The Nugget Vol. XLII No. 31
POSTAL CUSTOMER
News and Opinion from Sisters, Oregon
www.NuggetNews.com
Wednesday, July 31, 2019
Sisters got a feeling called the blues By Jodi Schneider Correspondent
More than a thousand people gathered in Village Green Park for the 2nd Sisters Rhythm and Brews Festival that kicked off Friday evening. The two-day event, packed full of outstanding artists, had folks from all over the Pacific Northwest celebrating music, local food and crafted libations. E v e n t o rg a n i z ers Jennifer and Joe Rambo said it’s their vision to bring highquality musicians to Central Oregon while supporting the local community. The Rambos provide electrical and equipment support to many of Central Oregon festivals, including the Sisters Folk Festival. The Sisters Rhythm and Brews Festival supported Sisters Habitat for Humanity and the Heart of Oregon YouthBuild and helped demonstrate their positive impact upon our community. Jennifer Rambo noted, “Having them here gives the two non-profits a unique
Correspondent
Sgt. William Bailey, public information officer for the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office (DCSO), reported to the City Council last week that an investigation into the recent spate of graffiti around town is underway. “We are making good progress in the investigation but I can’t say more at this time for risk of jeopardizing the investigation,” Bailey told The Nugget on Friday. During his report to the Council, he indicated that due to increased traffic over the last two months, there is currently an increased presence
Inside...
EDCO shines spotlight on Sisters business activity By Sue Stafford Correspondent
music is a very small (but important) piece of what we
The spotlight was on Sisters Thursday evening, July 25, when several hundred Central Oregon businesspeople gathered at the Three Creeks Production Facility for the EDCO Pub Talk featuring Sisters businesses. There was a festive atmosphere surrounding the event. Sisters Meat and Smokehouse provided the sandwiches and Three Creeks Brewing Co. the beer. People were playing Corn Hole on the lawn while others ate, drank and socialized under the canopy tent,
See MUSIC on page 19
See BUSINESSES on page 16
Eric Gales thrilled a big crowd at Village Green during the Sisters Rhythm and Brews Festival last weekend. The event featured a wide range of roots music styles. PHOTO BY JERRY BALDOCK
opportunity to discuss their programs in an unconventional environment. Any profit made goes directly to
Progress reported in tagging investigation By Sue Stafford
PRE-SORTED STANDARD ECRWSS U.S. POSTAGE PAID Sisters, OR Permit No. 15
of officers in town, in both marked and unmarked cars, including the use of some overtime personnel. Once the graffiti stops, they may pull back on the use of overtime officers. Bailey voiced appreciation for neighborhood watch efforts in town. Several citizens have been patrolling at night on the lookout for suspicious activity. The DCSO likes to work in partnership with the public. He thanked the public for making reports when they see something suspicious, saying that extra sets of eyes are always appreciated. He did, however, caution citizens to See CRIME on page 21
them.” She added, “Our focus is on the experience we are trying to create for folks. The
Logging project opens vistas along Road 16
Dave Elpi of Sisters Forest Products is working on a commercial firewood project along Forest Road 16 near Three Creek Lake. PHOTO BY CEILI CORNELIUS
By Jim Cornelius Editor in Chief
Dave Elpi is proud of the work his logging outfit Sisters Forest Products is doing on a 2.5-mile stretch of Forest Road 16 (Three Creek Road) south of Sisters.
“I want whoever drives down this road to say, ‘Whoever is doing this is doing a good job,’” he told The Nugget last week. “Not just the Forest Service — we want the public to be happy.” Elpi is working on the Melvin Firewood Timber
Sale, a 240-acre project that falls under the broader, 4,500-acre Melvin Butte Environmental Analysis. The Forest Service has supervised a mixture of stewardship projects and commercial timber sales in See LOGGING on page 30
Letters/Weather ................ 2 Be alert to elder abuse ....... 6 Entertainment ..................13 Sisters Naturalist............. 22 Classifieds..................24-26 Meetings ........................... 3 Announcements................12 Obituaries ....................... 14 Crossword ....................... 23 Real Estate .................29-32
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
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Jonah Goldberg
Letters to the Editor… The Nugget welcomes contributions from its readers, which must include the writer’s name, address and phone number. Letters to the Editor is an open forum for the community and contains unsolicited opinions not necessarily shared by the Editor. The Nugget reserves the right to edit, omit, respond or ask for a response to letters submitted to the Editor. Letters should be no longer than 300 words. Unpublished items are not acknowledged or returned. The deadline for all letters is noon Monday.
To the Editor: A sheriff’s deputy came to my house July 24 with the remains of three bills I’d put into the outgoing mail slot. What was returned was the envelopes of the three, one of the checks and two of the payment vouchers. Two checks are missing and one voucher which also contained my SSN. Whoever did this now has my name, address, SNN and bank information. This is not a petty crime; this is a federal offense as well as a state felony. My cluster mail unit is across the street from the new Ponderosa Heights apartment complex on Brooks Camp Road. There has been an increase in crime since these apartments have been occupied, the deputy had another stolen
envelope besides the three mentioned above, the club house property for the Pines adjacent to this cluster mail unit was vandalized in May, there has been other instances as well. Is this the new face of Sisters? Can we no longer feel safe about putting our mail into the outgoing mail slot? What’s next? This cluster mail unit is used by the Pines community which includes 50 homes in the 55 and over section known as Brooks Camp Village, most of the residents of BCV are well into their 70s and many in their 90s, are we putting our senior community at risk when they simply want to collect and send mail? This is a sad state when one can no longer feel safe in a small town such as Sisters. Chris Carr
Sisters Weather Forecast
Courtesy of the National Weather Service, Pendleton, Oregon
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Sunny
Sunny
Mostly Sunny
Sunny
Mostly Sunny
Sunny
88/55
88/53
83/51
88/56
91/56
91/55
The Nugget Newspaper, LLC Website: www.nuggetnews.com 442 E. Main Ave., P.O. Box 698, Sisters, Oregon 97759 Tel: 541-549-9941 | Fax: 541-549-9940 | editor@nuggetnews.com Postmaster: Send address changes to The Nugget Newspaper, P.O. Box 698, Sisters, OR 97759. Third Class Postage Paid at Sisters, Oregon.
