INSIDE SEC 1 22 �2 JU NE 22 9, 20 WW W. JU NE 22 -29 GO EA ST ER NO RE GO N.C , 20 22 OM TI EY L AN ES N O J and p t ir h it e s EA ON H DER S brate Cele ountry C Hig y h s Da PA G COMMISSIONERS ENDORSE RIMROCK INN REOPENS NEAR PROTECTION OF CATTLE FLORA, BUSINESS ION N SECT RIPTIO DESC PA G LOCAL, A3 $1.50 BUSINESS, A6 E 8 E 4 te Crea nge lle Cha show art PA G E 16 Enjoy speare e Sha s k val Fe ti PA G m r fro at on tou e, plays y nes, sse r Cit y Jo Tenne in Bake with Lane . ol ville, ng Nash hill Scho ly 2, alo t Merah Churc turday, Ju and Margo ted Photo on Sa yn Claire /Contribu Kathr Danforth Libby E 19 138th Year, No. 6 Wednesday, June 22, 2022 WALLOWA.COM Frazier to be grand marshal of July 4 parade By JACK PARRY Wallowa County Chieftain Lexie Canelli Joseph She had a fun experience seeing wolves ENTERPRISE — Lexie Canelli has only lived in Joseph for the past fi ve years, but she grew up here and moved away several times. “I’d move away and come back. I’d move away and come back,” she said. She said the community and the presence of family — her par- ents — keeps bringing her back. Not presently employed, she spends much of her time at her hobby of macramé — the art of tying knots into patterns. She and her boyfriend also like to drive around in the mountains, some- thing a bit hindered by the high cost of gasoline. “Right now, yeah, defi nitely,” she said. Her favorite thing about Wal- lowa County is twofold. “It’s a tossup between the peo- ple — the friendliness of the peo- ple — and the mountains,” she said. Not only does she enjoy see- ing the majestic mountains from town, Canelli enjoys seeing wildlife. “We just saw two wolves” on a drive near Wallowa, she said. “It was just running. Two weeks later, we went up to the same area and we saw an adult wolf and it was running away. We drove up about 200 yards and there was a mama elk with her little calf. I think we scared it off from going after the baby.” Canelli is aware of the concern ranchers have expressed about wolves attacking their livestock. “I’m not particularly fond of the wolves. They’re fun to see just because I’ve never seen one, but with the ranchers and their cat- tle, it’s their livelihood. I would be (upset), too.” With the Oregon Parks and Recreation Commission in town, she doesn’t have a lot she wants to see them accomplish. “A bike path all the way to the lake would be nice,” she said. “It gets kind of scary.” When someone is considering moving here, Canelli has mixed feelings. “Stay away so it stays small and beautiful,” she said. “But also, everybody’s businesses need the service. Come visit, but don’t stay.” — Bill Bradshaw, Wallowa County Chieftain WALLOWA − When it comes to the annual Fourth of July Parade in Wallowa, Ruby Frazier has been an ever-present onlooker of the festivities throughout her 86 years living in the town. “I’ve never missed any,” Frazier said. But for the fi rst time, she will not be viewing the event as a spectator. She has been selected as the grand marshal of the parade by City Hall. Always looking on from a parking spot at what used to be JNS Automotive Ser- vices, she has many fond memories of the event over the years, especially when it involved her children. “This motorcycle bunch (of riders) went through, and my oldest boy had a bicy- cle,” she said. “He turned his hat around backwards, and rode down Main Street with all those motorcycles on his bicycle.” She’s always admired the amount of passion workers put into the occasion, say- ing, “Some of them they put a little heart and soul into it, (which) makes it good.” As someone who describes herself as a quiet person, it wasn’t that shock- ing how she reacted to receiving the news. “Total surprise; my fi rst answer was no,” she said. She didn’t think she deserved it, something that her daughter, Wendy McDaniel, vehemently disagrees with. “She’s one of these peo- ple that always sits in the background and does amaz- ing things,” McDaniel said. Despite Ruby’s nervous- ness when it comes to the parade, her soft-spoken per- sonality doesn’t take away from the important role she has played in her family and the community. Hav- ing raised six children in Wallowa, she devoted a lot of time and energy to their upbringing. “Somebody asked me if I raised a garden, and I said no I can’t keep up with my kids let alone a garden.” she said. When it came to her kids, Frazier always emphasized fi nishing high school even though she didn’t graduate herself. Using her degree in “good common sense,” she would reiterate this mes- sage to each