Spilyqy Ty woo, Wqrro Springs, Oregon December 9, 2004 Bighorns: Helicopter flies V i 3 . Li V it i J'l nil 1 Spllyay photo Brian Mortensen Members of the ground crew at Eagle Creek Canyon watch as a helicopter piloted by Jim Pope Jr., of Clarkston, Wash., flies in a group of five sheep from the Lower John Day area Saturday afternoon. (Continued from page 1) "But we're going to try to ex pand their range a little bit, so they'll mix with those other sheep." The sheep populations have proven resilient where they have been introduced, and if especially lush forage is avail able, they flourish, as the herds in the John Day and Deschutes river canyons have, Klus said. "With the Warm Springs sheep, they'll go right into that release we put in a couple years ago, so it's kind of a supplement more than new release, so 15 is a good number since they're go ing to have sheep nearby that they're probably going to mix in with," Klus said. "That's just going to give that group a little bit of a boost and help them expand a little more quickly." By themselves, the group of 20 sheep introduced to the Mutton Mountains in 2002 has increised by 50 percent, even with some predation and a pos sible case of poaching since then. The sheep were captured by helicopter, just as they were in 2002. Flying a powerful Hughes 500 aircraft was pilot Jim Pope Jr., of Leading Edge Aviation of Clarkston, Wash. On board to capture the sheep and keep them secure in their flight to both a base camp near Condon and then in their flight onto res ervation land was a capture crew from Greybull, Wyo. The work in capturing wildlife is "high-risk, financially and physi cally," Klus said. The animals are captured when a crewmember shoots a net out of a gun while the heli copter pursues them. After the 4 A" V , T h j'J ' 1 Wi'i'tJ r rs 'J animals are netted, the helicop ter lands, and other crewmembers secure the ani mals, hobbling their feet and blindfolding them. They are transported to a base camp, where veterinarians examine them for siens of shock injury, mainly, and other ailments they might find. "Normally, we have a proto col where we give them some penicillin, a long-lasting (dose) of penicillin that gives them a couple extra days of antibiotic coverage for bacteria that might take advantage of a stressed animal," said Dr. Leon Pielstick, a veterinarian from Hines who has worked on such sheep round-ups for 15 years. In addition, the sheep are given medicine to fight clostridial infection, better known among people who work stock as black leg disease, and a vaccination of vitamin E and selenium. "That's very specific to help with muscle damage associated with capture stress, a condition known as capture myopathy," he said. "And you also give them a de-worming agentD Ringworm's a real problem, plus some other parasites, so we want to turn out clean animals." A blood test of each animal is also conducted to help deter mine and fight diseases in the future. A new measure includes clipping the tip of the sheep's horn to record its DNA. Overall, each of the sheep is in "really good shape," healthwise, Pielstick said. Sheep from the John Day River can yon tend to be less stressed than the sheep that come from the Deschutes River area 4 'Tor Deschutes River sheep, which we rounded up earlier in the year, it's always tough," he said. "It seems like it's tougher country, you alwjys have to chase them a little harder, you have more issues with rolling down the hill as they're captured. Traditionally, sheep that come off the Deschutes tend to be a little more stressed." Sheep are rounded up dur ing the coldest times of the year because the cool weather re duces the threat of stress, when body temperatures are already overheating and heart rates rise above normal.. The base camp for last week's round-up was in a field south west of Condon, where around 30 people, including tribal mem bers, representatives of the Con federated Tribes, ODFW, Bu reau of Land Management, in terested local residents, and members of the Foundation for North American Wild Sheep (FNAWS) were gathered. As soon as the quota of 15 destined for Eagle Creek was reached around mid-morning Saturday, the sheep were driven to a point on U.S. 97 near Crite rion Summit, about eight miles south of Maupin. Range and Agriculture Man ager Jason Smith transported the sheep on moitly straight roads to minimize movement that ni'giit cxaceioaie stress northwest to Wasco and . . . might exacerbate stress levels, south on U.S. 97 to Criterion Summit. The staging area was wide enough for the helicopter to land and take off and for the sheep to be unloaded from the trailer, hobbled and loaded individually into denim and canvas bags for their transport into Eagle Creek canyon, 6.1 air miles west. In groups of five, the sheep then took their second helicop ter ride of the day and arrived at their new home. At Eagle Creek, a group of 10 people waited for the three loads of sheep. The group, including seven tribal members, was briefed on how to handle the animals once they arrived. "The sheep are going to be coming in, they'll be in bags and hanging, kind of like daisy chained down off pf a cable," Luther instructed the group. "(After the bagged sheep are undipped from the helicopter cable), two people teams will take a sheep and move it off to one side until we have five sheep all lined up." The sheep were moved into a side-by-side line, where the bags were pulled off them, their blindfolds loosened, but not yet removed, and their hobbles re moved. "These animals are