Editor in Chief: Jim Cornelius Production Manager: Leith Easterling Graphic Design: Jess Draper Community Marketing Partners: Vicki Curlett & Patti Jo Beal Classifieds & Circulation: Lisa May Proofreader: Pete Rathbun Owner: J. Louis Mullen
The Nugget is mailed to residents within the Sisters School District; subscriptions are available outside delivery area. Third-class postage: one year, $45; six months (or less), $25. First-class postage: one year, $85; six months, $55. Published Weekly. ©2019 The Nugget Newspaper, LLC. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. All advertising which appears in The Nugget is the property of The Nugget and may not be used without explicit permission. The Nugget Newspaper, Inc. assumes no liability or responsibility for information contained in advertisements, articles, stories, lists, calendar etc. within this publication. All submissions to The Nugget Newspaper will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication and copyrighting purposes and subject to The Nugget Newspaper’s unrestricted right to edit and comment editorially, that all rights are currently available, and that the material in no way infringes upon the rights of any person. The publisher assumes no responsibility for return or safety of artwork, photos, or manuscripts.
I want to put in a good word for partisanship. This might sound strange to some readers. I’ve written a lot about our problem with tribalism, including hyper-partisanship and political polarization. It was a major theme of my cheerily titled book “Suicide of the West.” So I’m happy to concede that too much partisanship — or partisanship of the wrong kind — can be very bad. But unity can be bad too. Excessive unity cultivates groupthink and breeds contempt for dissent. It tends to ride roughshod over minorities, and not just in the sense of racial, religious or sexual groups. Ideological minorities — including the smallest minority, the individual — can get trampled by the unity stampede. Self-described nationalists insist the country needs more unity — around their ideas. Self-described socialists also crave unity, but only around their agenda. At various times and places, Catholics, Protestants, Muslims and Hindus have all strived for unity, but only on their terms. In any large society, the demand for unity is usually the demand for power in a winner-take-all contest between different groups. Our Constitution is set up around the idea that unity is scarier than disunity. The founders designed a system that prevented any one group, or “faction,” from imposing its one-size-fits-all unity on everybody. Ironically, the founders never envisioned political parties as a major component of this system. James Madison eventually embraced parties, but most of the founders were closer to Thomas Jefferson’s view that if the only way he could get into heaven was by joining a party, he wouldn’t go. Think of it this way: Courtrooms are partisan battlefields. The defense attorney is a zealous
advocate for acquittal. The prosecutor is equally passionate about conviction. Both sides must deal honestly, but it is the competition between the two sides, the questioning of evidence, the inquiry into motives and methods, that produces a just outcome. Of course, sometimes it goes wrong. But it’s the best system we’ve got. This is how the good kind of partisanship is supposed to work. Partisans have all manner of incentives to poke holes in the opposition’s arguments and proposals—some patriotic and principled, some more base and selfish. But the process of political combat, which is supposed to take place in Congress, not on cable TV or Twitter, should get us closer to both the truth and a consensus about the way forward. The public is supposed to be the jury. Unfortunately, too many jurors only want to hear arguments from either the defense or the prosecution. It’s a cliche to note that the party out of power only cares about deficits and debt when it is out of power. This hypocrisy is annoying and at times dishonorable. But it’s better than the alternative. If it’s true that unlimited borrowing, mostly from China, to pay for things we can’t afford is bad, better to have someone saying so, even if they’re doing it for cynical purposes. Such complaints at least serve to check runaway deficit spending. Last week we crossed a Rubicon with the new bipartisan budget deal proposed by President Donald Trump and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. It marks the end of either party even pretending to care about such things. It’s a victory of the sort of bipartisanship and unity so many claim this country needs. And it is a perfect example of how unity around a bad thing is worse than disunity over what constitutes a good thing. ©2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the writer and are not necessarily shared by the Editor or The Nugget Newspaper.
Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
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Local art key feature of Country Fair Over the past 20 years, the Country Fair and Art Show has become an integral part of the community outreach effort of the Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration. It has helped provide over $250,000 to the community’s support agencies. Last year, the fair organizers decided to experiment with a simpler, invitational format for the Art Show. This allowed the fair to host a nonjuried show with no entry fees. “We were pleasantly surprised by the positive comments we received,” Art Show volunteer Janet Shaver
reported. “It proved to have a less crowded art display area and no restriction of times for delivery and pick-up of art. We invited artists who would give us a wide variety of media: photography, oils, watercolor, pastels, pottery, collage, scratchboard and jewelry. It also required fewer demands on our committee members and improved promotion for our artists. Each year we will strive to have less repetition with a better and more open presentation of the artwork.” See LOCAL ART on page 26 PHOTO BY JERRY BALDOCK
The Islas family celebrated their new home in Sisters last week.
Book club seeks to ‘bridge divide’ Bridging The Gap Book Club. The club, Jacobson said, “basically just aims to start the conversation — bridge the gap — between the everpolarizing left and right.” The approximately 10 to 14 participants will be selected to reflect views and outlooks of people all along the political spectrum. “We’re going to have a survey where people will self-identify a lot of things about themselves,” Jacobson explained.
