The Blue Mountain eagle. (John Day, Or.) 1972-current, July 06, 2022, Image 1

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    GO! EASTERN OREGON MAGAZINE | INSIDE
JULY 6–13 , 2022
WWW.GOE ASTE
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Jammin’ wit
h the
Explore
Cool
Rides
PAG E 3
Wednesday, July 6, 2022
WALLOWA F
IDDLE
TUNES CAMP
Join
Summer
Fishtrap
PAG E 4
Experience
Outdoo
movies r
PAG E 22
154th Year • No. 27 • 14 Pages • $1.50
Robyn Burn
s/Contributed
photo
Finn, Mike
and Dinah Burn
s jam in
preparation
for the Wallo
wa Fiddle
Tunes Cam
p, which inclu
des public
performan
ces.
PA GE 8
MyEagleNews.com
Justin Davis/Blue Mountain Eagle
Prairie City cheerleaders and cheer camp participants perform a routine at the Independence Day parade on Monday, July 4, 2022, in Prairie City.
Fourth of July on the Prairie
By JUSTIN DAVIS
Blue Mountain Eagle
C
rowds of cheerful Americans
were on hand on Independence
Day to celebrate “America the
Beautiful” in Prairie City.
The annual tradition fea-
tured an early 5K run and pancake break-
fast, parade, pulled pork sandwiches and yard
games at the city park.
A patriotic drama performance by local
Prairie City youth and music by Red Headed
Step Child were also planned for the day.
Events started with the fi ring of a cannon
in the middle of Highway 26 as parade partic-
ipants lined up in the street. Members of Prai-
rie City American Legion Post 106 conducted
a fl ag folding ceremony in which the meaning
of each of the 13 folds was described.
Justin Davis/Blue Mountain Eagle
The Prairie City football team throws
candy to kids and waves to onlookers at
the Fourth of July Parade Monday, July 4,
2022, in Prairie City.
Justin Davis/Blue Mountain Eagle
2022 Grant County Fair and Rodeo Princess-
es Macy Carter and Raney Anderson wave to
crowds during the Fourth of July Parade in
Prairie City on Monday, July 4, 2022.
Also taking part in the parade were
members of Kim’s Tae Kwon Do in John
Day. Students and their instructor, Laurel
Coombs, demonstrated diff ering levels of
tae kwon do forms that varied in complex-
ity and diffi culty based on the belt level of
the demonstrator.
Also on hand was the newly re-formed
Prairie City cheer squad, who performed a
cheer routine with members of a youth cheer
camp the squad put on in the three days prior
to the parade. The squad also ran the commu-
nity kids fun zone at the park.
Prairie City head cheerleading coach
Sabrina Howard is in her fi rst year coaching
the team following a six-year stint as the head
swim coach at Gleason Pool.
Howard said the idea to do the camp, run
the community kids zone and perform a rou-
tine at the Fourth of July parade began with
Sharron Fritsch, who runs the community
center in Prairie City.
See Fourth Page A14
ODFW and Forest Service to propose road closures in 2023 archery season
R. 32 E
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9 MILES TO
HWY 26
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3670
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Miles
34
35
TIP Phone: 1-800-452-7888
Email: TIP@osp.oregon.gov
Vehicle make, model & color
Vehicle license & state
5
6
Location / road number
1
11
12
City/County:
Number of persons involved
Describe violation
7
8
3
2
9
10
11
16
Mail to:
Oregon State Police
Fish and Wildlife Division
3565 Trelstad Ave SE
Salem, OR 97317 14
15
4
Witness Contact Information
Four Corners
17
BLM Land
If you witness a violation, record information
on this form and present it to an official.
Time
Date
731
20
3 6
e k
13
Violation Report
3640
2
3
23
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18
13
18
17
Travel Management
Area
Open Roads
Private Land
Only those roads shown in green and within 300 feet
adjacent to those roads for the purpose of camping are
open to motorized vehicles during the period of restric-
tions. Motorized vehicle travel within the Travel Manage-
ment Area boundary on all other roads and trails, and
crosscountry is prohibited except by permit from the
Malheur National Forest.
OBJECTIVES:
1. Protect soils and wildlife habitat
2. Minimize harassment of wildlife
3. Maintain adequate buck
and bull escapement
4. Promote quality hunting
e k
C r e eek
l e l l a n C r e
14
R. 31 E
31
36
9
8
7
36
35
22
Map Location
USFS Land
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r e
r e e k
E a ag g
15
28
30
25
Period of Restriction:
Sep. 28 through Oct. 12
Oct. 23 through Nov. 13, 2022
11
B e ea a r
r e e k
T. 12 S
a m
Magone Lake
10
10
21
20
19
29
26
27
28
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Malheur National Forest
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
Ragged Rocks
16
17
Cougar Rock
Cold Spring
3 6
45
33
T i n k e r C r e e
L a
e e ek k
Magone Lake
Campground
5
36
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Cooperative Travel Management Area
40
r e e k
2022
2045
3
Grassy
Spring
9
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Porcupine Spring
l e
2
7
24
23
22
21
32
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36
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Lake
Butte
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15
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Cold Spring Camp
35
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Guard
Station
33
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Fir Spring
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31
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17
Jonas Mountain
18
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Spring
Clark Meadow
36
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C o u g gar
15
36
Camp Creek
Sunshine Springs
for 27 an interactive map
2045 Visit www.OregonHuntingMap.com
28
29
Sunshine
that is available on your cell phone or tablet.
