GO! EASTERN OREGON MAGAZINE INSIDE Wednesday, July 7, 2021 153rd Year • No. 27 • 16 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com HIGH AND DRY WHAT IS A DROUGHT? Contributed photo Young Marvin stands in front of plants. The tiny kitten was taken in by Hope 4 Paws and eventually adopted out to a loving home. There is no specifi c defi nition of a drought. The consensus is that it is a period of dry weather that occurs long enough to impact water supplies, farming, livestock opera- tions, energy production and other activities. Hope 4 Paws nately, Marvin liked the supplements he took to over- come the virus, according to Church. Church said when she fi rst By Rudy Diaz got Marvin, he was a tiny, Blue Mountain Eagle needy kitten, but he started interacting with her other Whether it be a cat pets and became a normal alone at a barn or a lost dog house cat as he got older. reunited with owners after “He was never feral-feral months away from home, because he was tiny when I Hope 4 Paws continues to got him, and he didn’t know help the furry friends in being wild,” Church said. Grant County. After several months, Susan Church, a volunteer Marvin was adopted in at Hope 4 Paws that focuses March 2020 by a friend of the feline eff orts, Church, Kati said someone Dunn. last year found “He’s got a an orange and really cute per- white kitten in sonality, and their barn and he’s really play- looked for its ful,” Dunn said. mother to no “Once he’s avail. The lit- tired from play- tle orange kitten ing, because he named Marvin doesn’t want was alone and to bother with Contributed photo aff ection when hungry. “When a kit- Cats Bithers and Mar- he’s playing, ten is starv- vin, who were adopted he’s very aff ec- ing, their face through Hope 4 Paws, en- tionate and becomes a nar- joy time with their adop- sweet.” row, little tive owner Kati Dunn. Dunn said, pointed face, when it was which is what he time to get Mar- had,” Church said. vin, Church recommended The people who found the she get a friend for him when cat brought him to the vet she is away at work. Dunn clinic where they called him walked away with two cats Starvin’ Marvin due to his that day: Marvin and his best malnourished state. friend Bithers, a grey tabby. The vet called Hope 4 “Starvin Marvin was kind Paws, and Church fostered of depressing name, so I felt I the tiny kitten. She soon should call him Marvin after began bottle feeding Mar- Marvin Gaye and keep the vin until he was ready to eat soul singer theme and name wet food mixed with KMR, the other cat Bithers after a milk replacement powder. Bill Withers,” Dunn said. “Marvin was a very fussy When Dunn gets home eater, and he wouldn’t eat from work, she is greeted that,” Church said. “I had to by an abundance of aff ection continue bottle feeding him a from both cats. She said they little longer.” have a great bond and pro- Marvin had an upper vide lots of laughs. respiratory infection as well, “Hope 4 Paws does which Church said is a com- incredible work,” Dunn said. mon affl iction in feral cats. “I’ve heard of a lot of stories She said it’s a virus that of kittens with rough begin- aff ects a cat’s eyes, breath- See Paws, Page A16 ing, ears and nose. Fortu- Helping four-legged friends around Grant County The U.S. Department of the Interior points out that drought has different meanings depending on a person’s perspective. For a farmer, a drought is a period of low precipita- tion that affects the crops. For example, a two-week dry spell can stress many crops during specifi c growing periods. Grant County experiencing historic drought conditions expensive supplemental feed and pasture. Local producer and biologist Shaun Robertson, who is president of the Grant Grant County is in the grip of a severe County Farm Bureau, said every rancher drought of historic proportions. he has talked to told him that this is the Gov. Kate Brown’s July 1 emergency worst they’ve ever seen. drought declaration for Grant County “Most are saying this is also the short- comes amid the driest year the county has est water year that they can remember seen in over a century. (including testimony from an 87-year It’s the driest old rancher from it’s been in 127 Fox),” he said. years with 2-2.5 Robertson fewer inches of said he could rain on average remember at this year, accord- least one year ing to the National being this bad Integrated within the last 20 Drought Informa- years ago, which tion System. began as bad as The multi- this year. How- The Eagle/Steven Mitchell ever, he said, agency drought monitoring sys- Grant County Watermaster Eric Julsrud in his the county was tem reports that offi ce Tuesday at the Grant County Courthouse. “bailed out” by over half of the late rain, but he county, roughly does not anticipate 65%, is currently under extreme drought that happening this year. conditions. Eric Julsrud, Grant County’s water- master, said the worst year on record in How bad are the drought his experience was 2001. He said this year conditions in Grant County? may be worse. Most of Grant County is in extreme According to the national drought sys- drought — the second to worst category in tem’s historical data, at the start of July of the U.S. Drought Monitor system. In these 2001, 100% of the county was in severe regions, pastures are brown and barren, drought but never went into extreme levels hay yields are low, prices are increasing See Drought, Page A16 and producers are selling cattle to avoid By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle On the other hand, a me- teorologist would defi ne drought as a prolonged period when precipitation is less than average. From a water manager’s perspective, Eric Julsrud, Grant County’s watermas- ter, said that drought is when the region’s water supply is defi cient and impacts water availability. The U.S. Drought Monitor system, a fi ve-category system, begins at ab- normally dry conditions, a precursor to drought conditions, moving up- wards to moderate (D1), severe (D2), extreme (D3) and then exceptional (D4) drought conditions. According to the NIDS website, the categories show experts’ assess- ments of conditions related to dryness and drought. The analysis in- cludes their observations of how much water is available in streams, lakes and soils in a specifi c region compared to the average for the same time of year. Under extreme drought conditions, reservoirs and lakes are shallow compared to an average year in normal conditions. Additionally, wildfi re risk is high, and there is an inadequate level of plant growth. Families celebrate the Fourth The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Contributed photo/Kalli Wilson Everleigh Schmadeka, left, gets an escort from Tiff nie Schmadeka Sunday during Dayville’s Fourth of July parade. Evie and her horse Cocoa Puff rode away with a fi rst-place ribbon in the kids category and another for Best of Parade. Pam Woodworth, left, Prairie City’s Independence Day parade grand marshal, waves at the crowd Sunday. See more Fourth of July coverage in next week’s edition. The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Levi Brown, an Iraq War veteran and member of Prairie City American Legion Post 106, and his two children, Rev, 5, and Ranger, 7, get ready for Prairie City’s Fourth of July parade Sun- day. The American Legion had two fl oats in the parade.