BAKER GIRLS SOCCER TEAM LOSES CLOSE MATCH AT ONTARIO: PAGE A6 THURSDAY OCTOBER 20–27, 2021 Watch Silent Film Festival Walk Sumpter Dredge Trails Experience Heritage Haunt PAGE 3 PAGE 7 PAGE 16 WWW.GOEASTERNOREGON.COM Eastern Oregon Film Festivalreturns Oct. 21-23 IMDb Filmmaker Anthony Orkin’s “Hello from Nowhere” features Oregon’s landscape (story on page 8). “The food is fresh, locally sourced and unbelievably delicious. Their IPAs are distinct and clearly not copy-cats of each other or anyone else making NW IPAs.” - Yelp Review, Bend. Oregon 1219 Washington Ave • La Grande, OR 97850 www.sideabeer.com GO! Magazine Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com October 21, 2021 IN THIS EDITION: Local • Business & AgLife • Go! magazine $1.50 DROUGHT 2021 Soggy stretch could relieve drought Taking a look at the aftermath of this year’s unprecedented weather Wheat lines the edge of a field on June 23, 2021, as a combine harvester harvests at Starvation Farms outside of Lexington. The farm produced a harvest of 60-70% of average in the wake of this summer’s heat wave and drought. The U.S. Department of Agriculture in September reported Oregon wheat farmers have experienced lower yields for three straight years. FALL 2021 AN EO MEDIA GROUP PUBLICATION Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian INSIDE TODAY: By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com 24-page special section examines the effects on farms and ranches in Northeastern Oregon of a year marked by severe drought and record- setting heat. QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Charles Carey of Baker City. BRIEFING BHS senior class planning party The Baker High School senior class is raising money for its drug- and alcohol-free party. Find more information at bhs- seniorclass.com. Woodland owners planning fi eld tour The newly revitalized Northeast Oregon chapter of the Oregon Small Woodlands Association is planning a free fi eld tour at the Defrees Ranch in Sumpter Valley on Oct. 30 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Although admission and lunch are free, participants are required to register online at https://beav.es/ UYC. The link also includes directions to the Defrees ranch and other details. WEATHER Today 66 / 48 Mostly sunny Friday 56 / 34 Rain showers The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Your weekly guide to arts and entertainment events around Northeast Oregon CUSTOM Creations Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald This pangolin took about 8 hours to fi nish on the 3D printer. Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Patrons can use two 3D printers at the Baker County Library to make a variety of items A 3D printer uses melted plastic fi lament and a heated plate to build creations like this octopus. the printer’s area, and total print time Instructions are located near the can’t exceed 10 or 11 hours. The rea- machines, secure in a book-shaped son for this, Spry said, is she wants The machines are so quiet they’re container created on the 3D printer. to print when the library is open and There are several options to fi nd easy to overlook. staff are available in case the printer But on any given day, chances are designs. has a problem. The website thingiverse.com has the pair of new 3D printers at the “I don’t want to get halfway hundreds of free designs. Simply fi nd Baker County Public Library are through someone’s print and have it the one you want and jot down the building something — an octopus, a not work out,” she said. number. ghost, maybe even a dragon. Signs warning people to not touch For those who want to create an Earlier this month, the library the printers are due to the heat, she original design, Spry suggests the opened its new 3D printing service. said. The fi lament melts at nearly 400 website tinkercad.com — a free 3D The printers, which cost about $160 modeling program that has tutorials degrees Fahrenheit, she said, and the each, were funded from the Maker’s printer bed is about 140 degrees. to help users learn the process. Club budget, said Heather Spry. She’s ordered several colors of Files need to be in the STL format “This is a big thing that a lot of and submitted on a USB drive at the fi lament. Right now, one printer has a libraries are offering now,” she said. bronze-colored plastic, and the other library or by email to 3D@bakerlib. The service is free to patrons. is rainbow. A 3D printer works by using mol- org. For more information about the The library also has a form to fi ll ten plastic fi lament to draw an image 3D printer, stop by the library, 2400 out for each submission. on a heated plate. It builds layer Resort St., or call 541-523-6419. The size of a project is limited by upon layer to create a shell and a honeycomb-like infi ll to lend strength to the structure. Prior to opening the printers for public use, Spry experimented with projects to familiarize herself with the machines. She’s made a ghost-themed chess set, a pangolin that rolls into a ball, and a dragon with a long tail and wings stretched in fl ight. But 3D printing isn’t just for decorations. When the library ran short on plastic hangers to secure the collec- tion of DVD sleeves, Spry made some on the 3D printer. “I designed my own and printed them,” she said. “It took a lot of trial Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald and error.” Library patrons can browse ready-made designs or create their own on So far she’s only had four patrons the 3D printers at the Baker County Library. For details, visit the library submit images to be printed. at 2400 Resort St. in Baker City. By LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com Baker County’s weath- er forecast for the next several days is loaded with four-letter words. One word in particular. And it’s a word typi- cally more conspicuous by its absence in the local forecast than by its preva- lence. Rain. Starting Thursday afternoon, Oct. 21, and continuing through at least Tuesday, Oct. 26, there’s a chance of rain each day and night in the forecast from the National Weather Service. And for several of those periods it’s a pretty good chance, at 70% or 80%. The Weather Service is calling for slightly more than one inch of rain in Baker City from Thursday through Tuesday, with higher amounts in the mountains. For farmers and ranch- ers, a damp conclusion to October would be a most welcome interruption in the severe drought that plagues Baker County and all of Eastern Oregon. One storm, even an un- usually soggy storm, won’t end the drought, said Jay Breidenbach, warning coordination meteorologist at the Weather Service’s Boise offi ce, which issues forecasts for Baker County. See, Rain/Page A3 Bi-Mart pharmacist refl ects on 21 years at Baker store By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Helen Loennig was there the day the pharmacy in the Baker City Bi-Mart store opened. And she’ll be there when it closes, more than 21 years later. Loennig, a pharmacist and the pharmacy manager, said the store opened in August 2000. See, Pharmacy/Page A3 Student singers return to the stage  Choirs performed Wednesday, and BHS band has concert set Oct. 28 By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com Some of Baker City’s best young singers have returned to the stage for the fi rst time TODAY Issue 70, 32 pages in more than a year and a half. And their instrument- playing classmates will be performing soon as well. With the pandemic having a major effect on choirs and bands in Baker schools, a concert on Wednesday evening, Oct. 20 featuring both the Bak- er High School and Baker Business ...........B1 & B2 Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Middle School choirs, the fi rst such performance since March 2020, brought a welcome sense of nor- mality, said choir teacher Tanner Denne. The students were also entertaining their families and friends without don- ning masks while on stage at the Baker High School auditorium. Comics ....................... B5 Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B2 & B4 “We’ve been rehearsing wearing masks all along and this is one of those exceptions that OHA and OSAA has made and, for the moment, when they’re up there singing on stage they can have their masks off and we can see all those — hopefully — smiling faces,” Denne said. Audience members were Dear Abby ................. B6 Horoscope ........B2 & B4 Letters ........................A4 required to wear masks. Denne said the student singers have been able to perform at graduation and smaller school events, but Wednesday’s concert was the fi rst in which students were encouraged to invite their family and friends. The BHS band also has a concert scheduled for Oct. 28 at 7 p.m. in the auditorium. Lottery Results ..........A2 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 SATURDAY — CATCHING UP WITH BAKER’S WORLD SERIES CHAMPION Opinion ......................A4 Sports ........................A6 Weather ..................... B6