OUTDOORS & REC SATURDAY, MAY 23, 2020 GEOCACHING Continued from Page 1B Max, as many boys do who are years away from being able to drive, has a sense of curiosity that’s both catholic and intense. Just lately his two obsessions — or at least the two that occupy most of his (and his parents’) time — are geocaching and microscopes. He recently acquired a portable microscope that allows him to pur- sue both interests simultaneously. There is of course an app for geocaching. Actually there are probably doz- ens of geocaching apps, but the one Max downloaded onto his mother’s phone is the one we employed on the Saturday we drove to Stump Spring Butte. My initial plan was to hike the road that follows the spine of Windy Ridge toward the Burnt River. But Max insisted that I check the app for nearby geocaches, and sure enough there was a bright green icon on Stump Spring Butte, less than a mile from Windy Ridge. Much too close, and convenient, to bypass, in other words. We headed to the butte fi rst. I had climbed to the top, where a fi re lookout once stood, but that was years before the Cornet-Windy Ridge fi re swept through in August 2015. The fi re, and subsequent salvage logging, had so changed the land- scape that I scarcely recognized the area. Or at least that was my excuse when I drove past an important junction and Lisa had to set me straight by consulting the geocache app, which also has a detailed map showing roads. A road gets to within a half-mile or so of the summit, so it didn’t take us long to reach the boulders and start looking for what the geocache’s Olivia Jacoby /For the EO Media Group Larkspur sort that, when you’ve wedged most of your upper body into them, can induce claustrophobia. It’s all too easy to imagine one stone shifting a creator described as a “camo lock- few inches, leaving you in a painful box.” and precarious position and ponder- I was a trifl e worried by the ing how easy it might be to amputate “camo” part, what with the purpose your arm with a pocketknife. of camoufl age being to make sure All four of us combed the plateau, something is not found. fanning out from the spot where Nor was I encouraged by the lack Lisa’s phone said the cache ought to of specifi city in the ostensible loca- be. tion of the geocache. Max’s disappointment was degrad- It was described as being “near” ing into despondency. I tried to con- the site of the lookout but that sole him, noting that we had made a was no help at all because there’s thorough search and anyhow maybe nothing — no crumbling foundation somebody stole the cache. blocks, no weathered boards — to He didn’t seem mollifi ed but he did indicate where the building stood. take the lead on the hike back to the Ray Kresek, who wrote a fi ne book rig, stomping through the woods. about fi re lookouts in Oregon and Within a half hour or so Max’s Washington, determined through mood had improved — a 9-year-old’s his research that the 32-foot tower attitude being as unpredictable as on the butte was built in 1934 and the waves in an unsettled sea. “destroyed” in 1963. It helped that he had the foresight I can’t say how thorough those to step outside the car before twist- assigned the destruction were in ing the cap on his bottle of Sprite, their efforts, but it appears that any which, agitated by the decrepit roads, recognizable remnants which might fountained a fan of lemon-lime foam. have survived the 1963 purge were His sister, however, uncapped her done for by the fl ames of 2015. bottle while we were driving, with (The geocache, according to the predictably sticky results and the app, had been placed since the sort of gloating opportunity that blaze.) younger brothers crave. The rock formations that comprise We had a nice hike out Windy the butte’s high point, although Ridge for a couple miles, reveling in interesting to look at, are lousy with the expansive views of the Burnt cunning hiding places. River Canyon and exclaiming with Some of these crevices are the delight when Max spotted the Lisa Britton /For the EO Media Group Heartleaf arnica’s blossoms brighten fi re-blackened forests. THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD — 3B distinct and beautiful blossom of the bitterroot. The next day we drove out to Sumpter Valley and then up into the Elkhorns, our destination the lime quarry along Baboon Creek. This is a fascinating place to visit even when you’re not looking for a geocache. The Blue Mountain Lime Compa- ny gouged the slopes between 1963 and 1971, according to a report from the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries on the state’s limestone deposits. The Baboon Creek quarry was the second the company mined in the Elkhorns. The fi rst site, on Marble Creek on the east side of the raange, opened in 1958. The rock was processed into industrial lime at a plant about 5 miles north of Baker City, south of Wingville Lane and just west of the railroad tracks. The plant closed more than 40 years ago but snowy- white piles of lime remain — they’re quite distinctive even from the summit of Elkhorn Peak, more than 5,500 feet above. Although limestone mining ceased long ago, the benefi ts of Blue Mountain Lime’s operation remain. The company was responsible for building the road that crosses the Elkhorns at Marble Creek Pass, the southern terminus of the Elkhorn Crest National Recreation Trail and one of just two roads — the other be- ing the Elkhorn Drive Scenic Byway — that cross the spine of the range. The road was a haul route for limestone trucks bringing rock from the Baboon Creek quarry over the Elkhorns and down Marble Creek to the processing plant. I’m not sure Max cared much about this history. But he was awfully interested in the geocache that the app told us was located near the top of the quarry. Lisa and I were leery, fearing a repeat of the previous day’s failure. We needn’t have worried. The cache — a plastic container — was conspicuously placed against the base of a fi r. Max dug into the contents, an eclectic mix that included a couple of granola bars, a handwarmer and a candy ring pop that Olivia dearly wanted to take. We poked around on the wide, fl at terraces the miners hacked into the hillside. The quarry, never patented, is public land. It’s an intriguing part of Baker County’s mining history — in part because it’s comparatively recent. And because the nature of mining limestone is quite different from tun- neling into the ground to intercept a vein of gold that might be only a foot wide the quarry, which extends for several hundred vertical feet and even more width, is considerably more prominent than a lode mine, many of which have caved in at the entrance anyway. Mining limestone economically requires both quantity as well as quality. The Baboon Creek quarry is vis- ible from miles away, a blatant patch among the dark green forests, some- times gray and sometimes nearly white depending on the perspective and the angle of the sunlight. We’ll likely be out this weekend, chasing the snow as it recedes up the mountains. (Although the storm earlier this week at least temporarily reversed that seasonal shift — about a foot of snow fell in parts of the Wallowas and Elkhorns.) Wherever we go I’m certain of one thing. Max will make sure the app is up and running, luring us to another green icon on the word of someone we’ve never met and probably never will. 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