LOCAL A2 THE WEST A5 HOME B1 EOU receives money to help rural students Groups seek to combat wolf poaching Strawberry ice cream sandwiches IN THIS EDITION: LOCAL • HOME & LIVING • SPORTS Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com TUESDAY, JULY 5, 2022 • $1.50 Creative campers QUICK HITS ————— Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Michele Cantrell of Baker City. BRIEFING ————— Nominees sought for Baker County Fair Family First camp at Eastern Oregon Museum combined art, history, even gold panning Baker County Friends of the Fairgrounds are seeking nomi- nees for the 2022 Fair Family of the Year. Nominations are due by July 10. Nomination letters can be emailed to bakercity- friendsofthefair@gmail.com. BY LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com Chastain receives $2,500 scholarship Connor Chastain, a 2022 Baker High School graduate, has received a $2,500 scholar- ship to attend trade school. The scholarship is from the Oregon Trail Electric Cooper- ative Member Foundation. The money is from unclaimed capital credits. Applications for trade and lineman school schol- arships are open year-round. To apply, go to www.otec.coop/ scholarships. Volunteers needed to help with library book sale July 14-17 Friends of the Baker County Library need volunteers to help sort books and to work as ca- shiers during the book sale July 14-17. Volunteers can sign up at the library, 2400 Resort St., or by calling Jen at 541-519-7828. Baker County Garden Club to meet July 6 The Baker County Garden Club will meet July 6 at 10:30 a.m. at the Eastern Oregon Museum, 610 Third St. in Haines. Please bring a sack lunch. Water and chairs will be provided. New members are always welcome. WEATHER ————— Today 81/50 Partly sunny Wednesday 83/53 Partly sunny Full forecast on the back of the B section. Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald A yearling male black bear in a birch tree on the east side of Foothill Drive in Baker City on Sunday morning, July 3, 2022. Bearly hanging on Crowd applauds as young black bear safely extricated from a tree along Foothill Drive HAINES — Cayden Sandberg is a bundle of impatient energy. When he finally gets the nod from Jes- sie Street, Sandberg gently extracts his paper from beneath the glass and takes it to a pan of water. He rinses. ...and rinses and rinses some more. The paper turns a brilliant blue with white designs created by objects placed on the “I just want the light-sensitive paper. kids to have Satisfied with his work of art, Sandberg fun and have lays it in the sun to something to take dry, then quickly of- fers to help someone away from it.” else create their own creative piece. — Logan Nedrow, co- This art lesson was director of the Haines part of the Haines Museum Camp Museum Camp held June 27-30 at the Eastern Oregon Museum. This is the first such camp offered at the museum, and it was directed by Logan Nedrow and Chris Aldrich. “It’s to pique their interest,” Aldrich said as she helped youngsters thread string through a button to create a whirligig toy. Aldrich is a board member for the museum and youth outreach volunteer. Nedrow, a 2019 graduate of North Powder See Campers / A3 BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com It was a perfectly ordinary sum- mer Sunday morning on Foothill Drive, until the bear arrived. The yearling male black bear’s appearance a little before 8 a.m. on July 3 gave residents in the south Baker City neighborhood an unusual bit of excitement on the holiday weekend. This show didn’t involve fire- works, although there was a tran- quilizer dart gun. Lasted longer, too — more than two and a half hours elapsed while a state wildlife biologist, po- lice from three agencies and other officials worked to bring the bear down from its perch about 25 feet up in a birch tree, place the ani- mal in a cage and drive it out of town to be released in the wild. A crowd of about 20 people who had watched the incident, many of them Foothill Drive res- idents, clapped and cheered, with yells of “good job” and “thank you” resounding as the episode concluded with no injuries, either human or ursine. Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Brian Ratliff, center, with white hat, wildlife biologist for the Oregon De- partment of Fish and Wildlife, loads a black bear into a cage on Sunday morning, July 3, 2022. Brian Ratliff, district wild- life biologist at the Oregon De- partment of Fish and Wildlife’s (ODFW) Baker City office, who shot the bear with a tranquilizer dart, said with a chuckle that it was his first standing ovation. Ratliff helped load the bear into the cage on a trailer connected to his ODFW pickup truck. He estimated the bear weighed about 150 pounds. Bruin runs from golf course The episode started when the bear was seen at Quail Ridge Golf Course, on the hill directly west of Foothill Drive. The Baker County Dispatch Center received a call about the bear at 7:51 a.m. Julie Bouchard, who lives at 235 Foothill, on the west side of the street, said she had just let out three dogs, one of her own and two belonging to her daugh- ter-in-law, Megan Cloyd, when she heard someone yelling, from the golf course, about a bear. Bouchard, fearing an ur- sine-canine tussle, quickly brought the dogs inside — Louie, her boxer-bulldog mix, and Cloyd’s black Labradors, Lola, and Lola’s daughter, Sammy. See Bear / A3 The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. ‘Doc’ Bryant reflects on life at 97 His story includes a stint chasing German submarines during World War II BY IAN CRAWFORD icrawford@bakercityherald.com H. Hiram “Doc” Bryant lights up when he speaks of life. He swings his hands animatedly, and spends a fair deal of his energy smiling in conversation. From the outside, it might ap- pear he lives an almost spartan life, but within Doc’s story is a sea of experience, vast as the blue At- lantic. When Doc was born in Septem- ber 1924, the Soviet Union was turning two. Hitler was in prison draft- ing “Mein Kampf,” and Calvin Coolidge was about to become president. The twenties roared then as they roar now. TODAY Issue 23 12 pages Ian Crawford/Baker City Herald H. Hiram ‘Doc’ Bryant of Baker City will turn 98 in September 2022. The world was bracing for fierce change, but for Doc it was to come even sooner. “In 1937 my dad and I, and a neighbor man and his son, went fishing,” he said. “We had never taken a round bottom boat, like a canoe, we had a bigger boat, but it Classified ....................B2-B4 Comics ..............................B5 Community News.............A2 Crossword ...............B2 & B4 Dear Abby .........................B6 Horoscope ..............B2 & B4 was getting crowded. Dad insisted on taking the little boat (alone). He was a stock man for Stude- baker. Loved hunting and fishing, he was a good Dad.” “We went on ahead around (the lake island) with the big boat and were fishing, and I heard a holler. I told my buddy, Kaiser, and I said, ‘that’s Dad.’ ” His friend disagreed. “No, that sounded like a cow.” But Doc insisted they go back, and they found his father had indeed rolled out of the canoe, and the current carried it away from his reach as he attempted to swim. His straw hat and cane pole were left floating in the lake. He drowned at age 39. “It left Mom with five kids, and I’ve carried that burden all my life,” Doc said, his voice wavering. “Mom never remarried, but she raised us.” See ‘Doc’ / A3 Jayson Jacoby ..................A4 Lottery Results .................A2 News of Record ................A2 Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Emma Bain, 9, tried out the whirligig toy she made at the Eastern Oregon Museum camp on Tuesday, June 28, 2022., Weiser, Idaho, woman dies in crash in Hells Canyon Baker City Herald A Weiser, Idaho, woman died on Friday, July 1 after the car she was driving crashed and went into Hells Canyon Reservoir north of Oxbow. Jewel Kay Salley, 77, died in the accident. She was alone in the vehicle. The incident was reported to Baker County Dispatch at about 9:31 p.m. on Friday. Several people reported a vehicle rolling on the Or- egon side of the reservoir along Homestead Road, and traveling down an embankment into the water. Baker County Sheriff’s Office deputies re- sponded along with the Halfway/Oxbow am- bulance. Deputies searched the area but didn’t find anyone. Witnesses told deputies they didn’t see anyone get out of the vehicle, which was sub- merged in about 20 feet of water. Divers from the Baker County Search and Rescue team arrived early on Saturday, July 2. The car was removed from the water, and dep- uties found Salley’s body. She was driving south on Homestead Road, toward Oxbow, when, for an unknown reason, the car went off the road, according to a press release from the Sheriff’s Office. The Sheriff’s Office thanked the Halfway/ Oxbow ambulance, Baker County Search and Rescue and Halfway Towing and Repair for assisting in the incident. Opinion .............................A4 Outdoors ...........................B1 Senior Menus ...................A2 Sports ...............................A5 Turning Backs ..................A2 Weather ............................B6