SPORTS & OUTDOORS MyEagleNews.com Wednesday, May 18, 2022 A9 To Patagonia and back By ANN BLOOM For the Wallowa County Chieftain Contributed Photo Jake Reynolds takes aim with one of his custom rifl es. SHOOTING THE BREEZE Scratch your shooting itch with a custom-built rifl e ou have been using the ing a wood stock to skeleton- same old off -the-shelf izing your bolt or laser engrav- rifl e for years. It works ing. For a complete list of his all right, but you just have the services, check out his website, itch for something new. A cus- www.reynoldsrifl eworks.com. tom rifl e that not only looks One of the services he provides good but performs better than is loading custom ammunition what you have in the closet. to work with the rifl e he builds Well, you are in luck. for you or the pet rifl e Owned and oper- you have. Jake cau- ated by Jake Reyn- tions, though, that it olds, Reynolds Rifl e- is a little more expen- works is located right sive than off -the-shelf here in Grant County ammo. and can likely make While Jake can do all your rifl e dreams some truly impressive come true. work on an existing Rod Growing up with a rifl e, what he really Carpenter dad who was an avid likes to do is build hunter and military marksman, super-accurate custom bolt-ac- Jake was exposed at an early tion and semiauto rifl es. I had age to quality rifl es. When he the pleasure of handling a 6.5 was old enough to hold it up, PRC he put together. With a Jake was allowed to use his carbon fi ber barrel and stock, it dad’s very own custom rifl e to was nice and light, but smooth compete in 4-H shooting com- to handle, and shot well. I may petitions. Jake’s love of shoot- have coveted just a little bit. ing fueled his desire to create If you are looking for next level rifl es. something a cut above what In 2018, Jake decided he you can fi nd on the gun rack, needed something special for it is worth your time to get elk hunting. With the help of a in touch with Jake. He can gunsmith friend he put together be reached either through his his fi rst rifl e, a .300 Ultra Mag website or by phone or text at on a Remington 700 action. He 541-620-4256. Let him know is still waiting on that elk tag, what you are thinking of, what but says it worked like a charm components you want to marry on antelope. together, and he will work to He enjoyed building rifl es make your dream a reality. so much that in 2020, he took What is your dream rifl e? the leap and started Reynolds Let us know at shootingthe- Rifl eworks LLC here in Grant breezebme@gmail.com. Rod Carpenter is a hus- County. Jake can do a variety band, father and huntin’ fool. of rifl e work, from refurbish- Y Blue Mountains Trail workshops set EO Media Group BAKER CITY — The Greater Hells Canyon Coun- cil is planning a series of free community engage- ment workshops to talk with local residents about the Blue Mountains Trail, the fi rst two scheduled in late May in Sumpter and La Grande. That’s the 566-mile route that runs between John Day and Wallowa Lake State Park. In between the trail, which includes existing trails and roads, along with short sections of cross-coun- try travel, passes through all seven of the federal wilder- ness areas in Northeast Ore- gon — Eagle Cap, Hells Canyon, Wenaha-Tucan- non, North Fork Umatilla, North Fork John Day, Mon- ument Rock and Strawberry Mountain. In the summer and fall of 2020, Renee Patrick, an expe- rienced long-distance hiker from Bend, became the fi rst person to complete a solo hike of the Blue Mountains Trail. In September of that year, three other hikers — Whitney La Ruff a, Naomi Hudetz and Mike Unger — also followed the entire route. Jared Kennedy, the devel- opment director for the Greater Hells Canyon Coun- cil and project lead for the Blue Mountains Trail, is scheduling the workshops. The fi rst is set for Wednes- day, May 25, at the Sumpter Community Hall, 275 N. Mill St., from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Light refresh- ments will be served. The second workshop will take place Thursday, May 26, at the Cook Memorial Library, 2006 Fourth St. in La Grande, also from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. To register for either workshop, go to https://www. hellscanyon.org/events. TOM CHRISTENSEN CHRISTENSEN TOM CONSTRUCTION (541) 410-0557 • (541) 575-0192 CCB# 106077 REMODELS • NEW CONSTRUCTION • POLE BUILDINGS CONCRETE EXCAVATION • SHEET ROCK • SIDING ROOFING • FENCES • DECKS • TELESCOPING FORKLIFT SERVICES ENTERPRISE — It’s called “the great- est test of horsemanship and wilderness skills on earth” for a reason. The Gaucho Derby, a 500-kilometer horse race done in 10 days in Patagonia, is a test of endurance and determi- nation on the part of both horse and rider. Brenda Johnson, whose participation in the race was fi rst reported in the Chieftain in February, qualifi ed for the race and left for Argentine Patagonia, in South America, in late February for the race, which was run in early March. Johnson described her experience as “epic.” She