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Current Weather Saturday, November 7, 2009

Recent Outdoors stories

Out & About


OUTLAST
100 years for Bison Range
40 million
Number of bison roaming in massive herds between Mexico and central Canada in the late 1700s.

Critter watch

The outdoors is a giant nursery this time of year.Hunters know "the rut," or peak of breeding activity for elk is in mid September and then around Thanksgiving for white-tailed deer. This is when love-sick bulls and bucks temporarily lose some of their characteristic wariness in order to get the job done.

Perfect day, slick tracks for Langlauf

The Mount Spokane State Park cross-country ski trails were graced Sunday by an event that falls somewhere between hot nordic competition and a yard sale.

Field reports

Eagle chicks in Web spotlight
Wildlife – Internet surfers around the world are flocking to the Hancock Wildlife Foundation Web site to watch live video of a pair of bald eagles ready to hatch eggs in a nest near Delta, British Columbia, a Vancouver suburb.

Cheney's shot still being felt by sportsmen

Sportsmen were thankful Wednesday that after four days Vice President Dick Cheney finally was persuaded to take responsibility for accidentally shooting his hunting partner. But before checking out the damage from shots directed at the veep, let's focus on brighter lights in the sportsman's world.

Welcome to January in our great outdoors

Just in case you haven't been outside since Saturday's brief splash of spring, here's your mid-April reality check.

Lake Roosevelt issue baffles sportsmen

Five months after a contentious public meeting in Davenport, state and local governments are still trying to get answers from Rep. Cathy McMorris and Sen. Maria Cantwell.

Biologists sometimes take a good lashing

Mama, don't let your babies grow up to be wildlife biologists – unless your boy's named Sue and your girl's dubbed Bubba. If they don't have a skin thick as a bison hump, they'll never last in the profession of managing game.

Watch out when fishermen land real estate deals

What entices so many fishermen to foul great fishing streams? The question is hitting me harder as I venture out this year to sample the spring runs and hatches, and I'm not talking about the occasional litter of white plastic worm containers.

Rich Landers: It pays to always be prepared

A Spokane fly fisherman caught a once-in-a-lifetime North Idaho experience in Tepee Creek Monday, and we're not talking about cutthroat trout. The angler asked to remain anonymous because … ahem … he doesn't want his boss to know he was out fishing.

Rich Landers: Lake levels fluctuate wildly as heat returns

Anglers and boaters are watching with interest as the sun bears down and the water rises at Lake Roosevelt. The lake level was drawn down as low as 1,230 feet above sea level this spring to accommodate water expected to pour in from the biggest mountain runoff in several years.

Rich Landers: Introduced species drive out trout

Times have changed irrevocably for anglers at the Little Pend Oreille chain of lakes east of Colville. Traditionally a hot spot for cutthroat trout fishing, the connected lakes – Gillette, Heritage, Leo, Sherry and Thomas – have been plagued with illegal introductions of perch, bass, sunfish and other species, said Curt Vail, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife district fish biologist.

Opening day

Many excellent trout fishing waters open Saturday in this region. Chris Donley, WDFW central district fish biologist, expects the top producing waters to include Badger, Williams and West Medical lakes in southwest Spokane County and Fishtrap Lake on the Lincoln-Spokane county line.

Salmon and steelhead

Last week, the WDFW opened spring chinook fishing in the upper Bonneville Pool upriver to McNary Dam. With 100,000 upriver spring chinook salmon expected to return to the Columbia River this year, fishery managers for Washington and Oregon have also reopened recreational salmon fishing below Bonneville Dam effective Wednesday.

Fishing season opened for spring chinook on stretch of Snake

A sudden fishing season for spring chinook salmon opens on a portion of the Snake River in Washington today, thanks to a late surge of fish up the Columbia River system.

Hunt & Fish

Winter lakes Fourth of July, Hog Canyon, Williams and Hatch will close at the end of March. Anglers are taking quite a few trout from open water on all but Hatch.

Hunting and Fishing

The Clearwater has been running high, but the ice is gone from Orofino on down, and it should be turning on when the rain stops, said Larry Barrett at IDFG.

Hunting+Fishing

Local tributaries of the Snake River are in excellent condition for steelhead fishing, reported WDFW fish biologist Joe Bumgarner of Dayton. Anglers are averaging just 2 1/2 hours per steelhead on the Tucannon River, just more than three hours per fish on the Walla Walla and about five hours per fish on the Touchet River.

Hunting+Fishing

Steelhead season closes April 30 on most regional waters, but goes until May 15 on the Little Salmon River. North and the South Fork Clearwater anglers are averaging a fish every 6 hours.

Hunting and Fishing

Salmon and steelheadAdult spring chinook counts at Bonneville Dam are the lowest on record. Through Sunday, 205 fish had been counted.

Ice led to chilly fishing season opener at reservation

Last weekend's fishing season opener on Colville Indian Reservation was a little short on open water at some of the best fishing lakes.

Orr steers group of kids to Bear Lake

At first glance, George Orr appears to be pulling off a cheap campaign trick by going fishing today at 10:30 a.m. at Bear Lake County Park with a group of special education kids.

Recreation calendar

For Friday, May 12, 2006.

Salmon and steelhead

With large numbers of late-arriving salmon moving up the Columbia River, fishery managers for Washington and Oregon have agreed to reopen the recreational spring chinook fishery in the upper Bonneville Pool to McNary Dam starting Saturday.

Jetboaters race the rapids

On rivers throughout the West, Mike Egbers of Mount Vernon and former Mount Vernon High School classmate Eric Hamburg of Shasta Lake, Calif., have been making waves on the U.S. Northwest Circuit of whitewater jetboat racing.

Wolves enter mainstream

Montana and Idaho are ready to go with gray wolf management plans that include limited hunting now that the predators are being removed from the federal endangered species list.

Finally, good news in 2009

Salmon are giving Washington and Idaho anglers reason for high hopes this season.Spring chinook appear to be headed to the Columbia system in fantastic numbers – the third-biggest run since 1977.

Smallmouth bass boom bad for salmon

Like all trophy-hunting sportsmen, smallmouth bass anglers want to keep the big ones.Fishery managers are trying to convince them to keep the smaller ones.

Sleep on this tent review

Swooping nylon and linked poles, zippered doors, screened windows and stakes in the dirt holding it down – the humble formula for a tent has long prevailed as an ultimate outdoor habitat for humans in need of a temporary home.

Show offers angling tips

Anglers can catch a lesson on skills needed to be successful at Inland Northwest fisheries during the Annual Great Western Sportfishing Show Friday through next Sunday at the Spokane Convention Center.

Bike commute gets stimulus

Tucked in among the hundreds of pages in the federal bill bailing out financial institutions are a few dedicated to people who commute to work on two wheels.

The decade of river revivals

AUGUSTA, Maine — A backhoe took a bite out of the Edwards Dam 10 years ago, releasing the waters of the Kennebec River that had been held back for more than a century and a half.

Learn skills, avoid spills

Monday is the last chance to sign up for the Spokane Mountaineers Mountain Biking Clinic, scheduled for June 13-14 at Riverside State Park.

Hanging on in the Selkirks

Despite setbacks caused by vehicle collisions, the endangered Selkirk Mountains caribou herd is at least holding an even population.

Hikers, hunters come together

Here's a bright idea for hikers, bikers, berry pickers and other people heading into the woods for outdoor recreation now that the first of the hunting seasons has opened in Washington:

Series highlights camping with kids

A big prize is waiting for families who explore camping and hiking with the kids this summer.The tents, sleeping bags and trip to Glacier National Park, complete with fuel voucher, is only the minor prize.

Angler reels in hero status

PORTLAND – Don Elder of Gresham didn't expect to catch anything on the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend when he waded through the crowd at Oxbow Regional Park and into Oregon's Sandy River to practice his fly-casting technique.

Light cot gives campers a lift

When talking about bedding in the great outdoors, the words "ultralight" and "cot" rarely come in the same sentence. But that's exactly what LuxuryLite, a small company in Lake Jackson, Texas, proposes with its UltraLite Cot, a 72-inch bed that weighs less than 3 pounds.

New trends in gear have you covered from head to toe

A jacket with embedded electronics, self-tinting goggles and customizable ski boots are among the products you'll discover in this second installment on gear trends in skiing and snowboarding for the '08/'09 season.

Bird counters unite online

Your home's picture window is a front-row seat for The Great Backyard Bird Count, which starts Friday and runs through Monday.

Fishing follies make him butt of jokes on the water

Yes, that's my butt in the photo. And yes, that's a fishing lure hooked to both the back of my shirt and the seat of my pants. And yes, that's a walleye dangling there from the lure.

Region's lookouts include rentals

Forest fire lookouts have had their ups and downs in the past century, but the trend throughout the country has been down.

Day-hiking Lake Pend Oreille

1 Schweitzer: From Sandpoint, drive 1.3 miles north on U.S. 95, turn left onto Schweitzer Cut-Off Road (across from Burger King). Turn right onto North Boyer Road; turn left at the Schweitzer sign and drive 9 miles up to the resort.

Translocating sage grouse wild, sleepless trip for volunteers

Volunteering to translocate sage grouse is no vacation."I'd forgotten what a hangover felt like, but now I remember," said Richard Rivers, one of six Spokane chapter members of the Hunting and Fishing Conservation Coalition who drove to southeast Oregon last weekend.

Technology trends in gear for the slopes

Here are four trends and a handful of corresponding new products — from high-tech skis to a snowboarding boot with a built-in heater — that are making the scene on ski and snowboard slopes this season.

Minnesota race a good test for bike gear

Minnesota is not often noted for its hills. But a new bike race in the state, the Ragnarök 105, makes the most of Minnesota's southern bluff country, climbing and rolling for an estimated 8,000 feet of elevation gain over its namesake 105-mile length.

Yakima deer plagued by lice

Washington wildlife officials estimate about 50 percent of the deer population in two central Washington counties has been lost since 2004, and while all the causes aren't known, at least one is believed to be lice.

Snake River at Clarkston may not get salmon season

Washington will open spring chinook salmon fishing this year, but the Snake River near Clarkston is not likely to be in the mix

Gobblers game for spring turkey season

Young hunters age 15 and younger are getting the first shot at wild turkeys this weekend.Washington's youth turkey season opened Saturday and closes today. The general gobbler season opens April 15 and runs through May 31. Licensed hunters are limited to shooting only a turkey with a visible "beard" protruding from its breast.

Steelheading prime in Idaho's upper Salmon

Steelhead fishing is winding down in most parts of Idaho, but around Stanley, it's just getting started.

Washington wolves protected

The recently announced removal of the gray wolf from federal "endangered" status included wolves found in the eastern two-thirds of Washington. However, Washington still lists the wolf as endangered.

Idaho petitions for more salmon

The Idaho Fish and Game Commission is planning to write letters to its counterparts in Oregon and Washington to complain about the way those states manage spring chinook fisheries in the lower Columbia River.

Bike offers no-sweat commuting

Flip up the kickstand, swing a leg over the frame, check your handlebar-mounted computer display, and go. The OHM XU700, an electric-assist bicycle, is rolling, and you're in for a unique ride.

Chinook en route to Idaho

Most Snake River system spring chinook anglers are waiting for better conditions before wetting a line.

Groups lead way on hikes

Three regional conservation groups will begin series of guided group hikes next weekend to introduce the public to choice roadless areas that are candidates for wilderness designation.

They have answers at park

MOUNT VERNON, Wash. — You have seen them at state and national parks. They are usually dressed in olive green, with a gold tag giving their name, title and employer. They often wear wide-brimmed Smokey Bear hats.

Sockeye reach Stanley Basin

The first two sockeye salmon of the season completed the marathon journey from the Pacific Ocean, up the Columbia and Snake rivers to Little Redfish Lake in Idaho's Stanley Basin on July 23. More to come.

Oregon adds fee for users of paddle craft

Oregon's Legislature has followed Idaho's lead by requiring non-motorized craft longer than 10 feet to have a sticker that will help fund invasive species protections.

Outback sledder curbs sought

A heli-ski operator is calling on British Columbia to enact controls over backcountry snowmobilers, saying the large number of deaths this season has hurt the province's reputation as a safe outdoor recreation destination.

Loaded-gun law prompts discussion

A new law allowing loaded guns in national parks and wildlife refuges will take effect in 2010, the Obama administration says.

OHVs may get more access

The Stevens County Commission will hear public comments this week on a proposal to open more county roads to off-highway vehicles.

Bears dogged in King County

Three Karelian bear dogs are being employed by the Washington Fish and Wildlife Department this year to help deal with bear problems, primarily in eastern King County.

Ticks ready to feast

Ticks are becoming active in areas around Spokane. Check yourself and your pet after being out.Ticks usually probe around a potential host for a few hours before choosing a tender spot to sink their mouth parts into your skin for a long, leisurely meal.

Outdoor groups hold fundraisers

Flicks and banquets are coming up to boost outdoor programs dear to our hearts. Among them:Centennial Trail Adventure Auction and banquet to support trail projects, Friday, Dance Street Ballroom in the West Central neighborhood. Limited to 180 tickets.

Eagle chicks in Web spotlight

Internet surfers around the world are flocking to the Hancock Wildlife Foundation Web site to watch live video of a pair of bald eagles ready to hatch eggs in a nest near Delta, British Columbia, a Vancouver suburb.

Fat tire plans at Stevens Pass

New ski lifts, a mountaintop lodge and mountain biking routes are being proposed for Stevens Pass ski area of U.S. 2.

Moose cause more concern

Washington Fish and Wildlife Department staffers have a big issue on their hands with moose – tons of them – making themselves home among city and suburban neighborhoods.

Low turnout for PdO kokanee

Only 650,000 kokanee eggs were collected for rearing at Cabinet Gorge Fish Hatchery this season, a disappointing, but not insurmountable number, said Jim Fredericks, Idaho Fish and Game Department Panhandle Region fisheries manager.

Avalanche deaths trigger review

U.S. Forest Service officials say they plan to re-examine local and nationwide avalanche control procedures following avalanche deaths at Western ski resorts.

2009 Boat Show has class

Get more bang for your buck by multitasking at the Spokane National Boat Show, which opens Friday and runs through Feb. 8 at Spokane Interstate Fair and Expo Center.

Stimulus a rare boost for parks

Yellowstone isn't flush with money from federal economic stimulus funds, but at least the Madison campground sewer system can be updated for the first time in some 50 years.

Griz gave hiker no warning

WILDLIFE – A female grizzly bear that attacked a lone hiker near West Yellowstone recently was probably protecting her cub and a chunk of meat she had buried near the trail, Montana wildlife officials said.

Mount Spokane summit open

STATE PARKS —The road to the summit of Mount Spokane opened for vehicle traffic this weekend.

Ione man cited for killing loon

WILDLIFE – Working from a citizen's tip, Washington Fish and Wildlife Department officers have cited Charles I. Fraley, 22, of Ione for killing a protected common loon at Yocum Lake last month, according to Tom Metzger, Pend Oreille County prosecuting attorney.

Milfoil fowling Noxon waters

WEEDS – Richard Reich and Doug Merchant had a piece of paradise in their neighboring lots along the Clark Fork River's Noxon Reservoir, until a weed hitched a ride, probably on someone's unwashed boat.

Waters buzz with salmon

FISHING – A banner season is expected for Washington salmon anglers, and the fish are already cruising the state's saltwaters.

Feds challenge pelican plan

WILDLIFE – Federal officials have told the Idaho Fish and Game Department officials that their plan to halve the number of pelicans nesting in southern and eastern Idaho by 2013 to boost fisheries is an "eradication program" that needs more work.

Road opens at Glacier

NATIONAL PARKS – The Inside North Fork Road has been opened to vehicle traffic for the first time since a storm caused extensive damage in November 2006.

Grizzly case is wake-up call

HUNTING – Charges against two Grant County men are prompting wildlife officials to warn hunters to study the difference between a black bear, which is legal to hunt, and a grizzly, which is federally protected.

Record rainbow caught in Idaho

FISHING – Michelle Larsen-Williams of Pingree, Idaho, broke a 61-year-old state record on July 29 when she landed a 20-pound rainbow trout on the Snake River just above American Falls Reservoir.

Outdoors, birdwatching, Trail of the Coeur d'Alenes, bicycling, rail trails, Audubon Society, nature

Trail birding
 The Audubon Society's Coeur d'Alene Chapter has updated a checklist of 189 bird species found at low elevations in North Idaho and along the Trail of the Coeur d'Alenes.

Wolf hunt

The Idaho Fish and Game Commission will meet in Idaho Falls on Monday to set harvest quotas for Idaho's first wolf hunts. The first seasons are scheduled to start in September. However, legal challenges are pending.

Outdoors, fly fishing, charities

Anglers hooked on charity
 A generous array of prizes has been donated to an upcoming fund-raiser to finance fishing adventures for youths with life-threatening illnesses.

Outdoors, hiking

Get high on 50 hikes
What: "Fifty Hikes of Eastern Washington's Highest Mountains," free slide show by local author James P. Johnson.

Outdoors, kayaking, sea kayaking, classes, clinics

Sea-kayak classes
Spokane Canoe and Kayak Club will offer its last three-hour clinic for recreational kayaking on Tuesday at Boulder Beach. Cost: free with club membership ($25).

Field reports

Economy impacts rifles, boats
OUTDOOR INDUSTRY – A U.S. rifle company announced it is closing shop this week and a major boating company is filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

HUNTING

What: Big-game trophy field care seminar.When: 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m., May 9 or May 10.

Snake preview

What: "A River Lost, A River Found: historic images of the free-flowing lower Snake River," free exhibit by Save Our Wild Salmon.

Hike the bridges

What: Spokane Bridge Walk.When: June 6, starting between 9:30-10:30 a.m.

Outdoors, skiing

NORDIC SKIING
Coming events

OUTDOOR IMAGES

 Photographer Keith Lazelle will discuss his exhibit, "Fast Moving Water: The Hoh River Story," at 7 p.m. Monday at Spokane Community College.

SKI/SNOWSHOE

Snowshoeing: Saturday evening, 49 Degrees North.Nordic skiing and Italian dinner, Saturday evening at Mount Spokane.

TURNBULL

What: Annual Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge Community Work Party.When: 9 a.m.-noon,

Outdoors, fishing, spring chinook, Snake River, Clearwater River, Columbia River, seminars

FISHING
Springer savvy
What: Four one-hour seminars on spring chinook salmon fishing.

Outdoors, fishing

FISHING
Coming events
Fly Fishing: Extravaganza, sponsored by Spokane Fly Fishers, featuring state fisheries biologists, area guides and information on local waters available through presentations, displays, 5 p.m.-9 p.m., St. Francis School, 1104 W. Heroy.

Outdoors, fly fishing, spring break

FLY FISHING
Youth break
What: Spring break fly-fishing seminars.

6 6 ways to save the river

This may be the best summer to get into the flow of the Spokane River. Clubs, groups, businesses and agencies are joining as stewards of the river's health as well as keeping it safe and available for river rats and newbies alike.

Cliff hanger

Perched at 6,870 feet on the divide between Idaho's Clearwater and St. Joe rivers, the Mallard Peak lookout has rarely been unoccupied since it was last staffed by Forest Service fire monitors in 1957.

Prime

"If this is what it means to be an old fart, sign me up," a 40-something skier said. He'd been advised he was too young to join a boisterous group that had taken over the lodge lunchroom's top floor during happy hour. But he left with a smile and something to look forward to – when he's at least 55.

Above it all

No stranger to cold and darkness, Annie Pokorny has a headlamp ready as she powers through another winter sunset. The after-school workout is paced by bursts of steam from her lungs when she streaks past her father and pierces the dusky hush of Mount Spokane with a rhythmic swish-swish of her skating skis across the groomed snow.

Leaving the nest

At a fraction of their salaries and with no stock options or bonuses, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service refuge manager near Cheney has done what many high-powered CEOs have failed to do.

1 river, 320 miles

Drift boat anchors are destined to be the new heavy metals in the upper Clark Fork River. "Undoing 150 years of mining, smelting and agricultural abuse will not be fast or cheap, but we've made a big leap in the right direction," Daniel Kiely of Missoula said as he worked the drift boat's oars.

Wife sharing

I used to be able to dismiss birdwatching as better left to birds. But my life and my wife have changed. The transformation for her was as easy as joining the Spokane Audubon Society and taking one of the club's bird-watching classes. It hasn't been that simple for me.

Cycling September

September is becoming the month of the bicycle in the Inland Northwest. A cycling event of some sort for a wide range of abilities is scheduled every week through the month and into October.

Quite a catch

If screaming reels are music to your ears, you might be moved to dance when The Fly-Fishing Film Tour lands in Spokane Thursday at the Bing Crosby Theater.

Senior Moment

Re-entry from the top of the world can be an ordeal in itself. Kay LeClaire could barely drive her car when she arrived in Spokane on June 2 from an expedition to Mount Everest. "Even 20 mph seems very, very fast," she said after two months at a pace that often required three breaths for every step.

BACK HOME

Considering what sage grouse have suffered in the past 200 years, the most recent ordeal was a joyride.

Cool Digs

Sometimes the rain is pelting down, a brisk wind is blowing, the surf is pounding, it's so chilly your fingers hurt and your lantern barely casts a dim light on this tumultuous edge of sea and sand.

BOW 'N' BARREL

Developed by a Spokane Valley machinist, the devise is a bow without arrows and a blowgun that requires no huffing and puffing, yet it shoots just fine.

Guns of winter

Comparisons will be made today between this season and the winter of 1968-69 as shotgunners gather to begin The Spokesman-Review Trapshoot. The shoot has been a winter tradition since 1916, when club scores were sent in to the newspaper from around the region by telegraph. The only break was during the three years around World War II, when ammunition wasn't readily available.

Hiker's dozen

A boat isn't the only toy useful for enjoying Lake Pend Oreille. A pair of hiking shoes will keep a lake visitor busy for days.

Before Prime Time

No attendants were in Glacier National Park's St. Mary Lake entrance booth to take money last Sunday. Visitors to the 1-million-acre park were on a self-serve honor system.

Cure for cabin fever

A surefire fun way to introduce a youngster to the outdoors is spending a night under the stars at an Idaho state park. Or how about spending the night under a roof and peeking out at the stars from a swing on a cabin porch.

Taking the plunge

Paddling atop a 60-foot waterfall seated in the equivalent of a glorified milk jug, Chris Korbulic's mind calmly analyzes the speed, trajectory and technique that make kayaking over mega-waterfalls more about precision than insanity.

Ferry Trail

Somewhere in a land not so far away, an abandoned railroad could become the best rail trail in Washington.

Along for the ride

Parenting 3-year-old twin boys hasn't tamed Teri Tucker's endurance-sports lifestyle. A versatile baby buggy has given the Spokane mom freedom to keep her fitness edge with her kids in tow.

Path to prosperity

A successful Montana fly-fishing shop owner is proving that building environmental stewardship for fish and rivers into his business model is more than just the right thing to do.

to local

Looking back at the Spokane River, speaking to no one in particular, Tim Wildman of the United Kingdom summarized two hours of whitewater rafting in one word.

Lessons from Isaak's Ranch

Set back by a cool start to spring, the best trout fishing of the season has finally begun to hatch in the region's desert lakes.

Fat tire flings

Droves of tourists head to Taos, N.M., every summer, ready to take in the area's art galleries, pioneer history and American Indian influence. This is the place that inspired artists such as Georgia O'Keeffe and Ansel Adams.

Roskelley duo chills out on icy waterfall climb

Spokane climbers John and Jess Roskelley shared some quality time in a room with an incredible view last weekend during their visit to Alberta's Columbia Icefields.

Fly fishers compete for USA Team

Lance Egan of Lehi, Utah, caught and released 42 fish over the two days of competition in Central Oregon last week to win the regional USA Team trails competition for the National Fly Fishing Championships.

UT bull elk confirmed as world record

A behemoth male elk dubbed the "Spider bull," taken by a hunter on Monroe Mountain in central Utah last fall, carried the largest antler rack ever recorded by the Boone and Crockett (B&C) Club. The elk was officially recognized on Jan. 2 as the new world record for a nontypical American elk.

Top trouting vacation is just one state away

Argentina, Alaska and other far-flung destinations can capture a trout angler's imagination, but the Inland Northwest offers a world-class fly-fishing dream trip for the price of just two tanks of gas.

Ups and downs for loons, geese, swan

Washington waterfowl have been keeping an unusually high profile in the news this month.Among the top recent stories:

Anglers think deep at Rufus Woods

Last year's outrageously good fishing has toned down to simply good fishing for porky rainbows in the Columbia River waters of Lake Rufus Woods.

Big-game harassment by antler gatherers increasing

Big-game hunting seasons are closed, but overzealous people scavenging for shed antlers may be harassing elk to death, Washington Fish and Wildlife Department biologists say.

Spring in the air, and in your hair

Birds, bears, buttercups and ticks – our region's perennial signs of spring are out and about, along with a lot of people recovering from cabin fever.

Gold vs. salmon debated at GU

Students enrolled at Gonzaga University often sprout some of their roots on campus, but Lange Solberg, a third generation commercial fisherman, is sowing a homegrown international controversy.

Gray wolves relisted as endangered in Great Lakes

The federal government recently agreed to put gray wolves in the western Great Lakes region back on the endangered species list — at least temporarily.

Economy had snag for area fishing icon

How bad has the economy been?Northwest fishing icon Buzz Ramsey has been out of work since January, but he leverages his fishing allowance by using "poor man's ramps," as he terms locations without fees, to launch his boat.

Top trails aren't so far-flung

The Inland Northwest is no stranger to classic destinations for mountain-biking routes. Rossland, British Columbia, snuggled in the Kootenay Mountains just three hours north of Spokane, ranks high on North American mountain-biking destination lists. The Kootenay-Columbia Trails Society maintains 32 trails totaling 100 miles.

Tiger muskies offer the thrill of the catch

Todd Reis of Tacoma was almost giddy that his daughter was enrolling at Eastern Washington University.

Take a hike, grab a shovel, join the group to Celebrate National Trails Day

Trails and the recreation they deliver will be in the spotlight as the Inland Northwest celebrates National Trails Day for much of the week.

Trails get TLC from local helpers

Laurie Fleming was wearing her new personalized hard hat with pride last Saturday on the Iller Creek Trail.

Cameras track rebounding species

Washington's wild areas are becoming more diverse and interesting as several furbearing species – wolverine, fisher and sea otter – slowly recover some of their former range.

Learning to live with wildlife provides food for thought

Learning to live with wildlife starts with two basic lessons:•Give them space.•Don't feed them or habituate them to human contact.

Meet the Airow maker

Devon Romney, 40, is neither an avid archer nor an ardent paintball gamer.But the Spokane Valley machinist's ingenuity is giving enthusiasts from both sports a new archery tool to try.

Notorious park elk falls, dies

CHEYENNE, Wyo. – His name was just a numeral, yet he had legions of human admirers and few rivals among his own species.

Spirit Lake angler wins knot wars

A North Idaho angler has tied up the top spot in a national competition for new fishing knots.The Fish-N-Fool knot, devised by Rick Lawrence of Spirit Lake, was declared the season winner last week during the Knot Wars feature of the North American Fishing Club's Versus Country cable television program.

Report offers insight into Eagle Cap tragedy

Persisting snowpack weakness combined with wind-loaded snow on steep terrain last month contributed to the first avalanche fatality in Northeastern Oregon's Wallowa Mountains since 1982.

