REGIONAL/SPORTS Wallowa.com 101 Legal Notices 101 Legal Notices PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF WALLOWA In the Matter of the Estate of GAIL L. WOLFE Deceased. Case no. 21PB10474 City of Joseph is accepting sealed bids on a red Toyota Tacoma VIN 4TAPM62N- 5WZ134243 (app. 197k miles) until February 28, 2022. Please submit sealed bids to City Hall at P.O. Box 15, or 201 N Main. Please contact City Hall with any questions. Legal No. 281414 Published: February 9, 16, 23, 2022 NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS Krag D. Norton has been ap- pointed Personal Represen- tative (“PR”) of the Estate of CLARENCE L. NORTON, Deceased, Probate Case No. 22PB01026, Wallowa County Circuit Court, State of Oregon. All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceedings may obtain additional informa- tion from the records of the Court, the PR or the Attorney for the PR. All persons having claims against the estate must present them by mail or in per- son to the PR at: Alyssa D. Slater, P.C. Alyssa D. Slater, Attorney for PR 107 Depot Street; PO Box 729 La Grande, OR 97850 (541)663-8300 within four months after the first publication date of this no- tice or they may be barred. Published: February 16, 23, March 2, 2022 Legal No. 282052 NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative. All persons having claims against the estate are required to present them, with vouchers at- tached, to the undersigned personal representative in care of Paige Sully PC, 213 W. Main Street, Enterprise Oregon 97828, within four months after the date of first publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceed- ings may obtain additional information from the records of the Court, the personal representative, or the lawyers for the personal represen- tative, Paige Sully PC, 213 W. Main Street, Enterprise, Oregon 97828. Dated and first published on February 16, 2022. Laura Moore Personal Representative Legal No. 282329 Published: February 16, 23, March 2, 2021. Find us on Facebook Find the crossword puzzle on page A6 Wednesday, February 23, 2022 Dry January aggravates drought concerns By KATY NESBITT For EO Media Group PENDLETON — December and January storms set up the winter of 2022 to be cold and wet, but several weeks without sig- nifi cant snow or rain are cre- ating concerns of another drought year. Northeastern Oregon is faring better than Central and Southern Oregon, with cold temperatures prevent- ing the early January snow- fall from melting. Snow in the last few days has helped inch up snowpack and snow-water equivalent lev- els for the Blue and Wallowa mountains. According to the USDA Natural Resources Con- servation Service website, monthly streamfl ow and res- ervoir conditions for Janu- ary in the Umatilla-Walla Walla-Willow Basin were above average. Two bod- ies of water In the southern region of the basin near Hep- pner are considerably higher than the rest of the basin: Willow Creek is at 187% and Rhea Creek is at 142% of the 30-year median. Farther south, the North Fork John Day River at Monument is recording 83% of its 30-year median. The basin has one strong- hold for water: Camas Creek near Ukiah at 346% of the median. The Grande Ronde- Burnt-Powder-Imnaha Basin is averaging between 83% and 95% of the 30-year median with one anomaly: Bear Creek, outside of Wal- lowa, is at 216%. Snowpack has been holding up, despite the lack of precipitation in the last Katy Nesbitt/For EO Media Group Weeks of subfreezing temperatures have held snow in the higher elevations of Northeastern Oregon, as is evident in this February 2022 photo of the Wallowa Mountains. Despite reasonable snowpack levels in the high country, however, most of the region is still facing severe drought conditions. fi ve weeks. In the Blue Mountains between La Grande and Pendleton, Emigrant Springs has 45 inches of snowpack and is 148% above aver- age with 10% snow-water equivalent. High Ridge Snotel east of Pendleton has 52 inches of snowpack, 5% below its average, but with 33% snow water equivalent. Milk- shakes SNOTEL on the Washington state line has 71 inches of snowpack, which is 87% of normal with 35% snow-water equivalent. In the Wallowas, Mount Howard has 27 inches of snowpack, 25% below aver- age with 32% snow-wa- ter equivalent. On the south side of the range, Moss Springs SNOTEL is record- ing 49 inches of snowpack, which is 15% below average with a snow water equiva- lent of 32%. In Baker County, Schnei- der Meadows Snotel is recording 22% below nor- mal precipitation and has 55 inches of snowpack with a 33% snow-water equivalent. While the snowpack and water levels look pretty good right now, Northeastern Ore- gon is facing down the bar- rel of another drought year, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. According to www.drought.gov, Wal- lowa County was down 0.69 inches of precipitation in January. The entire county is considered to be in severe Girls: Continued from Page A9 WALLOWA COUNTY