By Jim Cornelius Editor in Chief
In an arena where people increasingly retreat defensively into their own corner of the ring, real engagement among people of differing cultural and political perspectives is harder and harder to come by. Lane Jacobson, the owner of Paulina Springs Books in Sisters, is trying to change that, at least here in the local community. This fall, Paulina Springs Books is launching the
See BOOK CLUB on page 29
Many hands provide a home in Sisters Many hands go into the building of a Sisters Habitat for Humanity home, and when that home is dedicated those supporters show up to celebrate. It was no exception last week when Sisters Habitat for Humanity dedicated the home with the Islas family. Nancy and Roberto Islas are well-known in the community, and the attendance at the dedication was a confirmation of that fact. The couple has lived in Sisters for 15 years, and they are the 67th family to purchase a home through Sisters Habitat for Humanity homeownership
program. Roberto works at Hoyt’s Hardware and Nancy is a stay-at-home mom with her three boys. “I loved seeing all the people in the community that came to support us and love us. I thank the volunteers, friends and co-workers. I moved here 17 years ago to work and support my mother and brother. This is the first home that will be truly mine. I will own it. Our boys will have a yard to play in. I’m so excited for our garden,” Roberto said after the ceremony. When a family is selected into the homeownership
program, they are teamed with family partners. Paula Reents and Bill and Wendy Birnbaum have helped the Islas family through the journey to homeownership. “Roberto would landscape and make improvements wherever they lived even though they were rentals. Now those improvements will be on his own home – congratulations,” Bill Birnbaum told the crowd. It can take two years from the time a family is accepted into the Habitat program until they move See HOME on page 27
SISTERS AREA MEETING CALENDAR BOARDS, GROUPS, CLUBS Al-Anon Mon., noon, Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church / Wed., 6 p.m., Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration. 541-549-8737 or 541-549-1527. Alcoholics Anonymous Thurs. & Sun., 7 p.m., Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration / Sat., 8 a.m., Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration / Mon., 5 p.m., Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church / Big Book study, Tues., noon, Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church / Gentlemen’s meeting, Wed., 7 a.m., Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church / Sober Sisters Women’s meeting, Thurs., noon, Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church / Step & Tradition meeting, Fri., noon, Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church. 541-548-0440. Alzheimer’s & Dementia Caregiver Support Group 1st Tuesday, noon, Sisters City Hall. 800-272-3900. Black Butte Ranch Bridge Club Tuesdays, 12:30 p.m., BBR community room. Partner required. 541-595-6236. Central Oregon Fly Tyers Guild For Saturday meeting dates and location, email: steelefly@msn.com. Central OR Spinners and Weavers Guild One Saturday per month, Jan. thru Oct. For schedule: 541-639-3217. Council on Aging of Central Oregon Senior Lunch Tuesdays, noon, Sisters Community Church. 541-480-1843.
East of the Cascades Quilt Guild 4th Wednesday (September-June), Stitchin’ Post. All are welcome. 541-549-6061.
Sisters Area Woodworkers 1st Tuesday, 7 to 9 p.m. 541-639-6216. Sisters Astronomy Club 3rd Tuesday, 7 p.m., SPRD. 541-549-8846.
Friends of the Sisters Library Board of Directors 2nd Tuesday, 9 to 11 a.m., Sisters Bridge Club Thursdays, Sisters Library.www.sistersfol.com. 12:30 p.m., The Pines Clubhouse. Novices welcomed. 541-549-9419. Go Fish Fishing Group 3rd Monday, 7 p.m. Sisters Community Church. All Sisters Caregiver Support Group ages welcome. 541-771-2211. 3rd Tues., 10:30 a.m., The Lodge in Sisters. 541-771-3258. Heartwarmers (fleece blanketmakers) 1st & 3rd Tuesdays, 1 p.m., Sisters City Hall. Materials provided. 541-408-8505. Sisters Cribbage Club Wednesdays, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Ray’s Food Place Hero Quilters of Sisters Thursday, 1 to community room. 541-923-1632. 4 p.m. 541-549-1028 or 541-719-1230. Sisters Habitat for Humanity Board Military Parents of Sisters Meetings of Directors 4th Tuesday, 6 p.m. are held quarterly; please call for details. Location information: 541-549-1193. 541-388-9013. Sisters Kiwanis Thursdays, 7 to Oregon Band of Brothers – Sisters 8:30 a.m., Brand 33 Restaurant at Chapter Wednesdays, 11:30 a.m., Aspen Lakes. 541-410-2870. Takoda’s Restaurant. 541-549-6469. Sisters Parent Teacher Community SAGE (Senior Activities, Gatherings 2nd Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at Sisters & Enrichment) Monday-Friday, 11 a.m. Saloon. 541-480-5994. to 4 p.m. at Sisters Park & Recreation Sisters Parkinson’s Support Group District. 541-549-2091. 2nd Tuesday, 2 p.m., The Lodge. Sisters Family Aglow Lighthouse 541-668-6599. 4th Saturday, 10 a.m., Ponderosa Lodge Sisters Red Hats 1st Friday. Meeting Room. 503-930-6158. Location information: 541-279-1977. Sisters Area Photography Club 2nd Wednesday, 4 p.m., Sisters Library Sisters Rotary Tuesdays, noon, Aspen Lakes Lodge. 541-760-5645. community room. 541-549-6157.
Sisters Trails Alliance Board 1st Wednesday, 5 p.m. Sisters Library. Public welcome. 541-719-8822. Sisters Veterans Thursdays, noon, Takoda’s Restaurant. 541-903-1123. Three Sisters Irrigation District Board of Directors 1st Tuesday, 4 p.m., TSID Office. 541-549-8815. Three Sisters Lions Club 1st Thursday, noon, Ray’s Food Place community room. 541-419-1279. VFW Post 8138 and American Legion Post 86 1st Wednesday, 6:30 p.m., Sisters City Hall. 541-903-1123. Weight Watchers Thursdays, 8:30 a.m. weigh-in, Sisters Community Church. 541-602-2654.
