NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 Tuesday, August 16, 2022 Wallowa chicken processor suffers losses due to hailstorm lingers for Hawkins. “It’s just the emotion of like, wow. They just got pummeled to death,” she said. By ANDREW CUTLER AND BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain WALLOWA — Mary Hawkins was outside washing crates when she noticed a storm building up on the horizon. “When the hail started I was like, almost giggly, like ‘Ha ha, it’s hailing. I’m gonna hop inside,’” said Hawkins, who owns Hawkins Sisters Ranch with her sister, Nora. Within moments her deci- sion proved to be correct as one of the worst hailstorms in modern Wallowa County history descended on her chicken processing facility on Bear Creek Road. Hawkins said the outside work at the processing facility was over by the time the storm hit and much of her stock of chickens was under cover. Still, she had several hundred chick- ens outside under the deluge of hail. About 300 of her Cornish Cross chickens were out in a pasture. The chickens, said Hawkins, tend to sit and wait out inclement weather. “If anything, they pile up a little bit,” she said. When the storm passed, Hawkins and her employees immediately went into damage control mode. Hawkins checked her horses and vehi- cles and equipment and then trotted out to the pasture. What she saw was carnage. County comes together Wallowa County Chieftain, File Mary Hawkins, along with sister Nora, manages Hawkins Sisters Ranch in Wallowa. The sis- ters raise Turkeys and Cornish Cross chickens to butcher and also offer custom butchering for many local hobby farm breeders in the county. Hundreds of dead chick- ens littered the field. Many of the chickens were grouped together where they died as the hail hammered them. “In addition to getting crushed by the ice, they prob- ably got smacked, smothered by one another,” Hawkins said. As she stared at the field littered with dead chickens she said “my first reaction was to just turn around and walk away.” Over the next hour, said Hawkins, many other chickens died from the injuries suffered by the hail. Some, though, she thought might be dead were up and about. “Half of them is up and fluffy again,” she said. Still, by the end of the day Hawkins said she composted 150 dead chickens. As Hawkins and her employees began to clean up — clearing broken glass and other debris — she slowly began to take stock. She real- ized the hailstorm meant a significant financial loss to her business. The dead chickens were no longer viable products for Forecast for Pendleton Area | Go to AccuWeather.com TODAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Hot with plenty of sun Partly sunny and very hot Very hot with clouds and sun Hot with sunshine Hot with plenty of sunshine 98° 63° 104° 67° 100° 59° 105° 63° PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 99° 74° 98° 67° 97° 67° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 103° 73° 100° 65° 98° 65° OREGON FORECAST ALMANAC Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. PENDLETON through 3 p.m. Mon. HIGH LOW TEMP. Seattle Olympia 77/58 91/56 97/60 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 97/67 Lewiston 85/61 99/60 Astoria 74/57 Pullman Yakima 96/62 84/54 99/66 Portland Hermiston 88/64 Salem The Dalles 100/59 100/66 91/60 Monday Normals Records 98/63 La Grande PRECIPITATION John Day Eugene Bend 93/60 94/58 Ontario 103/63 Caldwell Burns 95° 52° 92° 57° 104° (1933) 40° (1937) 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Albany 98/60 0.00" 0.02" 0.08" 7.50" 2.46" 5.22" WINDS (in mph) 99/59 98/57 0.00" 0.04" 0.15" 11.17" 4.35" 8.46" through 3 p.m. Mon. HIGH LOW TEMP. 97/54 91/61 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date HERMISTON Enterprise Pendleton 94/56 91/62 Corvallis 95° 54° 89° 59° 109° (1901) 38° (1910) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 83/56 Aberdeen 94/63 95/68 Tacoma Monday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee 82/61 Today Boardman Pendleton Medford 99/65 Wed. WNW 4-8 NW 6-12 NE 4-8 NNE 6-12 SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls 97/54 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today 5:57 a.m. 8:02 p.m. 10:28 p.m. 11:26 a.m. Last New First Full Aug 18 Aug 27 Sep 3 Sep 10 NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 106° in Redding, Calif. Low 32° in Truckee, Calif. sale, she said. “Can’t process them. There is just no way to dress them out and get them cold. The body condition would be grotesque, and they were laying out in the field for two hours. They’re not really edible,” Hawkins said. Most of the chickens, she said, were “nearly finished.” “I have several thousand dollars into those chicks and their feed. I like to raise them until they dress out at a 4-pound average,” Hawkins said. The image of a field covered in dead chickens still Wallowa County residents, businesses and officials began working together in the after- math of the storm to help those in need. “That’s one good thing we still have in this country,” said Wallowa County Commis- sioner Susan Roberts, who grew up on a ranch near Wallowa. “We have a lot of people who come together to help.” Sheriff Joel Fish said numerous individuals and businesses turned out to help their neighbors. “People jumped in and stepped up to the plate last night to help people who couldn’t board up windows,” Fish said Friday, Aug. 12. “There were so many people helping, I can’t tell you who all helped and did things.” In a press release Aug. 12, Fish said the sheriff’s office, Enterprise Police, Lostine Fire, medics and the Oregon State Police all responded, as did members of the Wallowa Volunteer Fire Department. Fish also