Th e Bu l l eTin • Fr iday, a pr il 2, 2021 B9 Steins TOP PICKS Continued from B1 It began: “I have the eerie feeling I’m being watched. I’m hiking solo, pushing up the trail toward Steins Pillar, my senses heightened by the lack of human discourse and an un- derlying hunch that I am not alone out here in the Ochocos. And, of course, I’m not.” Gee, thanks, Jim! Along with the unforgettable lead, I’d also recently received an email from a hiker who’d had a close encounter with a cougar in this area a few weeks ago. Our first taste of snow came as we drove the two miles up Forest Road 500 to the trail- head, a fairly rugged 2-mile stretch, some of it still slick with packed snow and ice, to the trailhead. I marveled that, years ago, we used to do these kinds of drives in a Toyota Si- enna, a great van for a family of five on paved roads, less so on unpaved and rutted forest roads miles from the near- est mechanic. Fortunately, the RAV we drive now did just fine. Expecting the trail to dis- play summer’s mercy when the road hadn’t was Pollyannaish, but proceed we did, Caroline advising me about what to do in the event we ran into a cou- gar. I half-listened as I drove the last little bit to the trailhead parking area, where there was just one other car. Previous visitors had kindly left several primitive walking sticks leaning against a sign at the trailhead, and I opted to grab two of them, using them like poles. Though sunnier sections were summer-dry, I don’t think we were more than a quarter-mile from the trail- head before we started hitting little patches of sun-softened snow. And then we came to a patch with some very large, very fresh-looking paw prints. “Are those cougar tracks?” Caroline asked me. Now let me just say up front that I was raised in a large Southeastern city and have ab- solutely no business rendering judgment on tracks, although my high school mascot WAS a cougar. Other than that, my ex- perience with them is limited, and, I wish I’d snapped a photo but denial has funny affects on a person. “It’s just a dog,” I answered, and noted the sole vehicle we’d seen parked. “Probably those people’s dog.” Never mind that our midsized dog’s prints were a fraction the size of the ones we saw. Then we ran into those peo- ple, a friendly couple by the names of Bob and Raven. I noticed right away We chat- ted with them for a while a lit- tle farther down the trail, Bob warning us of the snow, espe- cially bad closer to the final de- scent to the pillar. “Did you see the cougar tracks?” he asked. Caroline was vindicated. I was chagrined. Paranoia was transmuted into fear. Preventing, surviving an encounter The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife notes that their are some 6,000 cougars living in Oregon. Though en- counters are rare, the ODFW offers tips for preventing a cou- gar encounter: — Stay alert, particularly at dusk and dawn. — Hike in groups … and be noisy about it. — Keep your dog leashed. Free-roaming pets can draw cougars to you. — Don’t feed the wildlife. (That should be a no-brainer, but I once witnessed a man holding out raw chicken to a very wild alligator at a park in Miami.) — Store food in ani- mal-proof containers. And in the event you do WHERE TO EXPLORE East of Bend Horse Ridge — The area about 16 miles east of Bend on U.S. Highway 20 is home to more than 30 miles of trails that criss-cross over the butte area, climbing about 1,300 feet to the top. Great for a winter bike ride or a day hike with trails of varying difficulties and lengths, anyone can find their perfect trail. Prineville Reservoir — Check out the reservoir 14 miles southeast of Prineville before it gets too crowded with ski boats for the sum- mer season. Right now water levels are on the rise and currently are at about 50% capacity. The lake is great for large and smallmouth bass, catfish and crappie as the days warm up. Reynolds Pond — The small 12-acre pond near Alfalfa has a short and easy trail around the circumference of the water and offers nice birdwatching, kayaking and fishing. This little oasis on the edge of the Oregon Badlands also has trails leading into the wilderness area. — Makenzie Whittle, The Bulletin Caroline Jasper/For The Bulletin Stein’s Pillar rises 350 feet above the surrounding forest floor, as seen from the nearby viewpoint. If You Go Getting there: From Prineville, travel east 9 miles on U.S. Highway 26 to Mill Creek Road (Forest Road 33). Travel