SCHOOLS Black Butte School Board of Directors 2nd Tuesday, 5 p.m., Black Butte School. 541-595-6203. Sisters Christian Academy Board of Directors 2nd Thursday, 8 a.m., RE/MAX office. 541-549-4133. Sisters School District Board of Directors One Wed. monthly, SSD Admin Bldg. See schedule online at www.ssd6.org. 541-549-8521 x5002. Sisters Middle School Parent Collaboration Team 1st Tuesday, 2 p.m., SMS. 541-610-9513.
CITY & PARKS Sisters City Council 2nd & 4th Wednesday, 6:30 p.m., Sisters City Hall. 541-549-6022. Sisters Park & Recreation District Board of Directors 1st & 3rd Tuesdays, 5:30 p.m., SPRD bldg. 541-549-2091. Sisters Planning Commission 3rd Thursday, 5:30 p.m., Sisters City Hall. 541-549-6022.
FIRE & POLICE Black Butte Ranch Police Dept. Board of Directors Meets monthly. 541-595-2191 for time & date. Black Butte Ranch RFPD Board of Directors 4th Thursday, 9 a.m., Black Butte Ranch Fire Station. 541-595-2288. Cloverdale RFPD Board of Directors 3rd Wed., 7 p.m., 67433 Cloverdale Rd. 541-548-4815. cloverdalefire.com. Sisters-Camp Sherman RFPD Board of Directors 3rd Tuesday, 5 p.m., Sisters Fire Hall, 541-549-0771. Sisters-Camp Sherman RFPD Drills Tuesdays, 7 p.m., Sisters Fire Hall, 301 S. Elm St. 541-549-0771. This listing is for regular Sisters Country meetings; email information to lisa@nuggetnews.com
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Antique and craft show draws a crowd Sisters Country birds By Douglas Beall
By Jodi Schneider
Correspondent
Correspondent
Swarms of people browsed through hand-crafted goodies and vintage trinkets at Sisters Arts and Crafts Festival and Antiques in the Park at Sisters Creekside Park for a weekend of rare finds. Wide assortments of collectible antiques were displayed by vendors from antique teakettles to vintage posters. Mixed in the huge treasure chest that spread across the park lawn were an array of crafts from infused glass to metal art. The combination of antiques and crafts together made for an eclectic show for people of all ages. Nearly 50 vendors filled their booths with artwork, jewelry, vintage furniture, and rare finds such as a 19th century gun case. Los Angeles native Katt Desehene and Katya Gogol from Russia are best friends and think of themselves as “Cosmic Twins,” which is the name of their handcrafted jewelry business. This was their second time participating in a craft show as artisans. “We met in Los Angeles where I was selling rocks and gems. Katt is a jewelry maker and works with a lot of copper,” Gogol said. “We decided to learn how to design both together.” Desehene added, “When we realized that we had so many similarities in common,
PHOTO BY JODI SCHNEIDER
Katt Desehene and Katya Gogl are starting a new company. The Sisters show was their second craft fair. we combined our skills and Margaret Meier drives from formed our company. I help her home in Fort Lauderdale, with the jewelry and the Florida to Sisters to sell her social media marketing side unique goods at this event. as well. We both contrib- She has been selling “Vintage ute to the company, and our Fabrics, Etc.” for 45 years. strengths and skills complePeople stopped by her ment each other really well.” booth searching through a The talented duo came to variety of vintage European check out Central Oregon and fabrics for just the right color found Sisters to be just what schemes. Meier also treks to the doctor ordered. Europe twice a year to buy Gogol noted, “We have only the best homegrown faba lot of appreciation for this rics to sell at shows all over pretty little town of Sisters. the nation. The locals seem to know She told The Nugget, a lot about gemstones and “They’re all spun and woven are very interested in our on farms in Europe, which craftsmanship.” means no chemicals or By 1 p.m. on Saturday the machine processes. I have park overflowed with people been collecting homespun and their canines carousing linens for years and have five through the show listening to warehouses full in Florida. classic rock tunes by live per- I lived in Europe in the late former Scott Brown. ’60s and then again in the Once a year textile dealer early ’80s.”
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Deschutes County Fair & Rodeo July 31-August 4
FREE FAIR SHUTTLE FROM SISTERS
PHOTO BY DOUGLAS BEALL
Prairie falcon.
Your Care would like you to meet
Dr. Clayton Reinhardt, DO
Your Care full-time doctor and Sisters resident, ready to take care of your medical needs.
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The prairie falcon (Falco mexicanus) breeds from southern British Columbia south to north-central Mexico and western Texas. It spends its winters within its breeding range, including Central Oregon and farther east into the Great Plains states. Their preferred habitats include dry plains, sagebrush, desolate mountains and prairies. Prairie falcons in summer eat mostly small mammals, particularly ground squirrels. They also eat pikas, birds, and insects. During courtship, the male and female spend a month or more visiting
potential nest sites together. The site they select is most often in a natural crevice, pothole, or ledge on a cliff or steep bluff, with an overhang to protect the nest. It often shares its nesting cliff with ravens, golden eagles, and red-tailed hawks. Two to six creamy white eggs are laid and incubated for 29-39 days, and the young leave the nest in approximately 45 days. The prairie falcon was first described in 1850 by Hermann Schlegel, a German ornithologist, and is similar in size to the peregrine falcon, 15 to 19 inches tall with a wingspan of 35 to 45 inches. A group of falcons are referred to as an “eyrie,” “tower,” “bazaar,” “stooping up,” or a “ringing up.” To view more images of the prairie falcon, visit http:// abirdsingsbecauseithasa song.com/recentjourneys.
