A8 LOCAL Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, March 31, 2021 Fishtrap to hold fi nal Fireside of season Friday Includes one regular, two newcomers Chieftain staff ENTERPRISE — Friday, April 2, will feature the fi nal Fishtrap Fireside of the sea- son, with readings by three Wallowa County writers, according to a press release. It can be viewed online at fi shtrap.org, Fish- trap’s YouTube channel or webpage at fi shtrap.org/ fi shtrap-fi reside-2/. This eighth season wraps up with long-time Fishtrap favorite, Pamela Royes, and two new voices in Dustin Lyons and Adele Schott. Royes lives on a farm with her husband, Skip, and an undetermined number of cows, horses, mules, dogs, cats, ducks, chickens and honeybees. Pam loves plant- ing things, baking sourdough bread, playing her ukulele and writing. She is the author SPRING TIME FUN and HVAC Parts & Service of the mem- oir, Temper- ance Creek, is currently writing a novel for young adults Lyons and is work- ing on a book of essays about people, food and landscape. Lyons was raised in a small, defunct timber town in Southwest Washington state where he developed an unshakeable case of poesy. The notion that writing could become his vocation — per- haps even a vehicle to world- wide acclaim — was com- panioned with a likewise dubious push toward pro- fessional-athlete superstar- dom. Although the latter Energy Community Service. 201 East Hwy 82 Enterprise, OR 97828 Not just propane 541-426-0320 Schott dream never came true, a decade of seasonal work in Alaska, along with several forays into Asia and Latin America produced countless journals chockfull of nearly uninterpretable masterwork. In response to these liter- ary triumphs he decided to shift gears and study shoe- making in Ashland, even- tually co-founding Alka- hest Leather. The world of humans being as it is, a life- long affi nity for critters and quiet space to write down her musings, recipes and expe- riences. Those are some of her favorite moments. Being a part of Fishtrap Fireside will be the fi rst time she has read original work out loud to strangers. Fishtrap Fireside is a monthly reading series fea- turing diverse voices from around Wallowa County. While the Firesides are usu- ally in-person readings, because of the COVID-19 pandemic Fishtrap has gone to a virtual format, allow- ing those interested to view it anytime they like. The April episode of Fish- trap Fireside is sponsored by Wallowa Lake Lodge. To learn more visit Fish- trap.org. More writers’ workshops off ered by Fishtrap Chieftain staff Ed Staub & Sons Royes wild places drew him to the base of Chief Joseph Moun- tain, where he owns a tum- bledown cabin on a couple of uncombed acres. The words keep coming and he does his best to intelligibly lay them down. Schott was brought up slightly feral on her fami- ly’s multigenerational ranch where she decided she wanted to be a cowboy when she grew up. Besides cow- boying around the West, she has held a wide variety of vocations and, most recently, a wife and mother to the three best men she has ever known. Infl uenced by some of the greatest storytellers around, Schott always has loved to write. Mostly she writes lists but sometimes she fi nds the ENTERPRISE — Fish- trap’s spring series of writers’ workshops continue online in April with The Land Beneath Your Feet: Writing With Nature — An Online Work- Featuring beautiful cabinetry designed and manufactured by shop With Karen Auvinen, according to a press release. For four Wednesdays — April 7, 14, 21 and 28 — from 6-7:30 p.m., Auvinen will explore the dual catastrophe of the COVID- 19 pandemic and climate change and how they have brought our collective expe- riences of nature and the nat- ural world into sharp focus. In this workshop, the fer- tile ground beneath our feet as the container for the sto- ries we have to tell will be examined, whether they be fi ction, poetry or nonfi ction. How do we create a sense of place and how do we use the natural world as ground for refl ection? Students will have weekly “nature work” assignments, but plan to spend time writing each week. Auvinen is an award-win- ning poet, mountain woman, life-long Westerner, writer and the author of the mem- oir Rough Beauty (Scribner), a fi nalist for the Colorado Book Award and the Willa Award. