Seen In Eastern Oregon
Eastern Oregon is defined as east of the Cascade Mountains. The east/west divide is political and topographical. The fauna and flora and climate differ as well.
Many years ago, it could have been 2010, I went with a group of nature guides from the Portland Oregon area to an interesting historical site close to the Northeastern Oregon city Baker. The main attraction in nearby Sumpter was the remains of an odd gold mining operation that operated from 1934-1954. A dry land dredge created its own stream while running rock through the dredge. Workers picked gold from the rock that passed through.
As interesting as that was, what caught my attention was a scene at the yard of a Sumpter resident. A dog on a leash was barking at a deer peacefully munching on edibles in the yard. The drama looked like it could be a nightly show. After he had enough of the relentless barking the resident of the house came out to shoo the deer away. The dog relaxed.
That wasn’t the only example of games animals play. When we visited the Malheur National Game refuge in Southeastern Oregon we witnessed a coyote stalking a pheasant. When the coyote got close the pheasant would fly twenty feet way. We watched the slow motion unsuccessful pursuit for a few minutes, but it looked like the show could go on all day so we moved on to other wonders of nature. Imagine a slow motion version of Wiley Coyote and the Road Runner. Beep Beep.
On another occasion we found what appeared to be a flattened road runner. A coyote didn’t get it, but it may have failed to Dodge a Maverick, Cougar, Impala, or other animal-named automobile.
Going through South Central Oregon just north of Nevada, we have seen herds of antelope (more accurately pronghorns). They are the fastest land animal in the USA. They evolved when dire wolves were around so they needed to be a little faster, and the excess speed has survived the demise of dire wolves.
The bittern is a bird that stays safe by standing head tilted up in reeds and is hard to discern from its surroundings. It is good at hiding but we saw one.
The landscape east of the Cascades is much different. The trees are different and smaller. The juniper, sage brush, and horned toads (actually a lizard made famous by Yosemite Sam – I’ve run across a few) won’t be found in Western Oregon.
The differences between East and West are partly from climate differences and extent and timing of volcanic activity. Western Oregon has a moderate climate with a lot of rain. Eastern Oregon is arid and much more extreme. Volcanoes made both Crater Lake National Park and Newberry Crater National Monument, home to East and Paulina Lakes, a frequent summer vacation for my family in the 1950s. On a much smaller scale, there are the lava tubes and ice caves which were formed by lava vents. Lava River Cave is over a mile long and open to visitors. The various ice caves can keep ice for much of the year when the outside temperature can reach 90F. In earlier times they provided Bend Oregon with ice in the summer.
Eastern Oregon – it’s something else.
Excellent essay exploring the riches of Oregon. Hawley is a very good fiction writer, but perusing this piece leades me to think that he is equally adept at non-fiction.