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Sat., August 3, 7-9 p.m. Gabrial
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9:30 AM • 11:30 AM 4:30 PM (Not on Sunday)
SHUTTLE LEAVES COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS 3:30 PM 5:30 PM (Last bus on Sunday) 10:30 PM (Wednesday/Thursday) 11:30 PM (Friday/Saturday)
5 4 1 - 5 4 9 - 6 0 6 1 • 3 11 W. C A S C AD E AV E . • S I S T E R S , O R
Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
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Whispers from the past — Camp Sisters By Sue Stafford Correspondent
During the Great Depression of the 1930s, the Civilian Conservation Corps established Camp Sisters, Project F-110, Company #263, #1454, and #1648. The camp was located two miles upriver from Camp Sherman on the east bank of the Metolius River, in a meadow surrounded by ponderosa pine trees. It was a CCC camp from 1933-1942. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt created the CCC “for the relief of unemployment through the performance of useful public work” while preserving the nation’s natural resources. The projects mostly involved forestry, flood control, prevention of soil erosion, and fighting forest fires. CCC camps were located all over the country, employing unmarried young men between the ages of 17-24. Other than California, Oregon had the largest number of CCC camps west of the Mississippi. According to state records, in 1940 there were more than 2,000 men in Oregon CCC camps. While working mainly in rural areas, they helped build, improve, and restore the national forests and parks, and other public lands. They fought fires and removed beetle-kill trees, all the while developing selfconfidence, learning new skills, and providing income for their families. The CCC provided housing, food, clothing, and medical services, in addition to educational and vocational training. The young men served for six months to two years and earned $30 a month. In a period in the U.S. when the races were usually segregated, at the Oregon camps young black and white men all worked together. During the spring of 1933, the first company of workers arrived at the head of the Metolius River and constructed a summer camp, which was abandoned that fall. While there, they built several miles of forest roads, did a lot of hazard reduction, campground improvement, fire fighting, and other forest work. The following spring, 25 members from Company #1648 arrived to construct a permanent camp to replace the temporary one built the previous year. The camp consisted of buildings built
in a rectangle, including three barracks and a mess hall, with a kitchen at one end. In another building there were mechanic, carpentry, and sign shops. A separate garage housed the trucks. There were quarters for the Army officers who ran the camp, as well as Forest Service personnel. By fall and winter of 1934-35, a full company of 200 men was working at Camp Sisters. One of their major projects during that time period was controlling the pine beetle, which had infested approximately 127,000 acres of forest. From then on, companies arrived and left until 1942. During that time period, a number of Sisters residents were employed at the camp, teaching a variety of skills. One Sisters man in particular had a huge influence on the lives of the young men who passed through Camp Sisters. Sisters High School principal Lloyd B. Baker became the educational advisor at the camp in 1937, serving for about four years. His responsibilities included developing the educational program for the young men and securing teachers to staff the program. Baker was also in charge of the camp recreation program, and served as the company commander or his assistant when either was gone from camp. Baker also found himself in the classroom, helping boys with no formal education to learn reading, writing, and math. He also taught high school math and camp administration to key personnel. Another Sisters resident and Forest Service employee, Robert Wakefield, worked with boys in the carpenter’s shop, carving and painting signs, and building tables and benches for campgrounds. They even constructed a portable house on skids, in sections, complete with plumbing and wiring, to be used by the Forest Service during timber sales. Archie Brown, of Sisters, and other Forest Service personnel were assigned to Camp Sisters to work as instructors and foremen. They included Bes Estes, Ray Dempsey, Gilbert McCleary, Ray Moore, Keats Hunter, and Cleon Clark. Jonas Hammack, who later worked as an Oregon Highway District See CAMP SISTERS on page 23
Friday, August 2 through Sunday, August 4!
St. Helens Lean Ground Beef 80/20
1
Fryer Hind Quarters
67
Whole In-Bag Boneless New York Strips
¢
$ 99
/ lb.
7
$ 87
/ lb.
/ lb.
Sold in a 3-lb. chub; $5.97 ea.
Frozen or previously frozen. Sold in a 10-lb. bag; $6.70 ea.
Certified Angus Beef
Whole In-Bag Boneless Beef New York Strips
Whole In-Bag Beef Rib-Eyes
Southern Boneless Skinless Fryer Breasts
4
5
$ 99
/ lb.
Not Graded
Whole Boneless Pork Loin
1
/ lb.
Organic.
Certified Angus Beef Rib Eyes
9
$ 47
/ lb.
Whole in bag.
Value Pack No Roll New York Steaks
5
$ 99
/ lb.
Twin Pack Pork Shoulder Roasts
2
/ lb.
2
Whole Beef Tenderloins
1
$ 57
/ lb.
Whole In-Bag Beef Sirloin Tips
$ 77
Sold in a 10-lb. box.
/ lb.
Hill Brand Pork Link Sausages 5-lb. Box
77
/ ea.
VALUE PACK
Pork Steaks or Country Style Ribs
1
1
Certified Angus Beef
Value pack.
17
Bulk Sliced Bacon
$ 93
$ 58
$
/ lb.
$ 99
Draper Valley Fryer Wings or Drumsticks
1
/ lb.
Approx. 10-lb. bag.
Not Graded
Whole Boneless Pork Sirloins
$ 34
/ lb.
$ 78
/ lb.
Roxy Organic Fryer Wings or Drumsticks
$ 47
Not Graded
7
$ 87
1
1
$ 77
$ 99
/ lb.
/ lb.
Certified Angus Beef Boneless Top Round
3
$ 77
/ lb.
Certified Angus Beef Boneless Cross Rib Roast
3
$ 77
Whole in bag.
Value Pack No Roll Rib Eye Steaks
6
$ 99
/ lb.
Value Pack Top Round London Broil
4
$ 77
/ lb.
/ lb.
/ lb.
Whole in bag.
Value Pack Boneless Pork Loin Chops
2
$ 49
/ lb.
Fully Cooked Salad Shrimp Meat (2 lbs.)