Snow hounds game

Deep snow isn't the only curse dogging wildlife in the region this week."Loose dogs are taking a toll on deer," Wanda Clifford, Inland Northwest Wildlife Council executive director, said Tuesday.

Seasons open for small game in two states

Hunting seasons for some of the smallest and most difficult targets will open Tuesday in the Inland Northwest.

Land swap protects wildlife, preserves public access

The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation teamed with The Nature Conservancy and several state and federal agencies recently to secure 2,675-acres in the first phase of a three-year project to protect wildlife habitat and public access in the Cascade Mountains near the Naches River in Washington.

Tying skills have him flying high

Fly-tying standout John Newbury of Chewelah had some dark days on his way to the national spotlight.

Out & About


OUTCLIMB
Locals scaling Mount Everest
Two senior Spokane climbers were progressing this week in their attempts to climb Mount Everest, elevation 29,035 feet.

Out & About


OUTPADDLE
Sea kayakers tell Alaska tale
Three Western Washington adventures are coming to Spokane to present a slide and video program detailing their 500-mile sea-kayak tour around the Kenai Peninsula.

Out & About


OUTDO
VIPs rally for Scotchmans
Not just anyone is attending the annual "State of the Scotchman Peaks Wilderness" event Tuesday at the new Ponderay (Idaho) Events Center (behind Sandpoint Furniture off the east entrance of Bonner Mall complex).

Out & about


OUTFIELD
Ladybugs swarm Mount Spokane
Tom Kimbrell of Spokane was rewarded with surprise discoveries for skiing over the lingering snow to the top of Mount Spokane last Sunday afternoon.

Out & About


OUTLIVE
Idaho producing bumper crop
About 1,300 vehicles collided with wildlife in Idaho, resulting in 200 serious injuries to drivers and passengers in 2007. In the past 10 years, 27 people have died in collisions with critters.

Out & About


OUTPEOPLE
Vet has soft spot for wildlife
Shortly after opening his Otis Orchards veterinary clinic for domestic pets and livestock, Dr. Jerry Ponti exposed his wild side.

Out & About


OUTCAST
Angler explains what bugs trout
What: "Understanding Emergers," free program on fly fishing with aquatic insect patterns.

Out & About


OUTCAST
Fishing is cure for March madness
With water temperatures rising and trout getting more active, it's time to wean from TV hoops and anything else that lures an angler indoors.

Out & About


OUTFISH
Angler catches largest of tiny fish
Here's a fish tale that could use a little exaggeration.

Out & About


OUTCLIMB
Everest distinction one for the aged
Spokane climber Dawes Eddy, who's trekking his way toward Mount Everest, has an interesting twist in his goal to possibly become the oldest American to climb the world's highest peak.

Out & About


OUTROAR
Snowmobile Expo at Yellowstone
The West Yellowstone World Snowmobile Expo, March 13-15, has grown over 19 years to become the largest snowmobile event in the West, with manufacturers unveiling their 2010 lines while freestyle sledders flip through the sky in exhibitions.

Out & About


OUTRAGEOUS
Sky-high skiers fly at Schweitzer
What: Yoke's Outrageous Air Show aerial ski-jumping exhibition, plus fireworks, music.

Out & About

Lewiston tops for sportsmen
OUTLIVE – Lewiston, Idaho, pop. 31,794, ranks No. 1 among 200 towns in Outdoor Life magazine's 2009 list of best places for sportsmen to live.

Out & About

Wolves may be in family way
OUTFIELD – A game camera monitored by Washington state wildlife biologists recently caught an image of what appears to be a lactating female wolf in the middle of Pend Oreille County.

Everest summiteers

By the Ages
Oldest man: Min Bahadur Sherchan, 76, of Nepal, in 2008.

Out & About


Gone fishing: Man in hot water
OUTCAST – While William Peterson spent a recent week fishing and camping near Bend, Ore., up to eight law enforcement officers in three Willamette Valley counties were out looking for him, according to The Oregonian.

Out & About

Roosevelt campers seek high ground
OUTSMART – Savvy campers will pitch their camps high on the shores of Lake Roosevelt over the Fourth of July holiday.

Out & About


Limits begin on Mt. Spokane road
Starting this week, the main road into Mount Spokane State Park will be closed to public access Mondays-Thursdays until mid-October.

Out & About


Rainier, etc., offer free ride
OUTBREAK – There's no charge to drive into national parks on July 18-19 and Aug. 15-16 under a new entrance-fee-free weekend program to help families become reacquainted with some of the best natural scenery in the world.

Out & About

Beginner's luck: clinics teach skills
OUTDO – Experts in three popular Inland Northwest outdoor activities have scheduled special clinics to introduce newcomers to life-long sports. Check them out:

Out & About


Experts make case for getting out
OUTGOING – Backpacker magazine's traveling "Get Out More" team will be in Spokane this week with a free hour-long seminar of trail-tested tips and the latest advice on outdoor gear.

Out & About


Biologist watch for lousy deer
OUTBREAK – A mule deer found dead this spring near Riggins was infested with Bovicola tibialis, an exotic louse not previously reported in Idaho.

Out & About


Floating a laugh with boat names
OUTFIELD – Here's a list of the funniest names boat owners have registered for their vessels in 2009, as compiled by editors of Boat U.S. magazine.

Out & About

Even 'play dams' are bad for fish
OUTLAW – Rock dams built by kids and campers to create swimming areas in streams can be a death trap to migrating fish.

Out & About

Flight itinerary a hummer-dinger
OUTDISTANCE – A 3-inch, male black-chinned hummingbird recently was recaptured and released near Hamilton, Mont., about 1,000 miles from where it had been banded nine years ago as a chick along Arizona's San Pedro River.

Columbia spreads wealth

State fisheries biologists say a huge Columbia River spring chinook run should deliver healthy returns of 18,500 salmon to the Wind, Little White Salmon and Klickitat rivers of the Columbia Gorge in 2009.

Solo's saga detailed

With thousands of tundra swans flooding through the region on their spring migration, a birdwatching spotlight still shines on a single endangered trumpeter swan that's become an icon at Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge.

Basic backcountry luxury

British Columbia has around 30 commercially operated backcountry skiing and hiking facilities that range from rustic cabins to swank lodges.

BLM restoring wetlands

Waterfowl are riding the coattails of the federal land consolidation program in Eastern Washington.

Think ahead for coveted permits

A few new cabin options join the list of lookouts and other accommodations available in the region's national forests this season, and reservations can be made up to six months in advance. Also, hikers and river runners who would like to visit some of the Northwest's top wilderness areas and rivers this spring and summer had better be making applications for coveted permit drawings this winter.

Outdoor show season starts

The boat, RV and sportsmen's show season is under way, giving outdoor enthusiasts a chance to see the latest products from manufacturers and learn sporting techniques at seminars.

Lead bullets targeted for risk to wildlife, game consumers

The trend toward restrictions on lead bullets for hunting gained velocity recently:•The Department of Interior in March announcement a plan to ban lead ammunition and fishing gear throughout the National Park System by 2011. (Hunting is allowed in some national parks, preserves and monuments to manage wildlife populations.)

Field test finds tent's pros, cons

There is a soft place in my heart for REI tents. As a developing backpacker in the early '90s, I bought an REI tent on sale for about $150 and kept it for years, staking the two-person shelter out on dozens of trips around the country.

Feds hold CRP hearing, ask public for comment

A potion of the federal Farm Bill that's as important to wildlife and sportsmen as it is to farmers is in the spotlight this week.

Skwala: lean, lively stonefly

"You should have been here last week!""I think the hatch will start in about a week, depending on the weather."

Bikers can now bag it and ride

Touted as high-performance and eco-friendly, Pacific Outdoor Equipment's new line of bike bags includes front and back fender panniers, under-the-seat cases, trunk bags, and other items that clip onto a bike's frame and rack system.

Canada profiles outbound skiers

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — A researcher at Simon Fraser University at Burnaby, British Columbia, is trying to profile the thrill seekers who duck under resort ropes and head out into the wild country.

'Hiker orange' clothing bill makes this outdoorsman see red

A bill in the Washington Legislature makes me gag, and I didn't even know Pam Almli. Had I known or been related to the Snohomish County woman — who was shot and killed while hiking in August by 14-year-old hunter who mistook her for a bear – this proposed legislation would make my blood boil.

Carriers focus on safer family biking

From bike seats to pull-behinds, cycling accessories made for children can grant Mom and Dad time to exercise with kids in tow. Indeed, cycling with kids is among the easiest ways to stay active as a parent. This roundup covers four new products for cyclists looking to take along a kid for the ride.

Parks aim to reduce emissions

Karen Lasch and her family recently pulled over their car near a glacier-fed creek in Mount Rainier National Park, piling out for a glimpse of the snowcapped peak in the distance.

Self-guided swan route for wildlife watchers

Self-guided access (Pend Oreille County map or DeLorme Atlas recommended): Drive north on Highway 2 through Newport to Oldtown.

Museum rethinks Cheney honor

The American Museum of Fly Fishing last week abruptly postponed a March 5 fund-raising dinner at the New York Angler's Club to honor former Vice President Dick Cheney.

Rufus Woods gets tagged trout

While not on the magnitude of the net-pen escapes from last year, the Colville Tribe is keeping the trout spigot open at Lake Rufus Woods.

Fishery update for Lake PDO

A public program on the status of Lake Pend Oreille fisheries recovery efforts and the latest research data will be presented by Idaho Fish and Game Department officials and biologists on Saturday, 8 a.m.-11 a.m., at the Sandpoint Community Center.

Anglers speak at Boat Show

Local anglers are giving fishing seminars at the Spokane National Boat Show, which is on through next Sunday at Spokane Interstate Fair and Expo Center.

Chinook forecast scaled down

Salmon managers in the Columbia River Basin say only about half the number of spring chinook originally predicted will return past Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River this year.

Antler auction raises feed funds

A May 2 auction to sell antlers elk shed this winter on the Oak Creek Wildlife Area in Yakima County raised $15,032, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife reported.

St. Helens restricts snowmobilers

Gifford Pinchot National Forest officials have established a non-motorized wedge on the south side of Mount St. Helens, bordered by the Monitor Ridge and Worm Flows climbing routes.

Get Snyder Station dates on Monday

The Snyder Guard Station — includng a ranger house, cookhouse, cabins, RV sites and corral — on the Moyie River in the north tip of the Idaho Panhandle will once again be available for rent this summer.

Teen sentenced in hiker shooting

HUNTING – A teen hunter who killed a mountain hiker he mistook for a bear has been sentenced to 30 days in juvenile detention and 120 hours of community service.

Projects affect fall recreation

PUBLIC LANDS – Fall work projects that may affect recreationists this month:•Coeur d'Alene River District traffic is being detoured around a popular route to Teepee Creek until Sept. 30 while crews replace a culvert on Short Creek to improve fish passage.

Heat bares ice at Mount Rainier

CLIMBING – An unusually early-summer snowmelt created hazards on the Muir Snowfield at Mount Rainier starting in August.

Top easy trails

What: Free slide program on the best "easy" walking trails across Washington.

BICYCLING

What: Free slide show of 2008 Canadian Rockies group bike tour.Who: Presented by Spokane Bicycle Club members.

Outdoors, lead, lead poisoning, lead sinkers, lead shot, lead bullets, fishing, hunting, loons, swans, eagles, wildlife, Washington, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Yellowstone National Park,

Action on lead
Significant actions in the trend toward reducing lead in the environment, with emphasis on U.S. restrictions affecting sportsmen:

Paddling safety clinic

What: Basic canoe/kayak paddling safety clinic.When: Thursday, 5:30 p.m. Where: Boothes Park, Lake Coeur d'Alene.

Outdoors, fishing

FLY FISHING
Tie one on
Scratch the itch in your casting arm:

WILDERNESS

What: Slide show on Cabinet Mountains Wilderness hikes and adventures, free.

FISHING

What: Free seminar on trolling with downriggers, planer boards and auto pilots.

SPOKANE RIVER FORUM

 Boaters and anglers will have a seat among scientists, tribal representatives and agencies at the Spokane River Forum Conference Thursday and Friday at the Centerplace Regional Event Center, 2426 N. Discovery Place, in Spokane Valley.

WINTER SPORTS

Two ways to enjoy an adult group moonlight trek on Mount Spokane next weekend, sponsored by Spokane Parks with discounts for REI members:

NUMB LUCK

Winter fishing gods played a cruel joke on Glen Kivett last Sunday at Sprague Lake.The Spokane angler caught a bright, hefty 19-inch rainbow trout almost immediately after dropping a jig through a hole in the ice around 10 a.m.

Public assets

Basically, the era started in 1987 with 156 acres purchased at the Lakeview Ranch near Pacific Lake north of Odessa.

Tour de jour

The pedaling season is shifting into high as organizers gear up for mass bicycle tours throughout the Northwest.

WILDERNESS

While some wilderness proposals championed by Idaho congressmen have moved to the front burner in Congress this month, the proposed Scotchman Peaks Wilderness northeast of Lake Pend Oreille is still in the show-and-tell stage.

Venerable vessel

After years of floating loans as a banker, Jim Wheeler launched a business 15 years ago to float anglers.

Promoting cavities

House hunting is entering its seasonal boom in the Inland Northwest, and savvy birding enthusiasts are working to improve the market.

Swan route

The spring migration of tundra swans through the Inland Northwest is imminent, and tourism officials in Pend Oreille County planning a tour to share the spectacle of the swans' annual flight to northern breeding grounds.

Backcountry base

It's no accident that backcountry skiers are coming home alive after pillaging the powder in the highest and most remote reaches of British Columbia's rugged mountains. Nor was it a coincidence that eight skiers were far from a particularly huge naturally triggered avalanche in a Purcell Mountains basin northwest of Kimberley last week, even though they had whooped it up in the same alpine openness on the second day of their weeklong trip.

Clearing the way

At first glance last weekend, the group of four backpackers appeared to be making a huge sacrifice.

Riding the rail

Mountain bikes replace skis on car racks at Lookout Pass Ski area on summer days as a popular rail trail continues to set visitation records.

Getting the lead out

Anglers have a sinking feeling about rising concerns over lead poisoning.Hunters are recoiling, too.

HEAT IS ON

A Svea 123 white-gas camp stove had been Bob Madsen's trusty companion through decades of traveling to backpacking destinations by land and air. The relationship changed dramatically a few years ago when the Spokane man was notified by Federal Aviation Administration lawyers that he was being fined $80,000 for packing his camp stove in his airline luggage.

Hoh my! First steelhead a trophy

Peter Harrison is one of those people who does things in a big way: His first steelhead appears to be a world record.

Women go for the snow on 'Souper' Sunday

Unfulfilled by the unofficial national holiday for body-bruising men and million-dollar commercials, a growing group of women is breaking away from big-screen TVs and into the great outdoors of Mount Spokane on Super Bowl Sunday.

This TV show will raise your hackles

Spokane fly tier Carolyn Sells is teaming up with Lewiston fur-and-feather guru LeRoy Hyatt for another season of instructional programs on public television starting Saturday.

Lottery set for St. Joe cabin

The popularity of a St. Joe National Forest rental cabin on one of Idaho's world-class trout streams has prompted officials to switch to a lottery system for reservations this summer.

Birds make swift entrance into chimney

Terry Gray spends several late-summer evenings each week fixated on a chimney in downtown Moscow, Idaho.

Contest a 'write' of fall for high school students

It's time for high schoolers to begin thinking about fame, fortune and the great outdoorsThe Spokesman-Review once again is joining the Outdoor Writers Association of America in sponsoring a contest for youth outdoor writing.

Hikers don't need to travel far for trails dazzling with wildflowers

Hikers are in the same boat with gardeners this spring. We've all had to be patient a little longer than normal for the bloom to begin, but the wait is over.

Cascades ski event is first class

Neither wind nor blowing snow last weekend could stay 55 skiing "mail carriers" from their appointed rounds – from snow line on the west slope of the Oregon Cascades to snow line on the east – along the route followed by pioneer mailman John Templeton Craig.

Bulls, bucks shed macho image

Moose, elk and deer males are feeling a little light-headed these days.The bucks and bulls are shedding their antlers to make room for new and maybe larger racks by next fall to help gauge their breeding prowess.

Washington state to hike hunting and fishing fees

Sportsmen will be doling out more dough to hunt and fish starting next week under recreational fee changes approved by the Washington Legislature to help maintain state fishing and hunting opportunities.

Fish-Wildlife Commission chair still learning despite multiple degrees

NASELLE, Wash. – Meet Miranda Wecker, environmental lawyer, spartina eradication expert, enthusiastic mountain biker and skier – and new chair of the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission.

Big Horn Show starts Thursday

The live bears, hungry trout and leaping retrievers moving into the Spokane Fair and Expo Center this week will be just a fraction of the attractions at the Big Horn Outdoor Adventure Show.

One-Fly generates buzz in trout circles

It's a contest of confidence, durability, technique and presentation.We're not talking about "Dancing with the Stars," but rather the Spokane Fly Fishers' annual One-Fly fishing contest, which attracted 25 participants May 9 at Badger Lake.

Out & About

OUTSTANDING
Moms gone wild
All mothers deserve a tip of the hat today, including remarkable wild moms such as:

Out & About


OUTBOUND
Author details hikes in Cascades
Which Cascade Mountains trails are already snow-free?

Out & About


OUTCRY
Details, details: Tiger musky record revoked
Steven Salazar, 19, of Harlowton, recently caught a 32.4-pound tiger musky that exceeded the Montana state record by 3.5 pounds.

Out & About

OUTCLASS
Lanting to focus on nature photos
Frans Lanting, photographer in residence for National Geographic and one of the world's finest nature photographers, is the headliner for this year's spring photography seminar sponsored by the Spokane Camera Club and Photographic Society of America.

Out & About


OUTFITTERS
Local companies 'best on earth'
Two Coeur d'Alene-based adventure travel companies received top international rankings in National Geographic Adventure magazine's January feature on "The Best Adventure Travel Companies on Earth."

Out & About


OUTFIELD
Elk buffs nudge Pennsylvania bid
Pennsylvania's first special elk tag raised $28,500 for wildlife conservation recently during the National Wild Turkey Federation convention in Nashville.

Out & About


OUTCLASS
Hunter ed courses fill fast
New hunters who have their sights on spring turkey seasons had better hustle to complete the mandatory hunter education requirements for Washington and Idaho. Courses in some areas are filled into May.

Out & About


OUTLAW
Minimum age sought for hunters
Fourteen would be the minimum age for a hunter in Washington without adult supervision under legislation introduced by Rep. Brian Blake of Aberdeen.

Out & About


OUTHOOK
Wintering anglers submit to vises
Fly fishers don't chill during the cold months. They invest time learning the sport and filling their fly boxes with patterns they'll use the rest of the year.

Turnbull trumpets return of senior swan

Solo is back.The elegant trumpeter swan is likely the elder seasonal wildlife resident at Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge, and one of the oldest documented anywhere among his endangered species.

Four trail tunnels will remain closed

The closure of four tunnels has taken the steam out of bicycling the rail trail through Washington's Iron Horse State Park-John Wayne Pioneer Trail, a popular rail trail that runs over the North Cascades.

Out & About

He said it
"Think what we could do if everybody helped a little."

Out & About


Drawdowns begin at lakes
OUTFLOW – Avista Utilities and the Corps of Engineers are beginning fall drawdowns that change the look of the lakes and rivers downstream.

Necessity ignites hiker's fascination with alcohol stoves

Mark Stambaugh's wife peeks into the garage, smiles, and says, "Nothing captures a boy's attention like playing with fire." Then she closes the door and leaves her husband to answer my burning desire for his insight on homemade alcohol stoves for backpacking. "She's comfortable with all the flames," he said. "I've spent a lot of time out here testing designs."

Out & About

Purple mountains majesty prevails
OUTPICK – Honestly, it made us sad last week to see the bounty of huckleberries going unpicked along good hiking trails north of Lake Pend Oreille and around Sullivan and Priest lakes.

Washington lags in loon protection

Loons are particularly vulnerable to death from ingesting even a single lead sinker.Several states, including New Hampshire, Maine, Massachusetts, New York, Vermont and Virginia, plus 13 national wildlife refuges and Yellowstone Park, ban the use of lead sinkers in waters frequented by loons or swans.

Outdoors, nature, wildlife, birdwatching, Audubon, Rich Landers

Nest box savvy
Important considerations: Dimensions, height of entrance above bottom of box, diameter of entrance hole, placement site and height. Also, ventilation, drainage, susceptibility to predators, ease of maintenance.

Outdoors, hunting, fishing, hiking, BLM, public lands,

Acquisition timeline
Following is a summary of the major land acquisitions from Spokane west through Lincoln County, using round numbers supplied by BLM realty specialists:

Outdoors, hunting, fishing, hiking, BLM, public lands,

Target areas
Since 1987, BLM has acquired 140,250 acres of private land in 14 Washington counties. Here are the top eight counties for acquisitions and consolidation:

Steelhead surging upstream

Record steelhead counts over Bonneville Dam in mid-August could bode well for Deschutes River anglers over the next few weeks, Oregon biologists say.

Poachers caught fishing near hatchery

Three Kennewick men caught fishing in closed waters have been charged in Franklin County District Court on several counts involving theft of salmon and steelhead from a state fish hatchery collection site on the Snake River.

Specialized bike provides ride of his life

The bicycle that carried Scott Stoll around the world doesn't look like anything special. There's tape on the frame and extra washers to hold racks in place. The leather saddle is faded and worn, a dented anatomical imprint testimony to the months and thousands of miles Stoll sat pedaling on a quest to travel the planet on two wheels.

Pheasant funds aim at habitat

It's likely to be a long journey, but the days of good pheasant hunting in Eastern Washington could return.

Ferry County votes on trail

Ferry County residents will make a critical decision on Nov. 3 regarding use of a prized abandoned railway the county acquired this year:

It takes a special kind to enjoy call of the wild

My wife obviously has a tin ear. She neither appreciates – nor tolerates – the beautiful sounds of nature.

Open house starts Heyburn planning

STATE PARKS – The public can comment on plans for Heyburn State Park on Monday during an open house at the park visitor center from 3 p.m.-5 p.m. and 7 p.m.-9 p.m.

Grizzly relocated to Cabinets

NATIONAL FORESTS –Wildlife managers recently released an 8- to 10-year-old female grizzly bear in hopes of bolstering the grizzly population in the Cabinet-Yaak ecosystem of northwest Montana.

Columbia shad returns dwindle

FISHERIES – American shad made a big splash in 2004 with a record run of 5.4 million fish counted moving over the fish ladders at Bonneville Dam and into the mid-Columbia.

ORVers sue state for funding

OFF-ROADING –The Washington Off Highway Vehicle Alliance has teamed with the Northwest Motorcycle Association to file a lawsuit against the state of Washington to block the transfer of $9.5 million in offroad vehicle funds from the Non-highway and Off-road Vehicle Activities (NOVA) account to the State Parks and Recreation Department.

Wolf plan meeting Tuesday in Spokane

ENDANGERED SPECIES – Public comments will be heard in Spokane on Tuesday on a recently released draft management plan with guidelines for removing gray wolves from Washington's state endangered species list.

Hatcheries on agenda for wildlife panel

FISHING – A hatchery and fishery reform policy is on the agenda for the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission meeting Friday and Saturday in Olympia.

Outdoors, kayaking, paddling

Paddling Idaho
A kayaking video, "Exploring Idaho," featuring first descents on what the filmmakers call "soon to be classic runs," will be shown by the Spokane Canoe and Kayak Club on Monday, 7 p.m., at Corbin Community Center, 827 W. Cleveland.

Choice programs at REI

Whether you're looking for a Cascades hiking route or an outdoor group, check out this week's 7 p.m. programs at REI:

Outdoors, boating, boating safety

Boating class set
A free one-day boating education class will be held Sept. 19 at the the Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation Office, 2885 Kathleen Ave., in Coeur d'Alene.

Outdoors, bicycling,

Cyclists rolling on Selkirk loop
What: First annual WaCanId Ride, a bicycle tour on the International Selkirk Loop; up to 340 miles or sorter segments.

Outdoors, fishing

Timely clinics for steelheaders
 Several fly fishing clinics especially appealing to steelheaders are scheduled by Silver Bow Fly Shop in Spokane Valley:

National parks in Washington

The National Park Service manages almost 2 million acres of land in Washington. The collection of sites includes three national parks, three national recreation areas, historic areas and the nation's only national historic reserve. Here is a look at each of the 13 units the service operates in the Evergreen State.

Outdoors, mountain biking

Scotchman's group leads hike
 Ross Creek Cedars and Scotchman Peak will be the destinations next weekend for the last in a long summer-fall season of group hikes led by the Friends of the Scotchman Peaks Wilderness.

Cliff notes

Professional paddler Tyler Bradt raised a puzzling question on April 21 when he traveled to southeastern Washington and set a world record for the highest waterfall descent in a kayak: What is the height of Palouse Falls? A group of Whitman College students set out recently to separate fact from hearsay.

Purcell hiking trifecta

The last week of September is a peak moment for hikers with the legs to trek high into the Purcell Mountains of British Columbia. While forest-fire season is waning in the high country, the landscape has burst into a blaze of fall colors. Huckleberry bushes are crimson, mountain ash berries are brilliant orange and the alpine larch are coming out of obscurity to steal the show.

Rolling out a route

Spokane is on the verge of having a spiffy, newly paved stretch of rail trail that eventually will run all the way to Cheney.

GAME ON!

This is shaping up to be a hallmark year for steelheaders, with the return of sea-run trout at near-record levels. Through Tuesday, 127,413 steelhead were counted at Lower Granite Dam, 35 miles west of Clarkston on the Snake River. At Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River, 572,152 steelhead were tallied.

Rig for a record run

Of all the steelhead fishing techniques, none is quite so simple as the cast-swing-step rhythm of fishing a fly.

Sparrows in my yard

The bird feeder in my neighbor's yard was a magnet. Dozens of sparrows at a time. I wished they'd eat only from his feeder, however, my backyard was the next course. One morning I stood at my back window and counted more than 60. I can take a few birds, but sun-blocking flocks? I needed to take action.

Teen draws dad into big hunt

"It was her idea," Shawn Barrong said. "I wasn't planning to go elk hunting this year."The Sawtooth Mountains area that fired up his passion for bugling bull elk had lost its luster in recent years.

Grayling quest is arctic event

Finally, after years of trying, I have completed my Quest for the Holy Grayling.Catching the elusive arctic grayling has long been near the top of my life list of "Things to Do Before I Die."

Wolf plan to get public hearings

A draft management and conservation plan released recently for gray wolves in Washington presents a blueprint for ushering the predators through their gradual revival to eventual delisting from state endangered species protection.

Fall hunting camps call for Dutch oven cooking

Aside from a coffee pot, good eating in hunting camp demands only one thing: a Dutch oven.I got my first taste of this art form at a New Mexico deer camp 25 years ago, when we returned to our rigs and one of the men took his cherished Dutch oven out of its burlap sack.

'National Parks' series a conservation windfall

The buildup to last Sunday's PBS premiere of "The National Parks: America's Best Idea" was the conservation community's equivalent of the build-up to the Super Bowl.

Larch light up area forests in curious yellow

Although they hid among the green firs and pines all summer, yellowing needles are helping larch trees stand out in the crowd during autumn.

Grayling surveyed in Idaho lakes

Inland Northwest hikers don't have to travel any farther than North Idaho to make a cast for grayling.

Out & About

Huck happiness ranges far
OUTPICK – The Inland Northwest doesn't have a lock on huckleberries.