said that was the only word she could think of to describe it. “It was literally epic. It is the best word to use,” she said. She described the terrain as very much resembling Wallowa County. “Our mountains are big and beautiful,” she said. “But those mountains were on a whole other level. So much wilder. It was humbling.” One thing she said that surprised her, in addition to the scope and scale of the scenery, was how important the other riders were. “It was impossible to do it alone because of the intensity of the course and the terrain,” she said. “Friendships were forged out of necessity and love.” Of the 34 original riders who started the competition, 28 riders crossed the fi nish line. Six competitors dropped out or were withheld during the race because of injury or other med- ical reasons. “It was nothing like I thought it would be. I thought I’d pit myself against nature,” she said. “In addition to navigating the terrain I was navigating a multicultural social landscape — it was an amazing human experience.” However, she did have an opportunity to test herself against the ravages of nature when, during a severe windstorm, her tent collapsed, and she spent the night trying to keep it from blowing away. It was a night of little sleep. “It was 3 a.m. and the wind was so bad, my tent poles snapped like twigs right through my rainfl y,” she said. Thankfully, there was no rain, just wind, she added. Brenda Johnson/Contributed Photo Brenda Johnson competed in the endur- ance horse race called the Gaucho Derby in South America’s Patagonia from March 3-13, 2022. Those riders and friendships became even more vital when Johnson was injured halfway through the ride. She was dismounting her horse, a mount she described as challenging, when the horse bucked. “(I) faceplanted on a rock and I broke my nose,” she said. She said there was quite a bit of blood due to the fact she sustained a laceration in a vein in her nose and blood was pumping out. “My race was over,” she said. She could not continue without being checked and cleared by a medic. There were medic and vet checkpoints at various stages along the race, which was for- tunate, because within 20 minutes of Johnson reaching a medic at a vet checkpoint, a more serious accident occurred when another rider was kicked in the head by a horse. If it had not been for his helmet, the accident would have proven fatal. A medic had already been called to ride out with her, but due to the seriousness of the other rider’s injuries (he was knocked unconscious), a helicopter was called. Between the medic, a veterinarian, Johnson and some of the other riders, they provided fi rst aid to the injured rider during the two hours they waited for the helicopter to arrive. Both Johnson and the injured rider were taken to El Calafate, Argentina, to a waiting ambulance. Johnson was cleared by the doctor and the medic on the tarmac and “the doctor sent me on my way.” The next morning, the Argentine Army helicopter crew fl ew the medic and John- son into Sierra Nevada, a beautiful estancia (ranch) and one of the horse-change stations. She stayed in Sierra Nevada for a little over 24 hours and then reunited with the other riders. She said she was honored to cross the fi nish line with Kirsteen Thain, the rider from Hong Kong, whom she had ridden the entire race with prior to her accident, as well as a group of riders from Africa, Mexico and France. The Gaucho Derby has participants from all over the world. Johnson said that travel to the start- ing line went smoothly. Most people spoke English, and none of her fl ights were canceled, although she admits there was a moment of complete panic when the bag containing her stirrups, leathers and helmet was the very last bag coming off the plane when she landed in Patagonia. “It was the one bag that could not be replaced,” she said. Besides the riders, there were about 50 crew members (medics, vets, etc.) and about 50 gauchos (Argentine cowboys) who han- dled the horses used in the ride. There were over 300 horses needed from start to fi nish. Although the riders used maps and GPS trackers, there were times when they lost their way due to the terrain, lack of sleep and the emotional intensity of the ride. “Oh, yeah. We go so lost,” Johnson said. Recovering lost ground was time- and labor-intensive. After the ride was over, she and a couple of riders spent several days traveling around Argentina sight-seeing, but more importantly using the time to process their experience and decompress from such an exhausting and intense experience. She still maintains contact with the people she met on the trip through social media. Finally, given everything she experienced, would she do it again? “If I could aff ord it? If someone paid for it? Would I do it again? In a heartbeat,” she said. ON THE TRAIL Hunting the best mayfl y hatches east of the Cascades few of the big yellow mayfl ies began to show, struggling at the sur- face of the dark water then, drying their wings, breaking free and fl ying. I