Spilyay tymoo. (Warm Springs, Or.) 1976-current, September 30, 2015, Page 6, Image 6

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    Page 6
Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon
September 30, 2015
Senior Fall tourney results
Fall Football at Eagle Academy
Jayson Smith photos/Spilyay
It’s football season at the Warm Springs Eagle Academy, for the seventh-grade team (above), and the eighth-
grade squad (below). The eighth-graders play at Sisters on October 6; the seventh-graders host Three Rivers on
October 6. Game times are at 4:15 p.m.
War m Springs golfers
made a good showing at the
Senior Fall Invitational tour-
nament this month at Kah-
Nee-Ta.
The Kah-Nee-Ta team—
resort pro Joe Rauschenburg,
Mel Barlow, Lee Balentine,
Bob Kjenslee and Basil
Beeler—finished fourth in
the Team Results category.
Rauschenburg tied for first
place in the 2-day Senior Pro-
fessional Results.
Louie Pitt, tribal Govern-
mental Affairs director, fin-
ished tied for fifth place in
the 2-day Amateur Gross
Results division.
Kah-Nee-Ta team mem-
ber Bob Kjenslee finished
fifth in the 2-day Amateur
Net Results; and War m
Springs Chief Delvis Heath
finished tied for eighth in this
division.
Golfers from around the
region played in the Kah-Nee-
Ta Senior Fall Invitational.
The team that took first place
was from the Stone Creek
Golf Club in Oregon City.
The second-place team, Sah-
Hah-Lee,
was
from
Clackamas; and the third
place team, Rock Creek, were
from the Portland area.
Team ar rived from
Tualatin, Orchard Hills,
Bend, Prineville, Crooked
River Ranch and other areas.
KNT scramble for MHS quad
There will be a golf scramble at Kah-Nee-Ta this
Saturday, Oct. 3, to benefit the Madras High School
football team. This will be a four-person tourney.
The entry fee is $ 60 per, $240 per team of four..
Checks should be payable to Madras High Football.
The entry fee includes green fees and carts, 3 kp
holes, and two long putts. Mulligans: buy three for
$5.
Two extra cash kp holes $10 entry ($5 to program
$5 into pot).
Putting string: $5 each; two per team, one string
per 9 holes.
For information contact Sean Cease ta 541-475-
7265 ext. 395 or:
scease@509j.net
Or call Butch David at 541-553-1128 ext. 8017.
Or email:
bdavid@509j.net
2015 CTWS Ceded Land and Reservation hunting
Tribal Council has ap-
proved the Reservation hunt-
ing regulations. Please come
by the Natural Resources of-
fice to pick up your Reser-
vation tags, ceded land tags,
and regulations.
Updated hunting informa-
tion is also available on the
fishing and hunting hotline at
541-553-2000.
2015 Reservation regu-
lations
Buck – October 3–Octo-
ber 25. One buck with vis-
ible antler per family.
Elk – October 7–October
29. One antlered elk per fam-
ily.
Black bear – Through
November 29; and April 1,
2016–May 31, 2016. One
bear per month per family.
Cougar – through March
31, 2016. One cougar per
month per family.
Bighorn Sheep – Octo-
ber 17–November 10. One
bighorn sheep ram. One tag
will be issued to one tribal
member through lottery draw.
Due to fire activity dur-
ing 2015, the Shitike Creek
area affected by wildfires
will be closed for hunting. A
hunting closure map is avail-
able at the Natural Resources
office and will be passed out
with tags.
Ceded lands
Please take advantage of
ceded land hunting tags:
These opportunities take
hunting pressure off the Res-
ervation, which may help im-
prove wildlife populations.
Please make sure ceded
land hunting takes place on
public (unclaimed) lands. It
is the hunter’s responsibility
to know where they are hunt-
ing, where they are allowed
to hunt, what weapons they
are allowed to use, and what
the bag limit is.
For questions regarding
hunting please contact the
Natural Resources Depart-
ment at 541-553-2001.