$
1477
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Commentary...
Be alert to elder abuse — Part IV By Betsy Leighty-Johnson Correspondent
This is Part 4 of a multipart series on elder abuse awareness, intended to raise community awareness and to provide resources for individuals who are themselves vulnerable or are caregivers, family or friends of vulnerable people. The Oregon Department of Human Services (DHS) has Adult Protective Service (APS) offices statewide to coordinate and conduct abuse investigations and provide services to reports of neglect and abuse of vulnerable adults, including: adults over the age of 65, adults with physical and/or developmental disabilities, adults with mental illness, and children receiving residential treatment services. Verbal or emotional abuse is the second leading type of elder abuse in Oregon, representing 26 percent of all substantiated cases in 2017. Verbal/emotional abuse often coexists with other types of abuse including financial exploitation and physical abuse cases. DHS’ web page provides definitions and warning signs for the abuse of vulnerable adults. Verbal or emotional abuse includes threatening significant physical harm or threatening or causing significant emotional harm to an adult through the use of: derogatory or
inappropriate names, insults, verbal assaults, profanity, or ridicule; or harassment, coercion, threats, intimidation, humiliation, mental cruelty, or inappropriate sexual comments. Some of the warning signs of verbal or emotional abuse include: • Humiliating, insulting, or threatening language directed at the person. • Being emotionally upset or agitated. • Being extremely withdrawn and non-communicative or non-responsive. • Unusual behavior usually attributed to dementia (e.g., sucking, biting, rocking). • An adult’s report of being verbally or emotionally mistreated. Verbal and emotional abuse often takes the form of bullying and threats if the vulnerable person does (or does not) do something. An example would be if someone was to threaten or bully a vulnerable person into signing a document that would not be to the vulnerable person’s best interest “or else ...” Or, stating if the vulnerable person did (or did not) do something, they would be made miserable for the rest of their life. Or, stating if a vulnerable person does (or does not) do something, they will never see something important (i.e., their pet, grandchildren, or home) again.
Verbal and emotional abuse is particularly persistent in cases involving other types of abuse, such as physical or financial abuse, when the perpetrator tries to control the victim from reporting the abuse. Often, the victim is made to feel guilty or somehow responsible for the behavior and actions of the perpetrator such that the vulnerable person becomes a reluctant or unwilling participant in the abuse investigation. Physical abuse represents 15 percent of all substantiated abuse cases of Oregon’s vulnerable population in 2017 and is any physical injury to an adult caused by other than accidental means that may result in bodily injury, physical pain, or impairment. Some of the warning signs of physical abuse include: • Cuts, lacerations, punctures, wounds. • Bruises, welts, discolorations, grip marks. • Any unexplained injury
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of any age) is being abused, report it and let the authorities investigate. Protect any evidence you may have and call the toll-free abuse hotline at 800-503-SAFE or by calling local law enforcement in the county where the abuse occurred. If you report elder abuse in good faith, the law will protect you from being sued by the alleged abuser if you are mistaken. D r. B e t s y L e i g h t y Johnson has a PhD in Human Services with a specialization in Social and Community Services. In September 2014, the author and her husband discovered his (then) 96-year-old mother had been the victim of financial elder abuse. They were very involved in the collection of evidence assisting in the felony prosecution of the victim’s daughter for the crime. Since that time, the author has become an elder abuse advocate, currently assisting the Deschutes County District Attorney’s office with elder abuse cases.
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
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SPRD hires new executive director
PHOTO PROVIDED
Nina Walz, left, is shifting her career from the food services industry into wellness counseling.
Kiwanis grant helps woman change careers Sisters Kiwanis is helping a Sisters-area resident shift her career path. Sisters Kiwanis awards grants to Sisters-area adults who are seeking a career change or who wish to enhance their career opportunities. The program, known as the Kiwanis Career Opportunity Fund (COF) assists adults (25 or older) who are financially unable to return to school or retrain for a career change. In the last 10 years, since its inception, the fund has awarded more than $70,000 in assistance to help residents reach their educational goals. Nina Walz was the most recent recipient of a COF grant. She currently works in the food service industry and retail, but due to medical issues she needs to pursue another career avenue. She has chosen to pursue a degree toward becoming an Ayurvedic Wellness Counselor. This will involve both in-class and online classroom formats, with some travel involved. Once she has accomplished this educational goal, she will be able to employ Ayurvedic practices to determine a client’s body constitution, conduct consultations, give Ayurvedic guidance on daily routines and meditation, and offer advice on special
therapies and home remedies. The COF grant will provide some of the funds necessary for Walz to take this course beginning in fall 2019 through the Kerala Ayurveda program. Nina shared with Kiwanis that she enjoys Ayurveda’s emphasis on diet and lifestyle, and sees this career of helping others as a positive step in influencing positive change in our community. The Kiwanis Career Opportunity Fund is designed to provide assistance to start, augment or complete a career that may include vocational, technical, artistic or general fields of study. Funds are available to qualified residents within the Sisters community regardless of age, gender, disability, marital status, race or current occupation. Kiwanis does not set limitations on potential use of the award. COF applications are available on the Kiwanis website: www.sisterskiwanis.org/ about-us/career-opportunityfund; at the Sisters Habitat for Humanity office, from Family Access Network, or by calling 541-410-2870. Kiwanis is actively seeking applicants for COF grants. To donate to the COF, make checks payable to Sisters Kiwanis COF and post to Sisters Kiwanis, P.O. Box 1296, Sisters, OR 97759.
