South Wasco Familiarity Tour 2024

Written by: Jackie Solomon - RARE AmeriCorps Cohort Year 31

So far during my time in The Dalles, Oregon as a RARE member there was an event that not only expanded my experience in professional environments, but also gave me the opportunity to meet a lot of people who are now becoming familiar faces. This tour gave me important insight into people truly living rural, their accomplishments, their needs, and their day-to-day lives.

The event that truly showed me a new part of Oregon that I had never experienced before, even as a Oregon native, was the South Wasco Familiarity Tour hosted by the South Wasco Alliance on October 11th, 2024. Where a group of about 25 people coming from various organizations got a guided tour of four rural towns in southern Wasco County, Oregon.

The day began with Anna Peach my colleague and a fellow RARE member, Lanier Fussell our colleague at the time as well as a former RARE member, and I driving down to Maupin, Oregon. Fun fact, Maupin is known as one of the best towns in Oregon for white water rafting. Maupin has a population of 418 people (2023). We also heard about the new world-class athletic field called the Maupin Deschutes River Athletic Complex, this track is Olympic-level quality, yet not many people are aware it exists in north-central Oregon. After introductions and snacks at Maupin Works, a local coworking space, we all got onto an old bus to carpool to our next destination. Pictured below is our bus going down the spiraling roads in Maupin towards Shaniko, Oregon.

The winding roads by Maupin, OR. Photo by South Wasco Alliance

Next we drove through Shaniko, Oregon. A town with a population of 31 people (2023). Our bus driver, Pamela Brown lives there with her partner Mark Haskett. Pam and Mark own and operate the only gas station in Shaniko, it is the only gas station for the 75 miles between Moro and Madras(South Wasco Alliance, 2023).

12 minutes south of Shaniko is Antelope, Oregon. Another very small and rural town in south Wasco County. Antelope may be a recognizable name to some, as it was a town once overtaken by the Rajneeshpuram, a religious community that started a huge movement in the 1980s after around 7,000 people took over the town for 7 years.

Antelope, Oregon was a very small and quiet town. There is an abandoned café, a postage office, an old school that is not currently operating, and a museum dedicated to Rajneesh items and memorabilia. Currently, the main attraction that brings people through Antelope is the Washington Family Ranch Young Life Camp down the road. This camp is 64,000 acres and can accommodate up to 2,00 people at a time. Touring this town opened my eyes to rural life. This portion of the tour was led by a local, Brandie McNamee. Brandie is also someone who will be a part of one of Wy’East’s newest projects. Antelope, Oregon is one of the rural towns that Wy’East RC&D intends to send a BEAM unit, a mobile EV charger, to which will usually be used to charge the EV’s of people coming to the Young Life Camp. But they can also be transported during power outages, fires, and other emergencies when power is needed elsewhere. Thanks to a CREP grant that the Oregon Department of Energy awarded to Wy’East, we are beginning the implementation of these units.

After seeing Antelope we made our way to Tygh Valley, Oregon with a population of 54 people (2022). Kathleen Willis led this portion of the tour, she is a Tygh Valley local, she is also a Board Member of the South Wasco Alliance. In Tygh Valley we were all served lunch at Molly B’s Diner, a staple in the town. We got to meet Molly herself and enjoy chicken fried steak, biscuits, croissants, and more.

Our last stop of the South Wasco Fam Tour was Tony, his garden, and the Tygh Creek Sustainable Farm Stand operated by his daughter which he stocks with his produce. Tony’s property was awesome to see, as someone who wishes they had the time and land to grow produce in a regenerative and sustainable way. Tony spends his days harvesting, maintaining, and watering his gardens. We got to hear Tony explain what he grows, his routines, his beliefs around sustainability, and his daughter's role in the Tygh Creek Sustainable Farm Stand. Of course, I bought some sweet potatoes and honey sticks while we were there. The farm stand is constantly open to the public and is full of fresh produce as well as value-added products. They operate on an honesty policy, where you weigh your produce yourself, calculate the price based on the $/lb listed, and Venmo their account before you head home with your organic and local items.

Tony at his farm in Tygh Valley, OR. Photo by South Wasco Alliance

Overall, this tour of South Wasco was extremely beneficial and enjoyable for me. I not only got to meet people I continue to work with, but I also have gotten to be in the towns that Wy’East is working with now as well as in the future. Before my time with RARE and Wy’East I had never heard of places like Dufur, Shaniko, Tygh Valley, or Antelope. It helped me better understand their needs, see the large amounts of progress that locals have already made, and make connections with people throughout Wasco County.

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