BAKER CITY HERALD • TuEsDAY, JuLY 19, 2022 A3 LOCAL Scenes from a sunny Miners Jubilee Memorial BELOW: Entries in the Miners Jubilee parade, including the large American flag, line up beside Baker Middle School on Saturday, July 16, 2022. RIGHT: Kids enjoy a bouncy experience in Geiser-Pollman Park on Friday. This year’s event will fea- ture Agent Orange, a truck that Ralph Tramp, Streifel’s longtime friend, has been competing with for more than 40 years. The truck is named for its bright orange paint and to remember Agent Orange, a defoliant the U.S. military used in Vietnam that has sickened many veterans. Tramp is a Vietnam veteran. Other competitors will include a five-engine and three-engine tractor, as well as a twin jet-powered trac- tor, Streifel said. Tractors will be dis- played Friday morning at the Baker City NAPA auto parts store and at the Baker City Auto Ranch, both on 10th Street. For rules or pre-entry information, call Streifel at 541-379-5174. Continued from A1 Photos: Baker County Chamber of Commerce/Contributed; Ian Crawford/Baker City Herald “There’s a method to it, there’s a system to what we do. You are making split second decisions and you’re executing those decisions to hopefully slip in there and protect a guy.” Bullfighters Continued from A1 Crenshaw sums up the gig as simply “saving cowboys.” On Saturday, Crenshaw and his fellow bullfighters, Matt Akers and Danny New- man, worked in coordination to distract heated bulls from downed riders with the goal of preventing injury to the rider, the bull, or themselves. Unlike the bull riding event — and unlike other forms of bullfighting involving swords and matadors or free- style bullfighting — this crew wasn’t competing in any way. Akers, a 36-year-old who’s been bullfighting for 13 years, said that even though the fighters try to draw the bull’s attention to themselves, the job isn’t about being a “show- boat.” “We stay quiet when we have to be,” Akers said. “You could be running out there and make rounds when you don’t have to, and you could have a situation where you bring the bull back to the bull rider because you are just fo- cused on that bull.” The fighters never engaged with the bulls until necessary — often, the bull would buck or run its way out of the arena on its own. Only when a bull moved toward a rider would the fighters step in. How to head off a bull Akers said the trio used what he described as a North- west style of bullfighting, which involves using a tactic called “head and tailing” — one fighter entices the bull forward while another hovers around its backside, causing the territorial beast to spin in circles, unable to pick one target. They might sometimes stay quiet, but the fighters are hard to miss. Each wore a long-sleeve shirts with bright red mark- — Bullfighter Matt Akers Clayton Franke/Baker City Herald All three bullfighters in action, from left to right, Matt Akers, Danny Newman and Jackal Crenshaw, on Sat- urday, July 16, 2022. ings to catch the eye of the bull, and two fighters — Crenshaw and Newman, who’s 51 — wore traditional loose-fitting denim skirts, called baggies, which allow the bull to make contact with cloth instead of the skin and bones of the fighter. The fighters all wear pro- tective vests and some form of a hockey girdle, also for pro- tection. And to complete the outfit, Crenshaw wears clown-like face makeup to accompany his waxed blonde mustache, carrying on the tradition of when bullfighters also served as the entertainment during the down time of rodeos. Crenshaw, despite being the youngest of the three fighters at 24, said he likes to “keep it old school” with his outfit. While most everyone in- volved with the rodeo wore flat-bottomed cowboy boots on Saturday, the three fighters donned footwear with molded rubber cleats for traction. The cleats help the fight- ers perform the quick, ath- letic movements necessary to evade charging bulls. Akers has a background in boxing Clayton Franke/Baker CIty Herald Bullfighters Matt Akers, left, and Danny Newman, rest between rounds in the bull riding competition Saturday, July 16, 2022, at Baker County Fairgrounds. and mixed martial arts, sports that require fast feet and movements in short bursts, as does bullfighting. Crenshaw said that while he can’t outrun a bull in a straight line, he’s much more nimble than the bulky crea- tures. All he has to do is run Weather Quakes Continued from A1 Continued from A1 But statistically speaking, temperatures typical of sum- mer pretty much coincided with the solstice on June 21. For the first 20 days of June, the average high temperature was 68.3. For the rest of the month it was 83.2. Prior to the solstice, the temperature reached 80 de- grees only once in June. After, the high was 80 or above on seven of 10 days (and 79 on another). The atmospheric spigot that dripped frequently on the area from early April through early June has been turned off, as well. Since the solstice, just 0.02 of an inch of rain has been measured at the airport — scarcely enough to dampen the ground. The National Weather Ser- vice is forecasting similar weather through at least the coming weekend, with high temperatures ranging from the upper 80s to low 90s and no rain. Just a few earthquakes with mag- nitudes larger than 3.0, which only cause minor shaking, have occurred in Baker Valley in the past 150 years, according to a DOGAMI publication. But that doesn’t mean the seis- mic and geologic nature of the valley shouldn’t be investigated on a deeper level, McClaughry said. The most valuable and respected source of local news, advertising and information for our communities. eomediagroup.com Baker Valley’s geological history The valley is what geologists call a graben — a German word meaning trench or ditch — a slab of the Earth’s crust situated below two other adja- cent landmasses. In Baker Valley’s case, those higher chunks of crust are the Elkhorn Mountains to the west, and the much lower hills rising east of the valley. Those hills, made up of volcanic basalt 10 to 12 million years old, are a relatively young part of the Columbia River Flood Basalts, a massive out- pouring of lava, much of it erupting from vents in the Wallowa Mountains, that flowed west along the current route of the Columbia River. These basalts, which are a