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, LitHub, Real Simple, Westword, The Colorado Sun, as well as numerous literary journals. She earned an MA in poetry from the University of Col- orado under the mentorship of Lucia Berlin and a Ph.D in fi ction from the Univer- Auvinen Balmer sity of Wisconsin — Mil- waukee. She teaches writ- ing workshops at Lighthouse Writers Workshops and fi lm, pop culture, and storytell- ing to fi rst-years at CU — Boulder. Past gigs include Writer-in-Residence for the state of Colorado, edi- tor, book-buyer, rural postal route driver, caterer, clinic assistant, landscaper, sum- mer camp director and guest chef. She lives in the Colo- rado mountains with the art- ist Greg Marquez, their dog River and Dottie the Cat. Learn more at karenauvinen. com. Follow her on Twitter @karenjamestown or Insta- gram @awomansplaceisin- thewild and on Facebook: KarenAuvinenAuthor. Cost for the workshop is $270 or $243 for Fishtrap- pers. Register at fi shtrap.org. Concluding the spring series will be Mining Your Life for Laughter: An Online Workshop With Bob Balmer from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 8. Balmer invites partici- pants to join examining how humor writers have taken Wallowa County FREE Chess Club No meeting until further notice but look forward to seeing you soon! No Foolin Here! Bongcloud: It is sometimes called the worlds worst chess opening. Before replying, the opponent is supposed to ask: “What have you been smoking?”. “Play golf for your body. Play chess for your mind.” JOSEPHY CENTER FOR THE ARTS AND CULTURE 3/24 Solution c5+ 403 Main Street Joseph, Oregon incidents from their lives and turned the painful, the absurd, the odd, the embar- rassing, the memorable into humor. Participants will look at what makes people laugh and the fact that what is funny is subjective. The work- shop will look at the various ways writers convey humor, through exaggeration, iden- tifi cation, embarrassment, self-deprecation and through short writing exercises, prac- tice using them. The work- shop will look at structure as a means to convey humor, through essay, tale or story. Then, to follow James Thurb- er’s adage: “Humor is chaos remembered in tranquility,” participants will sift through their lives to fi nd our truth in stories, anecdotes and inci- dents gilded with humor. Balmer’s fi rst humorous essay was published in The Oregonian in 1992. His work has appeared in The Smithso- nian, The Oregonian, The Seattle Times, The Seat- tle Weekly, Golf Illustrated, ZYZZYVA, Oregon Coast Magazine, Golf Weekly, The Eugene Weekly and Willa- mette Week. It has aired on the radio shows The Savvy Traveler and MarketPlace as well as on Oregon Public Radio and Television. He has an MFA in creative writing from Portland State Univer- sity, and he attended the Iowa Summer Writing Workshop and the Tin House Summer Writing Workshop at Reed College. In 2017, he took Improv and sketch writing classes at Second City Com- edy in Chicago. He has led humor writing workshops at the BARN (Bainbridge Artisan Resource Network) Write in the Harbor, Portland Storytellers Guild, The Ore- gon Writers Colony, Sitka Center for the Arts and Ecol- ogy, The Write on the Sound Writers Conference, The Hoff man Center for the Arts, Mary’s Woods Retirement Center, The Oregon Council Teachers of English student writing Festival. He gleans much of his humor-writing material from his and others everyday experiences and observations. Registration costs $120 or $110 for Fishtrappers. Regis- ter at fi shtrap.org. You can always expect more without paying more! Let us help you design the kitchen and bath that matches your vision and your budget. Our team of experts can create everything from entry-level, value cabinetry to semi-custom and custom designs. Get ready to get inspired Creative Spaces. Refreshing Places. 800 S. River Enterprise, OR www.carpetone.com 541-426-9228 PURE RAW HONEY Call or text Beth at 541-519-0187 Clayton Lamm Cabinet & Countertop Specialist Sales & Installation Clayton@CarpetOneEo.com We will be delivering in Union and Wallowa Counties April 2nd and 3rd, 2020. We wish you all a joyous Easter! Case of 12 Quarts Gallon Bucket Quart Jar Pint Jar Clean Beeswax - $150 - $50 -$15 - $8 - $7 per lbs