A8 LOCAL Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, June 8, 2022 Brown Bag presentation to focus on suicide Chieftain Staff WALLOWA COUNTY — Due in part to the pan- demic, suicide rates across the country have surged over the past three years. Wallowa County is not immune to this national problem, and the Wallowa Valley Center for Wellness is the focal point for dealing with suicide locally. Center Director Chan- tay Jett and clinical Direc- tor Mollie Cudmore will address the issue at a Jose- phy Center Brown Bag at noon on Tuesday, June 14. The event will be live and livestreamed. Jett grew up in Wallowa County, earned degrees in business and psychology, and worked with children in an in-patient psychiatric unit at Children’s Hospi- tal in Seattle. She returned to the county and picked up her mental health career, becoming director of the Center for Wellness in 2015. Jett and husband Lem have two teenaged children. Cudmore is a licensed clinical social worker, and the new clinical director at the Wallowa Valley Center for Wellness. Mollie earned a bachelor’s degree in psy- chology from the Univer- sity of Oregon and a mas- ter’s degree in social work from the University of Montana. She has worked in the mental health fi eld since 2001, and came to Wallowa County from Bethel, Alaska, seven years ago. She focuses on chal- lenges in loss, including divorce, death, stress, anxi- ety, depression, trauma and transitional changes. The Brown Bag presen- tation will address the ris- ing tide of suicides, and talk about seeing early signs of potential suicide and fi nd- ing help. Brown Bags are free and open to the public with donations appreciated. Directions for distance attendance will be pub- lished on the Josephy Cen- ter webpage at josephy.org. For further information, contact Rich Wandschnei- der at 541-432-0505. Parks commission to meet in Enterprise Tour of sites at lake also planned Chieftain staff ENTERPRISE — The Oregon State Parks and Recreation Commis- sion announced Wednes- day, June 1, it will tour local sites and convene June 14-15 at the Clover- leaf Hall in Enterprise. On June 14, commis- sioners will tour Wallowa Lake State Park and Iwe- temlaykin State Heritage Site starting at 8 a.m., fol- lowed by a work session and training at Clover- leaf Hall at the Wallowa County Fairgrounds in Enterprise. On June 15, com- missioners will convene an executive session at 8:30 a.m. at the same loca- tion to discuss real estate and legal issues. Executive sessions are closed to the public. A business meeting will begin at 9:30 a.m. and will be open to the public. Anyone may attend or listen to the business meet- ing; instructions on how to listen will be posted on the commission web page prior to the meeting. The business meeting includes time for informal public comment related to any items not on the agenda. Registration is required to speak at the meeting, and is available online at bit.ly/ registerjunecommission. Time per speaker is lim- ited to three minutes. Writ- ten public comments must be submitted by 5 p.m. June 13 to chris.havel@ oprd.oregon.gov. The full agenda and supporting documents are posted on the commission web page at https://www. oregon.gov/oprd/CAC/ Pages/CAC-oprc.aspx. Spring is coming! Save 50% on heating costs with Rinnai Propane Heaters!* Heaters and other HVAC Parts & Services not just propane! *Addtional rebates up to $100 apply . East Hwy 82 Ed Staub & Sons Enterprise, OR 201 • 541-426-0320 Energy Community Service. Jude Graham/Contributed Photo Fifth-graders from Enterprise and kindergarteners from Joseph dress in old-time clothing during a fi eld trip to the Wallowa County Museum in Joseph on Thursday, June 2, 2022. They were there for a scavenger hunt and to donate a dress from around the turn of the 20th century and some decades-old Wallowa County Chieftains. Grade schoolers donate vintage dress, newspapers Enterprise, Joseph students embark on joint eff ort By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain JOSEPH — A dress from more than a century ago and a stack of old Wallowa County Chieftains were donated to the Wallowa County Museum in Joseph by kinder- garteners from Joseph Char- ter School and fi fth-graders from Enterprise Elementary School during a fi eld trip Thursday, June 2. The Enterprise fi fth grad- ers donated the vintage Chieftains dating as far back as 1928 to museum cura- tor Jude Graham. The cen- tury-plus old dress, worn by Hallie Duncan, also was gifted to the museum. Enterprise teacher Lorri Fischer joined with her daughter, Joseph kindergar- ten teacher Aliyse Shetler, in a fi eld trip they have planned for about 12 years. The pair meet at the museum each year and pair the older stu- dents with younger counter- parts to complete a museum scavenger hunt uniting the two schools in a common purpose, Fischer said in a press release. The kids then usually travel to the R&R Restaurant in Joseph for an ice cream treat, she said. This particular donation was prompted when a pile of discarded Chieftains found in the back of a classroom fi le