Page 6 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon Young people had a chance to sharpen their rodeo skills at the Chiefs for Recovery youth rodeo and clinic. Featured events were the wild colt race clinics, taught by Professional Wild Horse racer Jason Smith and Buck Smith. The clinic also included mini bucking and senior bucking instruction. July 19, 2017 Youth track meet at Academy The Recreation Department and Warm Springs Prevention will host the Recreational Invi- tational on Tuesday, August 1 at the Warm Springs Academy track and field. There are two age groups each for boys and girls: ages 2- 5, and 6-12. Events include: 50 meters, 100 meters, 200 meters and 400 meters. There will be the long jump, high jump, softball throw, t-ball throw, and 400 meter relay. Patricipants receive a t-shirt and water bottle. Memorial races at Wasco Fair The Vernon and Nellie Spino Three-Quarter Memorial Race is coming up in August at the Wasco County Fair and Rodeo. The race prize is $1,000 winner take all, with other prizes to be an- nounced. The race is Saturday night, August 26. The Vernon Ray Spino Memo- Taking aim again at sea lions Jayson Smith pho- tos/ Spilyay CRITFC hosting Indian Fishers Expo next Friday The Columbia River Inter- Tribal Fish Commission will host the 2017 Expo at Hood River on Friday, July 28. The event is free to tribal members. Some features of the Expo: The Fish and Wildlife commit- tees of the four river tribes will each host their own question and answer sessions for fishers. These are open to everyone. The sanitarian of the Confed- erated Tribes of Warm Springs will conduct a quality handling class. This will give participants tribe-issued certification, recog- nized by the state of Oregon for sales within the state. There will be sessions on boat safety and boat maintenance. rial Kids Match Race is Friday night, August 25. This is half track race, limited to six riders ages 8- 12 years. Call-ins open August 7. First place, $100; second, $75; and third, $50; other prizes to be an- nounced. For information call 541-460- 3283; or 541-325-2799. The maintenance session will in- clude advice on keeping your boat engine at peak condition; common engine- killing mistakes and how to avoid them; and a hands-on over- view of basic fiberglass repair. Fish- ers can bring their own boats to the workshop for specific ques- tions. Another Expo session will cover marking and business: connecting with customers, and selling at farm- ers markets. There will be trade booths, and a free raffle. The Expo will be from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. on July 28. For more information call 503-238- 0667; or visit the website: critfc.org The July CRITFC commission Celestial Visions at museum The Museum at Warm Springs is now hosting the Celestial Vi- sions exhibit. The show features paintings, beadwork and other art celebrating the upcoming solar eclipse. Enhancing the show are edu- cational displays explaining the sci- ence of the eclipse. The museum is open Tuesday through Saturday. You can reach them at 541-553- 3331. Art in the West at High Desert Museum The High Desert Museum in Bend has selected 69 works of art by 53 artists for this year’s Art in the West exhibition and silent auc- tion. The opening reception is on Thursday, July 27 from 6–8 p.m. The public is invited to this free first view opportunity where they may place a bid or purchase a beautiful piece of artwork out- right. During the opening reception, artists Katherine Taylor and Ken Roth, who also have pieces in the exhibition, will participate in live painting demonstrations through- out the evening. meeting will be at the Best Western Hood River Inn the Wednesday and Thursday before the Expo. Congress is once again consid- ering giving Oregon and Washing- ton fish and wildlife officials and regional tribes broader authority to kill sea lions below the Bonneville Dam, an effort supporters say is necessary to protect 13 endangered species of salmon and steelhead. But unlike previous attempts to rein in the marine mammals, which are protected under federal law, the legislation goes beyond killing the dozens that converge each spring on the fish logjam at the Columbia River dam 145 miles from the Pa- cific Ocean. The bipartisan team behind the bill want to go much further. They also want to make it easier to kill California sea lions found on the Willamette River and its tributar- ies, and anywhere on the Colum- bia River east of Interstate 205. If the legislation is approved, as many as 920 sea lions could be killed annually, compared with 92 under the current agreement. The bill’s supporters say they don’t envision ever reaching that toll—that would be expensive and a public relations nightmare. The measure, they say, would allow them to move quickly to remove nui- sance animals before they engage in a months-long feast on prized spring Chinook salmon, an indus- try that accounts for hundreds of millions of dollars in business in the Pacific Northwest. In 2016, the states removed and euthanized 59 sea lions, the most in any single year since the program began in 2008 (two additional sea lions were accidentally killed).