FALL BACK GO! EASTERN OREGON MAGAZINE | INSIDE NOV EMB ER 2-9, 2022 WWW.GOE ASTE RNO REGO N.CO M Nunsense! Listen Grande nde Sympho Ro ny TH E “H UM OR OF TH E NU N” IS CO M IN G TO PE ND LE TO N PA GE 8 PAG E 4 See Art shows PAG E 7 Join Tunesm Night ith Daylight Saving Time Time ends on Daylight Saving at 2 clocks a.m. ends on Sunday at 2 Sunday a.m. when when clocks are turned are turned backward one hour backward one hour 1 a.m. to 1 a.m. Sunrise and to sunset Sunrise and sunset be will be earlier, which will means earlier, which means more more light in the morning. PAG E 16 “Nunsense” can be seen Nov. 10-13 Nov. 17-20 and in the Bob Clapp Thea Mountain Com ter at Blue munity Colle ge. For ticke collegecommu ts, visit nitytheatre.co m/box-offi ce/. Jennifer Colto n/Go! Maga zine Celebrate the season with Side A 541-605-016 3 Call the pub to book you r holiday par ty in our priv ate fire mu seum at 1219 Washington light in the morning. Wednesday, November 2, 2022 154th Year • No. 44 • 16 Pages • $1.50 Ave • La Gra nde, OR • www.side abeer.com MyEagleNews.com Ketchum: $2M grant at risk if bond fails By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — The city of John Day will likely lose the $2 million in lottery grant funding that would go toward the construction of a new community pool if the $4 million bond on the Nov. 8 ballot doesn’t pass. Interim John Day City Manager Corum Ketchum provided an update on the grant’s status during a meet- ing of the John Day City Council on Tuesday, Oct. 25. The update had been requested by members of the council. The city received a $2 million state lottery grant to go toward the cost of building a pool, but that money came with an expiration date. If the city Opsis Architecture/Contributed Photo This revised conceptual drawing shows an updated image of what the pro- posed aquatic center in John Day might look like. does not sign the fi nal grant agree- ment by Jan. 15, 2023, the funds will be withdrawn, Ketchum said. The bond failed once already after voters deadlocked in an 802-802 tie in the May election. If the mea- sure fails again this time, Ketchum said, the city may have to return the money. “We need to have a project selected that we can viably spend money on,” Ketchum said in an interview after the meeting. “In this case, it’s the pool project that we have been working on for the last fi ve years.” Ketchum added that if the bond passes, the city and the John Day/ Canyon City Parks and Recreation District will be able to use some of the grant money to pay back expenses that have already been incurred for preliminary design work on the pool project. Ketchum also cleared up confu- sion about an additional $1 million in funding that has been characterized I ain’t afraid of no ghosts as a recent loan to cover cost over- runs, stating that it is part of the same fi nancing package that was previ- ously approved for the project. “Back in February of this year, council approved $3 million in interim fi nancing, with $2 million that would be the lottery money and an additional $1 million to be the last dollars spent on the project,” Ketchum said. Ketchum added that the $1 million line of credit was taken out in hopes that the money would not be needed to construct the pool but would be available in case of overruns. “I think it was wise of council at the time to say, ‘Well, construction costs might be going up,’ Ketchum See Bond, Page A16 Tyler Smith trial gets underway By TONY CHIOTTI Blue Mountain Eagle Tony Chiotti/Blue Mountain Eagle Venkman and Stanz battle to save the Prairie City home of Shawna and Jamey Clark on Halloween night, 2022. By TONY CHIOTTI Blue Mountain Eagle I f you mention “the Halloween house” in Prairie City, locals will know which one you mean. Up Main Street, just off Front, Shawna and Jamey Clark have gone all out for the past 20 years, the last 10 of which have involved full-scale themes such as The Giant Pumpkin, Beetle- FOR MORE PHOTOS, SEE THE ONLINE VERSION OF THIS STORY AT MYEAGLENEWS.COM. juice, Ichabod Crane and a pirate ship. This year they went with “Ghostbusters,” includ- ing a custom-built Slimer and life-size Venk- man and Stanz fi ring proton blasters into an animated ectoplasm portal. Spengler and Zeddmore were less cooper- ative, their mannequins refusing to stand up. So they ended up on the porch, one seated and one prone, covered in “marshmallow goo,” which on inspection proved to be a mixture of spray foam insulation and shav- ing cream. Shawna Clark says they usually start on the next year’s plan right after Hal- loween. “It’s all her ideas,” said Jamey Clark. “I just do it.” CANYON CITY — Opening argu- ments in the Tyler Smith trial were made on Wednesday, Oct. 26, at the Grant County Courthouse, with Judge Dan Bunch of Klamath Falls presiding. Smith stands accused of three felony counts: attempted rape, attempted sex abuse and fourth-degree assault, all per- taining to events alleged to have occurred on Aug. 31, 2018. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges. The trial began in earnest following a lengthy jury selection that involved the court sending the sheriff out into the community to hand out summonses to residents. After the 12 Smith jurors and two alternates had been seated and pre- pared via instructions and clarifi cations on their role from Judge Bunch, opening arguments began. Oregon Senior Assistant Attorney General Jayme Kimberly made opening statements for the prosecution. She was joined in court by Wheeler County Dis- trict Attorney Gretchen Ladd. Andrea Coit, joined in court by co-counsel and husband Andrew Coit, made the opening statement for the defense. Both attorneys outlined the roadmap See Smith, Page A16 Giant pumpkin breeding makes enormous progress By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Despite their grotesquely bloated appearance — or per- haps because of it — giant pumpkins are known to evoke a curious reaction: love at fi rst sight. Growers of the oversize gourds commonly recall feel- ing a relentless, magnetic fasci- nation upon discovering them at an autumn fair or festival. “I was just captivated by these giant pumpkins. I made a note that if I ever had a prop- erty with enough space, I’d try to grow them,” said Brian Wil- liams, treasurer of the Pacifi c Giant Vegetable Growers nonprofi t. “It was just the enormity of them,” he explained. A decade ago, Williams tore out a paved sports court at his home in Lake Oswego to make room for the garden where he now grows enormous vegetables. He’s since been amending the “terrible” soil with organic matter, and while he still culti- vates giant pumpkins, Williams now specializes in long gourds that top 10 feet in length. Competition is stiff among the 120 members of the orga- nization, who strive to produce the heaviest or longest speci- men in eight crop categories, but it’s surpassed by the spirit of camaraderie. “We’re all a bit dorky and I think we take comfort that we can dork out with other dorks of the same variety,” said Wil- liams, who works as a consul- tant on occupational safety and health regulations. The ‘obsession’ Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Kendall Spielman, president of the Pacifi c Giant Vegetable Growers nonprofi t, examines one of the giant pumpkins grow- ing on his property near Brooks. Though giant pumpkin growers tend not to take them- selves too seriously, they’ve nonetheless performed astound- ing feats of agronomic and genetic improvement in recent decades. Good breeding At more than 2,500 pounds, the world’s heaviest pumpkin weighs twice as much as the record-holder 20 years ago and three times as much as the stan- dard-bearer 30 years ago. “As a group, we understand so much more about the science and what you need to let them grow big,” said Russ Pugh, chair of PGVG’s seed commit- tee in Eugene, and an events promoter. Selective breeding has pro- pelled this massive progress, with enthusiasts planting seeds from past champions and fertil- izing the fl owers of those plants with pollen from other promis- ing off spring. These lineages are tracked as earnestly by giant pump- kin breeders as those of thor- oughbred horses or champion livestock. Gary Kristensen of Happy Valley doesn’t have enough room to compete at the high- est level in giant pumpkin growing weigh-off s, so he in- stead breeds with an eye for optimal color. “There are family trees that go back for generations,” Pugh said. “Serious growers won’t grow them unless the genetics are known.” What makes these accom- plishments all the more impres- sive is that most giant pump- kin growers aren’t professional farmers, but come from a variety of professional back- grounds, said Brett Cooper, a founding member of PGVG who grew giant pumpkin seeds commercially for about two decades. Since the 1980s, the mar- ket for giant pumpkin seeds has grown from several hun- dred people to tens of thou- sands around the world, said Cooper, who lives near For- est Grove. For growers, the “obses- sion” is driven partly by the plant’s unbelievable growth during the height of summer — in the time it takes to eat a sandwich, it’s possible to mea- sure minute changes in size, he said. “When I started growing, you wanted a pumpkin that grows 15-20 pounds a day,” he said. “Now they can grow 50-60 pounds every single day.” From the perspective of breeding, however, it’s not enough to select for pumpkins that rapidly get heavy. In the past, pumpkins that simply packed on pounds with- out greater durability were eas- ily damaged, often disqualify- ing them from competition. “They’d collapse under their own weight,” Pugh said. Traits that confer thick walls and fl exibility are critical, so the fruit — yes, a pumpkin is a fruit — can withstand its own weight and environmental stressors. See Pumpkins, Page A16