A8 OUTDOORS Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, August 3, 2022 SHOOTING THE BREEZE Pregame prep is key to a successful hunt Community Health Beat What's new at BMHD? Two New Providers to Join BMHD Team in August Gillian Seton, M.D. General Surgeon; comes to us with nearly 10 years of surgery experience. Dr. Seton will be doing screening and diagnostic colonoscopies, all general surgeries, as well as assist in the ER. Charlie Price, D.O. is a Family Practice Physician who recently completed his residency through OHSU Skylakes Program in Klamath Falls. Dr. Price has an open panel for patients of all ages for general and family medicine needs. Now scheduling! Call 541-575-0404. Saturday y Same Day Appointments Appoi ntments Available for sudden, non-emergent symptoms. Dates: August 6th & 20th September 10th & 16th 8am - 4pm Call to schedule 541-575-0404 Dine & Walk with a Doc Join us the second Tuesday of each month for a complementary catered meal while you enjoy a talk on health and wellness topics from your local healthcare providers/professionals. After we eat, we’ll take a walk around beautiful 7th Street Complex. A new topic will be presented each month. What Time: Dinner will begin at 5:30pm by the duck pond and a walk around the complex will follow. When: August 9th, September 13th This is a FREE event and people of all ages are invited! Locally Grown Prenatal/Postpartum Classes Register now for August prenatal/postpartum classes by visiting our website. Classes are FREE, dinner is provided. Dates: August 17th, 24th, 31st. 5:30pm-8:00pm 25 Babies have been born at BMH so far this year! We're e're Hiring! Recruiter | Human Resources - (Full Time) Staff Accountant | Finance - (Full Time) Activities Director | Care Center - (Full Time) Nurse Informaticist | Hospital - (Full Time) Many other full-time, part-time & casual positions open, visit our website for more information & to apply. SAVE THE DATE: Strut, Stride, Straddle & Stroll & Hilton Half Marathon Saturday, September 10th, 2022 www.bluemountainhospital.org T he draw results are out from overtightening. — if you’ll be hunting After you’ve checked there’s no time to waste. everything out, it’s time to get All of the great professional to the range. athletes became great by mas- Regardless of our skill lev- tering the fundamentals of their els, we need to practice shoot- respective sports. Like- ing with the weapon wise, hunters must and load we plan have their own win- to use on our hunt. ning pregame prepara- Dumping four dif- tions. Physical fi tness ferent brands of car- goes without saying, tridges into your mag- and practice is pivotal. azine and printing a Whether a novice or a shotgun-like pattern Dale Valade veteran, some prepara- onto a Keystone Light beer box at 25 yards is tion with focus on fun- damentals will greatly increase simply not a course for success. Once you have properly your chances for success in the zeroed off of a solid bench rest, fi eld. practice from fi eld positions as Hiking in the hills is an much as possible. If you plan to activity that we as a soci- use a bipod or tripod, practice ety seem to fi nd the excep- deploying it on uneven ground, tion rather than the rule. If you don’t regularly engage in some getting into position and tak- sort of PT, please start doing so ing shots. Scouting is always time immediately. One of the recur- well spent. Get out your binoc- ring complaints I hear from informal surveys of guides and ulars or spotting scope and hit outfi tters alike is the poor phys- the hills. Learning the routines of the animals and hotspots ical condition of their clients. they frequent will give you a Being so winded as to put leg up come opening day. themselves in danger of med- It’s good to have a plan for ical emergency, too out of breath to make their shot when extraction and, more impor- tantly, where you will hang it to game presents itself and being cool out. I have heard that Rus- too worn out to aid with fi eld sell’s Custom Meats is once dressing and extraction are again taking game animals, but chief among these complaints. Rather than worrying about if they run out of space, you will need a backup plan. how to whittle 10 ounces off Proper preparation prevents of your hunting rifl e and gear, poor performance, as the say- it would go farther to lose 10 ing goes. Here’s to everyone pounds off of your posterior. having a satisfying and suc- Check your gear. Now is the time to see if the batteries in cessful hunting season! What are some of your pre- your rangefi nder need replaced. game preparations? Write to Check to see if the action us at shootingthebreezebme@ screws on your rifl e and cor- gmail.com and check us out on responding scope mounts and Facebook! rings have remained torqued Dale Valade is a local coun- to specifi cations. Spec on gun try gent with a love for the out- screws is NOT the same as the doors, handloading, hunting lug nuts on your Ford F-150; and shooting. please don’t strip them out Grant to fund testing of new wolf deterrents By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Agricul- ture has awarded a $100,000 grant to the nonprofi t Western Landowners Alliance to test new non-lethal tools ranchers can use to protect their livestock from wolves. Funding comes from the Natural Resources Conserva- tion Service through its Con- servation Innovation Grants program, which supports the development of new manage- ment strategies to improve nat- ural resource conservation on private lands. The alliance will work with four ranchers and three county wolf committees in Oregon, evaluating diff erent approaches to minimize wolf-livestock con- fl icts — including range riders, high-tech cameras and com- posting dead animal carcasses. “My goal, or my biggest hope, is that this project is going to help working lands remain viable,” said Ellie Gage, who is administering the NRCS grant. “The deck is already stacked against these producers.” Gage and her husband, Mark, ranch in Central Oregon, where they run a small herd of cattle near Prineville and Pow- ell Butte. She is also chair- woman of the Crook County wolf committee. For the last several years, Gage said she has been involved in the alliance, partic- ipating in the group’s Women in Ranching program. In May, she was asked to do outreach for the NRCS grant proposal, recruit- ing partners interested in study- ing non-lethal deterrents. “The response was really overwhelming,” she said. Four livestock producers signed up — two in Wallowa County, one in Baker County and one in southwest Oregon. Wolf committees in Wal- lowa, Baker and Grant counties agreed to collaborate, as well as Prairie City in Grant County, which has a site for compost- ing roadkill and dead livestock. The grant was awarded July 15, and will reimburse ranch- ers for half their costs as they implement non-lethal methods aimed at keeping wolves away from sheep and cattle. Gage said two producers will experiment with high-fre- quency radio ear tags on their cattle. The idea is that will allow range riders to locate herds more quickly and effi - ciently in large pastures, low- ering costs and maintaining a more consistent human pres- ence among herds to scare off wolves. “Some of these allotments might be several thousand acres,” Gage said. “If you can spend less time looking for your cows, and locate them quickly with the help of ear tags, then you can get to them ... more effi ciently.” Another piece of tech- nology that Gage said she is excited to try is a new game camera being developed with artifi cial intelligence that can be programmed to identify specifi c animals and notify producers. “There is a huge need for the producer to have real-time information on where the pred- ators are, and when they are there,” she said. “They can go and incorporate their non-le- thal tools and human pres- ence when they need to be there. Hopefully, it will make non-lethal tools that much more eff ective.” In Prairie City, Gage said composting dead livestock may prove to be an eff ective tech- nique for ridding ranches of carcasses that might otherwise attract wolves. “If we can minimize those attractants, everybody wins,” she said. The NRCS grant is meant to build on similar livestock-pred- ator confl ict prevention work the alliance is undertaking in other states, including Washing- ton, Idaho, Montana, California, New Mexico and Arizona. By proving which tools are most eff ective in diff erent areas and terrain, Gage said it could lead to a more perma- nent source of funding to assist ranchers. “The end goal of this proj- ect is to provide durable fund- ing for producers who are fac- ing the challenges of sharing working lands with wildlife,” she said. “The work that they’re putting into preventing confl ict with their livestock is not sus- tainable fi nancially.”