Out & About

World-record bass caught in Japan
OUTCAST – The world-record largemouth bass that trophy anglers have been stalking for decades from Florida to California apparently has been caught – by a woman in Japan.

Out & About

18 hours bags Kettle Crest Trail
Four hikers recently marched the entire 45-mile length of the Kettle Crest Trail and called it a day.

Out & About

Trust preserves another land jewel
OUTSTANDING – A conservation easement that will perpetually protect the natural beauty of 503 acres, including 1.5 miles along Lake Coeur d'Alene and the Trail of the Coeur d'Alenes, has been secured by the Inland Northwest Land Trust.

Easy does it, steelheader says

Steelhead fishing is best when it's simple, says Orofino, Idaho-area fishing guide Kyle Jones.Like a growing number of anglers, Jones, who also works at Camp, Cabin and Home in Lewiston, has pared his fishing gear down to a few basic and cheap materials. All he needs is a hook with an egg loop, a bit of yarn and some scent.

Shrimp bait color, scent are recipe for success

A trail of pink and purple stains runs along the floor of the Water's Edge Tackle Shop in Clarkston. The handle on the front door is stained, as are the telephone and other frequently used items.

Out & About

Luck of the draw in Alpine Lakes
OUTLAST – For the first time in seven years, Donna Larsen did not draw a coveted permit to camp in the Enchantment Lakes area of the Alpine Lakes Wilderness during the first week of October.

Out & About


Local birds grace calendar
The Spokane Audubon Society has a wealth of knowledge about birds that frequent this area, and the club also includes photographers with generous ability to capture their images.

Danger signs

BOUNDARY WATERS CANOE AREA, Minn. — The moose calf didn't seem to want to get out of the water.

Snowmobilers dig into pockets to save parks

Snowmobilers in the Yakima area are reaching into their own wallets to help a state agency make up for a budget shortfall – not because they want to.

Bikers can follow Lewis and Clark

TRAILS – Capt. William Clark never had it so easy. A route he and his men hiked through the Long Beach Peninsula in 1805 has been graded and paved. Sturdy wooden bridges ease the way over marshy stretches near Ilwaco.

Outdoors, mountain biking, trails

Map finished for Beacon Hill
 Three years in the making, a trail map for the Beacon Hill Recreation Area has been published.

That nothing look

Camouflage clothing for hunters has been developed much as fishing lures are marketed to anglers: Looking good to the consumer is perhaps more important than what the critter sees.

Pups enrich hunting experience

The unpredictability of hunting keeps us coming back. There's no such thing as a routine hunt.A sure way to add to the drama and interest: Bring along three puppies of three different breeds on their first hunt of the season for the opening of quail season.

Out & About

Fly fishers take on steelhead
Lewiston fly-tier Leroy Hyatt and Spokane fishing guide Sean Visintainer will present a free program about steelheading on the Clearwater and Grande Ronde rivers Wednesday, 7 p.m., at St. Francis School, 1104 W. Heroy, sponsored by the Spokane Fly Fishers.

SEX FACTOR

Skinny dipping is a generally accepted exception. A justifiable risk. But from a practical point of view, sex and nudity in the great outdoors tends to flirt with natural lust-busters such as ticks, horseflies, poison ivy and stinging nettles.

Winter fly fishers

The itch to cast a fly starts irritating serious anglers this time of year. Rocky Ford Creek south of Soap Lake is a satisfying place to scratch it.

Bad news bullfrogs

In the realm of delicious activities conducted after dark with a fishing rod, one obscure sport is leaps and bounds above the rest. "The only thing that's really comparable is spotlighting and spearing carp," said Dan Gillette, a Pend Oreille County good ol' boy who obviously prefers the path less traveled.

To The Rescue

Three climbers were already dead on Oregon's Mount Hood when a helicopter coming for survivors crashed and tumbled 1,000 feet down a steep snowfield. The accident, captured on video in horrifying detail, seemed to symbolize the costs and risks of alpine search and rescue.

Goose illusions

Minnesota hunter Randy Bartz began his career in insurance then left it to become an illusionist. But, he's not the sort of magician you'll find on The Strip in Las Vegas.

Hunt of a lifetime

A month after bagging the mule deer that ended what could be a once-in-a-lifetime sportsman's odyssey, Jim Parker's desk at Parker Toyota is piled with enough work to eliminate any time for gloating, even if he were prone to doing so.

A hike across England

After a year of making great strides into an active lifestyle, a Hayden couple has given some old travel habits the boot. Jane and Ralph "Skip" Lincoln mark their transformation with three life-changing moments: -- A reckoning with vacation boredom on the Oregon Coast.

PEDALING A TRADITION

For three decades, Mark Buescher has planned much of his life — job selection, the birth of his children, you name it — to maintain the tradition of getting a sore butt on the third weekend in May.

Survival of the sleepless

A Spokane man got more than he expected out of his first expedition-length adventure race: bruises, blisters, fatigue and a field of new acquaintances, both real and imaginary.

Crash course

When a cross country skier falls in the woods, does he make a sound? Apparently, at least on the second Sunday in February at Mount Spokane.

Moose Loose

Infrequent guests through the years, moose have been moving into the northeast corner of Oregon in greater numbers, much as they started moving into northeastern Washington decades ago.

Flying High

COLUMBIA FALLS, Mont. — The former Post Office building is crammed to the ceiling with row upon row of boxes containing a curious assortment of items: Frog hair, centipede legs, tentacles, muskrat hides, moose mane, goose wing feathers, gator hair and something dubiously labeled "Rub-A-Dub.

Gobblers

Following yet another mild winter, the number of turkeys in the Inland Northwest has probably never been higher. And with the 2005 spring turkey season more than half over, this may be the best time to call in a gobbler.

Wonders of the Wilderness

The U. S. population has increased by 100 million people in the past 40 years and the rate of rural land lost to development through the 1990s was about 2.

Lungs for the hunt

Like a scent-seeking missile, a sleek 6-year-old English pointer named Cypress Gunpowder left vapor trails across nearly 3,000 acres of Tennessee in February and blew away the competition at one of the nation's oldest sportsmen's events.

Game for the trail

Nothing takes modern big-game hunters to their roots more quickly and efficiently than a wilderness-bound pack string. Wall tents, wood stoves and saddle sores are part of a Western autumn tradition that dates back to the mountain men, although nowadays a wilderness hunt is a luxury in more ways than one.

Land Locked

Forty years and 106 million acres after Congress decided the wilderness should not be spoiled by people, the law is such an icon that skeptics dare only try to slow its consequences.

Blazing new vistas

‘You get a chance to see how it all begins," muses Mike Block, one of my hiking companions. At our feet, in a burn-ravaged forest, green fiddlehead ferns unfurl their fronds.

MIND BODY

Sweat, skill and surprise are three key elements facing participants in the region's first outdoor adventure race. The NIChallenge is scheduled for May 7 at Farragut State Park, sponsored by the North Idaho College Student Activities Department.

HIKING INTO HISTORY

The walk itself is usually all the reason a hiker needs to go backpacking. But the effort is even sweeter than the trailside wildflowers when every step takes you further into history.

Going Wild on Kauai

Leaving winter behind for a vacation break to Hawaii doesn't necessarily require going cold turkey on muscle-powered outdoor activities. Personally, I can relax on a beach with the best meat loafers on the planet — for about 30 minutes.

Final link in place

It's official, almost. Idaho dignitaries plan to make speeches and cut ribbons on Saturday to dedicate the 72-mile Trail of the Coeur d'Alene's, a spiffy paved parkway following the old Union Pacific railway from Plummer to Mullan.

Peak potential

Throughout history, people have been simultaneously awestruck and infatuated with towering peaks — pinnacles that come closer than other natural objects to the heavens. Borah Peak on Mount Borah is Idaho's offering to the gods.

Summit Quest

Editor's note: This is the first of a series of stories by Spokane writer Maryanne Gaddy regarding her novice plunge into mountaineering and her current immersion in the three-month Mountain School conducted each spring by the Spokane Mountaineers, celebrating their 90th anniversary.

Big Horn o' plenty

Fishing and hunting remain the foundation of the annual Big Horn Outdoor Adventure Show, but there's much more between there and the roofs of the Spokane County Fair and Expo Center this week.

Saltwater lure

British Columbia fishing resorts have noticed that salmon anglers no longer come from the same mold. Some anglers want nothing more than to hook a limit of chinook or coho.

Essence of the Act

The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska looms around the top of many lists. It's the nation's largest refuge and it encompasses the second-largest official wilderness.

Pheasant high

The gray-haired lady at the rental-car station in Pierre, S. D. , was sliding the contract over the counter when she stopped and looked up through her horn-rim glasses with a sweet, grandmotherly smile.

Fish grow from trees

Washington's last best wild steelhead runs spawn in waters protected within the wilderness of Olympic National Park. Perhaps the healthiest steelhead runs in the world originate in streams that flow out of the Kalmiopsis Wilderness in southwestern Oregon.

Into the journey unknown

The expedition grew, as so many others in history, from the longing gaze of a climber looking up from the lowlands at the challenge and mystery of eye-catching peaks in the distance.

Happy trails, sad tales

Trails made the region's headlines in 2004. Some were opened, some were destroyed and others were the subject of debate between motorized and non-motorized users.

Off-season training

Dogs were whining with anticipation in their kennels while hunters stuffed handfuls of No. 6s into their game-vest pockets. You might have thought it was opening day of the pheasant season, that is, if you didn't notice: -- The fall colors are gone.

ANTICIPATING BITE

Anglers almost need to sleep in their waders this year. Unusual weather and a pitiful snow pack are raising havoc with normal timetables for ice-out and run-off.

Tragedy on the Tetons

It started with a strange hum, a soft fluttering as if grasshoppers had suddenly gathered on the mountain. This wasn't a symphony of Wyoming nature, but a prelude to disaster.

And the winner is ...

A story by Amy Whisenand, a Spokane home-schooled senior, has been judged the best of 252 entries to win The Spokesman-Review's 2004 outdoor writing contest for high school students.

River Riders

I might have looked idiotic with my Captain America helmet, frogman fins and farmer John wetsuit, but fashion was the least of my concerns as I stood on the banks of the Clark Fork River near Missoula on a recent afternoon.

Enchanted hike

The black spot at the base of the mossy old bigleaf maple turned its head and looked as our party of five made its way down the trail through the meadow.

Outdoor Gift Guide 2004

Forget video games. Don't even think about a fruit basket. This year get your family and friends gear they can use on the snow, in the woods or anywhere else outside and under the blue sky.

Embarking on a senior whitewater moment

They are in their 70s, 80s and 90s, with centuries of collective life experience and wisdom. But for one day last week, they were all wet behind the ears.

Rare roost

A pair of falcons put Colville on the birdwatching map this summer. Two merlins, among the smaller of the falcon species that breed in North America, not only made a rare appearance in northeastern Washington, they set up house in the Colville City Park.

Protection beyond forests

From a distance, much of it looks like wasteland. Up close, this bulge in the sea of Oregon sagebrush desert reveals itself as one of the most diverse and productive wildlife areas in Oregon.

Bike enthusiasts ready to roll

Summer may be waning, but Inland Northwest bicyclists are gearing up for their sport's hottest season. Starting this morning with the 25th annual Autumn Century, sponsored by the Spokane Bicycle Club, there's a major leg-stretching event to enjoy every weekend into October.

Scaling new heights

Three miles high on the West Buttress of North America's tallest mountain, Heather Thamm and Betsy Young are the shining faces of the new feminism. The recent graduates from Alaska Pacific University don't make a big deal about what women can do or what men might say women shouldn't do.

Wings & worries

AN EPIDEMIC IN CALIFORNIA is sounding the latest alarm that birdwatchers might be loving their songbirds to death. National surveys conducted by the U.

Straight Shooters

don't know whether I'd shoot in the winter without The Spokesman-Review Trapshoot because it never crossed my mind," Chuck Booth said. After coming across a kind letter the veteran Cheney trapshooter had sent in last winter, I called recently to get a little more of his perspective on one of the longest-running sporting events in the Inland Northwest.

Coming up kokanee

Lake Coeur d'Alene fishing guide Jeff Smith selects his fishing role models with the same care a savvy patient would give to choosing a surgeon. "You look for the guys who are out here doing it every day," he said.

Lucky girl Alpine Lakes Wilderness, Washington

In August, I had a wilderness experience that changed my life. Right now, I am happy to be alive. I was unroped and scrambling on Class 4 rock on the West Ridge of Mount Stuart in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness when I strayed a bit off route, climbed through a 5th class move, decided it prudent to back off and began down-climbing.

Thinking short, hiking long Anaconda Pintler Wilderness, Montana

The 158,615-acre Anaconda Pintler Wilderness in Southwestern Montana is small by Western standards, but packed inside its boundary is a beauty rivaling anything in the world.

One that got away?

The formula for success was pretty simple at Clear Lake on May 7. Bring in 7,000 rainbow trout plus 60 volunteers plus 1,000 rigged-up fishing rods plus 1,000 kids and you have an equation that equals more smiles than a circus.

Ropes on the slopes

Third in a series: This week, 30-year-old Maryanne Gaddy, an aspiring recreational climber, offers an inside look at the "snow practice" session, one of the highlights in the annual 14-week-long Mountain School offered by the Spokane Mountaineers.

Flying High

She's the queen of the skies over High Bridge Park, and a devoted mate and model housekeeper as well. A 13-year-old female peregrine falcon — one of the oldest wild moms of her species — has hatched another brood of chicks under the Sunset Highway bridge upstream from the confluence of Hangman Creek and the Spokane River.

Film festival promises high-tech adventure

High-tech cameras have made their mark in producing high-quality films from high-energy places. The evidence was on the big screen last weekend in Alberta at the 29th annual Banff Mountain Film Festival, and it's on the way to Spokane this week.

River Discovery

Explorers scam sponsors, spend fortunes and span the globe looking for unique, far-flung adventures. Mike Aho found a cheap expedition in Spokane's backyard. "I'd never seen the Spokane River in its entirety, and as I started looking for information, I realized I'd never talked to anyone who'd been on the river from beginning to end," said the outdoor program director for the Spokane Parks and Recreation Department.

Ruling could force change in Montana

BOZEMAN — A federal judge's ruling in an Arizona case involving caps on nonresident hunters and the fees they must pay may affect similar regulations in Montana, a state wildlife agency attorney says.

Rangers race to the rescue

Part 2: A helicopter fights winds, rangers scramble on foot and on ropes, and injured climbers wait and pray in this installment of a three-part serial about a lightning strike last summer that left climbers hurt high in Grand Teton National Park, Wyo.

Thursday's Child

The blistering July sun beat upon Eastern Washington's landscape. It had killed the wild grass, leaving it withered and brown. The pine trees withstood the harsh rays better.

Senate Republicans push Arctic Refuge drilling

WASHINGTON — A Senate showdown over an Alaska wildlife refuge is expected within weeks as Republicans plan to use a budget measure to overcome strong opposition to allow oil drilling in the protected area.

Men attempt icy trek across the Bering Strait

WALES, Alaska — Two men began skiing to Russia last week from the icy shores of Alaska, dragging on sleds the 250 pounds of gear they hope will help keep them alive.

First climb keeps you tied in knots

Editor's note: This is the second in a series of articles about a 30-year-old woman's ascent into the world of mountain climbing through the annual Mountain School conducted by the Spokane Mountaineers.

B.C. fishing to be more expensive

Anglers will pay a premium this year to fish seven of the most popular streams in southeastern British Columbia. To help reduce pressure in the East Kootenay Region, a special $20-a-day permit (Canadian funds) will be required for out-of-province anglers who fish the Bull, Elk, Kootenay (upstream from White River), St.

In waiting

Wilderness is argued to be either the ultimate protection for America's choice wild lands or a drastic lock-up that excludes the use of motorized equipment, not just for recreation but also for management.

Autumn a dream time for anglers

During autumn, a sportsman who hunts and fishes struggles with a dilemma as perplexing as a loose dog that finds himself between a carcass and a cow pie.

Outdoor dad steps inside for ultimate adventure

My daughters don't care much for blood and guts, and that's a healthy lesson for a Montana-born hunter-fisherman to learn. A son might have had more interest in the 20-gauge and the five-weight fly rod I've made available to my daughters, but he wouldn't necessarily have any more wilderness miles under his hipbelt.

Scientists protest Bush forest road plan

WASHINGTON — More than 125 scientists, including chimpanzee expert Jane Goodall and biologist Edward O. Wilson, have a signed a letter opposing the Bush administration's plan to reverse a Clinton-era ban on road building and logging in 58 million acres of remote national forests.

Public can have a say on direction of forest plans

The Colville, Okanogan and Wenatchee national forests are shifting into another gear on the road to revising their forest management plans. Although forest officials have been working with user groups to outline specific issues, such as motorized use of recreational roads and trails, broader public meetings have been scheduled.

Locals offer schools, classes for fly fishing enthusiasts

Winter is prime time to delve into the sport of fly fishing, from the art of creating flies to the skill of catching fish with them.

Hunters don't need to be early birds to bag a gobbler

Turkey hunters head into the woods well before dawn in the hopes of calling in a gobbler, but the truth is that most hunters could sleep in and still have an excellent chance of bagging a bird.

Living the life of the caribou

Imagine an incessant whining of mosquitoes, caribou hair so pervasive it sticks to food and covers clothes, a week trapped in a tent sharing a single sleeping bag, not enough sleep, not enough food, months without a shower.

Returning to the Cedar

The Cedar was a workingman's river. It flowed past cement plants, airplane factories and trailer parks in southeastern King County, feeding Lake Washington, a poor-man's Puget Sound.

Spirit Lake exceeds expectations

Third in a series: Last time, The Lake Lady visited the Lower St. Joe River. This week she heads a little farther north into the Idaho Panhandle as she continues her powerboater's view of Inland Northwest waters.

Climber hangs on for life

Part 3: "Am I going to be OK? " a dangling climber asks as rangers finally reach him in this last installment of "Courage on Friction Pitch," a three-part serial about a lightning strike last summer that left climbers dead and injured high in Grand Teton National Park, Wyo.

The Vow

Cold air rushing in the open window, Damion looks out from his room above Pierre's Trade Store, peering down at the dirt street of New Mica.

Birdwatchers set their sights on annual Christmas Bird Count

Birdwatchers in this region and across the continent will flock together in the next few weeks for the Audubon Society's Christmas Bird Count, the annual birding social event of the season.

Anglers get more fish, less litter

Norm Price is on a crusade that has two goals: help fellow anglers catch more fish, and recycle millions of discarded beer bottle caps from bars and restaurants throughout North America.

St. Joe scenery beckons

Second in a series: Last time, Laurel Boone Helm offered her powerboater's view of Banks Lake near Coulee City, Wash. This week The Lake Lady and her family launch their 18-footer at the south end of Lake Coeur d'Alene as they explore another boating getaway within a short drive of Spokane.

Prospering pelican population poses problems

HELENA — In 1991, new arrivals to the Canyon Ferry Wildlife Management Area started making a few nests on the islands at the south end of the reservoir.

First Fish

"Dang it, missed another one," I said to myself, "Oh well, there are always more fish to catch. " "Meghan, set the hook, how many times do I have to tell you?

A record year for anglers

Two Spokane-area anglers said there was a downside to landing the fish that put their names in the record books. For Bryan McMannis, it was a matter of timing.

A record year for anglers

Two Spokane-area anglers said there was a downside to landing the fish that put their names in the record books.

'Swede' helping youngsters get hooked on fly fishing

Allen Peterson has the humble goal of working one on one to introduce the joy of fly fishing to underprivileged kids from single-parent families. Since he opened Swede's Fly Shop on North Ash Street last April, Peterson has offered free fly tying lessons to single-parent kids, one or two at a time.

Plenty of fun gear available for the hunter and angler

For starters, I am a sportsman, not a gear junkie. I love hunting, fishing, hiking and paddling. I hate shopping. I prefer spending my time in the field, not at the mall.

Motorized vehicles key concern in forest plan revisions

Managing access, whether by motor vehicle or human power, has become a hot topic as national forests revise their management plans for the first time in about 15 years.

N.C. man, 81, now oldest 'thru-hiker' to traverse Appalachian Trail

SHELBY, N. C. — The Appalachian Trail opened in 1937 as a continuous footpath and, a year later, Lee Barry first set his boots on the trail.

Wet winter brings new life to Death Valley

This is bizarre. People are launching kayaks on what is essentially a lake of weak battery acid at Badwater Point in Death Valley National Park, Calif.

Climbing services to expand at Rainier

The National Park Service will distribute guided climbing opportunities of Mount Rainier among three mountaineering companies beginning in 2006, effectively ending a near-monopoly one company has held at the peak for more than 30 years.

Anglers see transition in strength of B.C. fisheries

A new era is developing for fishermen who have made traditions of catching trout in British Columbia's southeastern waters. New attractive fisheries are emerging while the fishing quality is fading at some perennial favorite lakes.

Deadly capsizing still haunts area

GARIBALDI, Ore. — A year ago, the Taki-Tooo left the Port of Garibaldi bound for the deep fishing waters off the Oregon coast and headed into infamy as one of the state's deadliest marine tragedies.

Hauser offers right stuff for boaters

Fourth in a series: Last time, The Lake Lady cruised on North Idaho's Spirit Lake. This week, she's returning to the same neighborhood to explore Hauser Lake for another powerboating tour of Inland Northwest waters.

Young guide's zeal untainted by experience

Just as the runt of the litter can turn out to be the best dog in the kennel, a gem could be hiding in the dregs of the fishing-guide pool.

Banks Lake lets boaters rock through the ages

Editor's note: Last summer, Laurel Boone Helm wrote 11 columns for Outdoors & Travel chronicling her travels to launch her family's 18-foot powerboat and explore the dozens of lakes within a reasonable drive from her home near Cheney.

Hunters help youngsters in the name of science

FAIRBANKS, Alaska — Let others dissect only frogs in science class. Stephanie Bradford also wants the hearts and eyes of moose, caribou and bear.

Idaho's Selway River a revered waterway

Rivers are the blood vessels of a wilderness area. They are the life lines that link the ecosystem and provide the arterials for fish, wildlife and adventurers alike.

Roosevelt can't be ignored

The history of the body of water that became Lake Roosevelt started with the Ice Age floods that carved the landscape, leaving huge boulders and abstract formations along the shores of the Columbia and Spokane rivers.

In for the long haul

SALT LAKE CITY — There are pack horses, pack mules and pack llamas. But how about pack goats? Goats are perhaps the newest trend in hiking and backpack-carrying animals, and Utah is leading the pack in their promotion by hosting the 2004 Rendezvous for the North American Packgoat Association this spring near Flaming Gorge.

Bison Range kills coyotes to protect pronghorns

MOIESE, Mont. — The U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service has shot 11 coyotes on the National Bison Range so far this year, in an effort to give newborn pronghorn antelope a better chance of survival.

Beach protection keeps Olympic Park wet and wild

The beaches were an afterthought. Olympic National Park was established in 1938 primarily to protect the declining herds of Roosevelt elk and the old-growth forests that sustained them.

Montana has some changes for hunters

Montana is a magnet to hunters from across the nation each fall. Time seems to have stood still in the rural areas of this huge state with its rich, thriving wildlife populations.

Freeriding a challenge for bike riders, land managers

RENO, Nev. — Jon Wilson, a 27-year-old downhill mountain bike racer, likes the new style called freeriding because any challenge is fair game — from bombing down flights of stairs to dropping off 10-foot cliffs to riding across teeter-totters.

Anglers buggy over fly patterns

Fly tiers are realists and dreamers all in one. They create fly-fishing patterns to simulate insects and fishes. Some dream up attractor patterns they hope will deceive fish and become as popular as the Royal Coachman, a pattern that's been a staple for a hundred years.

Hunters, anglers pack election clout

In the next few weeks, the camps of President Bush and challenger Sen. John Kerry will be rolling out their campaigns to win over what is often called the "hook and bullet" crowd.

Next week

 Ah, wilderness!  Friday marks the 40th anniversary of The Wilderness Act, the legislation signed by President Lyndon Johnson that has helped assure that America's grandest landscapes — from the Florida Everglades to the Washington Coast — would remain wild .

Cherubs and the Chub

Back in 1988, my family lived at the famous Grand Canyon in Arizona. My dad was a trail crew worker for the National Park Service and knew the incredible canyon and the mighty Colorado River very well.

Shoreline residences squeezing on hunters

The real estate boom on Lake Coeur d'Alene is gradually silencing the boom of waterfowler's guns. Hunters in recent years have gone to bays only to find new homes in areas where they used to build their duck blinds.

Pondering a great gray's last hours

DULUTH, Minn. — Walking through the woods near my home the other day, I came upon a great gray owl that had died. It was lying atop the snow beneath some alders and young aspen.

River island is hopping with rabbits

Waterfowl hunters who hunker on a Snake River island in hope of decoying ducks or geese are more likely to have a shot at fur than feathers.

Clubs get backpackers off on right foot

Walking is something we learn naturally. The art of backpacking, however, requires a few additional steps. Two different Spokane-area outdoor clubs with decades of experience in hiker know-how offer spring backpacking schools to get hikers off on the right foot.

Bike riders gearing up for RAMROD

While this winter has been the worst for snow lovers, it has been among the best for cyclists who would rather ride outside than on an indoor trainer.

Sportsmen generous at auctions for wildlife

Volunteers focused on elk, turkeys and ducks are busy organizing Inland Northwest fund-raising dinners and auctions to boost wildlife conservation projects. The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, Ducks Unlimited and the National Wild Turkey Federation are particularly active, raising millions of dollars to improve habitat for these and other wildlife species.

Hiker's pace reveals desert's subtle diversity

Your feet will work fine, but you need to train your brain to hike the desert of Central Washington. For those used to roaming the forests and mountains of the Cascade Range, this country is too big, too wide open, a bit unnerving.

Nethercutt has own plan for Wild Sky

WASHINGTON — Hours after formally kicking off his U. S. Senate campaign, Republican Rep. George Nethercutt endorsed a wilderness proposal in Washington state. Nethercutt, a conservative who has drawn criticism for what environmentalists call anti-environment votes, said Friday he believes the proposed Wild Sky area northeast of Seattle should be preserved.

Quiet Gun creating a buzz among shooters

ST. PAUL, Minn. — "People look at the long barrel and think it's going to kick or that it's too hard to shoot," said inventor Wendell Diller.

Tourists explore Teton's wonders on their wheels

Grand Teton National Park is all about the mountains. Doing almost anything is more fun while watching the jagged peaks shift in front of forested hillsides and alpine lakes, and biking through the park is becoming one of the most popular ways to do that.

Some roads may open for use by off-roaders

While a bill that would authorize opening more secondary roads to all-terrain vehicles is cruising through the Washington Legislature, U. S. Forest Service officials in Washington are saying they may have been too strict in banning ATVs on some forest roads under existing law.

Think ahead, instructor warns

Hunter education instructors have lives to live and passions to pursue, a point that's especially worth making this time of year, their Washington state leader says.

Hangman thinning nearly done

Logging is a high-profile activity when it occurs between city neighborhoods and skidders drag trees across popular hiking and mountain bike trails. Reaction to a current forest-thinning operation on Spokane City Parks land near Hangman Creek and Hatch Road has ranged from concern to delight, city officials said.

IMAX offers world of adventure

If you've ever fantasized about joining an expedition but couldn't shake free for the months or years required, set aside a few hours to view the current shows at the IMAX Theater in Riverfront Park.

