Outdoors Rec B Saturday, April 30, 2022 The Observer & Baker City Herald Anglers can increase earnings by catching northern pikeminnows Rewards offered starting May 1 for anglers EO Media Group Mining for morels U.S. Forest Service/Contributed Photo Morel mushrooms in the Umatilla National Forest in 2017. Waiting for the fungi to appear TOM CLAYCOMB BASE CAMP f we can get a light shower and then it turns warm for a couple of days then it should be mushroom season, yippee!! The problem is, you think it’s about to bust loose and then it gets cool. I don’t know what to think and I don’t think the poor lowly mushrooms do either. I Dennis Dauble/Contributed Photo In an eff ort to really lower your self worth, think about it this way. It’s embarrassing enough to get outsmarted by a fi sh with a brain the size of a pea, how much more is it when you get outsmarted by an inanimate object — for instance, a mushroom! As alluded to above, to kick off the mushroom season we need a light rain and then for the temp to get warm for a day or two. With this magic formula, it seems they can pop up overnight. Being a mushroom hunter is the most frustrating and at the same time rewarding outdoor activity there is. I’ve been a mushroom hunter for 43 years. You’d think that I could write a knowledgeable article on the subject but some years I feel like a beginner. It drives me nuts to see some bozo write an article on fi nding morels. According to their article you just have to go out in the woods, look around old logs and then proceed to fi ll a pillow case. I read an article like that and want to brand “BOZO” on their forehead. They’ve obviously gone out one time with someone who knows what they’re doing, found a mess and are instantly setting themselves up as the world’s leading authority on mushroom hunting. A blonde and a black morel, both gathered off Skyline Road in the Blues at 5,800-foot elevation in late May 2020. See, Fungi/Page B2 PORTLAND — Anglers can earn more money by catching northern pikeminnows in the Columbia and Snake rivers this year. The Northern Pike- minnow Sport Reward Fishery, which encour- ages people to catch and turn in the fi sh that eat millions of young salmon and steelhead each year, has boosted the bounty from $5, $6 or $8 per pikeminnow 9 inches or longer, to $6, $8 and $10. It’s the fi rst increase in the reward amounts since 2015. The sport reward season starts May 1 and continues through Sept. 30 in the lower Columbia River (mouth to Priest Rapids Dam) and the Snake River (mouth to Hells Canyon Dam). Anglers will receive $6 for each pikeminnow longer than 9 inches for the fi rst 25 fi sh turned in, $8 for each fi sh from 26 through 200, and anglers who catch at least 200 pikeminnows during the season will get $10 for each additional fi sh. Specially tagged northern pikeminnow released by state fi sh and wildlife biologists into the Columbia and Snake rivers are each worth $200 to $500. In addition to increasing reward amounts, program man- agers are making it easier to participate. Online reg- istration and an app are expected to debut early in the 2022 season. “These tools will make it more convenient for people to participate, par- ticularly those who don’t live near a pikeminnow registration station,” said Eric Winther, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Columbia River Predator Control Program project leader. “Currently, people have to drive to a station and fi ll out paper- work before heading out Gary Lewis/Contributed Photo, File Brian Davis with a morning’s catch of pikeminnow. to fi sh. Registering online or through the app means they can go directly to the river, spend more time fi shing and make one trip to the station to turn in their catch.” Eighteen full-time sta- tions will operate during the fi ve-month season, with two to four additional satellite stations opening later in the season. These satellite stations off er anglers additional pike- minnow harvest opportu- nities in areas with good fi shing during short win- dows of time. Interested anglers are encouraged to get the latest information on the program website, www.pikeminnow.org, before heading out. Since 1990, anglers paid through the program have removed nearly 5 million pikeminnow from the Columbia and Snake rivers. The program is funded by the Bonne- ville Power Administra- tion and administered by the Pacifi c States Marine Fisheries Commission in cooperation with the Washington and Oregon departments of fi sh and wildlife. It has reduced predation from pike- minnow on young salmon and steelhead by approxi- mately 40% since it began. Details on how to reg- ister for the program and applicable state fi shing regulations are also avail- able on the program web- site. Anglers will fi nd resources on the site, including maps, how-to videos and free fi shing clinics, to help boost their fi shing game. For more information visit the program website or call 1-800-858-9015. An author’s Tax Day reward: A publisher LUKE OVGARD CAUGHT OVGARD F ew things are as grat- ifying as a tax refund. We all know it was our money to begin with, but there’s something about going head-to-head with “The Man” and coming out on top that I look forward to every year. My taxes are usually done in Feb- ruary, so the April 15 dead- line (April 18 this year) is meaningless to me — usu- ally. Not this year, though. After almost a decade of paying my dues as a colum- nist, fi ghting writer’s block, angry emails, loss of muse, encroaching deadlines and so much disappointment, I fi nally get my reward on Tax Day. Almost nine years since I penned my fi rst news- paper article, I’m pleased to announce that my fi rst book, “Fishing Across America” has a publisher. Hold for tearful applause. I consider publishing this book the crowning achieve- ment of my life, and it feels a lifetime away from when I fi rst wrote about fi shing in a spiral-bound notebook as a 13-year-old kid or even when I fi rst started writing about sports and fi shing for our local paper a decade after that. Though my last key- stroke was fi nished years ago, the publication pro- cess is far more brutal than the dating scene, and you can expect rejection after rejection while looking for a publisher. Mercifully, convos with two other out- doors writers who each took diff erent paths to pub- lication let me exhaust every opportunity before fi nding my publisher, Ink- shares. Huge thanks to Matthew Miller (“Fishing Through the Apocalypse: An Angler’s Adventures in the 21st Century”) and Kris Millgate (“My Place Among Men”) for talking me off the ledge. Now, you can fi nd that hilarious, heartwarming and weirdly captivating CaughtOvgard content you’ve come to love 600 to 1000 words at a time in just The author’s 2019 road trip was a long one, but it was one of the greatest adventures of his life. Now you can share that journey in his new book, “Fishing Across America.” a few more words centered around my 2019 summer road trip. The book’s outline Longtime readers know what to expect from me: harrowing tales in which I barely escape marginal decisions, epic adven- tures, loads of dad jokes and puns, digestible his- tory, a wide array of fi sh in an even wider array of habitats, food, travel tips, romantic failure and the gripping narra- tive that draws in so many readers who don’t even fi sh. I can promise all of that and more in “Fishing Across America.” The trip that spawned this book almost didn’t happen, but it panned out in the end as I traveled across the country for my cousin Austin Crawford’s wed- ding and saw him united to his wife, Darian. I had a fi shing conference as a rep- resentative for Fishbrain a few weeks later, so rather than fl y twice, I decided to drive and fi ll the downtime with fi shing. It was the road trip of a lifetime that has spawned subsequent road trips every summer since. 46 days. 12,167.2 miles. 122 fi shing stops. 19 states. 2019 fi sh. 211 species. 149 new species. Read about the “Lone- liest Road in America,” a confrontation with poachers who nearly shoot me, wading up alligator-infested creeks, landing massive sharks and tiny minnows, fi ghting drunken tourists for real estate, barely sur- viving Disneyworld and so much more. If you’ve enjoyed being CaughtOvgard all these years, please take a little bit of that tax refund and buy a copy of “Fishing Across America” today. Books are available for preorder today at www. inkshares.com/books/ fi shing-across-america. █ Sign up for every single CaughtOvgard column at www. patreon.com/CaughtOvgard. Read more for free at caughtovgard.com, follow on Instagram and Fishbrain @ lukeovgard or contact luke. ovgard@gmail.com. Thank you for your continued support of local journalism.