PAGE LABEL AROUND THE REGION Running with the big dogs Oregon ranchers turn to bigger guard animals to protect livestock from wolves By KRISTIAN FODEN-VENCIL Oregon Public Broadcasting BAKER CITY — For the last few weeks, rancher Kim Kerns has been living in a 1970s trailer, up on a high meadow, with 550 sheep as they fatten up on spring grass. Her family has used livestock pro- tection dogs up here since the 1980s when she fi rst got a Maremma guard dog from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. But that was before wolves returned. “We’ve actually kind of changed the type and size of dog we use,” she said. “We’re using a bigger and more aggressive guard dog now than we did in the ’80s and even the ’90s.” Now, her dogs are a mix of Akbash, Kangal and Anatolian, three massive, ancient breeds out of Turkey. All of them can be 100 pounds or more and have a bite pressure of 740 pounds per square inch. Statistics vary, but a wolf’s bite force is between 400 psi and 1,500 psi. Kerns runs eight guard dogs at a cost of $500 a month in feed. But she said the animals pay their ways by reducing the labor of controlling sheep and reducing predator kills. Over the last couple of decades, Oregon and much of the West has been conducting an enormous ecolog- ical experiment by allowing wolves to once more roam the landscape. For ranchers, wolves are another predator to guard against. But unlike coyotes, bears, bobcats or mountain lions, wolves hunt in packs and can be very persistent. They’re also smart. So they learn quickly that a sound cannon, a bunch of fl ags, or even gunfi re into the air aren’t a real danger. And they return. Kerns remembers a two-week period last year when wolves were picking off her sheep, one by one. Even her dogs weren’t a match. “We weren’t getting any sleep, the guard dogs weren’t getting any sleep, everybody was run ragged,” she said. “And it was terrifying. Like it was fl at scary.” She tried everything, from spot- lights and electrical fences at night, but the wolves kept coming. “Finally we just decided that we couldn’t take it anymore. We moved the sheep a couple of miles,” she said. “It seemed to be outside of where the wolves were.” Now, Kerns relies on the dogs to alert her to wolves. They can smell or see a wolf well before she can, and they start to bark and get agitated. Kerns surrounds her sheep with a Port lands $2 million expansion grant By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Kristian Foden-Vencil/Oregon Public Broadcasting Shirley Shold greets her livestock protection dogs out on her ranch just east of Baker City. Kristian Foden-Vencil/Oregon Public Broadcasting Rancher Shirley Shold breeds Akbash Kangal dogs for ranchers who want bigger livestock protection animals, now that wolves are in Eastern Oregon. sturdy electric fence at night or moves them to another pasture. She is per- mitted to shoot a wolf if it’s actively attacking. But since they’re federally protected, she needs really good proof. Also, shooting a wolf in a herd would just as likely result in the death of a sheep. The Oregon Department of Agri- culture has a compensation program to reimburse ranchers. But Kerns said it pays little and the loss of just one ewe can cause real damage, even though it might only fetch $200 at market. “There are some 5- or 6-year-old ewes in there that know every single camp we go to. Every single water- hole,” Kerns said. “That ewe is really irreplaceable in my fl ock.” Kerns thinks the compensation pro- gram just gives the public permission to turn a blind eye to the problem. Unlike many ranchers, Kerns doesn’t want to see wolves elimi- nated again. But she’d like a quicker response from the government when she sends in a kill request. Another rancher in the Baker City area, Shirley Shold, agrees: “I think it would be better for everyone, and the packs, if they were spread out more.” She started breeding dogs that are suitable for herds after fi nding freshly killed calves and lambs. “Seeing the loss of a newborn life was very hard,” said Shold, who moved from Portland 12 years ago. “So I started thinking, we’ve got to do something diff erent. And I was talking to a fellow rancher and she said, ‘If you’ve got wolves, you want Kangal dogs.’” So Shold got a Kangal and Akbash pair and now breeds them for other ranchers at about $800 a head. How good the dogs turn out to be depends largely on their nature, said Shold. Some dogs are more nurturing and remain in the middle of their herds. While other dogs become perime- ter dogs, scouting outside the herd for predators. Watching them is like watching a sheep dog trial. Except that instead of a human issuing orders, these dogs fol- low their inner natures. But many traditional ranchers aren’t convinced the dogs can keep wolves away and, they point out, the dogs are expensive to feed. But Shold thinks attitudes are changing as more wolves appear and ranchers see others in the busi- ness using large dogs to protect their livestock. “Everybody started paying atten- tion,” she said. “People really started … watching the dogs because they can observe them from the highway, and I know it’s making an impact. They’re seeing that this can help.” The dogs’ ability to manage a sheep herd is well recognized. But Shold wants to integrate them into cattle herds as well. Others aren’t so sure. They point out that cows don’t herd together like sheep. That means the dogs have to patrol much larger areas. But on Shold’s ranch, the cattle do seem toler- ant of the dogs. Brian Ratliff , with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, said some ranchers are seeing success with the large dog breeds. “Livestock protection dogs will work or have some noticeable benefi ts on certain operations. So, sheep and goats. Also in confi ned areas, smaller pastures, with cattle,” he said. But it’s not about having the dogs fi ght the wolves. “The most important thing I think that livestock protection dogs do … is they alert the producer to what’s going on,” he said. Back on the slopes of Kim Kerns’ ranch, she watches her dogs move the herd to greener pastures. She said yes, the dogs are useful: ”They’re another tool in the tool box.” But they’re not a silver bullet. Greater Idaho map shrinks By JOE SIESS The Bulletin BEND — The long-shot Greater Idaho movement reconfi gured its map after two coastal and south- ern Oregon counties rejected bal- lot measures last week that would have required county commission- ers to study