A18 NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, June 12, 2019 Celebrate Continued from Page A1 midpoint, but the biggest challenge was keeping the tires on the wheelchair rims. Some repair work will be needed before next year’s race. “We are thankful for all that joined us this year and appreciate their time and effort,” Galbreath said. “We awarded first, second and third places, but everyone was a winner in our book.” Parade results Mounted individual First: Grant County Fair Queen Courtney Nichols Second: Jenny Taynton and rider Tyson Mounted group First: Julie Bowling and Amber Britt Second: Baker County Fair and Panhandle Rodeo, Queen Kelsei Kiser with Lady-in-waiting Jaeden For- rey (Nyssa Nite Rodeo), Princesses Laramie and Lavina Kiser Walking group First: Boy Scouts, led by Greg Floyd Second: Kim’s Tae- kwondo, instructor Laurel Coombs The Eagle/Richard Hanners The Eagle/Richard Hanners From left, Amber Britt and Julie Bowling ride in the ‘62 Days parade in Canyon City on June 8. Antique car First: Ron Phillips driv- ing Loyce Phillips Group entry First: Sleep in Heav- enly Peace, led by Susie and Mark Brown Second: Grant Union Class of ‘99 Third: Grant County Snowballers and trail riders Business entry First: Station 62 in “Min- ion” 1972 Volkswagen Bee- tle, with Emma and Tori Second, tie: Saul’s Mobile Pressure Washing with little prospectors May- ley, Emmie and Dalley; and AAA Thunderbolt Fire Ser- vice of Mt. Vernon Third: John Day Polaris Derby car First: Steve and Georgia Patterson Best representation of 1862 First: Whiskey Gulch Gang Honorable mention: Can- yon City Fire Department, John Day Volunteer Fire Department, U.S. Forest Service and Smokey Bear, Grant County Search and Rescue, Canyon Mountain Racers and Coach Shane Koppel’s Grant County Lit- tle League minors baseball tea The Eagle/Richard Hanners Ron Phillips took his mother, Loyce, for a ride in his 1927 Model T during the ‘62 Days parade in Canyon City on June 8. Ranch Continued from Page A1 covered, he said. His approach is to leave each year’s “fall greenup” ungrazed so the third leaf on the tiller can fall to the ground as litter. It’s a tempta- tion to let cattle graze on the fall bunchgrass, but the soil will lose moisture and grass will not fill in the seed drill pattern. Southworth also relies on more intensive grazing — four cows per acre with a hoof print on every square foot to pound that litter into the soil. This is something he learned in just the past few years, he said. Portable electric fenc- ing is used to control stock density by dividing his 100- to 200-acre pastures into smaller sections. Grazing periods are limited to a week or less to minimize rebiting of regrowth. The fact that the seed drill pattern was still visible at this site after seven years and a few years of higher-density grazing didn’t deter South- worth. The missing litter might be the fault of elk graz- ing, he said. Jenni Moffitt, a soil scien- tist with NRCS in Bend, eas- ily dug a 4-foot-deep hole to see the soil conditions. There was very little compaction, and the deep grass roots showed evidence of moisture in the top 6 inches, she said. The soil at one level was “fluffy,” Moffitt reported, to Southworth’s delight. Keeping track Soil moisture probes Committee Volunteers Needed Grant County is now recruiting volunteers to serve on active boards and committees. Obtain an Application to Volunteer from County Court, 201 S. Humbolt, No. 280, Canyon City, OR 97820; (541-575-0059) wrightl@grantcounty-or.gov or online at www.grantcountyoregon.net . Applications are due by Friday, June 28th, 2019 Committees are formal public bodies required to comply with Oregon Public Meetings Law ORS 192.610. Extension & 4-H Service District Advisory Council . Eleven members serve three year terms and meet semi-annually to provide guidance and assistance to local OSU Extension staff in planning, developing, and evaluating balanced educational programs directed to high priority needs of county residents. Membership is limited to one re-appointment. Planning Commission ORS 215.020. Nine members serve four year terms and two alternates serve two year terms, meeting as needed to review land use and zoning applications and discuss city and county growth issues and the siting of new facilities. Members must be residents of various geographic areas within the county and no more than two voting members shall be engaged in the same kind of business, occupation, trade or profession with agriculture designations of livestock / forage crop production and horticulture / specialty crop production. Commissioners serving in this capacity must file an Annual Verified Statement of Economic Interest with the Oregon Government Ethics Commission. Members must re-apply to the County Court before their term ends if they wish to be re-appointed. A growing pile of logs from the Malheur National Forest unsuitable for milling lies waiting to be chipped for processing in the new torrefaction plant in John Day. Plant Continued from Page A1 Quality also gave permission for work on a new boiler system to begin ahead of air quality permit approval, Krumenauer said. A hearing will be held on the permit appli- cation at 6 p.m. Tuesday, June 18, at the Canyon City Community Hall. a higher temperature using a mixture of propane and syn-gas, which is emitted by wood chips during the torrefying process. The belt dryer and torrefier are expected to produce particulate matter, nitrous oxides, carbon monoxide, volatile organic compounds, methanol and visible emissions. A large electrostatic precipita- tor unit will be installed to control partic- ulate emissions. New emissions Forest health Ochoco Lumber Co., which owns Malheur Lumber Co. and is applying for the permit, proposes increasing the cur- rent limit for particulate matter from up to 34 tons per year to 42 and for nitrogen oxides from up to 50 tons per year to 77. The mill is not a major source of hazard- ous air pollutants, according to the DEQ application. As part of the torrefaction proj- ect, plans call for replacing two Wellons wood-fired boilers currently used for heat- ing the mill’s seven lumber-drying kilns with a single Hurst wood-fired boiler that can meet the mill’s current needs as well as those of the torrefaction