of her sons and daughters. “If you’ll just stay in school until you’re 18, what- ever you do with your life after that is yours,” she said. “But do it well.” Working 20 years at the Wallowa County Memo- rial Hospital before retir- ing, the 90-year-old Fra- zier now enjoys the quiet of town and makes sure to keep up with the lives of her 10 grandchildren and fi ve great grandchildren. Looking ahead to Inde- pendence Day, a very patri- otic Frazier hopes that she will be ready to participate in the parade. “If I can get over this ner- vousness, I’ll be fi ne,” she said. ENTERPRISE ELEMENTARY Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Mac Freeborn, left, manager of Wallowa Lake State Park, shows members of the Oregon State Parks and Recreation Commission a parcel of land Tuesday, June 14, 2022, that the commission is considering for purchase during its meeting in Wallowa County. Parks commission tours Wallowa Lake Talks events center, access; hears comments By JACK PARRY Wallowa County Chieftain Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Mac Freeborn, manager of Wallowa Lake State Park, talks about a planned events center at the marina before the Oregon State Parks and Recreation Commission on Tuesday, June 14, 2022, during the commission’s meeting in Wallowa County. Seeing the sights The commission started its gath- ering earlier in the week with a trip up the Wallowa Lake Tramway hosted by co-owner Mike Lockhart. That gave him a chance to discuss issues he believes are important for See Parks, Page A7 After 38 years, Fischer says farewell to teaching Passion for job key to teaching students By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain WALLOWA COUNTY — Getting back to normal after the COVID-19 pandemic, the Oregon Parks and Recreation Commis- sion held its fi rst meeting in person last week, and it came to Wallowa County to do so. “This is the fi rst time they’ve seen each other face-to-face in two years,” said Chris Havel, deputy director and commission spokes- man in an interview Wednesday, June 15. Havel said they chose Wallowa County for a couple of reasons. He said they wanted to bid farewell to outgoing Commissioner Lisa Dawson of Enterprise, whose term ended with the meeting. Also, they plan to hold the next meeting on the coast and wanted to take a trip to Northeast Oregon. The commis- sion meets fi ve times a year, Havel said. “For the people who have never been here before, we tend to hear the same thing, which is ‘Wow’ and ‘This is a part of Oregon I’ve always wanted to see,’” he said. Agency Director Lisa Sumption expressed her pleasure with Wal- lowa County after the meeting. “You have some of the most incredible scenery and humans here,” she said. Vikki Olsen/Contributed Photo Lorri Fischer holds a bouquet presented on her last day of teaching at Enterprise Elementary School. She has retired after 38 years in the classroom. Wallowa County Chieftain, File Mike Lockhart, co-owner of the century-plus-year-old Edelweiss Inn, stands before the dilapidated building in 2019. It once was the venue for a variety of events at Wallowa Lake that may now fi nd a new home in an events center planned for the state park. ENTERPRISE — Lorri Birk- maier Fischer fi rst walked into Enterprise Elementary School as a young girl with a knack for read- ing and writing. She liked school so much she would teach her younger brother, Tommy, lessons of her choice when she had the chance. After graduating from Eastern Oregon University with a degree in elementary education and a reading endorsement in 1981, Fischer would return to Enterprise Elementary as an educator in 1984. The principal at the time, Bob Eddy, gave her quite simple instructions to start. “He threw me into a room and said, ‘Teach!’” Now, 38 years later, Fischer is putting down the chalk and eraser following a career teaching students from fourth through eighth grade. It was a decision based on the need to be there more for her family, of which she has two daughters and four grandchildren. “I always say that you are replaceable at work, but irreplace- able within your family,” she said. Throughout her career, Fischer prided herself on lesson plans that made it fun for students to learn. Her classes have shot themed movies about the 100-year anniver- sary of the school and Lewis and Clark to name a few. Most recently, she brought her fi fth-grade class to the Wallowa County Museum in Joseph to donate an antique dress and a stack of old Wallowa County Chieftains along with her daughter, See Teacher, Page A7