said, “Private citizens responded with tarps and other items. Citizens went around to their neighbors help- ing to clean up and board up homes. … It was a real testa- ment to the resiliency of the citizens of the city of Wallowa and Wallowa County. I commend you all.” A meal site also had been set up at the Wallowa Senior Center, said Paul Karvoski, county emergency services director. Residents were active all over town on Aug. 12, cleaning up the mess the storm created. Leaves and branches littered yards and streets, and people were just trying to get back to normal. Fish and Mayor Gary Hulse confirmed Aug. 12 that only four minor injuries were suffered when people were struck by the hail, which reports said ranged from the size of ping pong balls to base- balls. Hulse declared a state of emergency Aug. 12 for the city, which started the process of obtaining federal or state aid. He said the city attorney was working on the declaration. Roberts said that although the county doesn’t “have a pile of cash” sitting there wait- ing for such emergencies, the county will help. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown and the Oregon Office of Emergency Management are aware of the storm damage. “The state has not received a request for a state declaration from Wallowa at this time,” Brown spokesperson Charles Boyle said Aug. 13. EOU professor takes on sunscreen project in memory of late sister By DICK MASON The Observer LA GRANDE — Amy Yielding, a mathematics professor at Eastern Oregon University, wishes that everyone could have known her sister, Rose, who lived in Arizona and died of skin cancer in 2018. “She was always volun- teering and involved in outreach,” said Yielding, who described Rose as the most generous of her 10 brothers and sisters. Few people in La Grande knew Rose, who was a microbiologist at Phoenix Children’s Hospital, but today her presence is being felt throughout La Grande thanks to Yielding, who is installing sunscreen dispen- sary stations throughout La Grande in memory of her sister. “I feel like I am planting little Rosies,” said Yielding, noting doing this is helping ease her sense of loss. “Rose died six months after she was diagnosed. It was devastating,’’ she said. Yielding said she believes her sister, who was 35, devel- oped skin cancer because of Dick Mason/The Observer The La Grande area now has four sunscreen stations, in- cluding this one at Birnie Park, shown on Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2022. too much unprotected sun exposure when she was growing up in Arizona. To date, Yielding and her husband, Jason, and daugh- ter, Josephine, have installed sunscreen stations at Candy Cane, Birnie and Riverside parks and the trailhead of the Mount Emily Recreation Area’s Red Apple area. The sunscreen stations at Birnie and Riverside parks were installed in May and the other two were put in during 2021. Yielding has installed all of them to make it easier for people to protect themselves from the sun’s damaging rays so they and their loved ones do not experience what her family did. The project has been funded with help from Grande Ronde Hospital through a small community events and projects donation account that is managed by the hospital and its public relations department. The account helps support, through small, one-time donations, those unique and local community efforts that otherwise may not have access to a traditional fund- ing stream or subsidy source. Yielding credited Casey Nichols, a dermatology board certified nurse practitioner at the hospital, with providing guidance on the project. Yielding also said Stu Spence, director of the La Grande Parks and Recre- ation Department, and Sean Chambers, who earlier served as the director of MERA, also provided major help in securing the city and county approval needed to install the sunscreen stations. NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY IN BRIEF La Grande police identify victim of deadly hit-and-run Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. -10s -0s 0s showers t-storms 10s rain 20s flurries 30s snow 40s ice 50s 60s cold front E AST O REGONIAN — Founded Oct. 16, 1875 — 70s East Oregonian (USPS 164-980) is published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, by the EO Media Group, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801. Periodicals postage paid at Pendleton, OR. Postmaster: send address changes to East Oregonian, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801. Copyright © 2022, EO Media Group 90s 100s warm front stationary front 110s high low Circulation Dept. 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La Grande police officers responded and immediately confirmed the individual had died. The investigation revealed that a vehicle traveling south on 16th Street struck Andrew as he was walking on the street sometime SUBSCRIPTION RATES Local home delivery Savings (cover price) $10.75/month 50 percent 52 weeks $135 42 percent 26 weeks $71 39 percent 13 weeks $37 36 percent EZPay Single copy price: $1.50 Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday during the night, according to Hays. The driver fled without contacting emergency services. The area where Andrew was found was immediately secured and La Grande Police Department investigators were dispatched to the scene. During the course of the day, 20 personnel were assigned to the case, which included volunteers. More than 60 items of evidence were collected at the scene and will be sent to the Oregon State Police Forensic Laboratory for analysis, according to Hays. Residents were interviewed and individuals came forward with information. 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