plant. The Hurst boiler, which was a standby boiler at a timber plant in Mississippi, is more modern and efficient than the cur- rent boilers, so total emissions should be reduced, said Joe Koerner, the operating manager for Restoration Fuels. The same crew that took apart the boiler in Missis- sippi will reassemble it in John Day. New emissions for the site will come from a 15-foot-wide belt dryer, which will be heated by the boiler through a heat exchanger, and the rotary torrefier unit, which take dried wood chips from the belt dryer and heat them into a charcoal-like material. The low-temperature belt dryer will be capable of drying up to 149,000 tons of wood per year. It was designed and will be built by Industrial Mechanical Inc. of Georgia, which sent a crew to oversee the overall construction project. The torrefier came from a mill that produced oriented-strand board, where it was used to dry wood chips. The large tri- ple-pass rotary torrefier will be heated to Restoration Fuels’ overall goal is to support stewardship work on national forests, marketing the smaller diameter logs and twisted or partially rotten logs removed as part of fuel reduction thinning projects. A large supply of logs ready for torre- faction already sit at the mill’s log yard on Lower Yard Road in John Day. The mill’s existing chipping facility will be used to convert the logs into material for the new plant. A machine from Denmark will be used to compress the torrefied wood into bri- quettes or pellets. Much of the mill’s cur- rent pellet plant machinery will remain, but the plant will be reconfigured so the mill can continue to produce white wood pellets and bricks as well as torrefied pel- lets and briquettes. Japan — which has imposed tariffs on power produced by nuclear and coal, making torrefied wood competitive — has shown interest in torrefied wood mass. Restoration Fuels expects to ramp up production at the John Day torrefac- tion plant — the first commercial plant in North America — to more than 100,000 tons per year. “That’s about one log truck or one chip truck of biomass per hour,” Krumenauer said. Proposed plans call for transporting the torrefied wood to a rail line in Prineville, at which point it can move on to domestic or international customers. Comments on the air quality permit are due by June 24. For more information on the air quality permit, visit https://go.usa. gov/xmdjG. For more information about the new torrefaction plant, visit resto- rationfuels.com. could be used to keep South- worth informed in real time, one participant said. South- worth is not averse to high- tech solutions — he has DNA profiles for all his cows and sorts them by the expected progeny differ- ences index. He also tracks how his 50-some pastures are far- ing using formulas on a computer spreadsheet. If he finds unexpected conditions, he can change one figure and see all the other graz- ing dates adjust in line. He can also adjust figures back- wards to account for Forest Service changes in opening dates for grazing on leased land. Southworth said he likes to do his monitoring in Sep- tember, when he evaluates steps he took to improve grasslands by looking at how much stubble was left. At one site, he lined up the 18 participants in a tran- sect and had them march off three steps. About 55 percent of them were stepping on a perennial grass when they stopped, TREAT YOUR FEET which was good. This site was planted in 1984 and litter concealed the seed-drill pattern, but the individual plants were not as big as the site planted in 2012. The question for Southworth was if he should spray this site and till it back up. “I’d prefer to plow,” he said. “Is that now considered a mortal sin even if it’s done just once every generation?” Seed mixing The next site was planted in 2018 with a “forage cock- tail” composed of crested wheatgrass, intermediate wheatgrass, Western wheat- grass, ladak alfalfa, yellow blossom sweet clover and groundhog forge turnip. Forage cocktails can range up to 30 species at a time. Southworth said his mixture cost about $40 per acre, which is more than grass seed alone, but the last time the site saw a plow and seed drill was 40 years ago. So that comes to about $1 per acre per year, he said. He recommended seed- Our Services Include: ing in the spring for high elevation arid places like this. Turnips are an annual that help break up clay soil, Southworth said, some- thing his father read about in 1948. Antelope had eaten the leaves, and only the pale white stalks remained. Back at the shop build- ing, Southworth demon- strated his spreadsheet and the flip board his crew uses to track all their changes. Resting plants is against the ranch’s philosophy, he said. Instead, he is always tweaking figures, tweaking infrastructure. What motivates him, he asked. Some ranch- ers don’t want to make so many changes. Is it a ques- tion of tradition — just leav- ing things the way they were always done? A lot of the ideas he showed the touring pro- fessionals are not based on proven theories, he said. He’s still learning. His father was an intellectual, ranching in different ways than others in Bear Valley. He is con- tinuing that heritage. 541-575-1648 - Skin Inspection Call for an Appointment - Nail Trimming $35 fee - Callus and Corn Reduction - Electric filling of thick, hard to cut nails Services available at - Basic foot care provided by a trained CNA Home Health Office, - Advanced foot care provided by a Certified Foot Care Specialist 422 W. Main, John Day. - Monument/outlying foot clinic every 8 weeks Wolf Depredation Advisory Committee OAR 603-019-0015. Members include one County Commissioner, two members who own or manage livestock and two members who support wolf conservation or coexistence with wolves. These members agree upon two business representatives to serve as additional members. The committee oversees the procedure established by Grant County for its Wolf Depredation Compensation Program. The current vacancy is for one business representative. 125298 Blue Mountain Hospital We provide Basic and Advanced foot care nursing based on current medical FOOT CLINIC bluemountainhospital.org research and professional guidelines. Reduce your risk for foot infection and injury by scheduling with our professional staff today.