Group challenges species protection

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A conservative legal foundation filed twin federal lawsuits last week challenging federal protections for 42 species, 15 of which live only in shallow seasonal pools across much of California and in far southern Oregon.

Alaska panel enacts measure to protect bears

ANCHORAGE — The McNeil River brown bears — famous for going about their business of catching salmon within a few yards of admiring tourists and photographers — won't be hunted during the next two years on state lands adjacent to the state game sanctuary.

Dogs now have a shot against rattlers

A California company, Red Rock Biologics, is marketing a canine vaccine that has proved effective in protecting dogs against venomous snakebite. According to company spokeswoman Janet Jones, most veterinarians are selling the vaccine for $25 to $30 a dose.

Push is on for whitewater park

Paddlers and downtown interests are eager to harvest some of the Spokane River's unutilized recreational value. But first they need some seed money. The Spokane Canoe and Kayak Club has joined area businesses to raise $45,000 needed for the design, permit and engineering phase of developing a whitewater park on the Spokane River near the new Sandifur pedestrian bridge.

Optician's glasses hit the target

LEWISTON, Idaho — Mike Rinard of Lewiston isn't shy about his product. "We make the finest shooting glasses," he says. "We have been rated No.

Bird extinction expected to be more widespread

WASHINGTON — About 10 percent of all bird species face extinction by the end of the century and 15 percent more are on the brink, according to researchers who say such extinctions would have a widespread impact on the environment, agriculture and human society.

Suit challenges Nevada permits

RENO, Nev. — A lawsuit by three New Mexico outfitters accusing Nevada of discriminating against non-residents when issuing big-game hunting tags has Nevada wildlife officials scrambling to revamp the rules before next fall.

Bogachiel is paradise for steelheaders

The steelhead runs up the Snake River have slowed. But even anglers with good steelheading in their neighborhood can find reasons to drive the winding roads toward the Bogachiel River on Washington's Olympic Coast.

Pigs plucked to save endangered fox

SANTA CRUZ ISLAND, Calif. — Norm Macdonald rises each morning with the sun, grabs his . 223-caliber rifle and slips into the passenger seat of a tiny, doorless helicopter for another day of shooting pigs.

Omori's fish story has a happy ending

CHARLOTTE, N. C. — Takahiro Omori, an immigrant from Japan, came to the United States hoping to become a pro fisherman and one day winning bass fishing's biggest prize, the Bassmaster Classic.

Contest targets young writers

It's time for high school students to begin thinking about fame, fortune and the great outdoors. The Spokesman-Review once again is joining the Outdoor Writers Association of America in sponsoring a contest for youth outdoor writing.

Colorado sand dunes named 56th national park

MOSCA, Colo. — More than 100,000 acres of towering sand dunes, snow-capped mountains and high desert became the Great Sand Dunes National Park and the Baca National Wildlife Refuge on Sept.

Beaverhead, Red Rock rivers could be ready for turnaround

Late snowfall and April showers have offered hope for trout anglers fond of fishing Montana's fabled Beaverhead River and its upstream tributary, Red Rock River.

Candid cameras capture wild creatures for a cause

More than 30 volunteers from northeastern Washington have joined a project to spy on the region's shyest wildlife. The helpers already been trained on installing special cameras with motion-activated sensors that trigger the shutter when a critter moves through the viewfinder.

Ranchers are paying big bucks for big bucks

Two Texas ranchers recently paid $450,000 for Jake the Dream Buck, a white-tailed deer with an enormous set of antlers that far exceed the measurements of the state record buck taken in 1892.

Ornithologist watches in amazement as ravens go on killing spree

BOZEMAN — A Yellowstone National Park ornithologist who saw four ravens systematically kill 141 grebes describes the spectacle in a recent issue of Yellowstone Science, a quarterly magazine.

Interior, tribes will share refuge management

The only federal wildlife refuge set aside to protect bison — the American buffalo — will be managed by the Interior Department and Indian tribes in an unusual partnership that conservationists fear could lead to more development of public lands.

Alaska voters turn down ban on baiting

A ballot measure to outlaw bear-baiting in Alaska apparently came down to a debate over which side represented the true Alaskan. On Nov. 2, the state's voters sided with the small number of hunters who use bait to lure bears within shooting range.

Sides square off on reform of Endangered Species Act

A flurry of activity has surrounded the issue of endangered species in the past month, from the field to Congress. Several Western governors recently called for a reform of the federal Endangered Species Act that would promote conservation while giving states a greater say in how their lands are managed.

Digital rifle sight isn't picture perfect

A rifle sight that incorporates a digital camera and computerized trajectory compensation has created a buzz heard far beyond the shooting industry's annual trade show last month.

Expedition event could crowd Missouri River

GREAT FALLS — Outfitters and federal land officials are expecting a surge of recreational floaters on Montana's Wild and Scenic portion of the Missouri River this summer that could compensate for last year's lackluster traffic.

Montana group seeks to protect hunting, fishing rights

Backers of a Montana constitutional amendment protecting the ability of state citizens to hunt and fish consider it a necessary pre-emptive strike against future threats to something that is a "cherished way of life" in the state.

Mount Rainier proposal causes rift among guides

PARADISE, Wash. — Just 12 years old when he first climbed Mount Rainier, Peter Whittaker considers the rugged, glacier-studded peak his back yard. He has ascended the 14,411-foot mountain more than 200 times, and his company, Rainier Mountaineering Inc.

Air enthusiasts can still drop in on wilderness

The cowboys of the skies call Idaho their home on the range. Outside of Alaska, Idaho is the nation's last great place for backcountry pilots and outfitters who have the skills and aircraft to take advantage of nearly 60 remote landing strips.

Pesky sea lions bait angry anglers

For the third year, biologists observed sea lions pig out on salmon at the base of Bonneville Dam, and fishermen are not pleased. The sea lions usually show up from mid-March through May, said Robert Stansell, a U.

Momentum builds to make recreation fees permanent

The "temporary" recreation fees for national forests and other federal lands are looking more permanent. The fees were first imposed in 1996 on a temporary basis and had been renewed by Congress every two years since.

Winter's out of this world at Craters of the Moon

POCATELLO, Idaho – In the summer, it's a black, barren place, and the sweltering temperatures on the lava flows remind visitors that its more than 700,000 acres were once an active volcanic area.

Poachers slaughter scores of eagles in B.C.

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — The recent slaughter of at least 40 eagles in British Columbia has drawn attention to what appears to be a growing market for feathers and talons of the majestic birds.

Logging aids bighorn sheep

CURLEW, Wash. — Kerrin Doloughan and his friends are helping bighorn sheep that might not see the predators for the trees. For the past four years, they have thinned thick stands of Douglas fir, killed weeds, installed a watering trough and planted shrubs the wild sheep savor.

Another state-record bull moose emerges

After being measured and re-measured, the rack of a moose shot last fall in Pend Oreille County by Leroy Cooper of Sprague has become the state record for Washington.

Automakers catering to outdoor enthusiasts

Leave it to the Japanese to leap ahead of American auto companies even in the field of producing functional vehicles for outdoors enthusiasts. Consider our shortcomings.

Valdez luring tourists by giving away salmon

ANCHORAGE — Each summer, about eight million pink salmon swim into Valdez waters, but the run of tourists has been dwindling. So some Valdez residents have hatched a plan to provide a free, frozen-fresh pink salmon to anyone who drives up the Alaska Highway and later pays a visit to the Prince William Sound port city.

Young campers rattled by hike in snake country

LIVINGSTON, Mont. — Two young tourists on a walk in Montana's Paradise Valley found themselves on a hillside infested with rattlesnakes, and used a cellular phone to tearfully ask for help.

Beginning skier takes crash course in falling

Like a lot of other self-propelled human slope-side menaces, I taught myself how to ski. Sometimes, it shows. This should come as no surprise, given that my method of self teaching consisted of the following: -- Drive to Snoqualmie Pass, exit vehicle, nearly choke to death on parking-lot diesel bus fumes.

States relocate bighorn sheep, antelope to Southern Idaho

Southern Idaho, and wildlife lovers who visit there, received a Christmas gift last month from Oregon, Nevada and Utah — 35 bighorn sheep and about 200 antelope.

Swan die-off attributed to ingestion of lead shot

The number of swans deaths attributed to ingestion of lead shot has nearly doubled in the past 15 months, to 1,850 in Whatcom County and British Columbia.

Natural area opens in style at Newman Lake

Nature has a way of rising to the occasion. As if on cue, this year's crop of bald eagles at Newman Lake hatched just before Earth Day, and were strong enough on April 23 to raise their wobbly heads from the nest and thrill dozens of people touring the latest large addition to the Spokane County Conservation Futures Program.

Wolf advocates pay $139,000 to ranchers for livestock losses

BOZEMAN, Mont. — Defenders of Wildlife paid out more than $139,000 in 2004 to Western ranchers whose sheep or cattle were killed by wolves, the group said recently.

Rogue rattlers get a helping hand in search for a new home

TWISP — John Rohrer smiled broadly as, one by one, 17 rattlesnakes slid slowly down the dark hole that will be their new home this winter.

Makeshift shelter near Sherman Pass to get a replacement

A crude but cozy winter sanctuary for winter backcountry travelers near Sherman Pass has been dismantled by Colville National Forest rangers who promise to build an even more useful shelter for the future.

Diving ducks dine on endangered fish

WENATCHEE — Dam operators researching birds that prey on endangered fish in the mid-Columbia River should have been looking to demure ducks swimming in the water instead of blaming high-flying gulls, according to preliminary findings of a study.

Region has a wealth of long-distance trails

Long-distance trails, many of them born from the beds of defunct railroads, are becoming a recreational signature of the Inland Northwest. Walkers, runners, bikers and in-line skaters are checking in from other states to make tracks on a remarkable and still-evolving network of routes, including:Trail of the Coeur d'Alenes — 72 uninterrupted miles, paved, the crown jewel of the region's rail-trails, from Plummer, Idaho, across the Chatcolet Bridge, along Lake Coeur d'Alene to Harrison and then along the Coeur d'Alene River to Mullan.

'The Bob' is a hunter's paradise

The Bob Marshall Wilderness Complex in Montana is distinguished from the Wenaha-Tucannon Wilderness of Washington and Oregon by several factors important to elk hunters, including more elk, longer seasons and fewer restrictions.

Idaho's highest point low on wilderness priority

In many cases, a state's highest mountain is a wilderness no-brainer. Weather and terrain hostile to development and resource extraction often creates wilderness by default in rugged mountain areas.

Bill seeks minimum age for training

Virtually every hunter education instructor gets a thrill from teaching new hunters and giving them the tools to be safe, successful, legal and ethical, said Red Nierstheimer, president of the Washington Hunter Education Instructors' Association.

Group tries to revive GOP conservation legacy

Like a faint voice in the wilderness, a small group of Republicans is rising to the call for protecting the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. "Our overall mission is to restore the Republican Party's historic leadership on conservation issues," said Jim DiPeso, policy director for Republicans for Environmental Protection.

Tip, luck key to bagging record

The key to claiming the Washington state record moose last fall came down to the oldest and most reliable of hunting methods, said Jeff McKeen of Spokane.

A bit of history is just a trail away in the Inland Northwest

Numerous trails in the Inland Northwest lead to some sort of historical attraction. Among them:•Kirkwood Ranch in Hells Canyon on the Idaho side of the Snake River, including a house built in 1925.

BY THE NUMBERS

1924 Year the Gila Wilderness in New Mexico, championed by ecologist Aldo Leopold, was designated as America's first official wilderness area8 Number of years the Wilderness Act was debated before passage in 1964106 million Acres designated as wilderness in 662 units in 44 states, an area larger than California...

Fast Facts

Under the 1964 Wilderness Act:• There are now 106 million acres protected as wilderness. Alaska accounts for more than half of them, 58 million acres, which is 16 percent of the state.

Ruling murky on water rights

Naturally, most people assume that water is critical to the existence of wilderness fish and wildlife. Legally, however, there are dissenting opinions. The Idaho Supreme Court in 1999 upheld trial court decisions that maintained "federal reserved" water rights for the Sawtooth Wilderness.

Idaho hunting lottery dedicated to opening access to private land

Following the principle of supply and demand, Idaho's controlled-hunt tags have become increasingly valuable — and profitable. Any hunter can buy over-the-counter tags to hunt deer and elk in some parts of the state.

Big-running dogs sometimes go from hunter to the hunted

Now you see them, now you don't. That's why working with big-running bird dogs occasionally requires a good dose of faith. Just ask Medical Lake-area dog trainer Dan Hoke, who breeds and trains a variety of bird dogs, from close-range hunting companions to long-distance field champions.

Original TOSRV was inspiration for mass cycling events

The Missoula-based Tour of the Swan River Valley (TOSRV West) is a spin-off from the Tour of the Scioto River Valley, the two-day, 200-mile mother of all big organized bike rides based in Ohio.

Ojito Mesa could become next refuge for lovers of outdoors

ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. — Wild enough to get lost in, tame enough for youngsters to follow porcupine and coyote tracks, Ojito Wilderness is about to become an official nature-lover's paradise.

Reasoned retreat

The Ptarmigan Traverse is a mostly unmarked 42-mile route that cuts through North Cascades National Park and the Glacier Peak Wilderness in north central Washington.

At a glance

Key developments involving the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska:1954 — National Park Service recommends preservation of Alaska's northeastern corner for wildlife, wilderness, recreation, scientific and cultural values; sparks debate, controversy.

Fees gone, but so is route

Snowmobilers will find access to Inland Empire Paper Company lands to be cheaper this winter, but slightly less convenient. IEP will not charge registered snowmobilers displaying Sno-Park permits an additional fee this winter for entering the company's timber lands from Mount Spokane State Park.

Mountains of fun

Sandwiches aren't sold at the Lunch Counter on Mount Adams. Passing through the Pearly Gates on Mount Hood doesn't mean you're dead. Most climbers go past Quitter's Point on Mount Jefferson.

Mountain goats still on decline

DARRINGTON, Wash. — Most of the meadows and rocky outcrops mountain goats inhabit in Washington state are so remote, only hardy backcountry hikers ever see them.

A wild rush Glacier National Park, Montana

In our youth decisions are often impulsive, like the time I bushwhacked up Chapman Peak, one of the many trail-less mountains in Glacier National Park.

From Pristine sources Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness, Idaho

The Idaho high country, above the town of Salmon, stunts most growth. Buds of lupine and paintbrush, penstemon and pines, even the paddling mallard ducks are tiny that high.

Singing a different tune Anaconda Pintler Wilderness, Montana

We'd talked ourselves into it. My husband and with our son and his girlfriend decided we were more than capable of hiking 13 miles into the Anaconda Pintler Wilderness to Warren Lake back in one day.

Because it's there

It's thrilling to hike alone in bear country. I love grizzly bear stories, I chuckle when I think of Lewis, Clark and the boys running across the West's biggest and baddest.

Harbinger of treasures

ABERDEEN, Wash. — Thousands of purplish-blue jellyfish washed ashore recently along the beach at Ocean City. Most people out for a morning stroll didn't give it a second thought, but those with a trained eye and a quest for elusive glass floats and other sea treasures watched closely.

Growing anti-wolf movement in Idaho

BOISE — A group of Idaho hunters maintain that efforts to reintroduce wolves in the state have reduced the population of big game. The hunters claim to see fewer elk and are skeptical of evidence that says there is no hard link between more wolves and less game.

Real-life history lesson

ST. LOUIS — While not as harrowing as Lewis and Clark's sojourn westward two centuries ago, the river journey by modern-day re-enactors has been anything but smooth sailing on the Missouri River.

Sportsman fees may increase

Idaho and Montana wildlife agencies are proposing increases in hunting and fishing license fees in order to maintain services. Meanwhile, Washington's Department of Fish and Wildflife is asking for a $5 hunting license increase for a new program to expand hunter access on private land.

Jamboree-style hunter education class offered

Washington is trying a new approach this month to satisfy the annual fall crush of interest in hunter education courses. A special jamboree-style course designed to handle up to 200 students has been scheduled for Sept.

Climbing season begins at Mount McKinley

ANCHORAGE – Climbing season has begun at Mount McKinley with several changes, including higher climbing fees and less support for rescues. About 1,200 climbers are expected on the mountain between now and mid-July.

Paddle season gears up

Paddle sports are gaining muscle in the Inland Northwest. Numerous schools, clinics, tours and events sponsored by clubs, businesses and recreation departments are already on the spring and summer schedule.

Creating a welcome environment

SALEM, Ore. — Kelly McGrath, 25, moved to Oregon from Ohio for the things that make the state special: mountains and coastline, salmon and deer, dripping moss and towering trees.

Cycle Oregon pedals history

SALEM, Ore. – Lewis and Clark only could have dreamed of a camp-out like this. Catered meals. Snack breaks and rest stops. Water from bottles, not creeks.

Stretch of Clark Fork protected

The Clark Fork River's Alberton Gorge, a major attraction for whitewater river runners and a critical stretch for the river's rainbow and cutthroat trout, has been permanently protected from development.

Missouri's rainbows dwindling

GREAT FALLS — Montana's famed big rainbow trout are disappearing from a section of the Missouri River. Wildlife managers point to old age, years of drought and a rise in whirling disease for the drop-off over the past two years.

Spokane man sets record for Idaho bighorn tag bid

A Spokane hunter has bid the highest amount ever for the Idaho bighorn sheep tag offered each year during an annual fund-raising auction. John Amistoso made the record $180,000 bid during the Foundation for North American Wild Sheep convention March 2-5 in San Antonio.

Foursome want to rewrite Endangered Species Act

WASHINGTON — Four leading GOP House members and senators announced a joint effort last week to rewrite the Endangered Species Act's references to habitat and scientific provisions.

This fish story has a ring of truth

MIAMI — The Fort Lauderdale fisherman who said he put his gold wedding ring on a sailfish's bill before letting it go and then recaptured the same fish more than two years later with the ring still attached has passed a polygraph examination.

Beavers unneighborly in urban areas

PORTLAND — Beavers may be Oregon's official state animal, but they don't always make great neighbors, especially in the state's fastest-growing cities and suburbs. The animals, rebounding after centuries of being trapped for their once-coveted pelts, have a pesky habit of chomping on landscaping and constructing unexpected lakes.

Too little or too much

SHERIDAN, Wyo. — Few new wilderness areas in the Bighorn National Forest are being considered under a draft management plan, according to environmentalists. But a forest planner says more wilderness would conflict with the U.

But, so far, he still can't beam fish up into the boat

DEVILS LAKE, N. D. — Bruce "Doc" Samson hit the water for the Wal-Mart RCL walleye tournament this summer at the helm of a boat with a control panel resembling the Starship Enterprise.

Paddlers rule in wild waters

Wet landscapes and wilderness management rules have maintained paddling as the premier mode of transportation in several of the nation's wilderness areas outside of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area.

It's time for canoes, kayaks

There's no reason to be up the creek without a paddling partner or paddling instruction this season. Canoeing and kayaking clinics, courses and group activities are being offered by several organizations in the Inland Northwest.

State of their state fish ominous

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Federal and state officials have agreed to spend $1. 3 million over the next five years to save California's state fish.

Field Reports

PREDATORSWolverine takes a hikeA wolverine wearing a global positioning system collar wandered nearly 550 miles in seven weeks, including a trip from Pocatello, Idaho, to the northern reaches of Yellowstone National Park.

Field Reports

SNOW SPORTSSnow Show scheduledArea ski resorts, skiing, snowboarding and backcountry equipment retailers will join stunt skiers and Olympic silver medalist Shannon Bahrke at the Spokane Snow Show, Nov.

Field Reports

PHOTOGRAPHYNorthwest Exposure contestIt's time to pluck the best photograph from your trips into the outback of Washington state for entry in the second annual Northwest Exposure photo contest sponsored by the Washington Trails Association.

Field Reports

WILDLIFECritter tourism toutedThe Othello Sandhill Crane Festival, a popular spring event, is a prime example of communities capitalizing on wildlife spectacles. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife likes this trend and is offering help to other local communities interested in planning wildlife festivals.

Field Reports

BICYCLINGHiawatha closes Oct. 3The Route of the Hiawatha bike trail will remain open daily through Oct. 3, according to a report from Lookout Pass Ski Area.

Field Reports

Roadless land decision on hold

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration says it will put off until after the election a final decision on whether to allow road building and logging on 58 million acres of national forest where both are now prohibited.

Field Reports

ENDANGERED SPECIESPelicans crash-landingMore than 30 endangered brown pelicans have crashed onto sidewalks and roads in Arizona this summer, mistaking the heat-induced shimmer of the paved surface for lakes and creeks.

Field Reports

Field Reports

Montana ski areas to reward students

BIG SKY — Montana's newest ski area plans to offer free lift tickets to students in two counties who earn good grades or bring poor grades up.

Field Reports

Field Reports

WILDLIFE ENFORCEMENTBlueRibbon leader citedThe director of the BlueRibbon Coalition has been placed on indefinite administrative leave after being cited last month for outfitting without a license in the Sawtooth National Forest.

Field Reports

WILDERNESSHike the Salmo-PriestMembers of the Kettle Range Conservation Group and Northwest Ecosystem Alliance are inviting the public on a hike through unprotected wild areas in northeastern Washington adjacent to the Salmo-Priest Wilderness Area on Sept.

Field Reports

SNOWMOBILINGTax collections decline Resort tax collections at West Yellowstone, Mont. , declined more than 15 percent this past winter, and town officials are putting the blame squarely on confusion over snowmobile rules at nearby Yellowstone National Park.

Field Reports

WILDLIFE HABITATContest for landowners Whether you have a ranch or simply a big yard you want to develop for wildlife, local members of Safari Club International want to showcase your efforts.

Field Reports

RIVER RUNNINGWhitewater fest set Rafting, Dutch oven cooking, movies nad a party are set for the 6th annual Bigwater Blowout Saturday on the Salmon River based out of Riggins, Idaho.

Groups says federal funding need to repair damaged trails

SEATTLE – Floods and fires have hit hundreds of miles of the state's hiking trails so hard they could stay closed for years unless Congress dramatically boosts funding to repair them, the Washington Trails Association says in a new report.

Field Reports

WILDLIFE CONSERVATIONElk Foundation building The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation broke ground recently on a new $14 million headquarters and Elk country Visitor Center in Missoula. Hundreds of members and staff joined the festivities, including Bob Munson.

Field Reports

For Sunday, June 13, 2004.

McKinley climbers find man's body

ANCHORAGE — Remains found on Mount McKinley may be those of a 32-year-old Wyoming man who died there in 1969, the National Park Service said. The body was found recently by climbers poking around in a high-elevation camp cache.

Field Reports

For Sunday, July 11, 2004.

Field Reports

For Sunday, July 04, 2004.

Field Reports

For Sunday, June 27, 2004.

Field Reports

Field Reports

For Sunday, July 18, 2004.

Field Reports

Field Reports

HUNTINGRecord moose measuredJeff McKeen of Spokane filled his once-in-a-lifetime Washington moose tag last fall with a once-in-a-lifetime bull — unofficially a Washington record. Larry Carey, an official Boone and Crockett scorer in Spokane, recently measured the trophy after the required 60-day drying period and gave it a score of 186 4/8 points.

Field Reports

MOUNT SPOKANELanglauf fills parkingNext Sunday is the busiest day of the year at the Mount Spokane nordic skiing area. The annual Langlauf 10-kilometer cross country ski race, which attracts more than 300 participants, is set to start at 11 a.

Shiosaki has unfinished business on wildlife commission

Fred Shiosaki's reappointment to the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission has shocked his friends. A press release lauding the Spokane man's service circulated from Olympia last month as Gov.

Field Reports

WILDERNESSWild Sky reintroducedFor the third session, bills to establish the Wild Sky Wilderness northeast of Seattle are working through Congress. Bills sponsored by Rep. Rick Larsen and Sen.

Field Reports

Riverside State ParkFee areas expandedBeginning Friday, Riverside State Park will collect the $5 daily/$50 annual parking permit fee in areas on the west side of the park.

Field Reports

WILDLIFEState elk range closedAbout a fourth of the 12,000-acre Wooten Wildlife Area in southeast Washington's Columbia County has been temporarily closed to all uses to help prevent disturbing elk and moving them onto surrounding private agricultural lands.

Field Reports

CLIMBINGIdaho on the wallSome hot-shot climbers and a swarm of local talent is expected to congregate Saturday for the third annual Palouse Climbing Competition, 10 a.

Field Reports

Field Reports

WILDLIFE MANAGEMENTDiseased pheasants destroyedAbout 2,200 pheasants have been euthanized in the past week at the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Centralia Game Farm after workers discovered an outbreak of an avian bacterial infection Dr.

Wireless snare puts poachers on notice

Game wardens across the country say mobile phones – and the sportsmen who use them – are the next best thing to catching a poacher kneeling beside a steaming gut pile.

Field Reports

CROSS COUNTRY SKIINGTry new nordic trailsCross country skiers can visit a different nordic ski trail system almost every weekend in a group trip series sponsored by Spokane Parks and Recreation Department.

Field Reports

NATIONAL FORESTSORV proposal opposedA group of bikers, snowmobilers and all-terrain vehicle riders is fighting a proposal by the Gallatin National Forest to close significant areas to motor vehicles.

Avalanche victim wrote about winter sports safety

BOZEMAN — An avalanche in southwestern Montana killed one cross country skier and injured another, leaving him stranded in the snow for two days until a rescue helicopter could pluck him to safety.

Boat, sportsmen shows coming up

The boat and sportsmen's show season kicks into high gear this month, giving outdoor enthusiasts a chance to see the latest products from manufacturers. While plenty of shows are still being scheduled to get sportsmen on track, it's notable that there aren't as many as there were a few years ago.

Field Reports

ENDANGERED SPECIESFour trumpeters shotFour trumpeter swans were killed by gunfire in two separate incidents the week of Dec. 20 in eastern Idaho. Idaho Fish and Game Department officials said three of the birds were shot in the neck with a rifle near Oneida Narrows below Oneida Dam, a wintering area for the rare species.

Field Reports

HUNTINGElk season extendedBig-game hunters today are ending a two-week extension of several antlerless elk hunts in Montana that were created in a continuing effort to reduce crowded elk herds in the southwestern portion of the state.

Multiple choices available when picking multi-tool

There are fabled stories and epic survival tales built completely on the transpiration of a multi-tool in a time of dire need. Whether it's the climber high on a mountain who repaired his stove just before freezing or skiers who needed to jigger a binding back to life 14 miles from the car, the multi-tool has saved a legion of outdoor athletes from great misery or much worse.

Field Reports

Lolo Motorway lottery to be held

The Clearwater National Forest will soon be accepting lottery applications for permits to travel the 58-mile section of the Lolo Motorway along the route of the Lewis and Clark Expedition.

Field Reports

BICYCLINGREI honors HyattSpokane's tireless bicycling advocate, Eileen Hyatt, is among seven "outdoor stewards" throughout the country honored by the annual national Stewards for the Environment Awards by Recreational Equipment, Inc.

Field Reports

LOCAL FORUMSCC explores wildernessThree speakers will be featured in a free public forum on the 40th anniversary of the Wilderness Act Tuesday at Spokane Community College Lair Auditorium: -- At 8:30 a.

Field Reports

PREDATORSWolf fence fundedAn environmental group is building 6-foot-high fenced pens on two sheep ranches in the Paradise Valley where wolves have killed 38 sheep in the past year.

