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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Sports >  Outdoors

Photo: Helpful noisy neighbors

Bed and breakfast and beaks: With improvements underway in his neighborhood in the foothills of Mount Spokane, birder/photographer Ron Dexter has made sure some of his most colorful neighbors aren’t disturbed. In posting these photos, Dexter said: “A pair of pileated woodpeckers has nested in a snag in the woods behind us at least three times now. The loggers were careful not to knock the snag down, so the woodpeckers may add more holes in the future. These are the largest woodpeckers in the United States, possibly the world. Their length is up to 18 inches and wingspan up to 30 inches. An ornithologist dissected one and counted approximately 2,500 carpenter ants in the stomach. So you can see, they help save the forests and maybe your house. They chop out large rectangular holes in trees to get to the ants and grubs, but their nest holes are shaped like a raindrop as you can see in the photo. They actually spend the majority of their feeding time on the ground or on fallen trees, snags or stumps that contain grubs, ants, etc. I see and hear them every year in our woods. They are in the area year round.”
Sports >  Outdoors

Queen of the road: Gloria Struck, 89, matriarch of female motorcyclists

This summer, to celebrate her 89th birthday, Gloria Tramontin Struck of Clifton, New Jersey will ride her blue Harley-Davidson 1,700 miles to Sturgis, South Dakota. There she knows she will be treated like a queen, a celebrity, a legend. Grown men will beg to have their pictures taken by her side. When the annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally is over, many of those men will strap their motorcycles onto trailers and drive away in the comfort of their air-conditioned, leather-seated, globally positioned pickup trucks.
Sports >  Outdoors

Weather report: Heat will return after weekend

The next few days are going to bring a transition from the severe weather that arrived over the Inland Northwest on Wednesday to hot summer weather again by Sunday. The low pressure area responsible for the storms is moving off to the east today, but its impact should still be felt.
Sports >  Outdoors

Weekly hunting and fishing report

Fly Fishing The Yakima River is experiencing summer flows and the fishing has been decent despite the heat and high water. The #12 black Copper John is a good pattern to start with.
Sports >  Outdoors

Early risers into region’s alpine areas weigh risk, reap rewards

Perhaps it’s incomprehensible to people stuck in the sweltering lowlands, but snow has been blocking portions of popular Northwest alpine backpacking routes in the Cascades and Rockies as late as this week. Snow-related hiker deaths and accidents requiring rescues have occurred in the past month in the North Cascades. Early-season hikers can break through summer snowfields and crash into underlying rocks or they can slip and slide to trauma on steep slopes.
Sports >  Outdoors

Field reports: Mount Spokane land classifications affect ski area expansion

PARKS – Land classification proposals that could make or break plans to expand the Mount Spokane alpine ski area will be presented at the Washington Parks and Recreation Commission meeting Thursday in Bellingham. In 2010, Mt. Spokane Ski and Snowboard Park proposed expanding its ski area within the state park to provide more intermediate terrain. Conservation groups have contested the expansion.
Sports >  Outdoors

Priest Lake area male grizzly collared for research

A 430-pound grizzly bear has been trapped by researchers and fitted with a transmitting collar north of Priest Lake. The male bear was snared by federal trappers Alex Welander and Matt Grode June 21 in the Jackson Creek area about 10 miles north of Nordman, said Wayne Kasworm, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service grizzly bear biologist in Libby who is supervising the collaring project.