Enterprise, Oregon Wallowa.com 134th Year, No. 50 Wednesday, April 3, 2019 $1 Nez Perce conservation site a step closer to reality By Ellen Morris Bishop Wallowa County Chieftain Ellen Morris Bishop The Nez Perce conservation easement, occupies the eastern side of the lake shore. The Nez Perce Tribe, Wallowa Lake Lodge, and Wallowa Lake State Park are one step closer to permanently conserv- ing a sacred Nez Perce cul- tural site, Waalal’aamkt or “where the braided stream disappears into the water” as a conservation ease- ment. The ten-acre locale, at the south end of Wal- lowa Lake, also provides premier habitat for fi sh, wildlife, and birds. Grants totaling $295,000 from the Healy, Collins, and Meyer Memorial Trust Founda- tions have brought funding to $449,000, or nearly half of the $990,000 assessed value of the easement. “We expect the purchase to be completed this year, hope- fully by summer,” James Monteith, Wallowa Lake Lodge’s Managing Board Member said. “Everyone deeply appreciates the lead- ership and generous sup- port of these Oregon foun- dations for the Nez Perce Tribe’s fi rst conservation easement in Oregon.” When local investors pur- chased Wallowa Lake Lodge in 2016, protecting the undisturbed portions of the grounds through a conser- vation easement was part of their plan. Keeping a portion of the grounds wild made ‘I JUST COULDN’T BELIEVE IT. IT’S NEVER HAPPENED BEFORE TO ME.’ Gary Marks , Imnaha rancher TRIPLE SURPRISE Gary and Vicky Marks /Capital Press A cow gave birth to triplet calves on a northeastern Oregon ranch recently. The odds of having triplets are 1 in 105,000. Wallowa County cow births rare triplets By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press W allowa County’s very own Imnaha rancher Gary Marks, like many local ranchers is in the midst of calving season. Early on, Marks fi gured his pregnant 4-year-old cow might be having twins, considering how big she was all winter. But triplets? The thought never even crossed his mind — even our most sea- soned local ranchers catch a surprise from time to time. By 8 p.m. on March 23, the Charo- lais-Angus cross had already given birth to one calf. Sure enough, three hours later there were two in the barn. When Marks and his wife, Vicky, returned at 3 a.m. to check on the babies, they were stunned to fi nd a third. “I just couldn’t believe it,” said Marks, 62, who runs a small family ranch up the Imnaha River in Wallowa County. “It’s never happened before to me.” Indeed, triplets are a rare occur- rence in cattle. The odds are about 1 in 105,000, according to the Iowa Beef Center at Iowa State University. sense for habitat and aesthet- ics. Honoring the Nez Perce reverence for the site was important. When complete, the fi nancial contribution of the easement purchase will help retire the large majority of the debt that investors and Lake Wallowa Lodge LLC incurred in purchasing the Lodge, James Monteith, the Lodge’s Managing Board Member noted. See Nez Perce, Page A9 Planning commission says it could do some planning of its own By Steve Tool & Christian Ambroson Wallowa County Chieftain The Wallowa County Planning Com- mission publicly revealed that it could benefit from a little planning of its own during its monthly meeting on March 26. The meeting appeared to have little direction. On the agenda was the vote to ratify the reasoning behind the planning commission’s Feb. 26 denial of the Joseph Branch Trail Consortium’s conditional land use permit for a trail accompanying along the old rail line. As the hearing commenced, Commis- sion Chair Ramona Phillips said she would do something “a little unusual.” Phillips proceeded with a lengthy statement that ultimately urged the commission either to disapprove the prior findings, table or reopen the record of the prior findings to allow more testimony. Phillips, who has admitted to owning and managing land next to the tracks, in an unchecked monologue said her con- cerns lay not with what was included in the findings, but rather what was not included. After listing a variety of concerns from the prospective of some adjacent land owners in a somewhat unorthodox way of testifying for the record, Phillips expressed concern over the lack of legal counsel as well. According to the chairperson, Planning Director Franz Goeble advised Phillips that county attorney, Paige Sully, would recuse herself from the proceedings as she was a former member of the Joseph Branch Trail Consortium. Nevertheless, the meeting proceeded without counsel. Phillips continued to speak to questions of liability issues on hunters or trail users with hunting season on private property as well as interactions with livestock. See Planning Commission, Page A1 See Triplets, Page A9 Odds of cow having triplets RAILS WITH TRAILS PROJECTS ALSO CONTROVERSIAL ON WESTSIDE 1 in 105,000 Yamhill and Wallowa counties both grapple with the thorny issue | A10 The perennial power of friendship I t was the summer of 2001 when my family moved to Wallowa County. Undoubtedly this would change my life forever. I was prepared for that. But how my life changed is astonishing beyond comprehension. Approaching the situa- tion, I knew that I had an uphill climb. I was a quiet city kid from a family of art- ists, now in rural Oregon. And I was shy and self-conscious to boot. For the fi rst time in my life I wondered if and how I would make any friends. It turns out I was lucky. After building up a good deal of courage I gave football a chance though I’d never played it before. Knew noth- ing about it in fact. I pushed the limits of my timidity. It didn’t seem to get me far. But I’ll never forget the bus ride home—I believe after playing Pilot Rock. Something changed. The other students engaged me in conversation. They welcomed me. In hindsight I now know that it wasn’t moving from the ‘WE WILL TELL HIM OF LANCE’S HUMOR AND LOVE OF LIFE. WE WILL REGALE HIM WITH STORIES OF HIS STRENGTH AND INTELLIGENCE.’ city to Wallowa County that would change my life. It was the bus ride home that night. Unbeknownst to me, a teammate, Lance Strickland told everybody to give me a shot. “Put yourself in his shoes,” were his exact words… which I remember to this day. Lance had one of those personalities that radiated greatness. A quote from Thomas Merton comes to mind whenever I think of Lance: “You are certainly one of the joys of life for all who have ever come within a mile of you.” That was Lance. And immediately I was surrounded by a handful of ‘brothers’ that to this very day remain my closest friends. Justin Bird, Kyle Schoeningh, Ryan Barstad and Mikey Gam- boa—just to name few. Like Lance, these men stood by me and continue to stand with me through pain. Through joy. Through Fear. Lance left this world in 2005. And I speak for all of us when I say that nothing on this earth could fi ll that void in our broken hearts. But together we moved forward, one slow step at a time, piecing our lives back together just as our friend would want. I’m confi dent today that Lance, know- ing my affection for Robert Kennedy, would remind me of his words: “Tragedy is a tool for the living to gain wisdom, not a guide by which to live.” Or perhaps he would remind See Friendship, Page A9