Field Reports

WILDLIFEHigh-strung mooseIn one of those only-in-Alaska stories, a trophy-sized bull moose was accidentally strung up in a power line under construction southeast of Fairbanks. The moose, apparently on the fight during mating season two weeks ago, tangled its antlers in electrical wire before workers farther down the line winched the wires tight.

Field Reports

MOUNT SPOKANE STATE PARKPark passes in transitionSometime within the next few weeks, Mount Spokane State Park will make the transition between the two different parking passes most visitors are required to have in their vehicles during the year.

Field Reports

OFF-ROAD VEHICLESDrinking banned at dunesAlcoholic beverages have been banned at a second sand dunes area south of Moses Lake in action prompted by a rash of accidents last Memorial Day weekend.

Field Reports

RIVER RUNNINGRiggins BigWater BlowoutWhitewater rafting, Dutch oven cooking, a rafting gear swap, movies and music are set for the 6th annual BigWater Blowout Saturday on the Salmon River based out of Riggins, Idaho.

Field Reports

MOUNTAIN BIKINGWomen-only fat-tire weekendRegistration is open for the 12th annual Skurtzendirt, a June 25-26 weekend of mountain biking rides, instruction and camaraderie at Farragut State Park for women only.

Field Reports

FISHINGFish hog blows itAlbania's most wanted man fought off special police and eluded capture for years only to blow himself up recently while fishing with dynamite.

FWS to review pygmy rabbit petition

BOISE — The U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service has agreed to decide by May 16 whether threats to the North American pygmy rabbit warrant a yearlong review that could lead to protection under the Endangered Species Act.

Field Reports

Field Reports

FISHERIESFish pesticide proposedA Spokane public meeting is scheduled by the Washington Fish and Wildlife Department to review proposals to use antimycin-A as a fish pesticide to kill undesirable fish populations in selected area waters.

Field Reports

HUNTING/FISHINGIdaho to boost feesIf you plan to get an Idaho hunting or fishing license, you'll save money buying it before July 1, when most of the state's license and tag fees will increase by about 10 percent.

National forests feeling budget pinch

PORTLAND — The cash-strapped U. S. Forest Service can no longer afford to maintain many campgrounds and trailheads and has started ranking recreational sites for possible closure.

Going up country? Try canned heat

Brunton has taken the decades-old concept of canned heat and added a couple crucial modern twists. The company's new line of GreenHeat fuel canisters, which are being marketed to backpackers, climbers and anyone else who needs to pack as light as possible, are filled with a special concoction of gelled and highly-flammable vegetable oil.

Four-race telemark series coming up

An Inland Northwest four-race telemark series for competitors of all skill levels has been scheduled for January and February, with the first event set for Saturday at Silver Mountain.

Bluebirds coming in for a landing

Bird migrations are in full wing through the Inland Northwest this month. Sandhill cranes and long-billed curlews showed up on schedule for the Sandhill Crane Festival that's concluding today in Othello.

Fish Fest will cover wide range of topics

Water temperatures are nearly ideal and the walleye bite is coming on. Do you know how to get in on the action? The annual Lake Pend Oreille spring fishing derby is only a few weeks off.

Not to worry, polycarbonate bottles are OK

The ubiquitous polycarbonate water bottle is the canteen of the 21rst century. But these colorful plastic vessels, made by companies like Nalgene and GSI Outdoors, have been embroiled in a controversy for the past two years, ever since a researcher at Case Western Reserve University said they may pose health risks.

Biologists planning long look at pelicans

BISMARCK, N. D. — Pelican nesting grounds will be off-limits to the public this year at a refuge in central North Dakota while biologists plan their most extensive study ever of the big birds.

Goggles worth seeking out

Many a ski day was ruined during my younger years while wearing the wrong eyewear on the slopes. A procession of cheap sunglasses and second-hand goggles left me with foggy vision and wind-battered, teary eyes whenever the weather turned foul.

Technology isn't reducing avalanche deaths

For the chance to recount nervy tales of outdoor machismo, many backcountry enthusiasts will risk nearly everything. Blocking off dangerous areas outside of ski resorts won't deter them, nor will frightening signs or avalanche advisories.

Couple strikes nice Kauai balance

Andy and Kelli Friedlander started their marriage on the right foot — wearing hiking shoes on Kauai. Along the way, they blended surf and turf into a perfect honeymoon and a model of marital compromise.

Jubilee reaches its peak

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — It's not quite as high as Mount Everest, but it's been about three times as dangerous to conquer. And on Monday, an Italian marked the 50th anniversary of his grandfather's first successful climb of K-2 by summiting the mountain.

At 81, Richland man still climbs

Bill Painter of Richland wanted a little activity before sitting down to talk about becoming the oldest person to reach the top of Mount Rainier.

Report lists concerns for sage grouse future

RENO, Nev. — Sage grouse populations across the West appear to be stabilizing overall, but the once-abundant game bird under consideration for federal protection still faces serious threats to its survival, a new report says.

Outdoors writers featured

Being an outdoor writer is a risky business, as one can clearly see by the books they produce. Pat Wray, for example, a former Marine helicopter pilot who's written for newspapers, magazines and the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Department, recently published "A Chukar Hunter's Companion.

New CWD study raises concerns

A new study shows chronic wasting disease can spread through environmental contamination and not just animal-to-animal contact, a finding that could change the way experts fight the ailment that afflicts deer and elk.

Kujala top 2003 volunteer

Teaching fishing techniques to youngsters and collecting roadkill from area roadways are among the many activities that led to Jim Kujala, 63, being named Volunteer of the Year by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife this month.

Canadian scientists warn about bullfrog proliferation

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Canadian scientists are sounding the alarm about the spread of the nonnative bullfrogs, which are native to the eastern United States, grow as big as dinner plates and eat anything they can fit into their mouths — including ducklings, garter snakes, songbirds and mice.

Predatory fish released in 2 lakes

Predatory black crappie fish were recently illegally introduced in two lakes in northwestern Montana and have the potential to spread to many other fisheries, a state fisheries manager says.

Search on for mule deer that attacked man

BOZEMAN, Mont. — Montana game wardens were searching last week for an mule deer buck, which has a history of aggression, that attacked a man near Cameron.

Roadless comment periods ending

Two public comment periods on important policies involving off-road vehicles and national forest roadless areas are ending this week. Monday is the deadline to comment on the Forest Service plan to keep off-road vehicles on designated roads and trails across the nation.

Ocean salmon fishing forecast a mixed bag

Overall, this year's ocean salmon seasons are likely to be good between San Francisco and Monterey, Calif. , a little tighter than last year off Washington, and a lot tighter from Northern California to Newport, Ore.

Oregon man donates money for Zumwalt Prairie conservation

EUGENE, Ore. — A Eugene man has given $500,000 to The Nature Conservancy to help restore a native grassland in northeast Oregon. John Soreng, 80, an avid fly fisherman and longtime supporter of conservation causes, wants to help preserve Zumwalt Prairie near the Snake River and Hells Canyon.

A handy camera for outdoors

Whether it's the requisite summit shot on top of a mountain or a picture of sunrise over the ocean, photography has become a default part of any big adventure.

Gregoire replaces four wildlife commissioners

OLYMPIA, Wash. — Gov. Christine Gregoire, moving to recast the state Fish and Wildlife Commission, has removed four commissioners who hadn't been confirmed by the Senate and replaced them with her own choices.

Base layer makes comfort no sweat

Long johns, skivvies, union suits, long underwear — whatever you call them — must be well-fitting and comfortable. For outdoor athletes, base layer clothing must also balance breathability and insulation.

Proposal to drill in Arctic refuge has its best chance

WASHINGTON — Members of Congress who have successfully blocked oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge for more than a decade vowed to do everything, including a Senate filibuster, to protect the preserve again this year.

Yellowstone Elk decline continues

The northern elk herd in Yellowstone National Park went into 2004 at its smallest size since 1988, primarily due to drought, wolves, severe past winters and outside hunting, officials said.

We wouldn't pull wool over your eyes

In a world of Lycra, nylon, Spandex and polypropylene, a fabric as age-old as wool can seem obsolete. But sheep fuzz is making a comeback as outdoor circles re-appreciate its natural characteristics.

Climbers on expedition list their possible first ascents

Members of the Spokane Mountaineers Adamants-Gothics 2004 climbing expedition list the following possible alpine first ascents (confirmation pending):Post Peak, 9,930 feet: Northeast Ice Remnant and Direct North Ridge, a route created by extensive glacier recession and not visible in previous guidebook photos.

Montanans divided on new wilderness areas

HELENA — Whether to designate new federal wilderness areas in Montana leaves state residents divided about evenly, according to a statewide poll. Forty-six percent of those surveyed said they support designating more wilderness areas, 48 percent were opposed and 6 percent undecided.

Exhibit changes create dispute

An exhibit of Alaska wilderness photos ignited a minor uproar in the nation's capital last year. The exhibit featured 49 photos of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, which is at the center of a fierce debate between environmentalists and the Bush administration over oil development.

Montana revives bison hunt near park

Montana's wildlife commission has voted to resume bison hunting, allowing up to 25 animals to be killed next year if they enter the state from Yellowstone National Park.

Sea-to-summit Everest climber to be in Spokane

The first man to climb Mount Everest — that is, the entire mountain from sea to summit — will be in Spokane this week to relive the details of his audacious mountaineering career.

How to keep the deer out

Deer are cute and almost everyone loves them — unless those same deer are destroying their gardens and champing on their trees and shrubs. Even the renowned Albert Schweitzer, who maintained all life was sacred, was reported to employ a double standard.

Three chances left to speak on Colville travel plans

The Colville National Forest is winding down months of public involvement in developing travel routes on roads and trails for off-road vehicles. Hikers, bicyclists, equestrians, ORVers and other forest users will have three more chances to offer their opinion on where motorized recreation should be allowed before the Forest Service moves into the next management phase, said Debbie Wilkins, the forest's coordinator for recreation strategy.

Fraser River sockeye hurting

One of the Canada's richest commercial fisheries, the Fraser River sockeye salmon run, will likely be shut down for the 2008 season due to a sharp decline in spawning stocks that may be related to climate change, a report by a Canadian government committee in Ottawa has concluded.

Idaho DFG offers e-mail alerts

The Idaho Department of Fish and Game has a new Internet service that allows sportsmen to subscribe to instant e-mail alerts on specific subjects of interest.

Anglers earn cash for their catch

Once again, it's time to fish for fame, and especially for fortune. The 2005 Pikeminnow Reward Season opened Monday on the Columbia River from John Day Dam to the mouth while the program starts upstream from John Day and up the Snake River to Lewiston on May 16.

Viesturs bags peak, bags sport

KATMANDU, Nepal – One of the United States' most accomplished climbers has come down from the death zone. After Ed Viesturs recently became the 12th person and the first American to climb the world's tallest 14 peaks – all above 26,240 feet – the 45-year-old said he is retiring from high-altitude climbing.

Postponement of decision on roadless issue draws Montana support

HELENA — Montana activists on both sides of the national forest roadless issue praised the Bush administration's recent postponement of a decision on the controversy.

Date set for ocean salmon fishing

Recreational salmon fishing is tentatively set to begin June 26 in all Washington coastal areas under agreements reached recently by the federal Pacific Fishery Management Council.

North-central Oregon lures winter fly fishermen

Winter fly fishing is a sport for the patient angler. The weather usually is brisk and the fishing is anything but red hot when water temperatures plummet.

STATE RECORD

 The antlers of the Washington state record moose taken in November will be on display this week at the Big Horn Outdoor Adventure Show at the Spokane Fair and Expo Center.

Birdwatching

 Audubon Society members welcome newcomers interested in helping with Christmas Bird Count. Following is a schedule of area outings and contacts. North Idaho Coeur d'Alene: Dec.

Catch up on changes to fishing rules

On May 1 – six days after the opening of Washington's general trout season – the state's 2008-2009 fishing rules go into effect.

Fish may be smaller, but still plentiful near Spokane

Spokane County, as usual, will produce some of the best trout fishing in the state when Washington's general lowland lake fishing season opens April 26.

Long on Liberty

Liberty Lake, once a general-season rainbow gold mine, has evolved in to a productive lake for a mix of species from trout to bass, perch and even walleyes and saugeyes (a sauger-walleye hybrid).

Elk lure Washington hunters

Northeastern Washington's elk population continues to grow and expand. Although the number of elk killed is low in this generally thickly vegetation country.

Yakima elk love the high life

The Yakima elk herd's reduction from roughly 13,500 animals to 9,500 has been accomplished over the past few years, requiring fewer antlerless permits to be issued this year.

Blues have bright side for hunters

Blue Mountains elk numbers are growing slightly, but the herds also are changing patterns slightly because of forest fires.

It's a fishy time of year

I don't consider myself a seedy character, but I love this time of year when my attention turns to writing about hookers, nymphs and maggots.

Spokane-area trout plump

Chris Donely was up to his gill nets in trout last week. The Washington Fish and Wildlife Department district biologist spends a few weeks each spring setting up a circuit of gill nets, each of which he allows to "soak" for 24 hours in order to survey the growth of hatchery fish stocked in Spokane County lakes.

Big bucks make comeback in N.E.

Four northeastern Washington game management units were by far the best general season deer-producing areas in the state in 2005. The Huckleberry, Mount Spokane, 49 Degrees North and Sherman units produced about 7,500 deer to hunters who averaged success rates of better than 30 percent.

Columbia Basin gets head start

April 30 is only one of several "opening days" for Columbia Basin trout anglers, who have virtually no off-season. Indeed, a few of lakes that opened March 1 are already near being fished out.

New Washington rules effective May 1

On May 1 – just two days after the opening of Washington's general trout season – a new set of rules will take effect. Read the new regulations pamphlet carefully for the waters you intend to fish.

Triploid rainbows have the genes for success

Not all rainbows stocked in Washington lakes before the April 30 season opener are created equal. Some hatchery rainbows called "triploids" have been genetically altered to make them sterile, a technique that lets the fish put all their energy into growing large.

Palouse late buck hunt permit-only

Washington's late whitetail buck hunt in the Palouse region south of Spokane will not be open to general hunters this fall. For years, the November season was a good thing for trophy buck hunters.

Yakima not state hot spot

The Yakima Region continues to be the best elk producer in Eastern Washington, but it's cooled from the hot spot it used to be. "The harvest has been down a little the last two years, mostly intentionally because we're trying to reduce the herd and we've been fairly successful at it," explained Jeff Bernatowicz, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife biologist in Yakima.

It's quality, not always quantity here

Northeastern Washington is not overflowing with elk, and it probably never will be. But while their numbers are not huge, a hunter has a chance of bumping into one just about anywhere in Pend Oreille, Spokane, Stevens counties and well beyond.

CWD testing aims at keeping Washington free of disease

Washington's continued testing for chronic wasting disease in deer and elk will be focused in Eastern Washington this fall, Department of Fish and Wildlife officials said.

Sorting seasons

Idaho and Washington have numerous fishing seasons geared to different waters and fisheries — too many to even summarize here. Always check current regulations for specific waters before going fishing.

There's reservoir of varied fishing in Lake Roosevelt

Lake Roosevelt is among the region's most productive fishing waters, luring anglers with diverse interests ranging from rainbow trout and kokanee to smallmouth bass and walleyes.

Don't ignore rivers in own backyard

While Montana and Idaho have the glamour rivers featured in the fishing magazines, Eastern Washington has some less-popular gems.

Panhandle elk hunting keeps up healthy pace

The Idaho Panhandlecontinues to be a haven for elk hunters, with its liberal seasons and large numbers of big bulls.

Timber companies charging fees

Hunters will have to pay fees this fall for entering some private timber company lands. Potlatch Corp., since April, has sold 2,300 permits for recreational access.

Idaho's 'whitetail tag' has its pros and cons

Idaho's "whitetail tag" still confuses some hunters after being introduced last year, Fish and Game Department officials said. Hunters can choose either a regular deer tag or a white-tailed deer tag.

Panhandle has plethora of white-tailed deer

The Idaho Panhandle is in the glory days of hunting for white-tailed deer. "The last nine winters were exceptionally mild," said Phil Cooper, Idaho Fish and Game Department spokesman in Coeur d'Alene.

Private land owners withdraw from program

Hundreds of Eastern Washington farmers and ranchers are withdrawing from a state Fish and Wildlife Department program that assist sportsmen in getting permission to hunt on private lands.

Opportunities increasing for disabled hunter access

Programs are expanding to give disabled hunters more opportunities to drive on forest roads that are otherwise closed to public vehicle travel. Both the Colville and Idaho Panhandle national forests have disabled hunter programs, as do some private timber companies.

Sprague gets jump start

Sprague Lake has been revived and is open for business after its fishery was eradicated in October.

Lakes for a selective clientele

Medical Lake was in the buzz at a recent Spokane Fly Fishers meeting, where members told of frequent visits since the March 1 opener and catches of big rainbows and browns up to 24 inches long.

Walleyes don't leave during spring spawn

Walleyes can be caught virtually any time of year in Washington's top walleye lakes, including Banks, Moses, Pothholes, Roosevelt and Scootenay Reservoir.

Idaho extends already liberal season

Idaho Panhandle deer seasons – among the most unrestrictive in the West – have been liberalized even more this season in answer to complaints about too many deer.

Stay-at-home fishing

Spokane area anglers won't have to travel far on opening day to find some of the top trout fishing waters in Washington. The April 29 general lowland lake trout season opener should put fat trout in the bag and smiles on the faces of thousands of anglers who won't even have to leave Spokane County.

Elk herds peaking on West Side

Elk hunting is steeped in tradition, which partially explains why a lot of Eastern Washington sportsmen continue searching this region for eligible elk while most of the state's elk-hunting success is in Western Washington.

More deer means more opportunities in Washington

The region from Spokane to Colville is Washington's deer hunting Mecca, producing far more bucks and does to hunters than any other region in the state.

Walleyes expanding

The secret is out among walleye anglers who are venturing in growing numbers to the lower 12 miles of the Okanogan River. Inasmuch as most of the stream's shoreline is privately owned, nearly all of the walleye fishing is from boats.

Put a tiger in your tank … eventually

A closure on fishing for tiger muskies at Newman Lake started this week and will run through May 15 as researchers capture and implant radio transmitters in adult fish so their movements can be tracked.

Amber, Coffeepot top selective lakes

For anglers who prefer quality to quantity, the top selective fisheries in the Spokane region are Amber and Coffeepot lakes, both of which opened March 1.

NE elk finding new ground

Northeastern Washington hunters are enjoying the most liberal elk seasons ever, although that still doesn't mean the hunting is easy. The elk are thinly populated and scattered through a huge area and the timber and vegetation is thick.

Fire leaves its impact

Forest and range fires have displaced wildlife and altered hunter plans in some locations throughout the Inland Northwest. Fires continue to burn in portions of Idaho and Montana, including the Bob Marshall Wilderness.

Panhandle still booming

Elk hunters in the Idaho Panhandle last year had one of the best seasons in memory for bagging bull elk, and this year should be even better, according to Idaho Fish and Game surveys.

Controversial bison hunt near park returns in Montana

After a 15-year hiatus, bison hunting is back in Montana. A 90-day bison hunt was recently approved to help thin herds migrating out of Yellowstone National Park, the Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks Department announced last week.

SPRAGUE LAKE

 Sprague Lake, just 45 minutes west of Spokane off Interstate 90, is one of those waters that holds more secrets and more potential than most anglers will ever discover.

SCHEDULE

 Following are some of the region's top walleye tournaments:   -- Rod Meseberg Spring Classic, April 30-May 1, Potholes Reservoir. Info: (800) 416-2736 or www.

Hunts go short-range

Until the Idaho Fish and Game Commission firms up its definition, all of the Panhandle muzzleloader seasons this year have been changed to "short-range weapons seasons"

Options available for disabled hunters

Disabled hunters can get special privileges to drive through locked gates onto some forest roads that are otherwise closed to public vehicle travel.

North Idaho elk even better

Elk hunting in North Idaho has been great for the past two years, and it's getting better. Cows continue to produce good crops of calves and some of the oldest bulls in the state are coming from the Panhandle, Idaho Fish and Game Department officials say.

Wolves' impact debated

The revival of wolves in Idaho has had an impact on Idaho elk, but it's not the death blow some hunters have imagined, according to Idaho Fish and Game Department aerial surveys.

Hunters' options abound in Panhandle

Idaho deer hunters have had to pause a moment when buying their licenses this fall because of a new "whitetail tag" option. But if you hunt in the Panhandle region, you didn't have to pause long.

Hunters' chances can vary from north to south

Eastern Washington deer hunters may have to adjust their expectations, for better or worse, depending on where they plan to hunt this year. While the number of bigger bucks has improved to pleasing numbers in the state's northeastern corner, a stretch of tough winter conditions two years ago knocked deer numbers back significantly in portions of the southeast corner.

Ins, outs of Panhandling

Lake Coeur d'Alene has become the darling of kokanee anglers since the fishery peaked with good numbers and hefty average sizes in 2003. This year the kokanee population is expected to be down a little from ideal numbers but size running 13-15 inches should once again put anglers in blueback heaven.

Land swaps boost elk

The future of elk hunting in Central Washington has a huge stake in land swaps currently being negotiated by the state Department of Natural Resources, private timber companies and the state Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Cougar-hunting pilot program enters third year

Hound hunters have until Saturday to apply for permits in the third year of a three-year pilot cougar-hunting season with the aid of dogs.

Craig Mountain area jewel of Idaho state land

Of the 35 wildlife management areas in Idaho, Craig Mountain south of Lewiston is a standout, from top to bottom. The 78,000-acre jewel is the wedge at the confluence of Idaho's two mightiest rivers, the Snake and the Salmon.

Playing for money at Pend Oreille

Anglers will be able to cash in on Lake Pend Oreille long after the annual K&K Spring Derby is over. This year's derby – the 61st annual event – starts April 29 and runs through May 7 with $28,000 in cash and prizes.

Turkey hunters getting another shot

Washington hunters who didn't fill their tags this spring have one last shot at wild turkeys this fall. For the second year, the state has set a general fall turkey season for either hens or gobblers.

Little Pend Oreille opens

For the first time in years, the entire 40,000-acre Little Pend Oreille National Wildlife Refuge in Stevens County will be open for hunting from Sept. 1 through Dec. 31.

Whitetails, mule deer rebuilding

Whitetails and even mule deer in northeastern Washington are showing encouraging progress in population building. That means more bucks for hunters this fall, but more favorable hunt regulations are still a year away.

Idaho Season

YA — Year around, but some rules may apply. R — Rivers and streams, May 28 to Nov. 30 in Panhandle. Note — Most lakes and reservoirs open year around for all species except trout.

Wash. Seasons

G: General season, opens April 30; see regulations for closures. Beware, however, that most streams open June 1. M: Opens March 1; see regulations for closures.

A burning concern

Vast land closures prompted by forest fires are of immediate concern to national forest visitors, especially sportsmen heading into the backcountry for early hunting seasons.

Ducks, geese stay in basin

Ron Friez uses dry humor when describing this season's waterfowl hunting prospects for the Columbia basin. "Ducks don't stay where it isn't wet," noted the Washington Fish and Wildlife Department waterfowl biologist in Ephrata.

HUNTING TIPS

 Waterfowl hunters face safety challenges that the average land-based hunter does not.  The complicating factor is water.  The tips below dealing with firearm safety, weather and water safety are taught at Montana's Youth Waterfowl Hunting Safety workshops.

Montana Season

Scouting tips

Here are the top 10 tips for effective scouting, offered by area hunting experts.

Washington seasons

Pheasants ready for release

More than 20,000 rooster pheasants have been ordered for release at designated sites in Eastern Washington for upland bird seasons.

Muzzleloaders load up

Paul Degel killed his first deer with a muzzleloader at age 14 and was hooked. Twenty-five years, nearly a dozen elk and more than two dozen deer taken with a flintlock later, Degel said his passion for the only type of weapon he hunts big game with has only grown.

Quail are highlight for upland bird hunters

This isn't a banner year for the region's upland birds, but versatile hunters are going to find some excellent wing-shooting.

Hunt for water, too

Water could be as important to hunters as it is to fishermen this year. Going into mid-September, walking through the mountains around the Inland Northwest was like a stroll through a bowl of corn flakes.

Targeting fall turkeys

Wild turkeys continue to boom throughout the Inland Northwest, seemingly impervious to the whims of spring weather.

Fires challenge hunters

Hunters in Idaho and Washington should contact their fish and wildlife agency if access is barred to their special-permit hunt areas because of forest fires.

Prospects looking strong

Stock up on shot shells and get the dog in shape. The buzz is that this could be an upland bird season to remember throughout much of the Inland Northwest.

Hunters look toward pen-raised pheasants

Once again, more than 20,000 rooster pheasants have been ordered for release at designated sites in Eastern Washington for upland bird seasons, Washington Fish and Wildlife officials said.

Montana seasons

Idaho seasons

Cash is the lure at Pend Oreille

Lake Pend Oreille's trout and kokanee fisheries are not in great shape, but area sportsmen and fisheries managers are still eager for the annual Spring Derby, set for April 26-May 4.

Fishing news briefs

For Thursday, April 17, 2008.

Early start for young hunters

The absolute best time of the year to take a kid bird hunting is coming up before the general hunting seasons open. "The special youth seasons are the best deal of the year for a hunter to take a kid, especially for waterfowl," said Matt Monda, Washington Department of Fish and wildlife regional wildlife manager in Ephrata.

Ducks are coming! Youths get first shot at locals

While summer has been hot and dry in this region, it's been a wet year in Canada's pothole regions where much of North America's waterfowl are produced.

Moose on the loose in Idaho

Idaho's moose populations are much larger than those in Washington, and still growing. The Gem state's moose numbers are so large that the state issued 1,095 permits to hunt moose this fall.

Limits upped to maximum

Idaho waterfowlers got their two ducks' worth as they complained to Fish and Wildlife Commissioners about the reduced bag limit last year. This year the commission upped the daily limit from five to seven, the maximum allowed by federal law.

Sage advice reduces wounding

Reducing wounding losses is both the ethical and the economical goal of waterfowl hunters. "None of us wants to wound a duck or goose and not be able to retrieve it," said Jim Hansen, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks Department migratory bird manager.

Don't snipe at this author; he wrote the book on this legend

Have you heard about the snipe hunter who wrote a bird hunting guidebook? It's no joke. His name is John Shewey, and he's the author of the "Wingshooter's Guide to Oregon," a straight-shooting primer on hunting everything from band-tailed pigeon to valley quail.

No-kill's the rule for cutthroats

A landmark change in trout fishing regulations has been enacted, effective April 1, for North Idaho's most popular streams. The key provisions:

Late spring delays Idaho trout deliveries

Hatchery trucks are scheduled to make sizeable deposits in 17 North Idaho Lakes this spring – but the lingering winter has delayed the schedule.

Where trout go

Cutthroat trout in the St. Joe and Coeur d'Alene rivers have different strategies for surviving summer heat.

Public lands open millions of acres to hunting

The Inland Northwest has a wealth of public lands, most of which are open to hunting. Idaho is 64 percent publicly owned.

Jury's out on hatch

There's reason for hope this season, even though pheasants, quail and partridge don't appear to have produced as many young as they did in 2005, a banner year for Inland Northwest upland bird hunters.

Worth a road trip

Several lakes and streams in Okanogan country this year are loaded with bragging-sized fish. Blue Lake in the Sinlahekin holds 3- to 4-pound triploid rainbows.

Head north to beat crowds

Trout waters in the northeastern corner of Washington will hold pleasant surprises for anglers when the trout season opens on April 30, plus a few unpleasant ones.

