Outdoors Rec B Saturday, November 6, 2021 The Observer & Baker City Herald DENNIS DAUBLE THE NATURAL WORLD A brief history lesson in salmon, trout names I magine yourself as a natu- ralist, two centuries ago, when up to 20 million Pacifi c salmon and steelhead returned annually to spawn in the Columbia River Basin. Several species of resident trout also ranged throughout the Columbia and Snake rivers and their tributaries at the time. How would you describe these strange and won- derful fi sh when only one species, the rainbow trout of eastern Russia (Salmo gairdneri), had previously been accounted for? Journal passages from the 1805 Lewis and Clark Expedition alluded to fi ve diff erent salmon and trout west of the Rocky Mountains. Included in their list were “salmon” (chinook salmon), “white salm- on-trout” (coho or silver salmon), “salmon-trout” (steelhead/rainbow trout), “red charr” (possibly sockeye salmon), and “speckled” or “moun- tain trout” (cutthroat trout). Other salmon and trout species were either scarce or the explorers failed to rec- ognize them as diff erent. For example, there was no men- tion of pink or chum salmon when both are seasonally abundant in coastal waters. In their defense, Lewis noted on March 2, 1806, “I have no doubt there are many other species of fi sh ... which we have not had the opportunity of seeing.” In contrast to how newly discov- ered plants and animals were saved for further study, early naturalists had no means to preserve fi sh spec- imens. William Clark, the prin- cipal mapmaker and illustrator of the Expedition, made sketches of only two of 11 fi shes encountered in western waters: the eulachon or Columbia River smelt, and “white salmon trout.” Rarely were any measurements taken. Only when the U.S. Exploring Expedition conducted surveys to determine the most feasible route for a transcontinental railroad did thorough description of salmon and trout of the Pacifi c Northwest take place. Consequently, the taxonomy of various trout and salmon species remained in fl ux through most of the 19th century. Approximately 50 species of western trout were initially cata- logued by early naturalists. The renowned ichthyologist, George Suckley, in an 1861 treatise titled, “On the North American Species of Salmon and Trout,” managed to pare See, Dauble/Page B2 Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Tamaracks blend in with their green coniferous neighbors during the spring and summer, but each autumn these deciduous conifers put on a show as their needles turn yellow-orange before falling off . Tamaracks brighten the Blue Mountains every autumn JAYSON JACOBY ON THE TRAIL W hoever named the Blue Mountains didn’t account for the tamaracks. Perhaps this person, whose identity is lost to history, never saw the mountains during autumn. Because when the tamaracks — a deciduous conifer common in much of the mountain range — are in the midst of their sea- sonal shedding of needles, blue would not seem to be the color most likely to occur to a viewer. Or maybe “Yellow Moun- tains” just didn’t sound right. Tamaracks — formally known as the western larch — not only fail to hold onto their needles year-round like their neighboring fi rs, pines and spruces, but before the needles fall they transition from their usual pale green to gaudy shades of orange and yellow. At the peak of their autumnal show, tamaracks positively glow in contrast to their more dour coniferous cousins. And they have plenty of needles to show off — they’re in bundles of 15 to 30 at the end of each twig, com- pared with, say, pines, which produce from two to fi ve per bundle. A single tamarack in a grove of evergreens is almost as con- Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Tamarack trees brighten the landscape on High Mountain, north of the Anthony Lakes Highway. The pile in the foreground is of trees cut as part of the East Face project, designed to create fuel breaks along roads. spicuous as a candle in the night. But to me the more stirring sight is a hillside where tam- aracks predominate — where their great splashes of brightness briefl y illuminate scenes that for most of the year are compara- tively staid. There is a surfeit of spots around Northeastern Oregon to behold the glory of the tamaracks. They’re suffi ciently profuse on the east slopes of the Elkhorn Mountains, for instance, that even from Baker City, a distance of 10 miles or so, the bands of tamaracks are easy to discern. The eff ect is accentuated by the tamaracks’ preference for a relatively narrow elevation range — generally between about 5,000 and 6,500 feet, although they grow at much lower elevations on cooler, north-facing slopes. From Baker City the tamarack zone is clearly delineated during the month or so when the needles are especially colorful. Typically the show peaks around Halloween. By Thanks- giving it’s likely that most of the needles will have detached, coating the ground with a soft yellow layer that for me is one of the defi ning sights of this part of Oregon. I could no more pick a favorite place to look at tamaracks than I could choose the most stir- ring vista of the Elkhorns or the Wallowas. The options are just too numerous, too compelling. But during a hike on Hal- loween morning in the old Anthony Burn country north of Anthony Lakes Highway, I was reminded that this area is par- ticularly well-endowed with tamaracks. Although the 1960 wild- fi re, which burned about 20,000 acres, left in places a near mono- culture of lodgepole pines, tam- aracks have also thrived in the ensuing decades. See, Jacoby/Page B2 Cove artist’s artwork selected for ODFW contest Debra Otterstein scratchboard piece wins upland game bird stamp art competitions By ANDREW CUTLER The Observer COVE — Debra Otter- stein loves capturing ani- mals and outdoor scenes through a variety of artistic media. One of those pieces, a scratchboard piece of three chukars, will be the face of Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s col- lector stamp series. Otter- stein’s piece took fi rst place in the upland game bird category. She was one of three artists selected, joining Buck Spencer of Junction City and Kathy Peckham of Ridgway, Colorado. “I was so excited,” she said. Spencer, who won the waterfowl category, Otter- stein, and Peckham, who won the habitat conser- vation category, will each receive $2,000 for their winning artwork. “The sales that they get from my artwork help to support their conservation eff orts, and that’s, as a wild- life artist, that’s important to me,” Otterstein said. “I believe in living alongside wildlife, not destroying wildlife. I like their eff ort.” Otterstein, who has lived in Cove for nearly 20 years, has entered the ODFW con- test for several years, but this is the fi rst time a piece of hers has been selected a winner. “I’ve been entering for a few years, and I’ve come in second and third, and so it was wonderful to be selected as the winner,” she said. Otterstein said scratch- board art can be a very labor intensive artistic medium. “I used a white clay- board and added ink that I then scratched off exposing the white clay that I again added ink to,” she said. Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife/Contributed Photo Cove artist Debra Otterstein, with her scratchboard piece of three chukars, won fi rst place in the upland game bird category for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s annual collector stamp series con- “I repeated the process until I achieved the eff ect I wanted.” Otterstein said the medium is very diff erent from painting. Otterstein also does feather painting and acrylic painting on fl at canvas. “A small piece can take up to 20 hours, so that one is quite a large piece, so it took a lot longer,” she said. “I do a lot of diff erent things.” Otterstein, who went to high school in Gooding, Idaho, has been painting since high school. She said it wasn’t until her junior year that she discovered her artistic ability. “I realized, Oh my gosh, I really like doing art and I have some ability for it,” she said. “I didn’t grow up in a family that was artistic, so it was kind of a surprise to me, so I’ve been doing art since then.” The artwork was judged at the ODFW’s Salem head- quarters by independent judges and unfortunately not open to the public, how- ever, the People’s Choice Award for 2022 is now open for online voting until Nov. 8. “We are excited that local artists won both the waterfowl and upland game bird contest,” said Kelly Walton, an ODFW assis- tant game bird biologist. “This is the fi rst Oregon stamp contest win for Debra Otterstein and Kathy Peckham, who have each been entering for several years. Spencer won the hab- itat conservation and upland stamp contests last year, so it is quite the accom- plishment to say that he has now placed fi rst in each of the contests. Although the number of entries was down slightly this year, we had many good entries that made for a tough choice for our panel of judges.”