NEWS MyEagleNews.com Wednesday, May 5, 2021 A9 Contributed photo When it comes to fi rewood, it’s better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it. SHOOTING THE BREEZE Woodpile lessons was 8 or 9 years old when doesn’t hold a fi re for very my father bequeathed me long compared to the others. Each night I would the chore of get- ting the family fi re- load up a toboggan wood from the stack and drag a few loads to the porch each of wood to the front night. Dad had been a porch of our home in timber feller for a long Spray. I would stack time until an accident the fi rewood about nearly left him crip- chest high there, Dale Valade pled. After almost and that would typ- two years of crutches, ically last the night. casts, braces, surgeries and One time I got lazy and didn’t physical therapy he was prac- stack as much as normal. Dad tically the six million dol- inquired if I was going to put lar man. All joking aside, he more wood on the porch, to found other employ to support which I replied that we had our family, and I was given the suffi cient. Around 1:30 or 2 chore of fi rewood. that morning, the old man Dad’s Collins number 4 came and got me out of bed as ax, which he formerly used we had ran out of fi rewood on to drive wedges, being as it the porch. Sleepy-eyed and all, was so small, was perfect in I was persuaded to drag my my young hands. As I grew, toboggan out to the stack and I graduated to the splitting wrangle more to the porch. maul and eventually received From then on I always stacked tutelage on the proper use it a little taller — better to of a chainsaw. Sometimes I have too much than too little. lamented not having an elec- Wood heat always works. tric or oil stove as our primary You aren’t reliant upon solar source of heat. As many if panels, power grids, stove oil not most of our readers know, or gas to stay warm. It’s some- gathering your winter fi re- thing to keep in mind even as wood is quite labor intensive. an auxiliary heat source for Depending on where you your homes. While not the live, and how bad the winters case everywhere, here in Grant are, you could get by with as County there is practically an little as three or four cords or endless supply of dead trees to you’ll need as much as seven be cut up and used. Start early or eight cords of fi rewood. getting your wood in. Winter A cord is a volumetric mea- might be over, but the next one surement of a stack of fi re- is always just down the road. wood that is 4 feet by 4 feet It’s better to have it and not by 8 feet, or 128 cubic feet. I need it, than to need it and not learned quickly that, although have it. red fi r held a fi re longer than Have a wood stove? Write pine or tamarack, it was also to us at shootingthebree- harder to split. Juniper, gnarly zebme@gmail.com! as it was, unless properly sea- Dale Valade is a local soned, could also be a night- country gent with a love for mare to split. Tamarack splits the outdoors, handloading, easy, and pine burns hot but hunting and shooting. I Blue Mountain Eagle The May 15 deadline to apply for a controlled or pre- mium hunt falls on a Saturday this year. The online licensing sys- tem will process applications until 11:59 p.m. on May 15, and license vendors will also be selling applications. But Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife licensing staff will not be available to help hunters who wait until Satur- day and encounter problems accessing their account. “We are urging hunters to not wait until the last minute this year,” said Michael Haw- kins, ODFW Licensing Ser- vices manager. “The major- ity of applications come in during the last few days before the deadline and our hold and email response times peak. But because the deadline falls on a weekend, ODFW cus- tomer service staff will not be able to help you if you wait until Saturday to apply.” It’s easy to apply online at MyODFW.com (click the green “Buy a License” but- ton at top right corner). People without an account can use the “Verify/ Look Up” feature to fi nd their account. Once logged in, go to “Pur- chase from the Catalog/Big Game Hunting” to fi nd the application for each series. An annual hunting license is required to apply and can be purchased at the same time as controlled hunt applications. Directions on how to apply online are available at https:// myodfw.com/articles/how-ap- ply-controlled-hunt, and more tips on using ODFW’s elec- tronic licensing system are available at https://myodfw. com/ELS. For problems, call Licens- ing at 503-947-6101 or email odfw.websales@odfw.oregon. gov. People can also apply at a license sale agent. Forest opening solicitation for blanket purchase agreement Blue Mountain Eagle The Malheur National For- est announced it will be open- ing the Eastern Blues Solici- tation for a blanket purchase agreement. The BPA will be open for all interested contractors the week of May 15 for one month and then not again until next year. The solicitation will be posted on https://beta.sam.gov/ and is open to viewing by the public. In order to receive a BPA award, contractors must be registered on https://www.sam. gov/SAM/ in order to do busi- ness with the government The solicitation for the BPA will be for the following service activities: commercial timber harvest, pre-commercial thin- ning, grapple piling, hand thin- ning, hand piling, road mainte- nance and mastication. For those who fi ll out the solicitation, contact Nikki Lay- ton at nikki.layton@usda.gov when the process is completed. Name and contact information will need to be provided. Reg- ister immediately in SAM to begin this process. Any ques- tions regarding this process can be directed to Layton 360- 891-5080 or Ingrid Anderson 541-549-7731. Full-spectrum Dermatology for both adult and pediatric patients is now available in Grant County. Blue Mountain Hospital District has partnered with Dermatology Health Specialists in Bend, and they will be seeing patients monthly in John Day at BMH. Oliver Wisco, DO, FAAD, FACMS Dermatologist MOHS Micrographic Surgeon Melanoma Specialist Samuel Christensen, PA-C Adult & Pediatric Dermatology Jill Conway, PA-C Adult & Pediatric Dermatology Matthew Clark, MD, FAAD Dermatologist MOHS Micrographic Surgeon Lindsey Clark, PA-C Adult & Pediatric Dermatology To make an appointment, contact your primary care provider for a referral or call 541-575-2060. FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT: WWW.BLUEMOUNTAINHOSPITAL.ORG/DERMATOLOG Y S241906-1 Controlled hunt application deadline is Saturday, May 15 NOW AVAILABLE AT BLUE MOUNTAIN HOSPITAL DISTRICT