SENIOR Meal sites are open for in-dining! Meal site information: Wallowa 886-8971, Enterprise 426-3840, Home delivered meals 426-3840. Mon. Feb. 28: Baked fish, rice pilaf, California vegetables, coleslaw & lemon bar (sponsored by Joe & Maxine Town) Wed. Mar. 2: Quiche with spinach, mushrooms & onions, sausage patty, fruit, tomato juice and biscuit with honey & butter (sponsored by Wallowa Senior Advisory Group) Fri. Mar. 4: Pork ribs & sauerkraut, roasted red potatoes, apple Waldorf salad, grape juice and orange cake (sponsored in memory of Gayle Lyman, her dad Abe Lyman, and brother Dan Lyman by Arlene Lyman and family. ENTERPRISE SCHOOLS (Milk, fruit & vegetables served with all meals) Mon. Feb. 28: Breakfast: French toast Lunch: Beef stroganoff & green beans Tue. Mar. 1: Menu not available Wed. Mar. 2: Menu not available Thur. Mar. 3: Menu not available A15 Imbler led 8-5 after one, but struggled after the fi rst as three starters spent a large part of the second on the bench. Imbler had a scor- ing drought of more than six minutes spanning the fi rst and second, and managed just a 19-foot jumper from Joelle Treat in the second. “Today one of the big- gest diff erences was we had a lot of foul trouble,” Sweet said. “When our best scorer is on the bench it changes our dynamic, and when you build a hole at halftime, they’re hard to overcome. But the girls never quit.” The Eagles broke the game open in the third. Nave connected on a 3-pointer for Boys: Continued from Page A9 didn’t rotate very well on defense in the third quarter, they got some looks at the baskets and some kickout 3s. We didn’t match them on our end. We got great looks, we just didn’t get anything to fall.” The teams traded the lead just three times in the fi rst half, but neither team gained a major advantage. Imbler’s largest lead was 8-3 on a Wyatt Burns 3-pointer, and Joseph gained its larg- Ronald Bond/Wallowa County Chieftain Players battle for a loose ball during an Old Oregon League District Tournament game Thursday, Feb. 17, 2022, in Baker City. Joseph defeated Imbler, 40-28. drought status, and 44.36% of the county is experiencing extreme drought conditions. Union County is down 0.27 inches of its average precipitation. The entire county is considered to be under severe drought con- ditions while 4.3% is expe- riencing extreme drought. And Umatilla County is down 0.2 inches of precipita- tion from a normal January. This puts all of the county under severe drought con- ditions, with 33.77% con- sidered to be under extreme drought conditions. The extended forecast for Northeastern Oregon calls for 33% to 40% below nor- mal precipitation with a 40% to 50% chance of above nor- mal temperatures. just three fi eld goals in the second and third quarters combined, fi nally found a rhythm in the fourth. Rachael Stirewalt, who led the way for Imbler with 13 points, regained her form from the fi rst quarter to close the gap, but the Panthers got no closer than 12. Stirewalt’s play on off ense and the Panthers’ defense carried Imbler early. Stirewalt had all eight of the Panthers’ fi rst-quarter points, with her drive to the hoop giving Imbler its fi rst lead at 6-4 with 3:01 to play in the quarter, and a steal and layup with 51 seconds to go dou- bling the lead to four. But Stirewalt, as well as Audree Treat and Elidia Rivas, spent either most or all of the second quarter on the bench in foul trouble, and Joseph took advantage. a 26-10 advantage, and later scored on a twisting jump shot on the block to extend the margin to 33-12 late in the third, the largest lead of the contest. “They played really calm until the end and really took care of the ball for the most part,” Homan said. “They’re getting it.” Imbler, which managed est fi rst-half lead at 26-18 on a layup by Hite that ended a run of him scoring eight points in less than two minutes. Joseph’s hot-shooting third quarter resulted in a 52% second half from the fl oor, and the Eagles were 45% for the game. Imbler, conversely, shot just 29%. The Panthers also turned the ball over 25 times. Burney and Besotes both added 10 points for Joseph, with Besotes also collecting a game-high nine rebounds. Justin Frost scored 13 points and added eight rebounds to lead Imbler. Joseph’s James Burney works against the defense of Imbler’s Wyatt Burns during an Old Oregon League District Tournament game Thursday, Feb. 17, 2022, in Baker City. Joseph defeated Imbler, 60-34. Ronald Bond/Wallowa County Chieftain Building Healthy Families would like to recognize Michael Cooler and Sara Crawford and their business, Central Copy, for all of their wonderfulness! From making our printed items beautiful to helping with computer and technology issues, they go above and beyond to help us, even though they don’t work at BHF anymore. Thank you for being awesome! To sponsor a senior meal, call 426-3840 or stop by the Community Connection office. MICHAEL COOLER & SARA CRAWFORD Building Healthy Families 541-426-9411 oregonbhf.org