The Sisters Park & Recreation District (SPRD) Board of Directors announced last week that Jennifer Holland of Springfield will serve as the organization’s executive director . In April, the board received 19 applications for the open executive director position. Holland applied at the time but withdrew her candidacy due to an illness in the family. The board reported that when that process did not yield a new executive director, the board reached out to Holland to ask if she would reconsider her decision to withdraw. In May, Holland visited the District for interviews with the board, community partners, and staff. According to SPRD, everyone involved in the process, including Holland, thought she would be a good fit for the position and Sisters Country. Board President Jeff Tryens said, “the board is thrilled that Jennifer has agreed to lead our team. Our 18-month journey in search of a new executive director has culminated in finding someone who is superbly qualified to take SPRD to a new level of service to the community.” Holland has been employed with Willamalane Park and Recreation in Springfield, Oregon for 17 years, most recently as the program manager of the Bob Keefer Center for Sports and Recreation. While at Willamalane, Holland’s accomplishments included increasing youth
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programming by developing and maintaining community partnerships, reducing the reliance of subsidy for program and facility operations and executing many successful community events. Jennifer’s son, Cal, will be entering sixth grade at Sisters Middle School and enjoys baseball, video games, and spending time with his dog, Griffin. “I am so honored to be given the opportunity to lead Sisters Park & Recreation District,” Holland said. “Cal and I consider ourselves very lucky to be moving to such a warm and welcoming community.”
PHOTO PROVIDED
Jennifer Holland has signed on to lead SPRD.
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Appaloosa to pony up the tunes at Fir Street Park By T. Lee Brown Correspondent
A pickup truck full of used music gear. A love of the high desert landscape. A guitar class at SPRD. These three elements were crucial to the formation of Appaloosa, a lively Americana act playing a free show in Sisters this Sunday. Dottie Ashley and her husband, Eli Ashley, retired from their careers about seven years ago. Dottie told The Nugget, “Eli said, ‘You know, I think we should play music,’ and I thought it was a big joke. Then he came home from Olympia, Washington with a pickup full of used gear. I realized he was serious!” They took a beginning guitar class at Sisters Park & Recreation District, taught by Brent Allen. They found that songwriting was “easy, super fun, and wonderful for us.” One of their classmates was Katy Yoder, a local writer and singer. One day, Yoder was talking about playing at a My Own Two Hands (MOTH) event. “We had done quite a bit of work for Sisters Folk Festival and My Own Two Hands, as pro bono volunteers,” Dottie explained. Both she and Eli had marketing experience; they donated their time to the festival for that along with emceeing various stages.
“So I just horned on in,” Dottie said, laughing. “Katy said, ‘Of course you can play!’ That was six or seven MOTHs ago.” Appaloosa has been playing ever since. Said Dottie, “Sisters was inclusive of us even though we lived down the road a ways.” Appaloosa members call their music High Desert Americana, “harking back to a Hank Williams sound, pre-Nashville in the fifties.” Dottie said, “We grew up in the ‘60s with the folk music scene. I remember Mother bringing in Willie Nelson and Joan Baez and Bob Dylan.” Dottie came to love the California Country style of the Laurel Canyon scene in the late 1960s and early ’70s. Eli, meanwhile, lived in the town of Woodstock, New York. “He lived in there during Woodstock,” she said, referring to the famed festival. “And so he had a much more electric vibe. The Band lived there. He brings that element to our sound.” Prolific songwriters, the Ashleys have penned well over 100 songs and produced several CDs. Sometimes they play as a duo. Other times a full band rounds out their sound. The Ashleys write their songs separately, then come together to work out arrangements and harmonies. “Because we have two songwriters in the band and
we’re really versatile in the stories we tell,” Dottie said. She characterized some songs as “hard-driving, socially driven, and conscious.” Disheartened by the divisive political landscape, Ashley said, “We’re doing everything we can as individuals to keep everything hopeful and healthy and alive and wonderful.” They write plenty of yarnspinnin’ tunes of a lighthearted nature. Women who like trucks? Appaloosa has written about one. Trains? Gambling? Whisky? All accounted for. Babysitters who run away to take LSD? They’ve got that covered, too. “We also write enduring love songs, broken-hearted love songs, best-friend love songs, everyday songs,” Dottie added. The Ashleys consider themselves to be of the troubadour lineage. “We’re really organic, intimate storytellers first,” Dottie said. Both Ashleys honed their skills at the Sisters Folk Festival’s songwriting camp. Dottie described it as “an incredible, nurturing, loving, wonderful environment. Jeffrey Martin was my mentor. He made me feel like what I was doing had potential and was worthwhile. It gave me a great leg up.” A fifth-generation Oregonian who grew up in Portland, Dottie has spent
PHOTO BY JERRY BALDOCK
Appaloosa brings their High Desert Americana music to Sisters. time in Sisters since childhood. She went to Camp Tamarack as a camper, then worked there. “So I always had Central Oregon in my blood,” she said. The couple moved to land near Bend in the early 2000s. “We’re out in the land and we can see 360 degrees around us,” Dottie said. “I don’t think these songs would have ever come into being if we still lived in Tacoma, Washington.” Despite the pressure of population growth, she said of Central Oregon, “It still is really God’s country, the
country of Mother Nature. We’re still so fortunate and lucky to have this beauty of nature around us.” Dottie injured her arm, thrown off her horse when he spooked recently. They’ll still play their scheduled set at the Farmers Market. She recounts, “The first thing I said was, ‘Don’t worry, Eli, I can still hold a pick.’ I couldn’t stand up or anything, but I could still hold a pick!” Appaloosa plays multiple sets at the Songbird Stage at Fir Street Park throughout the market day on August 4. Admission is free.
