A16 FROM PAGE ONE Wallowa County Chieftain Baby: Wednesday, October 6, 2021 WALLOWA MOUNTAIN MIDWIFERY WHO: Eleanor (Nora) Hawkins Continued from Page A1 WHAT: Midwifery year” is the nine months of pregnancy and the fi rst three months of a child’s life. Also, since a midwife specializes in child delivery, pre- and postnatal care, she does not do or have training in many of the other skills a general practitioner does. WHERE: 301 E. 1st St., Wallowa HOURS: Open Wednesdays or by appointment PHONE: 541-263-1724 EMAIL: info@wallowamountainmidwifery.com ONLINE: wallowamountainmidwifery.com which includes prenatal care, birth and postpartum care. She said that is less than a mother would pay for a hospital delivery. Long-time Wallowan Hawkins, who is the sixth generation of a local fam- ily, is not the fi rst in her line to be a midwife. Her great-grandmother, Mae Schaeff er Hawkins, was a midwife in the lower valley during the 1920s and 1930s. “I did not know that when I wanted to become a mid- wife. My dad told me after I’d gone back to school, ‘That’s what my grand- mother did.’ Barter was common and she used to trade things to people who didn’t have money,” she said. “There are various things around the ranch that came from her delivering someone’s babies.” Her dad, Merel Hawkins, who is retired now, long ran a ranch on the outskirts of town. Ancestors of Mae Schaeff er Hawkins home- steaded a nearby ranch in Freedom of choice Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Nora Hawkins stands in front of her new Wallowa Mountain Midwifery in Wallowa, on Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2021, which is in the former Home Independent Telephone Co. building. the 1870s. Nora recalls what many of the buildings in down- town Wallowa used to be. Next to the old telephone company — built in 1917, according to a story she showed from the Wallowa Sun — was a bowling alley. Next to that was a movie theater. Across the street, where Wallowa Food City now is, once was an auto- TIME TO PLAN for next year. Historic preservation Bank of Eastern Oregon offers Operating Lines of Credit and term loans on Equipment and Land. BOB WILLIAMS Ag & Commercial Loan Officer JOHN BAILEY Ag & Commercial Loan Officer Specializing in Agricultural & Commercial Loans. Enterprise HOURS: 9 AM-5 PM (M-F) 101 Hogan Street • 541-426-4205 mobile dealership. “I’m excited to give a facelift to this old building and continue to want to help revitalizing of downtown Wallowa,” Hawkins said. When not working as a midwife, she said, “I’m butchering chickens, help- ing run a ranch, being a mother to a 2-year-old and I’m expecting another one soon.” She said she’ll have a midwife come from Port- land a bit before her due date. Member FDIC Hawkins obtained a matching grant from the Oregon State Historic Pres- ervation Offi ce, which administers the Diamonds in the Rough grant through the Oregon Parks and Rec- reation Department. She said the grant helped refur- bish some of the building’s exterior. With the grant — and her own funds — she was able to get new awnings and masonry work done. She elected to keep the word “TELEPHONE” at the top of two sides of the historic building. Since buying the building Hawkins said she also put on a new roof and has completed a full remodel of the inside. “It was in a state of disre- pair,” she said. Open for business Prior to opening about a month ago, Hawkins set up two examination rooms — one with a double bed and the other with a typ- ical medical examination table — and a couple of sit- ting rooms. The front room has a small table and toys to keep older siblings occu- pied while mom is getting examined. Hawkins has her offi ce day on Wednesdays. Wind- ing Waters Medical Clinic in Wallowa has also started leasing the building on Thursdays for its clinic to have a space in Wallowa as they prepare to build its own place. She hopes to have both massage and acupuncture available in the building soon, as well. Hawkins received train- ing and national certifi - cation as a certifi ed pro- fessional midwife, state licensure as a licensed direct-entry midwife and certifi cation as an interna- tionally board-certifi ed lac- tation consultant. She said she believes she’s the only licensed mid- wife in Northeast Oregon. Although she gets calls from all over Eastern Ore- gon, she only serves Wal- lowa and Union counties, working closely with Wal- lowa Memorial Hospital and Grande Ronde Hospital and their practitioners. She said she gener- ally charges $4,000 for the package of her services, One of Hawkins’ top pri- orities is to give expectant families the options they wish for their deliveries. “My hope is to preserve the opportunities to have birth choice, the location, the mode, who is attend- ing … the freedom for birth choices of their own,” she said. “It’s not the right choice for everyone. Some families, if they’re low-risk and it works, then great. … I just want there to be choice. … Sometimes that means a family wants home birth; other families choose a package where I pro- vide midwifery care pre- natally and postpartum but they have a planned hos- pital birth, sort of a hybrid option.” Sometimes those choices mean the mother — or Hawkins — will opt out of a home delivery and decide to go to a hospital. For Haw- kins’ part, if she is not totally comfortable with the way the pregnancy is progress- ing, she urges the mother to go to the hospital and seek a physician’s care. Such concerns, she said, might come up prenatally or during labor. “When I have (a mom) transferred, I was glad we did,” she said. “There are some babies who shouldn’t be born at home, who might need a (hospital) team,” she said. “It’s rare — not even once a year that I have to do that — but I’m always grateful to do it; I’m grate- ful for the team at Wallowa Memorial, for sure. They have been great.” The decision to transfer from a home birth to a hos- pital can be made by both Hawkins and the mother. “As long as it stays low- risk, we go to their home,” she said. “I’m monitor- ing the mom; I’m monitor- ing the baby. If I start to see any red fl ags or yellow fl ags, I call to say, ‘Hey, we might want to transfer, I’m coming (to the hospital). If I do decide to say ‘I’m coming,’ then something’s changed, maybe concerning fetal heart tones, or maybe mom decides she wants an epidural (an anesthe- sia commonly given during childbirth) — it could be something that’s very nonemergent.” Postpartum care Hawkins said one way her midwifery practice dif- fers from a general practi- tioner is in the postpartum care. “After the (home) birth, we stay, we clean up, we make sure everyone’s breastfeeding and stable and not bleeding and the baby’s transitioned well,” she said. “Then I come back the next day and at three days and after a week and two weeks and four weeks and six weeks. … I’m seeing moms a lot more in postpartum, but it is the norm in midwifery care in this international model.” In addition to midwifery care, Hawkins also off ers various services as a lac- tation consultant, often to clients who were not in her midwifery care. These include prenatal breastfeed- ing classes, nutritional sup- port and personalized care plans to address common and not so common breast- feeding issues. Overall, Hawkins is a strong proponent of home delivery for normal births. “If someone becomes high risk and they don’t have a normal, routine, low- risk pregnancy, I would refer them to a hospital and a doc- tor,” she said. “If they don’t develop any kind of high risks or complications, then they stay with me, I deliver their babies at home.” Police seek tips in poaching case Chieftain staff WALLOWA COUNTY — A 3x3 whitetail buck deer was poached along School Flat Road near School Flat Lane within the Sled Springs Wildlife Manage- ment Unit sometime prior to 8 a.m. Sept. 25, according to a press release from the Ore- gon State Police. A local resident notifi ed OSP and wildlife troopers of the poaching. The buck was shot with a large-caliber fi rearm on private property, approxi- mately 30 yards from the road, and the entire deer was left to waste. Any person with infor- mation related to this inci- dent is encouraged to call the OSP TIP (Turn In Poachers) reward line at 1-800-452- 7888, by cell at *OSP (*677) or send an email tip to TIP@ osp.oregon.gov. Reference Independent Sales Contractor assisting you with your advertising requests and questions JAC’s Innovative Sales and Marketing Solutions Contact Jennifer Cooney TODAY! jacs.isms@gmail.com • 541-805-9630 Oregon State Police/Contributed Photo A 3x3 whitetail buck was poached Sept. 25, 2021, along School Flat Road in northern Wallowa County. The Oregon State Police is requesting the help of anyone with information in fi nding the culprit. case No. SP21274921. The Oregon Hunters Association TIP reward off ers preference points or cash rewards for informa- tion leading to an arrest or issuance of a citation for the unlawful taking, possession or waste of bighorn sheep, Rocky Mountain goat, moose, elk, deer, antelope, bear, cougar, wolf, upland birds, waterfowl, furbear- ers, game fi sh and shellfi sh.