E AST O REGONIAN SATURDAY, JULY 23, 2022 FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS | FACEBOOK.COM/EOSPORTS B1 STANFIELD STIHL Timbersports/Contributed Photo Kate Page of Heppner competes in the stock saw event at the 2021 STIHL Timbersports U.S. Championships in Little Rock, Arkansas. She placed sixth and is returning Saturday, July 23, for the 2022 competition. Lumberjack power Page looking to chop her way into top 3 at Timbersports Series By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian HEPPNER — Kate Page has chopped her way to the STIHL Timbersports U.S. Championships once again. Page, from Heppner, will be one of 12 women from throughout the coun- try to vie for the title Satur- day, July 23, in Little Rock, Arkansas. “This is my fourth trip,” Page said. “My top goal is third and my short goal is fi fth. I’d like to get some personal records in my events.” Page placed second at Western Regionals June 4 in Shelton, Washington, to earn her trip to the fi nals. Erin LaVoie of Spokane won the event. Page and LaVoie are two of three women from the West Coast competing at U.S. Championships. The rest are from the East Coast and Midwest. “There are seven women from the West Coast who compete and 30 from the east and Midwest,” Page said. “It’s like East vs. West. Erin and Martha King (two-time champions from Pennsylvania) are the favorites. Erin holds the world record in the under- hand at 22 seconds. My best time is 42 seconds. She has a slow swing and hits the block where she needs to.” Page, 31, has improved each time she’s competed at the U.S Championships. She placed eighth in 2018, seventh in 2019 and sixth in 2021. Competitors try their skills in four events — the single buck, standing block chop, underhand chop and stock saw. Everything is based on time. IN HER ELEMENT Woods brings energy, passion to role as Stanfi eld AD By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian S TA N F I E L D — Lorena Woods had no intention of being an athletic director when she took her fi rst teach- ing job out of college, but once she started she found she had a passion for it. Woods recently took over as athletic director at Stan- field High School and is working to serve the commu- nity and school. “Working and ser v- ing my own community is super important to me,” said Woods, who also is dean of students. “When the oppor- tunity came up for me to apply for the job, it was a no-brainer. Dan (Sharp) did a really good job. He really cares about the kids and Stan- fi eld. The pandemic really did a number on Dan. He has been super helpful to me. in Stanfi eld. For her, it’s all about relationships. “Being an athletic direc- tor, it grew my resources for my job, but also another family for my kids,” Wood said. “They were gym rats. It’s so nice to know every kid at the school. We welcome the kids in the morning. You “WORKING AND SERVING MY OWN COMMUNITY IS SUPER IMPORTANT TO ME.” — Lorena Woods, Stanfi eld High School athletic director Now he can focus on coach- ing. He started some good things here in Stanfi eld.” Woods had stints as athletic director at Arlington and Nyssa before landing know their names. It adds value to our day. Your actions become their actions. You want to make sure the kids have an experience they want to cherish forever.” GPA or better, and achieve automatic or provisional LA GRANDE — East- qualifying marks for the ern Oregon University’s indoor or outdoor season. “Given all the chal- men’s and women’s track and field teams earned lenges over the last U.S. Track & Field few years, I am and Cross Coun- very happy and try Coaches Asso- impressed with ciation National how wel l t he athletes have been Associat ion of doing in the class- I n t e r c ol l e g i a t e room,” EOU coach Athletics all-aca- Ben Welch said in a demic honors for their eff orts during Nichols news release. “Ulti- the 2022 season. mately, academic EOU was one of 14 teams success is the most import- to win the award. ant accomplishment and Heppner’s Hunter Nich- reason to be in college.” ols was one of 11 athletes on the men’s team to earn a 3.25 See Honor, Page B2 Woods took over at Stan- fi eld as the school district is going through renovations. A new middle school gym was added, the tennis courts have been resurfaced, and the school is getting a new track. “The track will be red and nice and cushy,” Wood said. “We have two full size gyms now, which will be nice for three-way volleyball days. We also got our booster club back up and running.” As much as improvements are exciting, Woods enjoys sharing the success on the court and on the fi eld with her athletes and coaches. “Going to state with the (Stanfi eld) girls was special,” she said. “When I was in Nyssa, the baseball and boys basketball teams went to state See Woods, Page B2 Biking and fi shing the Blues See Timber, Page B2 Heppner’s Nichols earns NAIA academic honors East Oregonian Yasser Marte/East Oregonian Lorena Woods, Stanfi eld’s new athletic director, works on Wednesday, July 20, 2022, out of Stanfi eld Secondary School. BRAD TRUMBO OUTDOOR PURSUITS O ne of the many beautiful things about summer in the Blue Mountains is the opportunity to pack up a mountain bike and fl y rod and hit the trail for a little surf-n-turf adventure. The rainbow trout are on the rise, wildfl owers are in full bloom, and wildlife is at its peak activity for the year. With streams and trails in close proximity, biking and fi shing are a match made in heaven with seemingly endless opportunities. Recently, I found myself casting big fl uff y stimulator fl ies to feisty rainbows in a canyon bottom. The stream was swollen, colored and Brad Trumbo/Contributed Photo A mountain meadow with a Blue Mountain view is one of the many rewards of biking in the Blues. cold from rain and runoff . My mountain bike was in the truck and the plan was to catch rainbows for a while, then head to the mountain- top for a wildfl ower ride in the wilderness. The river reach I selected for the day was lousy with large woody debris and prime pools. I had not fi shed it since before 2020 and the high fl ows that year and this spring had carved new side channels, deposited massive log jams, and allowed for trout to sprinkle out all over the place. Few fi sh were looking up, but the stimu- lator grabbed the attention of those willing to play the game. The fi rst pool I approached was formed by a channel-spanning log in which water was spilling over, creating a scour hole on the downstream end with a gentle glide off to the right side. Dissecting the habi- tat suggested fi sh would be holding at the head of the pool by the log, on the left where fl ow slowed against a root wad, in the fl ow seam between the pool and glide on the right, and through the glide itself. Maybe even a fi sh in the pool tail-out. Starting on the left side of the pool, a few small fi sh came to hand from the root wad, many of them bumping the big fl y as it bobbed along but struggling to fi t the hair mass into their small gapes. But big or small, watching trout attempt to smash a big dry fl y is always exciting. See Blues, Page B2 SHEDS for all your needs! Free delivery and set up within 30 miles Tobias Unruh, owner 600 David Eccles Rd Baker City, Oregon Elkhorn Barn Co. Custom Barns and Storage Sales 541-519 -2968 • Elkhornbarns@gmail.com • 509-331-4558