B Saturday, April 24, 2021 The Observer & Baker City Herald April 17, 2021: 1.6 inches (water content in snow) April 19, 2020: 1.8 inches April 21, 2019: 9.5 inches April 21, 2018: 0 inches IF YOU GO.... From the railroad tracks in Haines: • Drive west on Anthony Lakes Highway for 1.7 miles to the fi rst major corner. Turn left onto Pocahontas Road, then stay right, after about two-tenths of a mile, on South Rock Creek Lane. • Follow paved South Rock Creek Lane for about 3.7 miles, then continue into the mountains when the road turns to well- graded gravel. • Continue on gravel for about 2 miles to a Forest Service sign for Killamacue trailhead and Rock Creek Lake trailhead. The road becomes a dirt track here, suitable for four-wheel drive, high-clearance vehicles. Snowdrifts likely will continue to block the road, at some point below Eilertson Meadow, for at least a few more weeks. A N A PRIL P ILGRIMAGE ■ Replicating the photograph of a snow-measuring station April 22, 2017: 3.1 inches in the Elkhorn Mountains for the fifth consecutive spring T he split-rail fence replicate the photograph near Eilertson took here on April 22, ON THE TRAIL I 2017, Meadow is my the purpose being JAYSON JACOBY favorite enclosure. to compare the snowpack. Not that it’s likely to I’m fascinated by “repeat impede anything that wants to get in. photography” — using pictures, taken from The higher of the two rails is only three the same spot, to illustrate changes over feet or so above the ground, a height that a time. The technique typically catalogs peri- deer or elk would scarcely notice. ods measured in decades rather than years, The fence is the sort more typically but when the subject is not, say, a glacier, but used for decorative rather than protective rather snow that melts every spring, even a purposes. Except this fence isn’t in some- modest span yields interesting results. body’s backyard. It’s in a remote spot in the This April the snowpack looked quite simi- Elkhorn Mountains, a place that for much of lar to the 2017 version. I was a bit surprised, the year is rarely visited by people. though, that according to records from the Which is to say that it’s sort of jarring to measuring station, the water content in the come across this structure, which would be snow in 2017 was almost twice as much as appropriate in an upscale subdivision, in a this year. spot far closer to wilderness than to subur- I don’t know whether a couple of trees bia. could account for the difference, but the My affi nity for this fence, as with many scenes from those two years on this page types of affection, was fostered by familiarity. suggest a possible factor. The fence surrounds an automated In 2017, as the photo at right shows at the snow-measuring station that I’ve hiked to, left side of the fence, were two trees. But by during the same week in April, for the past the next April the two trees, as seen in the fi ve years. My goal, beside getting out in the 2018 photo, were gone. clean air and relishing the inimitable scent See Pilgrimage/Page 6B of sun-warmed pines, fi rs and spruces, is to • From the Forest Service sign, the Killamacue Lake trailhead is 2 miles, and Eilertson Meadow 3.5 miles. The Snotel is just east of the meadow, on the south side of the road “Snotels,” like this one near Eilertson Meadow, measure the water content in the snow by calculating the weight of the snow pressing on a “pillow” fi lled with an anti- freeze liquid. • The Rock Creek Road is a public route. However, it passes through private land near the Killamacue Lake trailhead, and at Eilertson Meadow, so stick to the road. Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative owns the property at Eilertson Meadow, including the cabin at the meadow’s eastern edge. Perusing pellet possibilities: air guns, part 3 As hunters, we all know that we have to experiment to fi nd which ammo shoots the most accurately in our big game rifl es, right? We check different manufacturers, grains of bullets, and designs. A while back I was setting up a Mossberg Patriot Revere .30-06. I mounted on a Riton RT-S MOD 5 4-16x50 WIDE FOV scope. I planned on this setup to be a shooter. But after testing several brands of ammo I still couldn’t get the results that I wanted. Finally, after testing 13 different manufacturers and grains of bullets, I got what I wanted. We know this on our fi re- arms but something that surprised me was that it is just as important to test various manufacturers, BASE CAMP TOM CLAYCOMB shapes and weights of pellets if you want your air gun to shoot accu- rately. Like I said in the fi rst article in this four-part series (published in the March 27 issue), in the begin- ning I could not get better than a 1½-inch group at 15 yards. Finally I got some good air guns and my groups improved immensely, but my quest for accuracy was not yet complete. With air guns we’re hunting small game that have small kill zones so it’s imperative that we get superb Ron Spomer Outdoors/Contributed Photo Pellets come in multiple shapes. Some are more profi cient for hunting but the most accurate are the Diabolo shaped or dome-shaped Diabolo pellets. accuracy out of our air guns. In my quest for accuracy, I then learned that which pellet you choose is as important as buying an accurate air rifl e. You just cannot get a good group with substandard pellets. As an outdoor writer I get to test a lot of pellets. Luckily I met the JSB crew at the SHOT Show and everything fell in place. From what I’ve tested, JSB hands down makes the most accurate pellets. Sig Sauer splits the 2/3 place with Crosman. See Pellets/Page 6B