cabinet prompted the Enter- prise fi fth-grade class to learn more about local history. The papers started in 1928 and progressed through the 1930s and 1940s. “They added much to class study of Wallowa County history,” Fischer said. During the fi lming of the 2016 movie, “The History of the Enterprise School,” which was a tribute to the 100th birthday of the main building built in 1917, Linda Bright, owner of B. Bright Vintage, a vintage and thrift store in Joseph, donated a vintage dress. It was said to be 100 years old and was worn by a student in the class movie as she was portray- ing an early teacher, Suzie Zurcher. Fischer said that after researching the dress, she was unable to determine exactly where it came from. Fischer is retiring from Enterprise School this year after 38 years. Noxious weed of month is meadow hawkweed Wallowa Resources ENTERPRISE — As part of the Wallowa County Vegetation Department and Weed Board’s ongoing edu- cation eff orts, in conjunction with Wallowa Resources, the Chieftain features a noxious weed each month that is on the county’s list of noxious and invasive weeds. This month’s noxious weed is meadow hawkweed. What: Meadow hawk- weed is a perennial that grows up to 3 feet tall, with rosettes that contain narrow, spatu- la-shaped leaves that are up to 6 inches long. Leaves exude milky sap when broken. The fl owers grow in yellow clus- ters near the top of the plant Joe Sims/Wallowa Resources Meadow hawkweed is this month’s weed of the month. It is a perennial that can grow up to 3 feet tall. and bloom from May to July. Where: Meadow hawk- weed prefers moist, grassy areas. In Wallowa County, it’s typically found in for- ested and riparian areas but can even be found in fl ower- beds and lawns. Dangers: Meadow hawk- weed is an invasive intruder that produces highly mobile seeds. It prevents desirable plans from establishing or surviving. How you can help: If you fi nd meadow hawk- weed either on your prop- erty or while out and about, take note of the location. Contact Wallowa Canyon- lands Partnership Program Manager Joe Sims at 541- 426-8053, ext. 61. Wallowa Resources youth programs resume in person Chieftain staff ENTERPRISE — Out- door in-person educational programming is back. Wal- lowa Resources Youth Stewardship Program has had a busy spring full with Friday WREN (Wallowa Resources Exploration of Nature) Science Adventures and a return to in-person outdoor school for every sixth-grader in Wallowa County. The weather this spring hasn’t been able to decide if it’s winter or summer, but despite some snowy days, students have had a blast learning outside. The last few years have made running programs as usual challenging, so the youth education staff at Wal- lowa Resources have been thrilled to be back up and serving the county’s youth and schools with free in-per- son programs that get kids outside exploring nature. This spring Wallowa Resources had seven full- day Friday Science WREN classes that took local fi fth- through eighth-graders out into the county’s landscape to learn about diff erent nat- ural science and place- based topics. Big highlights were the birds of prey lesson where students got up close and personal with some fal- cons and herpetology explo- ration, which includes fi nd- ing frogs, snakes and turtles out at local ponds. Wallowa Resources facil- itated three weeks of outdoor school serving all fourth- through sixth-graders at Joseph Charter School and each sixth-grade class from Enterprise and Wallowa. Outdoor school was held at Wallowa Lake State Park, where kids learned about salmon migration, soil sci- ence, forest structure and tree ID, animals and sur- vival skills. Staff also facil- itated one day of outdoor programming for a class of fi fth-graders from the neigh- boring town of Halfway. “We can’t stress enough how excited we are to be able to be running full, in-person programs again, and to have a full summer of outdoor programming planned to teach our youth,” said Lindsay Miller, youth education manager for Wallowa Resources. “Not only in our own programs, but also working with our school districts and other camps to deliver the best possible experience for our county’s kids.” For more information about programs or upcom- ing classes, visit www.wal- lowaresources.org/edu- cation. For additional information, contact Miller at 541-426-8053 or lind- say@wallowaresources.org. Adult Dances Friday & Saturday Parade June 6 - 12, 2022 Friday @ 2 pm always the first full week of june Ed Miller Xtreme Bull Riding Thursday, June 9, 2022 @ 6:30 pm PRCA Rodeo & Horse Racing Friday, June 10, 2022 @ 4 pm Saturday, June 11, 2022 @ 2 pm EMMA EMILY JENNA RICKER ARNOLDUS DENTON Sunday, June 12, 2022 @ 1:30 pm 4-H Horse Show - Mon & Tue, June 6th & 7th 4-H & FFA Livestock Show - Thu & Fri, June 9th & 10th Market Animal Auction - Saturday, June 11th @ 8am ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tickets are available from Queen Candidates or online until June 6th Horsemanship - Sunday, June 5th @ 2pm Queen’s Coronation - Tuesday, June 7th @ 7pm