26
Guard
Download free Geospatial PDF maps before your trip
to
Station
view your location, even when
you do not
have cell service.
Haystack
34
35
Spring
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Flood Meadow
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Beamer Flat
Jonas Flat
J Jo o n
Federal Spring
11
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R. 33 E
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Keeney Camp
Guard Station
p
JOHN DAY — The Ore-
gon Department of Fish and
Wildlife will hold a pub-
lic meeting to discuss road
closures during next year’s
archery season to promote elk
security on Tuesday, July 12,
from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the Ore-
gon Department of Forestry
Offi ce, 415 Patterson Bridge
Road in John Day.
The U.S. Forest Service
and ODFW are proposing to
close some roads under the
Camp Creek Travel Manage-
ment Area Cooperative Agree-
ment to motorized vehicles
during archery season for deer
and elk in 2023.
The idea is to protect elk
that are susceptible to human
disturbance — especially
during hunting season, when
2 1/4 MILES TO MIDDLE
FORK JOHN DAY RIVER
Bear Wallow Spring
30
25
26
C r
e e
R. 31 E
27
m p
By STEVEN MITCHELL
Blue Mountain Eagle
R. 33 E
The green reflector (dot) system
of posting open roads is used in
this area. There will generally be
no posting of closed roads or areas.
Dial 1-800-452-7888 or
*OSP or *677 from a mobile phone
*This product is for informational purposes and may not have been prepared for, or be suit-
able for legal, engineering, or surveying purposes. Users of this information should review
or consult primary data and information sources to ascertain the usability of the information.
revised 6/21/2022
ODFW
elk often retreat to private
land, ODFW wildlife biologist
Ryan Torland said. The For-
est Service and ODFW, Tor-
land noted, want to minimize
the disturbances to keep the
animals in the forest and on
public land, given the grow-
ing body of research they have
been reviewing.
Torland said the Forest
Service and ODFW have been
discussing the cooperative
agreement for many years.
Better enforcement from the
Oregon State Police coupled
with increased staffi ng has
allowed ODFW to enforce
the plan and keep up with it
administratively. Torland said
the two agencies want to get
the proposal out to the public
and get feedback.
Torland said he would
share deer and elk popula-
tion numbers from the March
2022 census. Generally, he
noted, elk populations are
somewhat steady. However,
he said, the calf-to-bull ratio
— 11 calves for every 100
bulls — was abnormally low
due to the severe drought
conditions last year. He said
deer fared better last year, but
overall the numbers are going
down.
The 2022 archery hunt-
ing season is changing from a
general hunt — meaning there
would be an unlimited number
of number of tags sold — to a
controlled hunt, with a limited
number of tags. Now, archery
hunters must apply for a tag
through the state’s computer
lottery system.
Other than that, Tor-
land said, there are no other
changes, and wildlife man-
agers are waiting to see the
eff ects on population counts
for deer and elk as the state
moves to a controlled archery
hunting season.
Archery season for both
deer and elk goes for one
month, starting in late August.
Torland said with this being
the fi rst season of controlled
hunts, ODFW would not be
proposing many changes.
However, he said, ODFW
would be increasing the East
Northside Hunting Unit’s tag
numbers to 25 due to a slight
increase in bull elk.
Benefi t set for local man with cancer
By STEVEN MITCHELL
Blue Mountain Eagle
JOHN DAY — The family and friends
of a local man battling a rare and aggressive
form of cancer will hold a benefi t dinner and
live auction on Friday, July 8, at 6 p.m. in the
Trowbridge Pavilion at the Grant County Fair-
grounds, 411 NW Bridge St. in John Day.
In March, Adrian Wheeler, 30, was diag-
nosed with Stage 4 colorectal cancer, accord-
ing to Laci Wheeler, Adrian’s wife. Doctors
told Adrian the aggressive type of cancer —
called signet ring-cell colon cancer — could
not be cured with chemotherapy.
However, Laci said, a specialist in Ohio
studying colorectal cancer has developed a
new treatment that might help. She also said
they have reached out to a cancer doctor in San
Diego to see if Adrian could be a candidate
for a specialized heated chemotherapy treat-
ment that also involves signifi cant surgery to
remove tumors.
Unfortunately, both specialists are out-of-
network providers not covered by the young
family’s insurance.
Meanwhile, Adrian has received two che-
motherapy treatment cycles at St. Charles Can-
cer Care Center in Bend to keep the cancer at
bay. Additionally, she said, Adrian is receiving
medications.
Born and raised in Grant County, Laci said
she is grateful to have support from so many
people in the community. She and Adrian, a
Prairie City High School graduate, moved back
to Grant County a couple of years ago because
they wanted to have a community around them
as they raised their son, Owen, now 2.
“We needed the community,” she said. “We
just didn’t know how bad we needed it.”
Those interested in sending a donation
to the family can go to gofundme.com/f/
support-for-adrian-wheeler.
Additionally, an account has been set up at
Tanni Wenger Photography Studio/Contributed Photo
Old West Credit Union in John Day under the
name “Wheeler family.”
Adrian and Laci Wheeler with their 2-year-old son, Owen.