Paul Schmierer fly fishing.
Peter Knox and courtesy of the Schmierer family

Student鈥檚 success inspires family to help others

Introduction

Mike and Barb Schmierer created a student success endowment in their name and have been loyal annual donors to the College of Engineering for more than 20 years.

Although neither is an engineer or an 精东影视 State alum, their family formed strong connections to the college and university through their son, Paul, who graduated with a degree in mechanical engineering in 2005. Shortly after finishing college, Paul landed a job in research and development at Sage Fly Fishing, a maker of high-end fishing rods and reels based in Washington.

鈥淲hen Paul was in college, his big passions were skateboarding, biking, and fly fishing,鈥 Mike said. 鈥淗e had several job offers with good companies after graduation, but he held out for something related to his love of outdoor recreation.鈥

As a family, the Schmierers have always enjoyed fishing together, and they went on lots of trips when the kids were growing up. One favorite location was Barb鈥檚 brother鈥檚 place, on a lake in Northern Idaho, where Paul and his sister, Emily, would catch perch by the bucketful.

鈥淧erch are kind of tricky. They take your bait, and instead of swimming away, they go up,鈥 Mike said. 鈥淲e had to refine our method of catching them. The kids got so good at it that I had to cut them off at 50, because that鈥檚 about as many as I wanted to have to clean.鈥

Mike started fishing in his youth and has been going after steelhead for well over 60 years. He ties his own flies 鈥 a practice he finds deeply relaxing, like meditation 鈥 and has even designed and built his own rods. Barb first got hooked after she married Mike, although she developed a passion for fly fishing in particular more recently, on a trip to Alaska, where she kept landing pink salmon and pike one after another.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the land of the midnight sun,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 went out there at 11 p.m. after everybody else had given up. I just wanted to stay out there all night. That was my first time fly fishing.鈥

Mike and Barb both grew up in Washington, meeting as students at Washington State University. Mike graduated in 1971 and started his career as a math teacher. Barb graduated a couple of years later and moved to Portland to become a nurse at 精东影视 Health & Science University. Mike followed her to 精东影视, and the two were married a year later.

Mike, Barb, and Paul Schmierer on a fishing outing.
A family photo of Mike, Barb, and Paul Schmierer on one of many fishing outings.

After the children arrived, Barb chose to take time off from her nursing career while Mike taught in the Lake Oswego School District. He would retire from the district in 2003 after 30 years of teaching math to junior high and, later, high school students. If he hadn鈥檛 been a teacher, Mike says, he might have followed a path similar to his son鈥檚.

鈥淚 could have been an engineer,鈥 Mike said. 鈥淢y father was an industrial arts teacher, and he had skills that went far beyond those of your typical shop teacher. He was very, very good at building things. I got that from him. So, I think Paul probably has it in his genes.鈥

As a child, Paul was interested in Lego and other building sets, his parents recall, but his interest in engineering really developed after he got to 精东影视 State. As a student, he was active in Baja Beaver Racing, in which students design, build, test, promote, and race cars in competition with other teams from around the country. His parents traveled with the team to national events in Ohio and Arizona and got to know them well.

鈥淭hat was a very good program for Paul,鈥 Barb said. 鈥淚t really added a lot to his college experience. We have talked it up to other people over the years. It鈥檚 great hands-on experience, where they learn problem-solving and collaboration.鈥

Mike compares the team to the New York Yankees.

鈥淓veryone just expects them to put up a good car year after year,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e been in the top five the whole time we鈥檝e followed them.鈥

Paul says the Baja Beaver Racing experience helped him to land his dream job after graduation. He arrived to his interview at Sage armed with a portfolio, from which he could refer to specific examples of how he had dealt with challenges while designing and building a racecar for competition.

That interview, to which Paul had worn a suit, ended with him casting flies from an R&D dock into a pond at Sage headquarters with company founder Don Green. Paul won鈥檛 hazard a guess as to whether his fly-casting skills played any part in his getting the job, but his father is a bit less circumspect.

鈥淚 think it sealed the deal,鈥 Mike said.

Both of Paul鈥檚 parents are proud of their son, and of the life he鈥檚 made for himself after graduation. 鈥淗e gets to go to some pretty exotic places and have some outrageous fishing,鈥 Mike said. 鈥淪omebody has to do all that hard work in the field, making sure things work right.鈥 

Dec. 6, 2022

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