LOCAL/REGIONAL Wallowa.com Place your business in the Service Directory Small Large $10.66 per week $21.32 per week (13-week minimum) Call 541-426-4567 Wallowa County Chieftain Deadline for classified ads 10:00 am Monday Find the crossword puzzle on page A6 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. Mar. 21: Asian chicken rice bowl on a bed of rice, roasted vegetables, mandarin oranges & fortune cookie (sponsored by Lostine Presbyterian Church & Resale Store) Wed. Mar. 23: Beef stew, corn bread, cottage cheese, peaches & ambrosia salad (sponsored by City of Wallowa) Fri. Mar. 25: Cheese ravioli with meat sauce, seasoned green beans, green salad, French bread & mixed fruit (sponsored by Wallowa Assembly of God) To sponsor a senior meal, call 426-3840 or stop by the Community Connection office. Wednesday, March 16, 2022 A15 Community Connection of Northeast Oregon brings support to the region By ANN BLOOM For the Wallowa County Chieftain WALLOWA COUNTY — Older adults in Wallowa County are supported by a strong web of services to help them remain in their homes for as long as they want — from congregate meal sites, to in-home care services, to family caregiver services to home-delivered meals. All are off ered through, or can be coordinated through, Community Connection of Northeast Oregon, and are as close as a phone call away. “It is a misconception that the meal program is for low-income people,” said Connie Guentert, manager of Community Connection. “It’s about socializing and congregating,” and all are welcome, she said. “We are super lucky to have two meal sites in the county,” Guentert said. One is in the senior center in the Community Connec- tion building, and the second is in Wallowa at the senior center. She said the meals are prepared to be “as fl avorful as possible.” The focus is on taste and visual appeal. The meals are based on the U.S. Department of Agri- culture 2020-25 Dietary Guidelines for Americans. They are portion-controlled and meet the dietary guide- lines for older adults drawing on foods from the fi ve food groups necessary for health. The fi ve food groups that comprise the senior meals at the sites include lean pro- teins, low-fat dairy prod- ucts, fruits and vegetables (fresh, canned, dried, frozen and 100% juice) and whole grains. The menus are avail- able in the Chieftain and are broadcast on KWVR radio. For those attending the meal site who are over 60, the suggested donation, which is voluntary, is $4. If one is under 60, the cost is $6. The Meals on Wheels Program is for homebound seniors. Both Meals on Wheels and the Congregate Meal Program are funded through the Older Americans’ Act. In addition to the meal programs, Community Con- nection off ers other senior support programs designed to help seniors stay in their own homes for as long as possible. For example, Ore- gon Project Independence is “designed to support seniors in their own home and remain independent as long as possible with assistance of in-home care assistants,” explained Guentert. It all comes down to dignity. “(We want to) support a senior who’s lived in their home remain in their home with respect and dignity with minimal funding, which is what we should aspire to. The alternative is a facility,” Guentert said. To qualify for nurs- ing-home care, a person must spend down, or spend their resources to qualify for Medicaid, a federal program in which the government pays for a person’s care. The program is income-based. Guentert said that is not what families want to do. They want to leave their homes and their resources to their families. Another senior program that partners with OPI is the Family Caregiver Program which “supports the care- giver, not the care receiver,” Guentert said. She refers to this web of support services for seniors as “wrap-around support- ive services” to allow older adults to remain healthy and independent. “Our community is so remote. Our parents and grandparents grew up in this community, and they want to stay here,” she said. She goes on to explain that the support services off ered are to help seniors, “age in their communities and thrive. There is a diff er- ence between thriving and existing.” She noted that aging in place involves a healthy, livable community and that a livable commu- nity includes mental, physi- cal and emotional health. “Senior programs have grown in this community. It’s a blessing to our citizens,” she said. Guentert stressed the importance of older adults in the Wallowa County community cannot be underestimated. “Our community is made up of many components,” she said. Those components are a diversity of ethnicities, races and ages. “The seniors are a major part of that,” she said. “They have worked all their lives to live here. They’re an import- ant aspect that should never be forgotten. We can’t have a community without them.” ‘No logical explanation’ in cattle mutilation By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — A muti- lated bull mysteriously turned up dead at a ranch in Bear Valley last month with surgically removed body parts. According to a Feb. 28 entry of the Oregon State Police log, a rancher called a John Day Wildlife Trooper to report a bull had been killed and mutilated on his ranch with its testicles, scro- tum, tongue and lips pre- cisely removed. Mat Carter, a rancher from the Crown Cattle Company, said he reported the mutilation to the state’s wildlife trooper after discov- ering the dead bull roughly a quarter to half a mile from his house. The cause of death is unknown. When Carter found the bull, it had likely been dead a few days and was already decomposing. The 24-hour window during which an autopsy could have been performed on the body had passed. According to Carter, there were no signs of vul- tures, coyotes or other scav- engers around the bull. “There’s no tracks, there’s no signs, there’s no nothing,” Carter said. He said it is hard to imag- ine anyone would have come on to his property, killed a bull, drained its blood, and then cleanly cut out specifi c body parts. According to Carter, with no evidence or leads to fol- low up on for law enforce- ment, the incident remains a mystery. And this was not the fi rst cow mutilation on his ranch, Carter said. Several years ago, Car- ter said he was almost sure one of his cows had been mutilated. However, he said, there was no way to say with certainty because he did not get to it quickly enough before fl ies and other scav- engers made it impossible to determine what happened. He said a similar situation occurred in August, which is why he tries to inspect cattle deaths a little more closely The most valuable and respected source of local news, advertising and information for our communities. eomediagroup.com when they occur. Indeed, Carter’s situa- tion is not unique. Accord- ing to FBI records, since the 1970s, thousands of kill- ings and mutilations of cat- tle have happened across the U.S. Last year Wheeler County had fi ve cases while Harney County had four in four years, with the previ- ous two occurring in May and June. The cases, the data reports, are similar to Car- ter’s case. A cow or bull is found dead in a remote area with no signs of how someone might have made it onto a property undetected. There are no footprints, tire tracks or fi ngerprints. There is very little — if any — spilled blood and no visible punc- ture wounds, bullets or strangulation marks. The bizarre nature of the mutilation and lack of evi- dence makes it all the more baffl ing and frustrating for Carter. Meanwhile, theories abound about who is behind the cow mutilations, be it aliens, demons or cults. However, in the thou- sands of cases since the 1970s, no one has ever been caught. For his part, Carter said he does not try to speculate on it, nor does he believe in UFOs or any other kind of strange phenomenon. “It’s really odd, Car- ter said. “There’s no logical explanation.”