going to V VMi mil iniimmii mum ; ' i (twii ifjvJ V-'"Vi I j R. C. Planes & Trucks parts & accessories Ho&N Trains & accessories Hours: Monday-Friday 9-5 Saturday 10-2 sheep into roadless be pretty stressed out," Luther warned. "They're going to be hot. They'll be panting and prob ably quivering, and what you don't want to do is if they start to struggle is kneel on their chest. They're pretty strong ani mals and they may try to scramble and get up." Two-man teams were as signed for each sheep. While they stabilized the animal and avoided the sheeps' horns or hooves, Dr. Pielstick examined each one, checking their breath ing and movements and even the color of their gums for signs of stress or injury. All this was done with utmost efficiency and as silently as pos sible to keep the sheep calm. And when Pielstick gave the silent "go" sign, the blindfolds were removed from each sheep and they were let go, like the start of a race, and the sheep ran away, preferably in a southerly direction so they could encoun ter the most habitable spot for them. "They're going to try to go up on steeper ground, but who knows," Luther told the group. "There's no control after you let them go, but they'll all find each other." Fourteen of the 15 sheep swiftly galloped away, usually in groups. One didn't, however, "...We'll just keep real close track of them for the next couple Months. " Warm Springs Fish and Wildlife manager Terry Luther not immediately. This was a ewe, the one that had been captured Friday. She spent Friday night alone in the horse trailer. The ewe appeared calm Saturday morning, stand ing in a docile fashion in the middle of the trailer, perhaps wondering of its destiny, per haps wishing for company from her fellow sheep. But when Pielstick deemed the sheep ready and cleared for their release into the hills, it didn't run away as the others had. It stayed put on the ground near the men who loosed it from its temporary bindings. Pielstick shaved some hair from its throat with a battery powered razor and instructed Joel Santos, part of the "ground crew" to hold and squeeze a bag of intravenous fluid into a needle placed under the skin in the ewe's neck. "I was looking at the gums, they weren't nice and bright and pink like they should be," the veterinarian said. "They were kind of a pale, bluish color, so I assessed that she was a little C-J .. A iV. ' W i Dr. Leon Pielstick, Burns, left, helps Larry Holliday and Don Winishut loosen the binds from a California mountain sheep after it was flown in from Criterion Peak Saturday afternoon. . shocky." So he injected a fluid to counteract the shock and stress that had taken her over, and he injected a dextrose solution to give her an energy supply against the hypoglycemic shock he as sessed. "What happens on release is that the stress of capture can cause muscle damage, and we've done everything at base camp, and we've usually caught them to prevent that, but it's just part of the game," he said. Pielstick said that though the sheep may have appeared calm as she stood in the trailer, what she endured was "very, fright ening", , 1 ; , , ; "Unfortunately, you don't like to leave one animal by it self in the trailer if at all pos sible," he said. "They ran out of daylight (Friday), and they tried to get more but they couldn't, so she spent the night by her self. "She looked good today, and she got friends. She looked good in the trailer, but the second flight just burned up her energy reserves, so we gave her a little shot of energy, and so hope fully, it'll come together." In fact, not even a minute after the dextrose was injected, the ewe stood up and ran away, albeit in a slower pace, but she found her freedom. Each of the groups of sheep arrived at Eagle Canyon about 20 minutes apart, an interval allowing enough time for the team of handlers to regroup and get ready for the next batch. Computer sales, Service and Repair Computer Accessories Palmain Internet Server $19.95 unlimited access area Spllyay pholo Brian Mortemen The mood of the group, made up of experienced hunt ers and outdoorsmen was enthu siastic yet laid back. To a man, they said they en joyed working with the sheep. "Actually, I thought they would be bigger," said Lyman Jim, a technician for the Tribe's Fish and Wildlife Department. Saturday's method of bring ing the sheep onto the reserva tion was different from when it was done in 2002 at Antoken Creek, as the sheep were sim ply released from the back of a trailer. The release point Satur day was in a roadless area, re- quiring a hike of about a mile, Saturday's release was the third mountain sheep round-up Warm Springs Fish and Wildlife management crews have been involved in. Luther, Doug Calvin and Stan Simtustus had participated in one in 2001. , To monitor the sheep, the Tribes has a pilot from Madras on contract who has a two-seat airplane to help observe the sheep herds. "We'll fly particularly for these (sheep), we'll be flying early this next week, and monitor them really closely," Luther said. "We'll probably fly every week for about a month or a month and a half, and we'll see where they settle. And depending on where they're at, we'll walk in and do some observing and we'll just keep real close track of them for the next couple months. "By then, they usually settle into an area, and then they're more predictable, and then we'll monitor them every couple of weeks." , Luther said that unless some thing catastrophic happened to the sheep herd, there may be no more need to move sheep intothe reservation. J