Panhandle cutts make comeback

The St. Joe and Coeur d'Alene rivers have never been at the bottom of the list of places to go fishing in North Idaho.

Special delivery

A Ross' goose is featured on Washington's 2007-2008 migratory bird stamp painting by Robert Steiner.

Duck speak is hard to quack

Luring ducks is considered higher education, thanks to Mike Plein, who has represented Idaho at the World's Championship Duck Calling Contest in Stuttgart, Ark.

Turkeys running wild in region

In two early forest grouse hunts this year, my English setter, Dickens, nearly fried his olfactory wiring by locking into the scent of a flock of wild turkeys.

Tread lightly in outdoors

With the explosion of off-highway vehicle sales in the last few years, more and more Americans are wanting to take their SUVs and trucks out to scale more than just their office parking garage.

All agree Montana elk are plentiful this season

There should be no shortage of elk for hunters this fall in north central Montana. Fish, Wildlife and Parks wildlife biologists from the east front of the Rockies to the Little Belts and on to the Missouri Breaks all agree that elk numbers are good.

Antelope a wily prey for those who hunt them

Pronghorns, the speedsters of sagebrush country, are a novel prey for sportsmen who draw permits to hunt them where the antelope roam in areas such as southern Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.

Release sites ace in the hole for pheasant hunters

About 20,000 rooster pheasants have been ordered for release at designated sites in Eastern Washington for upland bird seasons, Washington Fish and Wildlife officials said.

New limits boost CdA kokanee

Six is the number to remember on Lake Coeur d'Alene this year.That's the daily limit for any combination of kokanee and/or chinook until further notice.

Current of change in two rivers

North Idaho stream anglers have new reasons to look beyond the Coeur d'Alene and St. Joe.The Moyie and Kootenai rivers are perking up.

Biologists keeping eye on declining fortunes at Newman

Biologists have their eye on Newman Lake this year.Although bass fishing remains fairly good at the Spokane county lake, the panfish angling has been deteriorating in recent years and relatively few of the rainbows and brown trout the state stocks each year end up on anglers' hooks.

Reservation waters warming

Anglers received an icy reception at Twin Lakes on April 8 for the opening of the trout fishing season on the Colville Indian Reservation. "The lakes were still mostly iced over," said Jerry Marco, fish biologist for the Colville Confederated Tribes.

Worth a second look

Black bear hunters in an even wider swath of Idaho must take a second look before taking a shot to filling their tags.

Silvers, day or night

Kokanee are the region's icon for brightness, not just because of their color, but also because these landlocked sockeye salmon are known for eating quality that can brighten anyone's day.

Waterfowl numbers increase

Waterfowl seemed to enjoy the spring rains that, at least temporarily, filled puddles and lakes throughout the region. Mallard counts in Washington are up 11 percent from 2005, although still down about 17 percent from the long-term average, said Don Kraege, Fish and Wildlife Department waterfowl manager.

Be aware of disease

Hunters in Idaho and Washington will be keeping a sharp eye out for wildlife this season, and they need to watch out for some potential wildlife diseases, too.

Hunting briefs

Got a last minute urge to hunt for the first time?'

Hunter safety tips

Youths heading out for their first hunts should review the following reminders from Tom Higgins, 26-year veteran hunter education instructor in Spokane.

It's a waiting game for NE lakes

The best is yet to come at some lakes in northeast Washington. Being at slightly higher elevations than the most popular April 29 openers, many of the lakes in Ferry, Stevens and Pend Oreille require an extra few weeks for the waters to reach prime fishing temperatures.

Net pen projects catching on at trout lakes

Net pens projects are giving a giant boost to a growing number of trout fisheries in the region. The biggest project is on Lake Roosevelt, where nearly 500,000 rainbows are being raised in 57 net pens and scheduled for release in mid-May in a program funded by The Bonneville Power Administration.

Fires cause grief

Summer fires are causing grief for hunters in portions of Idaho and Washington

Deer have a nose for a hunter's scent

Like humans, deer use the five senses to interpret the world around them, especially to warn of danger. But unlike humans, who rely heavily on sight, whitetails have a highly efficient sense of hearing and smell, the latter thought to be 100 times more sensitive than humans.

Briefly

Bighorn tag back with state raffleA single bighorn sheep hunting permit was issued to the winner of a state raffle for the Blackbutte, Wenaha and Tucannon areas this year, marking the first season for wild sheep in that region since disease decimated the herds in 1995-1996.

Fishing briefs

Kids fishing events set for area lakesCasting contests and other activities focused on fishing and fun for kids under 16 are scheduled for Saturday (April 16) during the Curlew Lake Fishing Festival for Kids, 9 a.

Hunter seminars

The Master

Editor's note: Luke Clausen, 27, of Spokane is the 2006 Bassmaster Classic winner and youngest angler in professional fishing history to win more than $1 million in a career.

Montana's temptations

Interstate 90 ranks up there with caddis and mayflies in delivering satisfaction to Inland Northwest fly fishers. The four-laner is the express way to Montana and its assortment of premier trout fishing streams.

Okanogan offers variety of options

Scattered through the timber and even the sagebrush of Okanogan and Douglas counties are lakes worthy of a long spring fishing expedition. Whether you cast flies or troll plugs, there's a fish waiting for your hook.

Columbia Basin has hot lakes

Managing trout fisheries is not a slam dunk, even in the fabled fishing waters of the Columbia Basin. Even fisheries biologists are surprised to see what opening day delivers after factoring in the effects of weather and competition from cormorants and pelicans and illegally introduced species.

Kids need preparation

The recipe for teaching a little person to fish includes one dash of angling technique, two or three tablespoons of gear, and several cups of patience.

Lunkers for youngsters

Certain fishing waters in Washington are just for kids. Listed in the regulations pamphlet as being for "juveniles-only," these waters often are small lakes or ponds that are stocked with hatchery trout to provide dependable early-season fishing close to communities.

In brief

Pacific Lake near Odessa is starting to fill with water for the first time in years. "There's not enough water yet to stock it, but one more good, wet winter and it might be back," said Chris Donley, Fish and Wildlife department district biologist.

More liberal limits for smallmouth, walleye

With smallmouth bass and walleyes booming in some of Eastern Washington's most popular fisheries, daily catch limits will be liberalized starting May 1. Among the changes:•Walleye on Lake Roosevelt: Daily limit will be 8 fish, no minimum size, but no more than one over 22 inches.

Brentwood volunteers get their thanks

Brentwood Elementary School held a luncheon last week for its army of volunteers who, throughout the school year, have donated their time to help the Mead district school.

Answering the call

It takes all kinds to form an effective safety net for people who venture outdoors. The people coming to your aid in a search-and-rescue situation are likely to be volunteers with a passion for activities as diverse as ATVing and hiking, snowmobiling and mountain climbing, river rafting and Ham radios, horse riding and flying private planes.

By the book

Muscle-powered travel isn't all about body punishment. The best expeditions teach us something about ourselves and the land we explore. Here's a selection of recently published books that capture the big picture through the outdoor experience.

High Life: Spokane trekkers find fulfillment in rarified air of northern India

Gerry Copeland broke with convention during his summer vacation along the edge of the Himalaya. He didn't relax on the 21-day trek away from roads and motorized vehicles.

Killer

While some people are content to simply watch killer whales, sea kayakers have a yen to experience them. The payoff for investing a few days and a little muscle power can be huge, as another eclectic group of adventurers learned this summer in the fabled orca waterways off northeastern Vancouver Island.

Are elk getting more wary of human imitations?

Love is in the air this week wherever Rocky Mountain elk roam. This is the peak of the mating seasons — the rut — and bulls are whipping their longings to a libidinous pitch.

Early hunting season offers opportunity for retrievers, pointers to hone their skills

Even Michael Phelps would have been a disappointment had he put off his seasons of pool training until a few days before the Summer Olympics. Your bird dog's performance this weekend – Washington's opener for quail and partridge seasons – may not garner international attention, but the principles are the same.

Mountain of gear

Three balding climbers and a token young guy from Spokane dubbed themselves the "Into Thin Hair Expedition" as they left this spring for Alaska. Beyond that, the trip was no laughing matter.

CRABBING

Here's a do-it-yourself guide for crab lovers who want to get a handle on the action.What
Summer crabbing in South Puget Sound and Hood Canal.

The Bike Doctor

Only the very best physicians look over their patients as thoroughly as Dave Mannino checks out a bicycle that comes into Two Wheel Transit for a tune-up.

Springers have sprung

Spring chinook salmon fishing is the hottest game on the Columbia and many of its tributaries.

Death mountain

Shivering, weak and injured in a snow cave, on a mountain he and two climbing companions had tried to conquer, Kelly James managed to reach his wife on his cell phone.

Family game

Carol Schmidt of Mead had no reason to be optimistic on Oct. 28 as she hiked up a ridge before sunrise – until she and her husband, Mike, spotted a fresh elk track that ranked with the legendary NBA shoe size of Bob Lanier.

Snowcat women

A bright red Pisten Bully named Princess hugged a narrow snow-draped arκte in the Canadian Rockies. The driver, a spicey. tongue-studded chick, spun it adroitly around a ledge to stop atop a pitch plummeting several thousand feet. Twelve laughing skiers spilled out — all women. Decked out in K2 Phat Luvs made for floating in deep powder, they attacked slope after slope of fluff as light as cottonwood whisps.

Up, down and out

Standing on the rim of the gigantic, steaming caldera, the awesome power of the blast still resonates. The sight into the bowels of Mount St. Helens is an impressive reminder of how lives were so profoundly affected in 1980. To ski down after the climb in such an exotic volcanic setting is icing on the cake of a great climbing experience. You won't need a lift ticket, but you'll pay a serious physical price for the thrill.

Sharing the range

Standing in the middle of the wildlife-land grazing controversy is Kittitas County cattleman Russ Stingley, who's waiting for state approval to put his cattle out on 18,500 acres over six pastures of rolling shrub-steppe. The state-managed land known as the Skookumchuck – set to be the next battleground for the controversy over grazing on public wildlife lands – is east of Ellensburg and home to thousands of elk. Originally scheduled to take effect April 1, the permit isn't expected to be approved by the state Fish and Wildlife Commission for another week or so. But every day that passes costs the rancher money.

Much left unsettled

Some years stand out for accomplishment, but 2008 seems to be notable for unfinished business in the great outdoors.

Checkered Past

Although far short of the fanfare rampant at college basketball venues, teamwork is scoring points for wildlife habitat and public access to recreation lands.

An oasis for snowmobilers

Even though it had been mounted on a 12-foot pole, only the top few inches of a snowmobile trail sign showed above the snowpack on Windy Ridge last week.

North Idaho's top fish manager retiring after 22 years

The bite had tapered off by noon. Most of the trout anglers at the south end of Priest Lake had reeled in and left the ice.

Gear up for the river

A day of gear swapping and an evening festival of eight whitewater boating films will make downtown Spokane the place to be on Saturday.

Breaking away

Three teenagers didn't let a few bumps, blisters and grizzly bears detour them from the route to independence.

Waterfall bonanza

Waterfalls are rivers and streams stood on end; they flow insistently and endlessly, they're pretty, soothing to hear and they capture the imagination.

Stick it to 'em

When is a willow as good as graphite or boron?Answer: When a Spokane Valley fly fisher shows up on the St. Joe River without his fishing rod.

Changing seasons

Will 2009 be the year that general-season whitetail deer hunters in northeastern Washington will be limited to shooting only bucks with at least four points on one side of their antlers?

Winning writers

A story by Thomas Cleary, a senior at Cheney High School, has been judged the best of 196 entries to win The Spokesman-Review's 2008 Outdoor Writing Contest for high school students.

Nurturing a sport

While it sounds like a fraternity drinking game, egg sucking at the Spokane Fish Hatchery is of sobering importance to the region's trout anglers.

Out in the cold: Thrill and chills for Yellowstone campers

Winter camping has a way of focusing wilderness skiers on their core values, which, in this case, involved peeing in the tent and sharing my sleeping bag with Clif. Blushing, I might add, wastes precious body heat.

Walking on water

When the snow piles on and threatens to smother the enthusiasm for winter, snowshoeing enables any reasonably active person to stay above it all.

Rewriting the rules

A rash of incidents in Central Washington at the end of January is tarnishing Washington's Advanced Hunter Education (AHE) program. Founded in 1991, the voluntary program seeks to train and recognize a corps of elite sportsmen whose ethical standards and technical proficiency rise above the realm of the average hunter.

Go with the flow

River runners are banking on a wealth of spring runoff that's finally roaring out of the region's mountains. "The good news is that the snowpack is bigger than normal and we'll have a longer summer season of fun water," said Peter Grubb, owner of Coeur d'Alene-based River Odysseys West.

High country ripe for early visitors

Timing, timing, timing.For the backcountry explorer, that mantra is every bit as worthy as location.

Over-riding issues

The trouble with off-road vehicles becomes apparent during a 12-hour holiday shift with Mike Mumford, Colville National Forest law enforcement officer.

LET IT RIDE

This first week of August is not a day too soon for bicyclists to gear up for September.Although major cycling events are scattered through the year, September has become the month of the bike throughout the Inland Northwest as charities and bicycling advocates spin the attributes of pedal power.

Don't strike out

The worst place you can be in a lightning storm is outdoors. And that's exactly where we were: standing atop a treeless ridge in California's Sierra Nevada when several bolts of lightning materialized from out of nowhere to zap an adjacent peak.

RIVER CLAN

Mark Zoller was a third-grader in 1973 when his father came home from a long work day overseeing the family's small chain of Portland-area restaurants and made an announcement.

Power to the paddlers

This isn't Maine or Minnesota, but Washington and beyond through the Inland Northwest is second to none for a diversity of choice options for paddling a canoe or kayak.

Conservation Bonus

Changing farming practices have been plowing new ground for trout among the Palouse wheatfields of Whitman County.

1 Hunter 2 Turkeys 6 Beards

After three decades of turkey hunting experience, David Busta had a couple of career moments last spring.

Eye in the woods

A picture is worth a thousand tracks, rubs, scrapes and scats. At least it was to Cheney bowhunter Thom Long. After taking up archery in the late 90s, Long switched to muzzleloader to take advantage of late deer seasons near his home. This year, he got back into archery hunting – in a big way.

Lure of the desert

Levi Meseberg is a man prepared to fish Potholes Reservoir. His 21-foot Ranger fishing boat is festooned with a forest of fishing rods. He has rods for flipping plastic baits, pulling crank baits, casting tube baits, pulling worm harnesses. He has rods with bait-casting reels and others with spin-casting reels.

Bull for the books

Dan Agnew invested time and a small fortune for the chance to bag what is sure to be a Washington state record bull elk.

Pike explosion lures anglers, researchers

Near the peak of high water this month, I found myself on the Pend Oreille River with two awesomely efficient predators:

Group dynamics

Summer is marching along for several groups leading hikes and trail work parties in the region's national forests.

Spilling the beans

A Washington fisherman with an inquisitive mind, the discipline to take notes and an itch to travel has breached angling tradition in a series of tell-all guidebooks.

Personal fowl

A retrieving dog couldn't draw a much better deal than landing in the home of a waterfowling fanatic.

Nearly recovered

The Columbian white-tailed deer population of Washington has rebounded from the verge of extinction, and wildlife officials are starting a process that may remove the species from the federal Threatened and Endangered Species list.

Sandpoint paddler leaves wake across North America

Adventure has been a long-term investment for Bob Rust. Working as a family physician in Sandpoint, the 65-year-old kayaking enthusiast hasn't been able to devote a full summer to the long-distance expeditions he craves. But that didn't stop him from paddling across North America.

Prized spring prey gang up on winter landlords

Wild turkeys – one of the region's great wildlife introduction successes – are flocking, scratching, pecking, pooping and otherwise wearing out their welcome with some lowland landowners in the Inland Northwest.

Up for the count

Some of the most colorful entertainment in the world is flying into local back yards. To help point this out, the National Audubon Society and Cornell Lab of Ornithology once again are inviting everyone with a birding field guide, binoculars and a computer to participate in the Great Backyard Bird Count starting Friday through next Sunday.

Living large in the wild

The Inland Northwest was thinking big in the outdoors this year, with people catching record fish, and spending more per gallon of gas than they ever imagined.

Top writers

A story by Delaney Dittman, a sophomore at Lewis and Clark High School, has been judged the best of 361 entries to win The Spokesman-Review's 2007 Outdoor Writing Contest for high school students. In "One More Run," Dittman puts readers in the chairlift to witness a 4-year-old girl's power-trip on the ski slopes.

He's not acting

Television fishing shows have a tempting connection to fantasy. Editing can make four days of filming and mediocre action look like one fantastic half-hour.

Taking refuge

Elk that frequent Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge are the root of more conspiracy theories than the Kennedy assassinations.

Christmas count coming

Birdwatchers are flocking together in the next few weeks in about 2,000 localities across North America for the 108th Audubon Christmas Bird Count.

Priest Lake fishery continues to evolve

Fishing for Priest Lake mackinaw can be good just about any time of year if you find the fish, said Ned Horner, Idaho Fish and Game regional fisheries manager.

Grin, bear it

Editor's note: This excerpt, "The Permission Seeker" is one of 80 stories from "Fish Tales," a new collection of humor by Spokane author Alan Liere.

CdA bald eagles are visitor attraction

Bald eagles continue to congregate at Lake Coeur d'Alene for their annual feast of kokanee spawning in Wolf Lodge Bay, with counts of more than 80 birds last week.

HIGHLIGHTS

A classic event at Mount Spokane

Langlauf, the region's largest and longest running cross-country skiing event, is scheduled once again to take over Mount Spokane State Park's nordic trails on Feb. 10.

Compulsive poacher wreaked havoc in Montana

MISSOULA – A man who "took a game animal in every unlawful way he could," was sentenced to 20 years of probation, fined $52,744 and ordered to do community service.

Peak experience on IMAX

The filmmakers who lugged a downsized 30-pound IMAX camera to the top of the world for their 1998 Academy Award-nominated "Everest," are back with eye-popping scenery and a gripping story from the North Face of the Eiger.

Big Horn Show returns

Knowing that kids are the future of outdoor sports, this week's Inland Northwest Wildlife Council's annual sportsmen's show will have attractions that appeal to everyone from youngsters and families to big-game hunters and anglers.

Fishing adventures caught on the fly

These aren't the fly fishing videos you're daddy used to watch.The Fly Fishing Film Tour, stopping in Spokane on Friday during a 70-theater run, wastes little time on instruction or profiling the contemplative angler. False casting is virtually prohibited.

ONE MORE RUN

It has been snowing all day. The friendly kind of snow. The kind that floats out of a nearly blue ski with plush fluffy flakes that, no matter how fast you fly down that hill, never sting your face. You can see each individual sparkling particle as it sways on the breeze and joins the many others coating the shimmering ground; so bright it hurts your eyes.

Wolf gets fresh start as managed species

The reintroduction of gray wolves to the northern Rockies has been officially declared a success. They were removed from the federal Endangered Species list on March 28, transferring most wolf management authority from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to the states of Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.

SpokeFest gearing up for Sept. 7

Bicycles will rule in Riverfront Park on Sept. 7 with the debut of SpokeFest.The non-competitive cycling event includes food, entertainment and ride options for cyclists of all abilities and ages, ranging from short loops in the downtown park to a 21-mile tour using the Centennial Trail into Riverside State Park and back.

Projects block access to summer fun

Spokane-area recreationists will have to endure major disruptions this summer in two popular venues – the Spokane River and Mount Spokane.

Ferris grad slogs in race to South Pole

A Spokane native was on track this week to set a speed record – possibly this weekend – for trekking 700 miles to the South Pole in less than 40 days.

Peak performance

While actress Marlee Matlin is swinging with her hearing disability on Dancing with the Stars, Miriam Richards has put her disabilities to the test of ascending to the heights of all 50 states.

Shooting restrictions proposed near Fishtrap

Target shooters are triggering concern for public safety on public lands near Fishtrap Lake about 30 miles west of Spokane.

Two for the coast

A husband-wife team from Seattle is nearing the completion of a 4,000-mile odyssey that ranks among the most impressive human-powered explorations of the northern Pacific Coast.

Fawn crop hits the ground

The outdoors is a giant nursery this time of year.Hunters know "the rut," or peak of breeding activity for elk is in mid-September and then around Thanksgiving for white-tailed deer. This is when love-sick bulls and bucks temporarily lose some of their characteristic wariness in order to get the job done.

Have trout, will travel

Trout aren't automatic in waters of the Inland Northwest.Without a boost from hatcheries, most lakes in this region would be troutless.

Locals make TV splash

"Seasons On the Fly" may be the first cable TV fishing show in which a Few fish is better than a bunch.

Museum bags summits

America's only museum dedicated to mountains and mountaineering opened this weekend in Golden, Colo.

Ready for spring arrivals?

Bird migrations will be getting into full wing through the Inland Northwest this month, as you may have noticed last weekend when songbirds seemed to flood into the area and fill yards with song.

St. Helens elk waste away

Harsh winter conditions took a heavy toll on elk in the Mount St. Helens Wildlife Area in recent months, even though wildlife managers trucked in tons of hay to feed them.

Forest Service trail crew taps teen power

It was a God-send to a Kaniksu National Forest trail crew that's swamped with work and strapped for funding.

Kokanee season closing early at CdA

Labor Day will be the season's last hurrah for kokanee anglers at Lake Coeur d'Alene.The Idaho Fish and Game Department has announced an emergency closure on the lake's kokanee fishery starting Sept. 2 based on surveys indicating dangerously low numbers of spawning-age fish.

Anglers learn not to string grizzlies along

ON THE RUSSIAN RIVER, Alaska – Washington angler Justin Steinhoff was enjoying his first Alaska fishing trip in June when he spotted a group of dark objects moving downstream out of the brush toward the riverbank.

Group targets locked gates on public land

CLARKSTON – A new group has formed in Asotin County to protest the closing of roads on public lands in the Blue Mountains and beyond.

McManus humor era ending at Outdoor Life

Humor is the latest victim in economic tsunami that's sinking many outdoor industry markets.Patrick F. McManus, Outdoor Life's iconic back page humor writer, says the magazine has terminated his contract for budget reasons.

Pronghorn's return delayed

Pronghorns one day could again roam swaths of Eastern Washington, although not as soon as longtime supporters of reintroduction have hoped.

Volcano, bears lure paddlers abroad

Bill and Debbie Pierce of Spokane have a reputation for bringing home their far-flung outdoor adventures to share in sharp photographic detail.

Hold on to your seat: Banff films are coming

Adventure, humor, awareness and awe, plus a good dose of pucker factor are coming to Spokane next weekend in a road show of top films from the recent Banff Mountain Film Festival.

COMMENTARY: Economic crisis a big threat to the environment

Bow. Arrows. Binoculars. Camera. Gloves. Face mask. Masking scent. Eau de Doe. Safety vest. Lifting rope. GPS. Energy bars. Water bottle. Pee bottle (don't confuse with previous). That backpack's going to weigh 20 pounds.

OHVers need new license to ride

A new law passed in the Idaho Legislature earlier this year requires a "restricted vehicle" license plate for all off-highway motorcycles, ATVs and utility vehicles starting Jan. 1.

Gunmakers give back to Jack

Jack O'Connor helped Al Biesen launch a distinguished gunsmithing career. Now Biesen, 79, and his family are giving a hand to the center named for the famed gun writer.

Tiger muskies are living large

Washington led the country in tiger muskies reported caught and released in 2007 according to Muskies Inc., an international, nonprofit group that tracks the catching-and-releasing of the big trophy fish.

New show is all about fishing

A new sportsmen's snow coming to the Spokane Convention Center next weekend is dedicated to anglers.

ORV's losses are hunters' gains

Off-road vehicle drivers lost a small portion of the routes they can ride on the Colville National Forest this week, but disabled hunters are gaining ground.

Critter watch: He's a real-life batman

No law prevented Mike Weaver from evicting the messy tenants in his home along the Spokane River.

PEAK PERFORMERS

Two men last week set a record for climbing to the highest point in each state in less than 50 days.

Shoot pepper not bullets

One blast from a can of bear spray was all it took to make believers out of Carl Ramm and wife Susan Alexander five years ago.

Plug your nose! Shore ills confronted

Most of Lake Roosevelt's 1.4 million annual visitors have come and gone for the season, and what many of them left behind will make you wince.

Clubs teach local angles

A backpacking school and a fly-fishing school conducted each year in Spokane have one important common denominator.

Finding fish under ice

One of the keys to successful ice fishing is selecting a place to fish. While tradition helps narrow down the lake selections, technology can help locate the fish.

Join the crowd: Commute by bike

Conserve fuel, improve health and fitness, contribute to better air quality, eliminate parking hassles and save money.

Campground 'hosts of the year' to open Nine Mile

The cream of the crop among Washington State Parks campground hosts will open the gates when the Nine Mile Resort campground opens for the season on Thursday.

McDowell Lake revived for fly fishers

With spring runoff fouling the rivers, it's prime time for trout fishing in the region's lakes.Looking for something new?

Pilot project indicates flaws

Grazing on state wildlife lands has become a hot-button issue in Washington with little middle ground. People either want it and see benefits to wildlife habitat and to the rural economy, or they consider it a travesty.

Strange snow year forced adjustments

Unlike the huge dump of snow in Spokane last week, the snow in the 2007- 2008 winter came more gradually and steadily, and it disappeared the same way.

Casting for fishing's future

He's hobnobbed with presidents. His likeness hangs alongside those of Ernest Hemingway and Zane Gray in the Sport Fishing Hall of Fame.

Etiquette eases tension on rivers

Anglers seem to be keeping their cool and getting along in the midst of an outstanding steelhead run on the Clearwater, Snake and Salmon rivers this year.

Call goes out to young authors to compete in writing contest

It's time for high schoolers to begin thinking about fame, fortune and the great outdoors. The Spokesman-Review once again is joining the Outdoor Writers Association of America in sponsoring a contest for youth outdoor writing.

Ways to get out and make tracks

Finding a group or a good place to go snowshoeing is easier than ever in the Inland Northwest.After this week's snowstorms, many people can don snowshoes and discover a new world virtually out their backdoor.

Park catering to winter visitors

Choice areas of Yellowstone National Park are being groomed for cross-country skiers.Since 2006, park concessionaire Xanterra has been managing 33 trails, many of them groomed for day use by classic and skate skiers.

Cameras an important tool in wildlife efforts

Biologists and conservationists have been using remote camera technology on a limited basis for years to help document lynx, fishers, wolverines, wolves, grizzly bears and other rare wildlife species in the Inland Northwest.

DNR closes 40 acres to shooting

Slobbish behavior has cost shooters the privilege to fire their guns on a popular piece of public land in southern Stevens County.

Technology helps collar many pups' aggressive habits

I'm not big on technology. Give me the old ways, tried and true. But occasionally an innovation is so effective, even an old Luddite falls for it.

Panhandle rule: No-kill for cutts

A landmark change in North Idaho trout fishing regulations has occurred this weekend.Starting Saturday, all cutthroat trout caught in the Spokane River drainage – that includes all of the Coeur d'Alene and St. Joe rivers – must be released.

Local man makes elk his business

With his heart tugging one direction and his instincts pulling another way, Rance Block tied competing interests into a career that's had a significant impact on wild critters and the people who enjoy them.

Yearlong tallies show variety

Spotting bird species became a year-long goal for Coeur d'Alene veterinarian Stephen Lindsay, who dedicated himself to listing as many species as he could in Kootenai County in 2001.