switched to a graphite rod on which I had tied a 3X leader and a big yellow parachute Hex imitation. My friend Craig Schuhmann handed me a Floating Hex Nymph originated by the late Klamath tyer Dick Winter. I knotted a length of tippet material and fi shed the two fl ies in tandem. Late June and early July mark one of the great bug events on the Wil- Gary liamson River when that Lewis largest of the mayfl ies, the Hexegenia, throw their shadows on the water. If the Hex hatch happens at all, it hap- pens at dusk. A tributary of Upper Klamath Lake, the Williamson River drains about 3,000 square miles of southeast Oregon. Connected to the food-rich lake, the trout migrate out to feed and then back to cool off in summer. A 5-mile fl oat off ers time for refl ec- tion. We watched trains pass, the cars fl ashing by on the tracks, mirrored in the river. One image in my mind is a four- pound rainbow three feet above the sur- face, its red-banded body refl ected in the water it has just burst out of at the moment the fl y came out of its lip. In the last hour, trout boiled along each bank. We cast to rise rings. In a summer evening punctuated by 21 grabs and a dozen bat- tles and fi ve fi sh brought to my hand, the hatch was a frantic moment between dusk and full dark when we measured casts, lost track of our fl ies and struck at sounds and splashes. A Fishing the hex hatch The hexegenia hatch on the Williamson River might be the most well known, but in June and July, the big bugs can pop on Clear Lake, Lost Lake, Timothy Lake and Harri- ett Lake on the slopes of Mount Hood. The biggest hex hatch I ever witnessed was on a summer evening on Clear Lake when the rocks were yellow with bugs and the fi sh plucked dries lazily off the surface. Carry two rods, one loaded with a fl oat- ing line and the other with a sinking line and a 3X tippet. The dry is best matched by a No. 10-12 yellow Hex Paradrake or an Extended Body Hexagenia. The best fi shing can be on substantial nymphs like the Red Fox Squirrel Nymph, Beadhead Wet Hare’s Ear Wet or Dick Winter’s Floating Hex Nymph. Fish two nymphs in tandem at fi rst, then switch over to a dry with a fl oating nymph in tandem. Green drake Look at the calendar. If it says May at the top, an angler should be ready to match a green drake hatch at any moment. It’s a short window of opportunity, but it’s the most important thing happening that week in the eyes of Drunella grandis and Onco- rhynchus mykiss gairdneri (the redband rainbow). Coincident with the more well publi- cized salmonfl y hatch on the Deschutes River, green drake mayfl ies start to appear in May. By June some trout will pass up a bigger stonefl y to chase down a green drake. Green drakes may be more prevalent on the Metolius River in May and June and a sec- ond hatch happens on the Metolius in Sep- tember and October. The green drake is a sporadic hatch on most western streams, but it can be abun- dant on the Metolius and a few others. It is a good idea to carry dries to match this mayfl y when the adults could show up any time. Best bets include the Loop Wing Green Drake, Electric Green Drake and the CDC Green Drake Emerger. Callibaetis The most reliable mayfl y hatch to follow is the Callibaetis which shows up in May on rivers like the Owyhee and the Powder and is important in the mountains from Anthony Lakes to East Lake and Paulina through the end of August. Once I saw so many callibaetis in Dia- mond Lake, I thought they would hold me up if I fell out of the boat. The trout as fat as footballs were so sated we had to switch to diff erent fl ies to get them to eat. One morning in July at Anthony Lake, I caught 23 trout in two hours on a Callibae- tis Nymph in tandem with a Rubber-legged Hare’s Ear. Some of my favorite imitations include Dexter’s Callibaetis (tied with wood duck and red fox) and Dexter’s Pheasant Callibaetis tied with natural pheasant, red Flashabou and rockchuck fur. One of my new favorite dries is Mason’s Mighty Mor- sel Mayfl y (from Rainy’s Flies) which takes a traditional design and adds a foam sad- dle for buoyancy, a poly wing and a short sub tail imitative of a nymphal shuck. The fl y comes in six diff erent variations: Adams, blue-winged olive, pale morning dun, pur- ple, March brown and Callibaetis. May, June, July and August, these are the months of the mayfl y. If we are honest, this is why we fl y fi sh, for the moments when the trout crash through the surface tension to eat the fl y. And the refl ections in between. Gary Lewis is the author of “Fishing Central Oregon,” “Oregon Lake Maps and Fishing Guide” and other titles. To contact Gary, visit www.garylewisoutdoors.com. BLUE MOUNTAIN EAGLE EARLY DEADLINE For June 1st Edition Ad, Classified & Legal Deadline Thursday, May 26th by 4PM Our office will be closed May 30th in observance of Memorial Day 195 N Canyon Blvd., John Day, Oregon Daily & tes Ra Weekly Budget 8 Motel 711 W Main St, John Day, OR 97845 • (541) 575-2155 Grant County’s newspaper since 1868 MyEagleNews.com 541-575-0710