2015 ceded land hunt-
ing regulations
Buck – through October
31. One buck with visible ant-
ler per tag.
Elk – through October 16.
Closed to branch antlered bull
rifle hunting. Spike bulls and
antlerless elk only with rifle.
Either sex elk (branched or
unbranched) with archery
only.
October 17 – November
30 – Either sex elk.
December 1, 2015 – Janu-
ary 31, 2016 - Closed to
branch antlered bull rifle
hunting. Spike bulls and
antlerless elk only.
Pronghor n – through
October 31. Either sex prong-
horn antelope.
Bighor n
sheep
–
through November 30. One
ram per tag. Tags will be
awarded to four tribal mem-
bers through a public draw-
ing. Sign up for the lottery
draw is at the Natural Re-
sources front desk and Macys
Market. Hunt locations are
West John Day River (1 tag),
Deschutes River (2 tags) and
Aldrich (1 tag).
Black bear – through
November 30. Either sex;
excluding cubs less than one
year and sows with cubs less
than one year.
Cougar – Open season.
Either sex; excluding spotted
kittens or female cougars
with spotted kittens.
additional tags only after pre-
viously issued tags are filled
and reported on.
Ceded land hunting is des-
ignated for off-Reservation
public (unclaimed) lands.
Illegally harvesting wildlife
on the Reservation using
ceded land tags or harvest-
ing the wrong sex can have
great long-term negative im-
pacts to the tribes’ wildlife
populations.
Overharvesting wildlife
and illegally harvesting fe-
males reduces wildlife popu-
lation numbers for multiple
generations.
Please help protect the
Confederated Tribes wildlife
resources by reporting poach-
ing violations to 541-553-
2033 or 541-553-1171.
Reporting
Each tribal hunter may
possess two tags for each
hunt at a time (except for
pronghorn) and may be issued
There is mandatory re-
porting of all hunter har-
vest.
Failure to report harvest
results for ceded land and
reservation hunts will result
in a loss of hunting privileges
for subsequent tags.
Please be honest with your
hunter reporting. If you are
issued a tag, you have the
right to hunt and harvest an
animal.
Harvest and hunting in-
formation is important for
the tribal Wildlife Depart-
ment in determining wildlife
population sizes, herd com-
positions and hunting pres-
sure.
In addition, this informa-
tion helps us determine where
there are and are not animals,
which helps focus our habi-
tat restoration efforts on the
Reservation.
Your continued support
and participation with hunter
reporting is greatly appreci-
ated. Thank you for your par-
ticipation!
The War m Springs
Wildlife Department
Award recognizes CRITFC fisheries work
The Coalition of Colum-
bia Basin Tribes and First
Nations received the William
E. Ricker Resource Conser-
vation Award from the
American Fisheries Society at
its 2015 Annual Meeting in
Portland.
The Ricker Award is
given to an individual or or-
ganization for outstanding
accomplishments or long-
term contributions that ad-
vance aquatic conservation
at a national or international
level.
The Coalition of Colum-
bia Basin Tribes is a group of
15 Columbia River Basin
Tribes and Canadian First
Nations that has provided sig-
nificant leadership in creating
a common vision for restor-
ing ecosystem function and
resiliency to the Columbia
River watershed.
Their active engagement
Courtesy CRITFC
CRITFC executive director Paul Lumley (left) accepts the
award from the American Fisheries Society.
into re-negotiations of the
Columbia River Treaty be-
tween Canada and the U.S.
will help integrate ecosystem
function as a co-equal Treaty
objective in these negotiations.
Their efforts include devel-
opment of white papers, for-
mal and informal meetings,
and documentation of tradi-
tional knowledge.
“The tribes and first na-
tions have elevated the dia-
log as it relates to indigenous
peoples’ cultural, harvest, and
spiritual values, many of
which were lost with river
development for power and
flood management,” said
American Fisheries Society
president Donna Parrish.
Founded in 1870, the
American Fisheries Society is
the world’s oldest and largest
fisheries science society.