Help birds complete their journey

Many bird lovers in the Inland Northwest are rolling out the welcome mat for the spring migrants flocking into the region.

Solo outing tests girl's strength, will, soul

Ellie LaRocca didn't have a plan for last summer – a mistake she may not make again.Her parents came up with a plan for her.

Hybrid hummer?

A group of Oregon birdwatchers have spotted and photographed what appears to be the first documented hybrid resulting from a breeding between North America's most common species of hummingbirds, Anna's and rufous.

Cascades will please wet rafters

"It's going to be one of the better seasons we've had in probably 10 years," said D.J. Tuttle, who operates Action Rafting in Cashmere. "I'd say the last year we had like this was '99, with this kind of snowpack and late runoff."

Stevens County search was a lost cause

This concluding newspaper report was sketchy last year, considering it apparently involved the most expensive search-and- rescue effort in Stevens County history:

Gray wolf leaves its mark throughout the Northwest

The 2008 Critter of the Year for the Inland Northwest had no rivals at the top of the food chain — except for man.

CRITTER WATCH: Lovely but ruthless invaders

Although mute swans look elegant on a pond at a park or retirement community, Washington declared them to be deleterious exotic wildlife in 1991 and Oregon has listed the non-native species among the state's 100 Most Dangerous Invaders list.

Out & About

As more than one mother has told her child at the beginning of the ice fishing season, "You don't need to be the first one out on the ice."

OUT & ABOUT

A North Idaho family is suffering from too much of a good thing this fall.

After traveling to 43 countries, local adventurer has savvy advice

Jane Schelly has become a master at extracting every ounce of adventure from an airline ticket to a Third World country.

Regional trail projects in need of volunteers

An unprecedented surge of volunteers is putting muscle into trail projects and cleanups throughout the Inland Northwest this season.

Conservation theme of wild game potluck

The dining should be excellent, but the meat of an upcoming event will be the program about hunting and fishing in the 21st century.

The Hunted

Alert and watchful, I listen for the sign.I hear the rustle of grass slowly waving in the wind. I hear the crackle of dry leaves moving across the ground. I hear the swaying of the branches of the giant pine close by. I hear the ... wait ... the sign ... I hear the sign.

End of the Rainbow

As my father and I waded through the Clark Fork River, I was overwhelmed by the beauty surrounding us. The water glistened in the late afternoon sun; trees swayed in the gently autumn breeze.

The Biggest Sky

As we wound down the bumpy dirt road, I looked up from the book I was reading to peer out the window. If I craned my neck in just the right way, I could catch a glimpse of the sparkling blue water.

Winter not over for wildlife

Despite the rapid change from harsh winter to spring-like conditions at low elevations in the past week, big-game animals are not out of the woods.

New guidebook details 120-plus trips

Published this spring, "Paddling Washington," (Mountaineers, $24.95) details more than 120 paddling trips in the region, from the scablands to the mountain wilderness areas.

Spike-bull rules lead to trophies for eyes, walls

In Washington, elk hunters are grouped into the "haves" and the "have nots."

Angling Academy feature debuts in S-R

Seth Burrill, the Spokane Valley fishing video guru for the Angler's Xperience, is bringing his Angling Academy lessons to The Spokesman-Review. Starting today — and through all four seasons — look for his fishing tips for various species condensed into a highly readable graphic presentation in Outdoors & Travel.

Out & About


OUTGOING
Check out local outdoor groups
What: The Inland Northwest Trails Coalition's Spring into Action gathering; chance to meet representatives from 16 non-motorized trail and paddling groups.

Out & About

OUTLAST
Forest giants fall to storms
Severe storms the past two winters have been the last straw for some of the biggest trees and oldest living things in Oregon and Washington.

Out & About


OUTSHOOT
Fine tuning sporting clays
The state's top shotgunners have been demonstrating their prowess this week in the Washington State Sporting Clays Tournament, which concludes today at Landt Farms just west of Spokane.

Out & About


OUTFIELD
These climbers have a cause
Because it's there, many charities are looking up to the biggest mountain in their area.

Out & About

Out & About


OUTFIELD
Colorful lakes are health risk
Hot summer weather brings the risk of toxic blue-green algae in some of the region's lakes.

Out & About


OUTPADDLE
910 lakes and counting
Minnesotans call her The Kayak Lady.

Out & About


OUTDISTANCE
Local cyclist's dark, secret ride
If you need pampering, don't show up for this cycling event:

Out & About


OUTPICK
Huckleberry Haiku
One of the best huckleberry crops in memory is leaving stains on fingers and smiles on faces throughout the region. Berries are so thick in some mountain areas, a serious harvester might move less than 25 feet in an hour.

Out & About


OUTPEDAL
Moo U embraces bikes
In the latest action to break away from the aura of the cow-college, Montana State University has taken the bold step to allow bicycling on campus.

Out & About

OUTMEDIA
New resource for Idaho trail
Hiking, biking, horseback riding and riding a motorcycle or ATV on the Idaho Centennial Trail should be easier to plan with the help of a new Web site and blog maintained by the Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation.

Out & About


OUTDATED
Geology bike tour
Explore the deepest and most rugged of the flood canyon in the path of the Ice Ages Floods during a fairly gentle 11-mile bike tour by special permit on the Columbia Plateau rail-trail.

Out & About


OUTWRITE
Huckleberry Haiku inspires readers
A bumper crop of huckleberries has inspired readers to take up our challenge and send in some delicious deep purple verse.

Out & About


OUTCRY
Grizzly bumper crop
Vehicles were the grizzly bear's worst enemy in northwestern Montana last year.

Out & About


OUTBOARD
Wildlife panels meet
Idaho Fish and Game, Nov. 5-6 in Lewiston. Hot topic: License fee increases.

Out & About

OUTGOING
Summit road closing on Mount Spokane
Today is the last chance to drive to the summit of Mount Spokane, that is, if an unusual weather event hasn't already closed the road.

Out & About


•Inside: Mountain bikers have big plans for Beacon Hill/T2

Out & About

Out & About

Out & About


OUTPEDAL
Bikes come out of the closet
About 1,000 people in the Spokane area pledged to commute by bicycle last week in a successful revival of Bike to Work Week, and a jump-start to their summer cycling fitness foundation.

Out & About


OUTFIELD
Be bear aware
With bears emerging from their dens and looking for food in lowland areas such as Priest Lake, a timely presentation on living and recreating in bear country will be presented in Spokane on Tuesday.

Out & About

Out & About


OUTBREAK
Gobblers galore
While most sportsmen are still trying to fill their spring turkey tags, at least one hunter has thrown in the towel.

Out & About


OUTFIELD
Learn birding basics
What: Two free seminars on basic bird-watching skills.

Out & About

Out & About


OUTCOOK
Campfire cooking recipe contest
What: Redwood Creek Wines Campfire Classic recipe contest.

Out & About

OUTCOME
Nice shot, Bubba
The small print of the Idaho official records revealed recently that Zeb C. Zielinski, 28, of Coeur d'Alene was sentenced to a $300 fine, five days in jail or 40 hours in the county work program for an "attempt to take simulated wildlife."

Out & About


OUTBACK
Lucky Lab licks avalanche
"I'll probably always see her eyes just looking up at me as she slid down into that thing," said Montana backcountry skier Tom Pick, describing the last sight of Lizzie, his 3-year-old Labrador retriever as she broke loose a cornice and was swept down a hillside by an avalanche this winter.

Out & About


OUTPADDLE
Kayakers heading to local waters
The Spokane Parks and Recreation Department's first-of-the-season group kayaking trips to Inland Northwest lakes for paddlers 18 years and older are launching this month to:

Out & About


OUTFISH
Top this catch
Losing ice-fishing poles down an ice hole is one of the hazards of winter angling. But it really hurts when the outfit is a brand-spanking-new Christmas gift from your son.

Out & About


OUTPEDAL
Got spring fever? Go 'parking'
Bicyclists looking for a road of their own in Glacier and Yellowstone national parks get a once-a-year window of opportunity during spring plowing before the parks are opened to motor vehicles.

Out & About


OUTDO
Souper Bowl Sunday is ladies' day out
What: 3rd annual Women's Souper Bowl Nordic and Snowshoe Sunday, with lunch, on-snow activities and prize drawings.

Out & About

Out & About

Out & About


OUTFITTER
Gifts that catch a fly fisher's fancy
Rods are too expensive, and reels are too personal, but two products stand out as pleasers for the fly fisher on your gift list:

Out & About

OUTCRY
Room for improvement
Reorganization of Spokane area's Department of Emergency Services has left search and rescue "in flux as far as whose running the program," Spokane County Undersherriff Jeff Tower said last month.

Out & About

Out & About

OUTDINE
Wild Game Dinner an elegant event
Time to get reservations and start fasting for the popular annual Wild Game Dinner, a North Idaho College Alumni fundraiser. Tickets for the Jan. 24 event at NIC cost $55.

Out & About


OUTLAST
Winterizing boats
1. Drain all water from the engine and lower unit and fill the cooling system with environmentally safe antifreeze. Remove spark plugs; fog cylinders, and wipe down engine with moisture-displacing lubricant.

Out & About


OUTCRY
Lousy deal for wild salmon
Researchers announced new evidence last week that increasing densities of salmon farms are driving nearby wild salmon runs to extinction.

Idaho's new OHV licensing

Following are answers to frequently asked questions regarding Idaho's new OHV licensing requirements effective Jan. 1:

FIRST BUCK: New hunter goes 'old school'

In a society that tends to demand quick fixes and raise kids with short attention spans, Robert Fisher deserves a tip of the fluorescent-orange cap.

Life's A BEACH

"We bought a cabin, right on the beach!" my mother says as she bursts through the front door. "Finally, I catch a break," I think to myself. "For once in my life my parents do something cool."

Highlights from the field

Anniversaries
100, Seven northwest national forests, including the Clearwater in Idaho and Umatilla in Oregon-Washington.

Tougher criteria in new program

At least one of the two "master hunters" recently cited for hunting elk within a state park would not have been eligible for Washington's Advanced Hunter Education program under new standards.

Skiers go the distance at Masters World Cup

Marathon-style cross-country ski races are not new to the Inland Northwest, but this year the world is taking an unusually keen interest in the region.

Critter Watch

Managing bighorn sheep is a moving experience for modern wildlife managers.The sturdy cliff-dwelling critters are particularly susceptible to diseases transmitted from domestic livestock. Thriving bighorn herds have been decimated in months by disease outbreaks.

Backpacking School

Early Risers

Even though she's an 18-year-old Running Start sophomore at Eastern Washington University, Melissa Main's body doesn't seem to have learned about the basic forces of gravity.

High-Caliber kid

After piling up enough brass in six years to build a monument, Amanda Furrer is just 60 rounds from making the 2008 U.S. Olympic Shooting Team.

CATCH OF THE DAY

Joey Nania was hooked by the bass fishing bug at an early age. The Central Valley High School junior is a formidable competitor on the region's bass fishing circuits, but to understand his prowess, it helped to be aboard a boat to watch him fish three years ago as a 14 year-old who was just a few weeks away from winning a world title.

Spokane River Classic moves to Nine Mile Resort

This year marks a milestone for the Spokane River Canoe Classic, as the annual Father's Day weekend event moves off the flowing water and onto a lake.

THREE GENERATIONS: Pushing their luck

One North Idaho family has defied the theories of probability and challenged the fundamentals of physics.

Ride Schedule

Aug. 31
Great Northwest Fall Tour
Location: Newport

MOUNT ST. HELENS

Permits: Each climber needs a permit, $22 apiece, to ascend Mount St. Helens beyond the timberline at 4,800 feet.

Mountain of gear

Paul Fish of Spokane has sold millions of dollars worth of specialized outdoor equipment in the 25 years since the former backpack builder retired his industrial sewing machine and founded Mountain Gear, Inc.

ORV rules vary by state

To comply with state laws, most national forest roads in Washington have been closed to ATVs, dirt bikes and other unlicensed vehicles that are not "street-legal."

Wesport's reel deal

The grill was hot enough for the apple wood to start smoking. Friends had brought microbrew beer and chardonnay, gourmet breads and artistic salads.

Fouling the nest

Some of the earliest residents on Inland Northwest waters are being crowded off Loon Lake. Small remaining colonies of red-necked grebes have had poor nesting success in recent years, and the situation is worse this spring, according to local bird watchers.

FREAKY FUNGI

BASSETT'S STATION, Calif. – Dennis Desjardin tenderly plucks a delicate brown cupped mushroom, small enough to be Tom Thumb's goblet, growing in the debris of a soggy field of young corn lilies.

Original skins

The route back to the birthplace of skiing was a quagmire of rotten snow and horse manure, hangovers and monotonous meals, not to mention nearly five weeks without a bath.

Extreme angles

Some adventure filmmakers rose to the occasion of the 32nd annual Banff Mountain Film Festival last week, while others sunk to unnerving depths.

Cool cats

A three-passenger snowmobile on steroids is putting North Idaho on the cutting edge of backcountry snowcat skiing and snowboarding operations. "Anybody can get a group of three, so you know exactly who you're skiing with," said Shep Snow, the snow conditions expert and partner in the Selkirk Powder Company.

Wind disciples

Soaring fuel prices have made 2005 one of the best years to have a sailboat since the harnessing of steam power. Yet with all the development booming around Lake Coeur d'Alene, the tidy Panhandle Yacht Club is the lone sailboat-only facility on the lake.

Roadless areas under siege

The Scotchman Peaks region north of Lake Pend Oreille is among the darlings of Idaho's unofficial wilderness areas. Studded with peaks and ripe with lakes, streams and wildlife, the area was among the first in the state to be embraced by conservationists for a campaign launched in June.

In the dark

icycle helmet laws are as rare as cheap lake frontage in North Idaho, but the Route of the Hiawatha is a notable exception. Riders are required to be equipped with helmets as well as lights while riding the 15-mile rail-trail, which features seven towering trestles and 10 tunnels.

Off limits to off-roaders

For decades, off-road vehicle enthusiasts have been mostly free to roam federal forests and rangelands at will. But their freewheeling days could be numbered.

Better than ever

Editor's note: The last of the Inland Northwest's brief fall dove hunting seasons closed last week. Farther south, however, dove hunting is a way of life.

Circling Rainier

While "Near Nature, Near Perfect," might be a stretch for Spokane, the city's slogan would be an understatement for the 94-mile Wonderland Trail that circumnavigates Mount Rainier.

World Wild Web

Across the country, from classrooms to living rooms, people have been revving up their computers to see the next generation of peregrine falcons hatch, grow and fledge on a ledge of a Harrisburg, Pa., office building.

FOOTAGE

A documentary produced by a professional film crew following the rampage of a man-killing Siberian tiger was named the grand prize winner at the 31st annual Banff Mountain Film Festival that wrapped up last weekend in Banff, Alberta.

Off-road rage

A friend recently informed me he is getting a four-wheeler – "for huckleberryin' and mushroomin' and such," he said. He was appropriately apologetic, for he knows how I feel about such things.

WEEKEND HIGH

Defining the perfect man weekend is about as easy as landing the perfect date or riding a greased pig up a ladder. I am not claiming my adventure on the second weekend of May was perfect, but it was damn close.

Ticket to ride

As the spring pedaling season shifts into high gear, some of the region's classic mass bicycle tours are showing signs of running their course. The Spokane Bicycle Club already has announced the cancellation of the Autumn Century, the north-Spokane 100-miler that celebrated its 26th year last September.

Chills & thrills

The recent cold snap that ushered the Inland Northwest into winter was greeted warmly by anglers pulling plastic sleds onto lakes freshly covered with ice.

ABCs of the ATVs

Differentiating the students from the instructors was impossible at Idaho's first Responsible Rider ATV course late last month. "We're all students today," said Ron Hood of the Wallace-based High Mountain ATV Association.

Rescuer from above

OROFINO, Idaho – When Ray Reel comes hovering onto the scene, it's usually because bad things have happened in hard-to-reach places. When forest fires rage in north central Idaho, Reel is there with his bucket to douse the flames or ferry firefighters to the front.

Fetching talent

A local group of bird hunters is no different in the basic approach to their sports than hoopsters eyeing the NCAA tournament — your team is going to be a lot sharper and more successful if you don't wait until the season opener to start practicing.

To be a Thomas

Holiday gift guide

A family holiday tradition, perpetuated for years by my father, involves giving the gift of interesting, unique outdoors gear. Though we give and receive wool socks, long johns and other standard fare, there's an unwritten family code that says one gift item each year must be unexpected, intriguing or a bit off the wall.

HEADING OFF DISASTER

Like the beer commercials that end with a plea to drink responsibly, sponsors of the X Games punctuated the extreme-sports event of speed and wild jumps with a sobering note: Trying the death-defying jumps, flips and spins televised at the X Games could be hazardous to your health.

Montana's Lonesome Wilderness

Going the extra mile for a special reunion of four old college friends, we huffed and hoofed deep into a Montana wilderness where roughly 240 square miles appeared to have been reserved for our private party.

Wet and Wild

This is a banner year to be in the business of restoring wetlands. While ducks and geese are already taking advantage of the trend toward normal spring runoff, nobody is happier about this season's soggy landscape than The Nature Conservancy staffers working on the Ball Creek Ranch.

Comfort

So you want to get away from it all. You crave the incomparable satisfaction of eye-popping mountain views won by sweat and muscle power.

GRADUATION CLIMB

Last in a series: On Memorial Day weekend, Maryanne Gaddy, 30, scaled Mount Athabasca along with a group of students and instructors on the graduation climb for the 2005 Spokane Mountaineers Mountain School.

Gearing up for geese

Outside of the danger of falling asleep and missing the entire flock of birds flying overhead, the best of the new layout blind hunting bags can provide extraordinary comfort on a cold day.

Tracking Turkeys

The boom is on for wild turkeys introduced to this region in the past few decades, but nobody knows how big it is. Washington is officially and unofficially trying to get a handle on the number of wild turkeys spreading across the state.

The Columbia

Like blood pumping from a giant heart, the year's last pulses of steelhead and salmon are spreading from the Columbia River and into tributaries. The fish are running in every direction, and so are the anglers.

Beyond hope

Bob Ploof embraces walleye fishing with the same can-do attitude he's applied in 28 years with the U.S. Air Force Survival School.

Senior swan

Solo is back, but this time he's not alone. The elegant trumpeter swan is perhaps the elder seasonal wildlife resident at Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge, and one of the oldest ever documented anywhere among his endangered species.

Camping Classics

Responding to our request for your tales, Outdoors & Travel readers have confirmed that a campsite is a fertile field for everything from bliss to misery.

Trophy Bones

Taxidermist Pat Bannon employs thousands of workers in the part-time business he operates out of his home in Deer Lodge, Mont. The helpers get free room and board, and they're encouraged to eat their fill of meat and leave the bones.

Quest for a real high

High on Mount McKinley in the summer of 2003, stuck in a cramped mountaineering tent and waiting out a storm, John Mitchler took out a pencil to write a list.

Wary of walleyes

Walleyes aren't native to Northwest streams and lakes, but they were here before the influx of Californians, and they're probably more highly regarded. Salmonid-oriented Washington fisheries managers gave up trying to curb the spread of the toothy predators decades ago.

Black Beauty

The aftermath of a forest fire is a startling sight. The flames can strip many of the trees and leave much of the ground naked.

Reeling 'em in

On a rainy June morning in 1932, a poor farm boy named George Perry decided to forgo plowing for the day to fish with a friend in Montgomery Lake in southern Georgia.

Up America's Highest

A steady stream of mountaineers is headed to Mount McKinley in Alaska to tackle North America's tallest mountain.

Peak time for cycling

Fat and skinny tires, even a tricycle or two, enjoy the freedom of riding one of the country's most spectacular highways sans cars pinching them off the two-laned Montana road.

Targeting bird flu

Bird-flu threat doesn't deter waterfowl huntersJoe Ford isn't worried about avian flu. The avid duck hunter from Pullman, said he intends to go out this fall shooting and eating wild game even if there is a possibility ducks and geese could bring a virulent strain of the disease to North America.

Forever Wild Lake

Smoke was billowing up the lake from two separate forest fires when I arrived. But even on a "bad day," Lake Chelan is a charming place to be outdoors.

The Big Deal

The year 2006 is a defining moment for elk, sportsmen and the hunting-related industry along the east slope of the Cascades. The Washington Department of Natural Resources is on the brink of negotiating a complex set of deals that could combine into one of the largest public land exchanges in state history.

Survival Quest

On the sixth day of the race, my head began to float free from my body. It was on a mountain biking leg, heading east into Manti-La Sal National Forest, where I first noticed the phenomenon.

Summer Adventures

"They had no idea what they were doing," said Robbie Anderson, describing the outset of her son's Appalachian Trail adventure. "They didn't even have the right shoes for a long walk in Manito Park."

Getting cabin fever

Cabins have been losing their meaning in the past few decades. Instead of a small simple structure providing basic shelter for brief stays, "cabins" have trended toward eyesore mansions infested with all the comforts of home. The biggest pity is that without real cabins, we are deprived of a real cabin experience.

PRINT MEDIA

With every snowfall, nature leaves a blank page for creatures to write their stories.

Bass circuits catching on

The Columbia River's world-class smallmouth bass fishery is a secret that soon will be broadcast to more than 400 million households around the world.

New trails to try

Cross-country skiers have new tracks to try east of Chewelah this season with 49 Degrees North emerging as the region's latest nordic skiing destination.

Taking on the NRA

Ray Schoenke, 65, was tackling the steep, rock-riddled slopes of Oregon's Snake River chukar country in November.

Fledging leaders

Eagles Scouts have landed and left their mark almost everywhere in the Inland Northwest.

NATURE'S CLASSROOM

DIABLO LAKE, Wash. – We're paddling a canoe along Diablo Lake below mountains and glaciers and in the presence of loons, learning about Alice Algae, Freddy Fungus, poets on peaks and exploding sourdough.

On the decline

Several common species of North American birds have suffered drastic population declines since the arrival of the West Nile virus eight years ago.

Hard lessons

This is no ordinary school. The classroom can be unmercifully miserable for the slow-to-be-educated.

FULLY INVESTED

Turkey hunting isn't just a season for Dave Murphy. It's a lifestyle. While some hunters golf in the off-season, Murphy grooms and plants food plots on his 20 acres in Stevens County.

Walkers' window

Spring break is over and Memorial Day weekend is down the road. While the next six weeks are busy for many families, this is boogie time for hikers who'd sooner chance the odds of iffy weather than face the certainty of summer crowds. Snow still blocks access to most backcountry destinations in the mountains, but lakeshore trails, such as those at Sullivan, Priest and Chelan, are opening for walkers who want to be there when the buds begin to burst open.

Warming warning

The farther Will Steger clambered up the frozen cascade on the Weasel River, the better he grasped the immensity of the task ahead.

Killing me softly

Feeding wildlife, from songbirds to carnivores, is coming under scrutiny all over the country, and the topic is particularly hot this fall in the Inland Northwest.

Course required

What is the most common cause of boat-related drowning among hunters and fishermen? The answer – along with the two essential pieces of boating equipment that would prevent these tragedies – is revealed later in this story.

Meat Hunt

Even though meat from free-ranging animals is bringing premium prices at specialty markets nowadays, a few hunters are giving it away to the needy.

CLAIMING TRAILS

Mountain bikers are gearing up to stay on track in backcountry areas being proposed for federal wilderness designation in the Inland Northwest and throughout the nation.

Weeding out the wildlife

Green and lean — that's one way to describe the spread of empty calories on the region's wild lands this month. Vegetation is thriving in yards, meadows, river valleys and hills in the wake of two consecutive wet spring seasons.

Hooked by a dream

Mike Matney has combined his decades of expertise with bulldozers and fly fishing to transform a hay field into a trout factory. The Kettle Falls businessman and excavator has joined his brother, Ron, to launch the first full pay-to-fish season at Horseshoe Lake, a private fishery he re-created east of Chewelah.

Lycra and wool share Langlauf

Langlauf, the region's largest and longest running cross-country skiing event is scheduled once again to take over Mount Spokane State Park's nordic trails on Feb. 11.

Beating around the bush

Farmworkers are trained to remove apples, grapes and other fruits without damaging the farmer's investment in trees and vines.

FACE OF STONE

The most dramatic feature in the climbing mecca of Oregon's Smith Rock State Park is Monkey Face, a 350-foot formation revered by tourists and climbers alike.

Hooking new anglers

Joshua Sutherland beamed in amazement at the six-inch bluegill he had managed to reel in from on one of the first casts of his young life.

Majestic Strait

We're paddling near Port Angeles in a rocky cove toward a dark sea cave, cliffs towering above, colorful sea stars, tiny fishes and other marine life below, our kayaks among dense beds of brown bull kelp.

50 years on the fly

Fifty years ago, a handful of men formed the Inland Empire Fly Fishing Club to mix camaraderie and education.

MEET HER HIGHNESS

Emily Harrington patiently surveys the climbing wall in Boulder, Colo., mapping out the way her hands and feet will travel along a route called Paranoia.

BIRDS-EYE VIEW

At first glance, Michael Woodruff is a lot like most 15-year-old Spokane boys. An easy smile betrays his gratitude for a newspaper interview that has left his sister by herself to rake the leaves in the yard.

Death of the aspens

LEAVENWORTH, Wash. – In a tangle of snowberry brush, vine maple, and bitter cherry, and under a canopy of ancient towering aspens, Heather Kranz searched for clues to a disappearing species.

Rules of Enchantment

Wednesday is the most important day of the hiking season in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness, even though the scenic area near Leavenworth is still buried under at least 10 feet of snow.

Holiday gear

Since 2000, the Stone Nudes calendar has taken photography, climbing, mountain scenery and the human body to new artistic heights. The 2007 calendar, however, falls to crass consumerism and features only women climbers.

Running with the dogs

Two northeastern Washington men aren't leaving the Iditarod Trail to the dogs. The so-called "last great race" route for sled dogs is also one of the last best snowmobile tours, said Bob Jones, 66, of Kettle Falls.

Target Practicum

The Deer Park School District appears to be on target with a new physical education program that's based on an ancient sport. Any doubts about unleashing projectiles in a gym full of students were erased last week as parents and teachers watched classes of sixth-, seventh- and eighth-graders test their developing prowess with the bow and arrow.

Whitney's high

Any excuse will do for Edwin "Wyn" Hill when it comes to plotting an adventure with his family. But now that his oldest daughter, Whitney, has branched off to college at Whitworth, the Spokane financial planner is rising to the challenge of being even more creative.

Nature's course

At the very least, the mixed group of high school students on a fishing field trip to Eloika Lake last week got a good lesson in the three P's — perseverance, patience and peeing in the woods.

Opinions vary on killing trophy walleyes

Should the ethical angler keep or release a trophy walleye caught in Eastern Washington waters? That question posed in The Spokesman-Review aroused some passion from a few walleye anglers, while state fisheries biologists said it's a non-issue.

Young hunters on decline

MINNEAPOLIS – The age-old battle between deer and deer hunters might soon be won by deer.

CREAM OF THE CROP

A story by Tamera Pumphrey, a sophomore at Shadle High School, has been judged the best of 162 entries to win The Spokesman-Review's 2006 Outdoor Writing Contest.

Diving into history

They call themselves "aquanauts." Just as astronauts explore space and the world above, Rick Inman, Alan Worst and Tom Michalski have taken to exploring the one beneath.

Rediscovering the Centennial Trail

By the hour or by the day, the Spokane River Centennial Trail has been delivering priceless recreation opportunities since 1989.