becoming part of a dif- ferent state. While the setback does not spell the end for the Greater Idaho move- ment, which seeks to move the bor- der of Idaho to include all of Eastern Oregon, it is a sign most of the peo- ple who hope to see the movement succeed are in rural counties east of the Cascades. The likelihood the border would be changed is remote, as it would require the approval of both the Ore- gon and Idaho legislatures in addi- tion to approval by Congress, but for the movement’s leaders, part of the point is to send a message to Salem and to get more rural Oregonians to the ballot box. The movement’s new map now excludes Douglas, Coos, Curry, Josephine and Jackson counties, but includes nearly everything east of the Deschutes River. The Bend area would remain in Oregon, but other parts of Deschutes, Jeff erson, and Wasco counties would be annexed to Idaho. Most of Klamath County, which in Tuesday’s election became the ninth county to support the move- ment, would be annexed as well. Jeff erson County narrowly WEDNESDAY June 1, 2022 Submitted Image A redrawn map by the Greater Idaho movement. approved the Greater Idaho ballot measure in 2020. It asked county residents if they wanted the Jeff erson County Commission to meet twice a year to discuss the initiative. Kelly Simmelink, a Jeff erson County commissioner, said while he is willing to do what he can to honor the people’s vote, he does not have high hopes for the movement’s success. “I applaud the eff orts of peo- ple that want to be represented,” Simmelink said. “I get it. Eastern Oregon, anything east of the Cas- cades, has a long record of being underrepresented. “We need to make Oregon work for all of us … I want my Oregon to be the best it can be. The state is run in a fashion that it is a one size fi ts all, and what works in Multnomah County doesn’t work in Jeff erson...” Mike McCarter, president of the Greater Idaho eff ort, said the move- ment intends to push forward, and the main goal at this point is to start the conversation in the state Legislature. “We are working hard trying to fi nd the champions in the state Leg- islature that want to start the discus- sion,” McCarter said. “I think that what we are doing does send a mes- sage to the Oregon Legislature that they need to work across the state.” McCarter said the movement’s intention from the beginning was never to force an issue on anybody, but getting it on the ballot was an important step in fi guring out where the focus should be moving forward. “Our move right now, we have ready to turn in the signatures for Morrow County, to get them on the ballot in November,” McCarter said. “And we have signatures lined up to put Wallowa County on next May’s election. And we are trying to work with Wheeler and Gilliam counties to get them a petition going so we can get them on the ballot.” “So, we are going to continue on. This is not a step back. It’s maybe a change of direction a little more,” he added. BOARDMAN — A unique rail-to-barge grain facility at Ore- gon’s Port of Morrow is expanding with help from a $2 million grant recently approved by state trans- portation offi cials. The Morrow County Grain Growers cooperative has won approval from the Oregon Trans- portation Commission for funding that will cover about two-thirds of the $3 million project’s cost. “It’s worked great so far and we hope it will give us that much more capability,” said Kevin Gray, the cooperative’s CEO, of the grain handling operation. Originally completed in 2019, the facility is the only one of its kind along the Columbia River that can unload grain from rail cars and then load it into barges headed for downstream export elevators. “It’s a time saver just because of the congestion on the railroads,” Gray said. The expansion project will install a new 600,000-bushel grain bin and associated conveyors that will connect it to the existing facility. Six grain bins already stood at the location when the cooperative built the $7.5 million rail-to-barge system, whose cost included instal- lation of a seventh bin. The project recently approved for Connect Oregon grant funding will bring the number of bins to eight, with room for fi ve more and a grain bunker left at the site. Gray said the additional bin is meant to improve the facility’s fl exibility, since until now it’s occa- sionally been forced to reject pro- posed grain loads because the exist- ing bins were in use. Even if the bins have storage capacity left, they’re still limited to storing the type of grain each one already contains, he said. “You can’t put corn in the same bin you put wheat in.” Grain shippers benefi t from using the facility because their loads can bypass backed-up rail traffi c in Portland, Gray said. By switching to a river barge, shippers can have their grain loaded into export elevators in Portland, Ore., and Vancouver, Wash., within 18 hours, versus a couple days with rail cars, he said. “It’s a great way to get grain to access the Pacifi c Northwest export markets without having to get a train into Portland,” he said. “It gave them another path to their export elevator.” Local grain farmers can also rely on the rail-to-barge facility, but its connection to two major railroads is primarily intended for loads from distant sources, such as Minnesota and North Dakota, Gray said. Unlike some grain storage facil- ities, which are dedicated to grain from certain major traders, the cooperative’s bins can be used by any shipper, he said. “We’re not tied to any one grain company. We have fl exibility.” Grain grown in the central U.S. commonly reaches Asian markets by traveling via rail to export facil- ities along the Columbia River, where it’s picked up by ships headed across the Pacifi c Ocean, he said. Another options is for the grain to be shipped to Gulf of Mexico export facilities, where it’s loaded onto ocean carriers that must fi rst pass through the Panama Canal — a route that’s typically more expen- sive, Gray said. The cooperative saw a surge in demand for its facility in 2020 after storms shut down export facilities along the Gulf of Mexico, he said. Aside from serving as a tran- sit point for Asian-bound grain, the facility is also useful for local dair- ies and feedlots, since it can import and store feed grains, Gray said. Shipping feed grains by rail is less expensive than trucking it into the area. “This provides a way to meet the local livestock demand as well as help our customers save on transportation costs,” he said.