Page 6 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon Academy Football September 27, 2017 Fall fishery open this week The sixth fall fishing period has been set. The current fish- ery is open through this Friday, September 29 at 6 p.m. The open area is all of zone 6. Allowed gear is set nets with an 8” minimum mesh size. Allowed sales are salmon, steelhead, shad, yellow perch, bass, walleye, catfish and carp. Sturgeon may not be sold. Legal-size sturgeon between 38 and 54 inches fork length in the Bonneville pool, and sturgeon between 43 and 54 inches fork length in The Dalles and John Day pools may be kept for sub- sistence use. Standard river mouth and dam closed areas applicable to gillnets are in effect including the Spring Creek National Fish Hatchery sanctuary. Fish may be sold after the period ends if caught during the open pe- riod. Kah-Nee-Ta Fall Run Oct. 14 Jayson Smith/Spilyay Warm Springs Academy Eagles running back Derrek Main take rushes against Burns. Derrek ran for a total of 85 yards and a touchdown. Eagles football travels to Hines on Wednesday, October 4. They’re at home against Sisters on October 10, game time at 4:30 p.m. Coming up in Buffs sports... In Madras High School sports: Girls junior varsity soccer plays at Summit High School this Thurs- day, September 28. The volleyball squads all travel to Molalla. Madras High School Buffs Cross Country competes at the Oxford Meet at Drake Park in Bend this Saturday, September 30. Warm Springs Recreation will host the annual Kah-Nee-Ta Fall run—‘For a Change of Pace’—on Saturday, October 14. The run in- cludes the 10k and 2-mile fun run/ walk. Registration begins at 8 a.m., and the run/walk begins at 9 a.m. Pre-registration, before October 11, is $15; after October 11, the registration is $20. For more in- formation call Recreation at 541- 553-3243. A thank you for fair livestock auction Varsity volleyball plays in Junction City. Buffs Cross Country competes on Thursday, October 5 in the Estacada Meet at McIver State Park. Meanwhile, boys soccer trav- els to Molalla. Girls JV and varsity host Molalla at 4 p.m. Volleyball will host Gladstone. Dylan Heath (above) and Hayden Heath (left). This is a thank you that has been some time in coming: Thank you very much to Chilkat Enterprises Inc., and Brad Klann Farms for purchas- ing our 4-H market goats at the Jefferson County Fair Livestock Auction in July. We also want to thank all of the people and businesses that do- nated to the auction and raised the sale prices of our goats. Courtesy the Heath family. We, along with our parents, really appreciate your generos- ity and investment in our futures. Thank you again, Hayden Heath and Dylan Heath Community fitness challenge starts in October The 50 Days of Fitness Com- munity Cardio Challenge is com- ing up in October and November. It’s open to anyone 18 and older who lives or works on the reserva- tion and Jefferson County. There are individual female, male and 4-person mixed team divisions. Registrations will be taken on Monday, October 2 at the Warm Springs Health and Wellness Cen- ter in the kitchen conference room between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m., and at the Jefferson County Public Health Department, 715 SW Fourth Street in Madras between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. The entry fee includes free use of all activities at the Madras Aquatic Center and all activities, except group fitness classes, at the Madras Athletic Club. For more information you can contact Carolyn Harvey at 541- 475-4456, extension 4233. Or email: carolyn.harvey@co.jefferson.or.us Jayson Smith/Spilyay The Madras High School White Buffalos boys varsity football team won in September against Valley Catholic, 19-7. This was the first win for the team in past two seasons. They have a home game this Friday, September 29 at 7 p.m. They are away at Gladstone the following Friday, and then back at home Concern for fish after Eagle Creek fire Communities in and around the Columbia River Gorge are still feel- ing the effects of the Eagle Creek Fire, and so will the river ecosys- tems in the areas that burned. Once significant rains return to Illegal gillnetters busted on Deschutes with 85 salmon Working on complaints of illegal gillnetting on the Colum- bia River at the Deschutes River Sanctuary, Oregon State Police teamed with Washington Department of Fish and Wild- life Enforcement for a night- time river patrol. They caught two people de- ploying gillnets illegally before confiscating 85 chinook salmon and one steelhead. The patrol located a boat operating without required lighting in the sanctuary with three persons onboard. Authorities discovered the boaters had deployed a gillnet longer than 1,100 feet in vio- lation of 800-foot length re- strictions, as well as being in a sanctuary that’s closed to gillnetting year-round. Courtesy Oregon Troopers Fish and wildlife officers with some of the chinook and steelhead confiscated from an illegal gillnetting operation on the Deschutes. Lane Meanus, 26, and Ashley Leslie, 24, both residents of Celilo Village, were arrested for multiple criminal acts. The investigation discovered 85 chinook and one steelhead with a current market value of $3,500. Meanus was lodged at NORCOR on charges of Com- mercial Fishing Closed Waters and cited for Operating a Vessel Without Required Lighting. Leslie was given criminal ci- tations for Commercial Fishing Closed Waters and Taking Fish Without Tribal Identification on Person. Fish and wildlife preservation is crucial to the sustainment and healthy population management efforts to the Pacific Northwest. Anyone witnessing, or with knowledge of fish and wildlife violation, please report via the established tip line. To report a violation or suspicious activity on the reservation, call 541-553- 2001. Or use the tip hotline: 1- 800-452-7888, available 24-7. Tip email: TIP@state.or.us the Pacific Northwest, loose ash and sediment will likely wash down into streambeds and creeks, potentially filling in valuable spawning grounds for salmon. “There is a lot that is unknown about how the fish and the river are going to respond, but we have a lot of scientific research that shows there are some predictable things that we can expect,” said Seth White, a watershed ecologist with Colum- bia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commis- sion. In the short term, White worries how clogged spawning grounds will impact spawning salmon in the gorge, specifically Coho. “There are these threatened populations of Coho who spawn in those streams and their spawning could coincide with timing with the fall rains and their might be some danger with spawning grounds be- ing covered by sediment that is wash- ing down from the fire,” White said. Experts say that it is too early to tell exactly what will happen to the river. White added that because the fire has been spotty in some parts, some streambeds may be filled with sediment, others may see no effects.