few thou- sand feet thick in places, were later cut through by the Columbia River, and the dark brown rocks make up the towering slopes of the river’s gorge. Some basalt flows extended to the Pacific Ocean, where they form some prominent headlands. McClaughry uses the analogy of three building blocks to describe the relationship between the valley and the adjacent mountains or hills. The valley is the middle block, and it’s dropping, at the imperceptible rate of most geologic movements, relative to the mountains. It’s this slippage — friction be- tween adjacent chunks of crust that on a curve, and even with the bull’s horns tailing inches be- hind his rear end, he’ll lose the animal. Sheer athleticism allows the fighters to protect riders and themselves in many scenar- ios, but according to Akers, certain situations require a pre-calculated and coordi- nated effort. When competitor Wyatt Covington fell from his bull during one of his rides Satur- day, something unusual hap- pened. Instead of hitting the dirt, his hand got stuck un- der the flat braided rope that riders use to hold the bull, leaving his body dragging on the ground while the bull at- tempted to shed the rider. Getting the bull to spin in this case, as the fighters typi- cally try to do, would have left Covington underneath the animal. Instead, the fighters got the bull to “line out” or continue in a straight line. It wasn’t until all three yanked on the rope — that’s when the bull’s horn probed Crenshaw’s ribs — that Covington’s hand popped out, leaving him un- injured. “I haven’t seen a guy get stuck that bad in a long time,” Akers said. The frenzy might have seemed like a random scrum to some in the audience that packed the grandstand and bleachers, but Akers says that’s far from the truth. “There’s a method to it, there’s a system to what we do,” Akers said. “You are mak- ing split second decisions and you’re executing those deci- sions to hopefully slip in there and protect a guy.” Remembering Mabry Anders, who was buried with full military honors at the Haines Cemetery, has been honored with a sign designating Milepost 36 on Highway 7, between Baker City and Sumpter, as Mabry Anders Memorial Highway. Anders’ mother, Gene- vieve Woydziak of Baker City, said the Powder River in that area was a favorite fishing spot for her son. He and his family spent part of a day there before he was deployed to Afghanistan. Anders was born in Yuma, Arizona, on July 22, 1991. After graduating from high school he en- tered the U.S. Army in Jan- uary 2010. He served in South Ko- rea from June 2010 to June 2011. In March 2012 he deployed to Afghanistan where he was a driver for two route-clearing pack- ages. He was killed in ac- tion at Kalagush. Anders’ convoy hit a roadside bomb, and while he was looking for other bombs he was fatally shot. In a biography on the Facebook page for the Spc. Mabry James Anders Me- morial Foundation, he is described as a “fun-loving young man” who “lived life to the fullest.” “Mab loved the out- doors, riding dirt bikes, off-roading in his jeep, horseback riding and fly- ing helicopters,” the biog- raphy goes on. “His humor, strong sense of friendship, encouragement and com- passion touched many lives. Mabry was dedicated to his family, friends and his brothers-in-arms. He loved serving his Country and those he served with. A friend quoted Mabry as saying, ‘If you want to learn something in this life, learn how to live!’ ” Kathy Orr/Baker City Herald, File Faults along the base of the Elkhorn Mountains have caused Baker Valley to drop, and the mountains to rise, over millions of years. When the Earth’s crust slips along those faults, earthquakes result. Geologists hope to study the faults within the next several years to learn more about the history of quakes in the valley. occasionally is released — that causes earthquakes along what geologists call faults. According to a 2017 USGS report partially authored by McClaughry, the fault on the western edge of the val- ley, at the foot of the Elkhorns, is the most recently active, in geologic time anyway. The report says this fault has cre- ated roughly 3,000 feet of vertical displacement over the past 7 million years — the reason for the Elkhorn’s prominence, with the highest peak, Rock Creek Butte, rising more than 5,000 feet above the valley floor. Additionally, there’s evidence of fault activity there within the last 2.5 million years, meaning the fault can be considered “potentially active,” Mc- Claughry said. Light Detection and Ranging (LI- DAR) evidence shows some other, smaller faults near the Elkhorns to be 120,000 years or younger, based on the fact that they cut through similarly aged glacial deposits. Detailed geologic studies planned With other statewide geologic stud- ies completed, McClaughry said Baker County is near the top of the state’s priority list for a survey using current technology. “The target goal within the next five years is to begin the project,” Mc- Claughry said. “Then it would take us about three to four years to complete an adequate geologic assessment of the larger Baker Valley.” USGS geologists would use high-resolution mapping and geo- physics to get a better understanding of rock formations in the valley, as well as what’s underneath them. Mc- Claughry and his colleagues from the federal agency will be able to see fur- ther into earth’s crust and potentially recognize different types of fault sys- tems — or potentially new faults they didn’t know existed. “There are certainly ones buried at depth below the valley, beneath the river fill, that we don’t know their lo- cation, orientation or what they look like,” McClaughry said. They’ll also get a better understand- ing of when the faults were last active, if they are still active, how big the po- tential earthquakes could be and what type of risk that might pose to the valley. “You want to know two things: what is the largest earthquake that could develop, and how often do they occur,” McClaughry said. “I don’t have the answer to that at this point.” That is vital data, because the mag- nitude of a quake largely determines the severity of damage. In Baker City, older, unreinforced multistory stone buildings, of which there are many in the historic down- town district, are particularly vulnera- ble to shaking.