Wheels of fortune

SISTERS, Ore. — The population will more than double here for a few days in September. But it won't be rodeo riders, quilters or artists and crafters surging to town: It will be more than 2,000 bicyclists from across the country.

Out & About

Seizing a blooming opportunity on April 21, the young gobbler was interested in eating only one entrιe before being bagged in Pend Oreille County on April 21.

NET GAINS

In the gray dawn rain, Phil Doepke guides the 33-foot Freedom from the shore of Yellowstone Lake toward a distant island. This is a day, he hopes, when they'll make a killing.

Requiem for a heavyweight

The underrated scrapper took a hook to the jaw and then battled back in the fight of its life. Fifteen minutes later, the fish was still taking everything his foe could dish out with a 10-pound leader.

INFLATED expectations

Almost any angler who fishes from shore in this region will admit to occasional bouts of envy when a powerboat roars by heading toward the piscatorial Promised Land beyond the reach of roads.

Rapid development

Idaho's Lochsa River offers several whitewater rafting options for thrill-seekers, but staying dry isn't one of them. The river tumbles down the west side of the Bitterroot Mountains, with 63 rapids identified by the Forest Service on about 57 miles of river between Crooked Fork Creek and Lowell.

Fish story

Rod Koon of Mukilteo was the liveliest of the four Western Washington anglers when they showed up on the Snake River's Heller Bar around 7 a.m. last Thursday.

Post Falls freshman wins outdoor writing contest

A story by Casey Thomas, a freshman at Post Falls High School, has been judged the best of 159 entries to win The Spokesman-Review's 2005 Outdoor Writing Contest for high school students.

Wild about their work

Rocky Spencer stepped off an old logging road and hacked through wiry tangles of alder and blackberry branches. His dog, Mishka, was up ahead somewhere, sniffing through the dense underbrush.

Babbit: Lands promise broken

WASHINGTON – Ten years after a landmark law was adopted to improve national wildlife refuges, the system is neglected and undermined by politics and underfunding, former Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt said.

One for the record book

For decades, wildlife agencies have kept records of the who, when and where of the biggest fish caught in state waters.

Avalanche of interest

The first significant snowstorms have ushered in two seasons of interest to skiers, boarders and snowmobilers – the winter sports season and the avalanche season.

One for the ages

BANGKOK, Thailand – Climbers over age 60 are three times more likely to die on Mount Everest than the average mountaineer, according to study results released Wednesday.

Revival of the ultralight canoe

NORTH ELBA, N.Y. — Oncoming hikers stepped off the trail and made way for two canoes being hauled up to Avalanche Lake.

Fishing can be tough on the eyes

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Tuskegee University student Ralph Squire had forked out five bucks for the fishing lure that very morning.

Alaska

Working in the bountiful fishing waters of southeastern Alaska, Tom Ohaus is an anomaly:

GAINING CONFIDENCE

I'm going skiing for the first time. Stand on two boards down a hill; it'll be a piece of cake!

Stepping into silence

There's no off-season for the hikers in the North-Idaho based Friends of Scotchman Peaks Wilderness.

Knifing through the Middle Fork

Most folks don't know it, but a trip down the Middle Fork of the Salmon River would do them a world of good. Out there, beyond cell phone reception and internet service, life is reduced to its most basic, elemental rhythms.

Hiking into the fire

The smoke from the fires cleared more than 95 years ago, but it was just last week that the dust settled from building a handsome hiking trail commemorating an epic event in national forest history.

See trout grow

The revival of the popular Spokane Fish Hatchery tours is no simple matter, as one could see recently while veteran tour guide Bob Bates packed facts into the brains of 17 tour-guides-in-training.

World-record goat certified

Put a bow and arrow in the hands of an overachiever and something is going to fall. In the case of a Liberty Lake software company CEO, it's a world-record Rocky Mountain goat.

Something to sea

More than a decade ago, Terry Prichard and Nancy Mertz found a whale of a sea-kayaking destination in the saltwaters of British Columbia.

Sprague angler is top dog when it comes to catching cats

Not all anglers have abandoned Sprague Lake." We see fishermen coming in with some big crappies, decent size perch and some bass," said Scott Haugen.

Running the river

The high-price of gas is no deterrent to rowers and paddlers who live near the Spokane River.

Battling macks

North Idaho is battling its own lake trout invasions, most notably in Lake Pend Oreille.

What makes lures work?

VANCOUVER — Phil Rabideau wastes no time in the sporting goods store aisle that's packed with a plethora of fish-attracting scents.

CRITTER WATCH

If you hear what sounds like a jackhammer on the roof shortly around sunrise this month, it's more likely to be a woodpecker looking for love.

Island solitude

With one last sweep of the paddle, gravel crunches under my hull as I beach my kayak and pop my spray skirt.

Relief: Outdoorsmen shed no tears for summer's demise

Summer doesn't officially bow to autumn until Sept. 23, but hunters, firefighters and especially anglers began celebrating the change of seasons last week.

REMEDIAL ACTION

With all the preparations and anticipation, the Apple Cup would be a disappointment if only a few Cougar and Husky players showed up for the big game.

Fall in line for group hiking trips

Fall is prime time for hiking, and conservation-oriented groups are helping hikers make the most of it.

NET GAINS

The guardian angel of the Lake Roosevelt trout net-pen project is retiring this week on a high note for fish and fishermen.

Captured by Alaska

Signs that Cody McCanna is living his dream are scattered all around his home in Koliganek, a tiny village on one of Alaska's most productive salmon rivers.

TIME FOR TURKEYS

Anyone who hasn't seen a wild turkey this year probably hasn't been out of the house – or even looking out the windows.

Best shot

Nathaniel Morse had to visit Palouse Falls several times before he saw the light.

Fundraisers vital to groups' success

Volunteers with a passion for elk, ducks and turkeys are once again busy organizing Inland Northwest fundraising dinners and auctions to boost wildlife conservation projects.

Why We Went Camping Only Once

I watched as we packed our van in preparation for my family's camping trip.

Dark Woods

In a cathedral of hemlock and cedar near Pinnacle Lake, Wash., the hush of the forest is sharp contrast to the violence that took place here three months ago.

Becoming a centurion

Cycling as a sport has always appealed to me, maybe because of my dad's bikes hanging so lonely in the garage.

Bark is back

"Choosing a birch bark canoe over one made of Kevlar is like comparing the choice of bamboo vs. graphite for a fly-fishing rod," Spokane boat builder John Lindman explains.

Kids

At first, they barely resembled kids. Mostly they were all business and perfect young gentlemen tending to a writer's curiosity about their passion for tournament fishing.

BIG MACK

The "Old Fish and the Man" may not be a best seller, but it could be the title of a story Robert McDowall will be telling for a few years.

Lucky hunter stumbles upon bounty inside an old mine shaft

While an individual elk's odds of being killed during the hunting season are very low, one northeastern Washington bull clearly got the shaft last week.

Biologists soar beyond sight of critics

They're the butt of hunting camp grousing, the messengers some politicians attack, the government entities some landowners don't want messing in their business.

State prepares to rehab Sprague Lake

Sprague Lake, which extends across the Adams-Lincoln county line just south of Interstate 90, is being prepared for Washington's largest fisheries rehabilitation project.

Assault-style rifles get mixed reviews for hunting

Hunters filed more than two dozen responses indicating a spectrum of opinion to last Sunday's request for comments on the promotion of assault-style rifles for hunting.

Mistakes, bad luck doomed hiker

ANCHORAGE — All Larry Dowling did was try to save a ski pole from the cold, rushing waters of Eagle River, and for that he paid the ultimate price.

Cougar pounces on hunter

KALISPELL — A hunter suffered cuts and scratches after being attacked by a mountain lion southeast of here Nov. 11, state wildlife officials said.

High-end bikes the new Porsche?

It's no longer enough to have the best bicycle on the block. Now you have to have the best fleet.

Commentary: Sportsmen no strangers to eating locally

Hunters and anglers are the ultimate in eating locally, and most probably don't realize they are pretty trendy.

Rescuers fight to reel in a problem

Every year, thousands of wild birds and reptiles fall prey to fishing line, hooks and lead sinkers because uneducated or careless anglers leave them behind.

Chef pays homage to fresh fish

Fish fresh from the water is a treat that often can't be purchased even at the most expensive restaurants.

Local club teaches canoe, kayak skills

Spokane Canoe and Kayak Club is the local do-it-yourself paddler's constant connection to the region's lakes and rivers.

Private landowners withdraw hunting land

Finding a place to hunt in Washington will be more difficult this year because of a rural reaction to the pillars of modern convenience – the cell phone and the Internet.

Watch, but don't touch

Luna, the only killer whale that lives in Nootka Sound off Vancouver Island, may be wondering why his adopted human family is rejecting him. Until last year, he apparently considered those two-legged, camera-carrying people on boats were his ever-loving family.

90 years, and still camping

The singing at Fan Lake will be temporarily left to the birds after this weekend, and the painted turtles will finally get a chance to soak up the sunshine on a log without fear of capture.

Peter Stevenson

Peter Stevenson
Age: 21

CRITTER WATCH: Little Spokane River blooms with wildlife

Paddlers aren't the only ones checking out the feral iris that was bursting in bloom last week along the Little Spokane River.

Fishing the docks: Angler etiquette needs polishing

It's clearly taboo in town to pitch sharp objects into a homeowner's yard, bounce lead-weighted fishing lures off a parked car or and stare into somebody's front window.

Sportsman a class act for 50 years

Howard Gardner was president of the Richland Rod & Gun Club in 1957, when a new Washington law required young hunters to complete a hunter education course.

Pikeminnows a cash crop for anglers

Once again, it's time to fish for fame, and especially for fortune. The 2007 Pikeminnow Sport Reward Season opens May 14.

Future skiing difficult to predict

Predicting the future is a risky business.John Fry knows. He was editor-in-chief of SKI magazine in 1968 when the staff set out to describe skiing in 2001.

Noah Symington

Noah Symington
Age: 19Currently: Western Washington University

Mariah Ostheller

Mariah Ostheller
Age: 18Currently: Senior, St. George's School;

Rough things afoot

Glacier National Park's mountains have stood for over 60 million years, so it's hard to imagine change. But that's exactly what hikers should expect this summer. When last November's Pineapple Express rumbled through the Northwest, floods pummeled park roads and trails. To compound the damage, record-breaking December winds toppled many more trees than normal.

Wildfires shut down rafting trips

An unusually hot summer dried up more than a few plans for people heading into the region's great outdoors.

Farmer plants pheasants

"Chasing pheasants beats the heck out of herding cows," said Allen Widman, of his decision to turn part of his farm into Squaw Canyon Shooters bird hunting preserve.

Big bull stories

Hunting stories are a dime a dozen in Idaho, but none captures the biggest of Idaho's big-game tales and photos like Ryan Hatfield's "Idaho's Greatest Elk."

Bogus buck targets road hunters

While the Bionic Woman is dealing with evil on TV this fall, Robo Deer will be haunting poachers in Eastern Washington.

LIGHTS & RODS

Eric Merchant traveled to the Clearwater River with hopes of landing one of its prized steelhead on a fly rod.

Riding into snowy danger

Avalanche safety training is a critical tool for snowmobile riders, from the extreme sport enthusiast to the family rider.

Special season barely deters snow geese

FIR ISLAND, Wash. — Hunkered among 100 decoys made of white plastic sheeting, Barry Martin and Scott Pool waited with their sons in a West Side farmer's field.

Pointer holds her own in kennel of Labs

They were smiling at the podium of the Spokane Bird Dog Association's annual banquet this winter, but their teeth were tightly clenched.

Langlauf a step stone to U.S. team

Don't be deceived by the casual atmosphere complete with a few people in wool knickers: The Langlauf podium has been a step toward international competition.

Skiers take sport to higher level

Serious skiers were not fooled by that short splash of spring-like weather in late February.

Hook It and Cook It: a delicious idea

Fishing and wildlife viewing destinations are a dime a dozen in Alaska, but one stands out so distinctly, you can taste the difference.

The learning wasn't over for Whitworth grad

Bicycle tourists have a different view of adventure as they ride along the highways, with the great outdoors on one side and 16-wheelers speeding by inches away on the other side.

Fall Flings

Going outdoors in mid-October is a bright idea.

RAPID RIVER RAPID RIVER

A few hundred elk, the tug of a threatened fish species and dipping my face into one of the coldest, clearest rivers in Idaho helped cast off doubts about the value of roadless areas.

Nordic Kids make tracks at Mount Spokane

A parent-driven youth program that's been teaching kids the lifelong enjoyment of cross country skiing is gearing up for its 25th year at Mount Spokane.

Gentleman officer

Encounters with snarling badgers, charging moose and landscape-munching elk on the South Hill are all in a day's work for John McColgin.

This brew in Canadian wilderness is not your average 'joe'

ON THE BLOODVEIN RIVER, Manitoba — It's morning on the Bloodvein River, and Ken Gilbertson is making joe.

Fly tyer's effort emerges

Hen-pecked for a couple of decades, John Newberry of Chewelah has finally been freed to find peace and honor from the art of fly tying.

Writer is no slave to luxury camp promo

To: The Resort at Paws Up, Greenough, Mont.From: Ron JuddRe: Future "Camping Butler" employment opportunities

High school writers show wild side

It's time for high schoolers to hink about fame, fortune and the great outdoors. The Spokesman-Review once again is joining the Outdoor Writers Association of America in sponsoring a contest for youth outdoor writing.

Cormorants join Columbia feed

CHINOOK, Wash. – There's a hungry new bird on the Columbia River. For years Caspian terns at the mouth of the river bedeviled salmon recovery efforts.

Sailing the world in 5,976 days

It was a dream Michael and Nancy Morrell of Tacoma shared, to one day sail around the world. They just didn't realize it would take 16 1/2 years to do it.

Fighting the war on weeds

Chemical spraying continues to be among the most effective attacks on noxious weed infestations. Spot spraying on private property reduces costs and the amount of chemicals on the land.

Building bicycles for the enthusiast

"These aren't bikes for duffers," said Gary Selner from the shop in the basement of tiny home he shares with his two dogs. "These bikes are for the enthusiasts, people who want to be in shape."

Big river has niche fisheries

Sport anglers can learn something about timing fishing trips on the Columbia River from people who have a financial stake in catching fish. Bob Roberts, the one-man skipper and crew of Columbia Basin Guide Service, is based in Pendleton, Ore.

Woods still safe for nonhunters

Expect to hear occasional gun shots in the mountains. Plan on seeing hunters carrying rifles or shotguns. Most hunting seasons throughout the West are in full swing.

Corporate timberlands, roadless areas in spotlight

Wild land was a hot item in 2006. Never before has it been more valuable to developers as well as to conservationists and wildlife.

Idaho survivor of ATV wreck stumps for safety

POTLATCH — By the time darkness fell and the upended four-wheeler continued to press down on her body, Marjorie Lienhard feared she was slowly being crushed to death.

Fur flies at Dock Dogs

A Spokane couple is getting a lot of mileage out of their Chesapeake Bay retriever, the Mack Truck of hunting breeds.

Sprague to get extreme makeover

With the rehabilitation of Sprague Lake's fishery in the final stages of approval, Washington Fish and Wildlife Department biologists are preparing to clear the lake of fish.

Eagle numbers

4
Percent of Boy Scouts nationally who earn Eagle Scout rank.

Waterfowl art losing stamp of approval

Washington waterfowlers can enjoy a tradition and contribute to waterfowl management by purchasing state duck stamps and artwork through the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife or local galleries.

Big Horn Show is its own adventure

Long before Wal-Mart arrived in Spokane, the Big Horn Outdoor Adventure Show had already adopted the concept of big-box convenience to serve the region's outdoor enthusiasts.

Ski patrols, local clubs gear up for season

Snow accumulating in the high country is a sure sign that used gear will be coming out of closets to make up the great deals offered by annual ski and winter gear swaps.

Senior moment

The trek was brutal. Both men pushed themselves to the edge of their mental and physical limits as they gained and lost about 60,000 feet in elevation over the 11 days.

For quality fishing rods, Moran is top of the line

Editor's note: Fourth in a series devoted to local craftsmen of distinguished outdoor gear. Trout are natural works of art that attract the affection of millions of anglers.

Wild about flowers?

Finding wildflowers can be as simple as stepping into the woods. But learning about these sometimes delicate and often brilliant plants can add a layer of fun and interest to spring and summer outings.

Hunting camp trip provides chance to experience Bob Marshall

It's day five of Bobby and Dave Terese's 10-day hunting trip into the Bob Marshall Wilderness Area.

Spring unveils peril for hikers

Hiking dangers resulting from storm damage to trails and bridges in the Cascade and Olympic mountains will continue well into summer, officials say.

Casting for advocates

Jeff Holmes and Stann Grater had no competition for the trout chilling in the Spokane River on Jan. 21.

Hiking groups gear up for outings

It's never been easier to find hiking companions in the Inland Northwest. Three conservation-oriented groups have been leading group hiking trips since May.

Tame deer unpredictable

Nelda and Glenn Butner of Pasco became another statistic of deer aggression two weeks ago at the tourist village of Wallowa Lake in Oregon.

Critter Watch: Bridge favors troubled critters

Spokane's Sunset Highway Bridge is far more than a passageway for motorists across Hangman Creek.

Knot might have saved climber's life

FAIRBANKS, Alaska – A safety knot might have prevented the death of a woman rappelling down a mountain in Denali National Park and Preserve, her climbing partner said.

Riders have many tour options

The pedaling season is shifting into high, with organizer gearing up for mass bicycle tours. Most of these tours are fundraisers that feature great food and participation of several hundred.

Local finalists advanced to win national honors

Entries by two local finalists from The Spokesman-Review 2006 Youth Outdoor Writing Contest advanced to win top honors in a national contest.

Weighing the costs

Proposed water storage projects on tributaries to the Columbia River would create winners and losers among Washington's sportsmen, landowners and taxpayers.

Walk first, vote later

Seeing is believing, and the Spokane Mountaineers say it doesn't hurt to also walk, smell and listen for reasons to re-approve the Spokane County Conservation Futures Program.

The heat is on

Serious white-tailed deer hunters throughout the Inland Northwest have had this week blackened out on their calendars for a long time, and God forbid any interference by significant birthdays or anniversaries.

A race through the Yukon

Ted Lowe's training secret could boost the esteem spouses have for partners consumed with the adventurous ambition The Spokane kayaker and his tandem teammate, Bob Rust of Sandpoint, prepared for years to enter the world's longest annual canoe and kayak race – the 460-mile Yukon River Quest from Whitehorse to Dawson City.

A master of upward mobility

At the age of 15, Melissa Main's athletic ambitions have hit a wall. The Lewis and Clark High School sophomore enjoys basketball and she made the varsity gymnastics team as a freshman.

Gunmakers shoot for perfection

He began making guns as a hobby at the age of 15. He trained as a machinist and was earning $16 a week grinding optical lenses before moving to Spokane to renew his boyhood fascination with building custom guns.

Alaskan adventure an icebound trek

Spring had to wait for two northeastern Washington men who spent 32 days in March and early April snowmobiling from Anchorage to Nome and along the icebound arctic coast to the northernmost point in Alaska.

Garbage open to Priest bears

Priest Lake State Park, in Idaho's most bear-rich region, does not have basic tools in preventing bears from getting at human food: bear-resistant garbage containers.

Stations unguarded

The northeast corner of Washington has always been a productive playground for hunters and anglers. Recently it's become especially fertile ground for poachers.

Fantasy fishing hooking fans

Under an enormous tent in Rogers, Ark., at a Wal-Mart parking lot last year, some of the country's top fishermen hoisted their freshly caught largemouth bass. Fans and television cameras looked on as the anglers competed for a $200,000 check.

Anglers need to lighten up during the night

LEWISTON — Steelheaders shouldn't be totally in the dark when night fishing on the lower Snake and Clearwater rivers.

Best duck callers know when to shut up

Roger Reynolds, former Western duck-calling champion, competes in only one type of duck-calling contest nowadays – the kind that's judged by ducks. When the Washington waterfowl season opens next weekend, the Nine Mile Falls hunter plans to sweet-talk Columbia Basin mallards into his decoy spread.

Reconstructed trails make easier climb to a Selkirk high

Newly reconstructed trails are rolling out the welcome mat to choice but largely ignored scenic destinations in the Idaho Selkirk Mountains. Even though some work won't be finished until next summer – including some blasting, bridges and trail hardening – I took advantage of last Sunday's brilliant fall weather to hike the freshly rerouted, brushed and well-designed trails to Snow and Bottleneck lakes.

Big Horn Show opens this week

For the 47th year, the Big Horn Outdoor Adventure Show is bringing the buzz of hunting and fishing, to the Spokane County Fair and Expo Center starting this week.

First on Foraker

ANCHORAGE — Masatoshi Kuriaki didn't linger at the summit of Mount Foraker when he became the first solo climber to conquer the 17,400-foot mountain in winter.

Urban hunters find their niche in search for big game

PHILADELPHIA – The hunter had been perched 20 feet up a carefully placed tree stand for perhaps 15 minutes, his bow on his lap, when a deer with huge antlers appeared.

Trail workers overwhelmed

Forest Service trail crews are facing a mountain of work with a trickle of funding this season. "In a word, it's horrible," said Jack Dorrell.

Rich Landers: Fishing lessons taught here

Ignorance will no longer an acceptable excuse for getting skunked on local fishing waters. Local experts have scheduled numerous upcoming seminars.

Out & About

For Sunday, March 25, 2007.

Critter watch : Wolf report shows growth

Few critters in the Western wildlands are being watched more closely than wolves. We have better numbers on wolves than we have on disabled veterans or immigrants, although we do know that all three groups are growing.

Rich Landers: Second thoughts haunt bass angler

Allen Krant has been getting a good ribbing about the big one that got away. Actually, a possible Washington state record tiger musky didn't get away. He released it.

Saying goodbye

One of the oldest family-owned fishing and water-recreation resorts in the region is undergoing another transition.

Fire's scars can't hide wonders of wilderness

SALEM, Ore. – The trail was hot and dusty, the shade eliminated and the thick stands of lodgepole pine and mountain hemlock in large part obliterated by forest fires in 2003.

Critter Watch

Moose have reached another milestone in their expansion throughout Spokane County and the Inland Northwest. Alces Alces andersoni has been officially added to the unusually varied fauna and flora of the Dishman Hills Natural Area, association members reported last month.

Volunteers to spruce up Fish Lake Trail

A neglected portion of the Fish Lake Trail is about to get some attention from a volunteer clean-up project organized by REI.

Handling a mountain of a task

Ski patrollers at 49 Degrees North responded to this month's huge dump of early season snow much like a volunteer fire department mobilizes for an alarm.

Egg suckers are quite a catch

Fly fishers suck eggs – and that's a compliment. During the cold snap before Christmas, two dozen members of the Spokane Fly Fishers gathered in a small enclosure at the Spokane Fish Hatchery in north Spokane near St.

EWU leads way in outdoor-management courses

Montana State University might seem to have the edge in outdoor recreation, considering Bozeman's proximity to wilderness, whitewater, ski slopes, fishing, hunting and other wild pursuits.

Idaho trails are latest hiking treasures

Even in 2005, new trails are waiting to be discovered in the Inland Northwest. Among the newest are two North Idaho gems, one at the edge of Sandpoint and the other a thoughtful reconstruction of a route near the Canada border and the Idaho-Montana line.

Land deals give public more access

Public access continues to gain ground in Eastern Washington with the U. S. Bureau of Land Management completing the latest in a series of large land exchanges.

Rivers fast and furious

Most rivers are still running high throughout the Inland Northwest Rivers. That's a deterrent to fishing, but an opportunity for whitewater paddlers and rafters.

State agrees to preserve Reardan wetlands

Reardan has gained a permanent wildlife attraction this week and bird lovers have won a small but significant victory against development that's continually encroaching on wetland habitats.

Rare caribou rack ripped off

Rare trophy antlers from a mountain caribou shot by an Idaho hunter in 1892 have been stolen from a cabin north of Priest River. Vandals who accessed the cabin by snowmobile in December smashed the old head mount and packed off the antlers, which had been considered special enough to tour in the Idaho exhibit to the 1893 Chicago World's Fair.

In north-central Washington, coho are fighting the odds

LEAVENWORTH — After a 530-mile journey from the ocean, a salmon skitters in a stream bordered by dogwood and willows.

Popular outdoorsman, author dies at 81

Harvey Manning, a well-known Western Washington conservationist, hiker and author, died Nov. 12 after suffering from colon cancer.

Emmrod springs to success

A stubby fish-catcher called the Emmrod has caught on with a anglers across the country since its 2004 debut at the Big Horn Show in Spokane.

Idaho teenager is a champion honker

BURLEY, Idaho — Kalen Smith's first word was not "mama" or "dada." It was "hornk," and it sounded just like a goose. So it is only natural that today, 16-year-old Kalen is one of the "Best of the West" when it comes to goose-calling.

Hands pick better berries

"Indians who buy huckleberries tend to look for hand-picked berries because they taste better. They move the berries around in the box to make sure they move freely and aren't sticking to each other.

Mount Spokane x-c trails expanded

Cross-country skiers will have nearly 10 kilometers of new trails to explore in Mount Spokane this season.

Out & About

Oregon as installed a wireless hot spot at Multnomah Falls in the Columbia River Gorge — one of the state's most popular natural tourist attractions.

Group hikes planned

It's never been easier to find hiking companions in the Inland Northwest. Three conservation-oriented groups are leading group hiking trips.

Feisty summer steelhead fill fishing gap

LONGVIEW, Wash. — It was a case of multi-tasking of the highest importance. Wil Morrison of Vancouver snatched the rod from the plastic holder, reeled the line as tight as possible, stuck the rod back in the holder, made the three-step sprint to the front of his boat and released the anchor rope.

Disappearing butterflies

FRESNO — The number of butterflies migrating through California has fallen to a nearly 40-year low as populations already hurt by habitat loss and climate change encountered a cold, wet spring, researchers said.

New animated movie has hunting crowd in its crosshairs

Make no mistake about it, the movie "Open Season" is really open season on hunters.

Skinny herd too big for habitat

MOUNT ST. HELENS, Wash. – Hay trucks are arriving daily this winter at the Mount St. Helens Wildlife Area near Toutle, bringing fresh alfalfa to wild elk.

Fishing guides idle flies to tackle lunker trout

Bored with the slow fly fishing at Hayden Lake on April 2, two Orvis Northwest Outfitters guides switched to trolling gear and sat back in their boat to relax.

Bear experts disappointed with film featuring 'Grizzly Man'

ANCHORAGE — A recently released documentary film of Timothy Treadwell, who gained notoriety for living and dying among Alaska's grizzly bears, has many worried that the compelling close-up footage of the animals could inspire other misguided adventure-seekers to emulate him.

Festival floats ideas for river attractions

The slow-growing appreciation for an underrated gem of downtown public land is primed to burst with enthusiasm next weekend in the first Spokane RiverFest. Musicians, volunteer trail crews, hikers, bikers, paddlers and anglers will converge at High Bridge Park on Saturday from 9 a.

B.C. rivers are coming prime for anglers

A new daily fishing fee could reduce the crowds of anglers that have been flocking to southeastern British Columbia rivers, some of which are coming into good fishing condition.

Operators changing at Seven Bays Marina

A slow time of the year is even quieter at the popular Seven Bays Marina on Lake Roosevelt. The Colville Tribe has not renewed its contract with the N