B Saturday, March 27, 2021 The Observer & Baker City Herald Spring Hiking In The Sage Country East Of Baker City Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Looking northeast down the west fork of Ritter Creek and across Keating Valley to the Wallowas. B UGS AND B UTTERCUPS T he buttercup and the tick are cousins. Not literally, of course. A wildfl ower and an arachnid stand about as far apart, on the spectrum of living things, as, say, the sala- mander and the Sitka spruce. Nor is taxonomy the only area in which this pair makes for an odd couple. Buttercups are beloved. Their glossy yellow blos- soms, beaming from the scant shelter of a sagebrush, herald spring’s arrival as surely as the frigid north wind and The Masters golf tournament (al- most always, anyway, with the latter bellwether; we’ll give Augusta a mulligan for 2020). Ticks, by contrast, are despised. In common with most sorts of bloodsucking organisms — leeches, vampires, head lice — ticks provoke in many people a deep revulsion, a loathing that overrides their normal attitudes. My 10-year-old son Max, for instance, hates to see almost anything suffer, including insects and other “lesser” creatures. Max was disgusted with me when I accidentally hit a small bird while we were driving, and he was not persuaded by my argument — compelling though I believe it was — that it was purely an accident and besides, our sedan isn’t nearly so nimble as a bird in fl ight. Yet when Max found a tick on his neck the other day — still crawling, not embedded — he exhorted me to take it outside and burn it, as I had done one other time. Flush- ing the bug down the toilet ON THE TRAIL JAYSON JACOBY was not suffi ciently harsh, by Max’s way of thinking. The tick had hitched a ride on Max earlier in the day while we were hiking in the sagelands east of Baker City. I picked the place not only because it’s just a 20-minute drive from our home, but because I was pretty sure we would see some new butter- cups. Which we did. Along with clumps of another yellow denizen of dry places, the desert parsley. This intersection of the buttercup and the tick, the potential to both revel in nature’s beauty and to be infested with vermin, is only one of the tradeoffs inherent to early spring hiking in our elevated corner of Oregon. There is the matter of mud. The gumbo common to the sage steppe is a particularly foul concoction, a viscous stew of soil and gravel that can thwart even knobby off- road tires and cling to boots with a disturbing tenacity. In the worst conditions, one stride can saddle each boot with a pound or so of slippery muck. Desert roads are most prone to turning into quag- mires when the frost is going out of the ground, usually sometime in March depend- ing on elevation and slope aspect. I’ve been turned back, by roads the approximate consistency of half-congealed oatmeal, on many otherwise fi ne spring days. east of Baker City. From Interstate 84 at Exit 302, drive east on Highway 86, toward Richland, Halfway and Hells Canyon, for about 5 miles. Just beyond the turnoff to the Oregon Trail Interpre- tive Center (north), turn right (south) onto Ruckles Creek Loop, a well-maintained gravel road. Drive east for about 6.7 miles. For much of the distance the Bureau of Land Management’s Virtue Flat Off-Highway Vehicle Area borders the road on its left side. Just beyond a ranch with a distinctive horse corral made of old tires, turn right onto Love Reservoir Road, marked by a small white sign (distinguished from the more offi cial, and larger, green sign for Ruckles Creek Loop). Love Reservoir Road is rougher, with ankle-deep ruts in places that betray its sometimes muddy condition. This is a road to avoid when it’s not dry. Follow the road about 2.9 Lisa Britton/For the Baker City Herald miles. Just before the road Sure signs of spring: buttercups (left) and desert parsley. drops into a canyon, a narrow track bears off to the right, to- Which are themselves fi xture hereabouts. Skies tend mountain ranges — the Wal- ward the ridge that forms the relatively rare. to clear in the front’s wake. lowas and the Elkhorns — in a divide between the Powder That chilly north wind I But as the low atmospheric more fetching perspective. The and Burnt River drainages. mentioned earlier is another pressure slinks southeast into topography is relatively gentle, The Oregon Trail crossed this occasional spring irritant — Idaho and Utah, hauling off but even the modest knolls ridge a mile or so farther west. especially to eyes, like mine, the clouds and precipitation, have the sort of vista that real We hiked this road, which burdened by rigid contact the wind — which is just air estate developers covet. climbs very gently, for about lenses. moving from high pressure Fortunately there’s little a mile and a half, to a locked It’s nefarious, that wind. toward low — freshens. chance that these minor gate at the fence that marks The most blustery days, Yet for all the potential summits will ever be capped the boundary between public perversely, also tend to be the impediments — bugs and by mansions — a goodly por- and private land. The creek sunny days that entice us mud and gusts — the allure of tion of the ground is publicly just to the east is a fork of outdoors after the long months snow-free ground is powerful. owned. Ritter Creek. of ice and snow. The area east of Baker City Our destination on the day For a better view, climb This meteorological phe- beckons for reasons other than of Max’s tick encounter is the unnamed butte that rises nomenon results from the pas- buttercups. between Virtue Flat and Love west of the road and is also sage of cold fronts, a seasonal Few places put our great Reservoir, about a dozen miles publicly owned. A scratched airplane flight prompts column about air guns I got up on a and herded us recent morning into a long line BASE CAMP at 4 o’clock, ran for rebooking. TOM CLAYCOMB to the airport Five hours later and jumped on I’m back home a plane heading where I started. to the inaugural Shooting Sports The plan was to meet Fred Showcase in Alabama. We boarded Rielhl, a good buddy of mine and and it quickly became apparent the publisher of AmmolandShoot- that something was wrong. An hour ingSportsNews, in Atlanta. From and a half later they deboarded there we’d run over to Alabama a day early. There’s a park where you can shoot howitzer cannons and drive tanks. Scratch that item from the agenda. Oh well, I got to go home and be with Katy one more day. I was going to write my article for the next week on the four-hour fl ight so I’ll also get that done while at home. I sat down to plan what topic to cover and sud- denly it hit me. I’ve never written a series of air gun articles for the papers! Wow, how did I let that one slip by me? I’m big time into air guns. I’ve tested air guns for a lot of the major air gun companies, been on Prostaff with one of the major ones, hunted big game with the big Umarex .50 cal. Hammer, etc. etc. So I’d like to encourage you to check out some of the modern air guns. I won’t be able to do air guns justice in one small article so I’m go- ing to do a two-part or maybe even a four-part series to pique your inter- est. (That is unless some other hot topic pops up in the meantime, like whistle pigs attacking school kids at their bus stop, in which case I’ll have to do my civic duty and write about that). See Air Guns/Page 6B