northeast for 6.5 miles. Turn on Forest Road 3300-500 and continue to signed trailhead. Difficulty: Moderate Cost: Free; no trail fees Contact: 541-416-6500 these things and nonethe- less encounter a cougar, the ODFW advises: — Don’t run. This triggers their chase response — and no, you cannot outrun a cougar. Usain Bolt can’t outrun a cou- gar, which can sprint 50 mph. — Make noise. Speak firmly, yell, clap your hands. — Pick up your children. Don’t turn your back on the cougar, and don’t stoop to do it. — If the cougar seems ag- gressive, raise your arms and try to appear larger. (How you’re supposed to do that while holding your child is not addressed in the ODFW liter- ature.) — If a cougar does attack, fight back. The ODFW recom- mends you carry bear spray, but be aggressive and weapon- ize whatever is at your disposal: rocks, sticks, tools. cue dog, Wichita, on March 7. “Rescue dog” is particularly apt, because in this case, their dog may have rescued Doer- fler and her boyfriend, Philip Aulie. Doerfler and Aulie were hiking to nearby Twin Pillars — half the size but double the fun of Steins — also in the Mill Creek Wilderness. Unlike Jim, Caroline or I, “We had no idea. We didn’t feel eyes on us. Neither of us were paranoid in any way, shape or form,” Doerfler said. “It’s prob- ably because we’re huge idi- ots, because on the trail, we’d seen tracks, and I was like, ‘Oh, look, these dog prints are dif- ferent than our dog Wichita’s. That’s funny — look how dif- ferent they are.’ I didn’t even put it together in my head that those are cougar tracks.” Another sign they didn’t take much notice of: a freshly gnawed deer leg Wichita found beside the trail. And then they came to the point when Wichita became stock still, then bolted after a cougar only 20-25 feet in front of them, Doerfler said. “We didn’t even see it until she was chasing it,” Doerfler said. “The fact that we didn’t ever see it until then is just crazy to me. … She just kind of froze up on the trail for a second, and then bolted, kind of behind a bush and then started chasing it up the hill. We didn’t see it until it was running.” They dashed up the hill af- ter Wichita and the cougar, she said, Aulie getting a ways ahead of her. “I didn’t actually see the cou- gar treed, he did. We were on the hill screaming at Wichita to ‘Come back, come back,’ be- cause she was kind of putting her paws up on the tree where the cougar was. Luckily, she listened and came back, and then we scrambled back down the hill.” They made a great deal of noise “so it wouldn’t follow us,” she said. “We were frantically watching the trees and the trail trying to get out of there as quickly as possible.” Deterred by the snow and the apt trail conditions warn- ing we’d heard from Bob and Raven, Caroline and I made it no closer than the viewpoint located above the last descent to the base of Steins — close, but no pillar. Still, it made for a good lunch and photo spot, even if I was constantly glancing around the rocky perches and nooks. We’ll have to save reaching Steins Pillar for a re- turn trip, hopefully sooner than later — with a large group of tall, long-armed loud peo- ple. For their future hikes, Doer- fler and Aulie are considering buying a baton that emits noise and has an electrified zapper on one end. “We’re looking into gadgets, but I don’t think I’ll be going out anywhere that remote for a while,” she said, laughing. When she does, she’ll have along Wichita. “Oh yeah,” Doerfler said. “She was amazing. We just feel so lucky that she just bolted right into action wanting to protect us. That’s so cool.” e e David Jasper: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com Central Oregon’s Best Kept Secret 265 SE Scott St . in Bend! 541-323-9338 It could happen to you A few days after our hike, I got in touch with Emily Doer- fler, the emailer who’d had the cougar encounter while hiking at a nearby trail with her res- Weekly specials A S ENIOR M OMENT Senior Living Solutions A Senior Moment is committed to personally assisting you with fi nding the right community to meet your needs at no cost to you! • Retirement living • Foster care • Memory/Alzheimer’s care • Nursing homes • Independent living • Assisted living Nancy Gotchy, 541-408-0570 | Tiffany Plagmann, 541-788-3487 www.aseniormoment.us We are 100% local, independent and not affi liated with any single provider network. 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