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
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Sisters grad operates ‘Hopservatory’ By Ceili Cornelius Correspondent
Grant Tandy, a Sisters High School graduate, is the manager at the Worthy Brewing Company “Hopservatory” in Bend. The observatory contains a 16-inch reflecting telescope, a Ritchey-Chrétien reflector made by RC Optical systems. The scope is a research-grade telescope capable of viewing planets and galaxies that are far away. Tandy graduated from Sisters High School in 2011 and attended COCC for two years and obtained general education requirements while trying to figure out what he wanted to do. He always had a fascination for the night sky and viewing the stars. “Growing up in Sisters with dark starry skies triggered my interest in astronomy. I was always a curious kid wondering how things worked, and astronomy was an interest for me,” said Tandy. He took Rima Givot’s astronomy class in high school as well as IEE (Interdisciplinary Environmental Expedition) and was grateful for the opportunities brought forth by IEE, being a hands-on learning program focused on the outdoors. Tandy got his astronomy and telescope training from Oregon Observatory manager Bob Grossfield. Tandy worked for the observatory in Sunriver while living in Bend after going to COCC. “I learned everything from working at the observatory under Grossfield, who has multiple PHDs. I was more working on the side of speaking to the public about astronomy versus the research aspect of astronomy, which was Grossfield’s area as a physicist,” said Tandy. Ever since his high school days, it was in the back of
Tandy’s mind that he wanted to work in an observatory. “I loved the idea of looking at the stars and getting paid for it,” he said. “I never cared about a degree, I just care about being able to inspire and educate people about the sky.” The Oregon Observatory hosted many school events and Tandy loved seeing the inspiration on kids’ faces. “I get cute letters back from kids saying they want to be scientists when they grow up; it is great to plant that seed,” he said. Tandy explained that astronomy is a sort of gateway science and it is fun to be the one explaining the sky to the public, and locally affecting people. “I like to talk to the public about the sky, and it is fun to talk about something I am passionate about and learn from the people around me all the time,” he said. The idea for the Hopservatory came about when Rodger Worthington, owner of Worthy Brewing Company, was inspired by events at the Oregon Observatory. The Garden Club, the sustainability center and 501 nonprofit foundation at Worthy Brewing operates the Hopservatory, which Tandy now manages. The Garden Club is separate from the brewery itself, and rents out space and runs off donations as a nonprofit while working in conjunction with the Oregon Observatory. Tandy heard the idea for the “Hopservatory” coming about and started emailing the managers at Worthy and the Garden Club to try and get the job running the observatory, based off his knowledge and experience at the Oregon Observatory. “The event at Stars over Newberry Crater is where I met Rodger and got him inspired, and we started talking
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and our ideas for an observatory aligned and we got the donations for the equipment and came up with the idea for the observatory as part of the garden club,” said Tandy. A few months later, the Hopservatory, three stories above Worthy Brewery, became a reality, opening in May 2017. Tandy runs the events and viewings five days a week at the observatory. He works split shifts where he comes into the brewery in the late day and begins figuring out what is visible on a given day and what he may show for the evening. Tandy also plans events for the garden club and works on promotional materials and event planning for the club as well as the Hopservatory. Then, in the evening, announces to guests that the observatory is open for viewing. “I guide guests who come up as to what we are looking at on the given night and explain the details of the telescope, and that it can look into deep space and what is visible to us,” he said. As stated on their website and reiterated by Tandy: “The Worthy Garden Club Hopservatory opened in May of 2017 with the goal of raising scientific literacy and educating our visitors about big and unwieldy concepts like scale, size, time, distance, and speed in our solar system and beyond. We want people to be amazed and humbled by the beauty and diversity of
PHOTO BY CEILI CORNELIUS
Grant Tandy helped develop and now operates the “Hopservatory” at Worthy Brewing Co. in Bend. our galactic garden as well as inspired to take care of our own planet.” The Hopservatory is open Wednesday through Sunday from 8 to 11 p.m., with a
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Sisters man presents paper in Iceland By Jim Anderson Correspondent
PHOTO BY DOUG WILTSHIRE
The ancient art of stone carving will be on display at Suttle Lake.
Stone carvers gather at Suttle Lake By Kathryn Godsiff Correspondent
There aren’t many permits being issued these days for the construction of vast cathedrals made of stone. There is, however, a need for skilled stone sculptors to do repairs on existing buildings around the world. And as the world watches the revival of the cathedral at Notre Dame, the focus will be on the artisans who bring it back to its former glory. The United Methodist Suttle Lake Camp is set be the site of a gathering of stone carvers from the Northwest and beyond during the week of August 11. Organized by the Northwest Stone Sculptors Association, Oregon’s 25th Annual International Stone Carving Symposium is in its fifth year at the camp. It is a week of education, skill building, fellowship and ideas exchange. Participants and instructors hail from the Pacific Northwest, Canada, California, and from as far away as Norway and Iraq. The symposium isn’t limited to experienced carvers. The NWSSA raises funds each year for scholarships for aspiring and student stone carvers. Novices are welcome to attend the event and tools are available for those who don’t have their own. There is a meditative aspect to stone carving, despite the power tools and dust and scale of some of the pieces being created. During the symposium, the artists work outdoors, taking them out of their studios and into a collaborative, energetic experience. “Stone carving is a subtractive method of sculpture,”
said Doug Wiltshire, symposium director. “We find the sweet spot in stone by removing stone. And I think there’s going to be a resurgence of interest in what we do.” The public is welcome to visit the symposium and see the carvers’ work on Saturday, August 17 from 1 to 5 p.m. The area near the lower parking area will have the projects on display. To get to the Suttle Lake Camp, head west toward Salem and turn left at the signs to the Suttle Lake Resort and campgrounds. The camp is on the left past the resort and there will be signs for the NWSSA Symposium. For more information, go to www.nwssa.org.
Ron Thorkildson, Sisters’ local weather guru, and his wife, Sharon, recently took a trip to Iceland, where Ron presented a scientific paper on structural icing. Living here in Sisters Country, ice on structures is not an uncommon phenomenon, but it is also something Thorkildson confronted throughout almost his entire professional life. Thorkildson was employed with the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) as an environmental engineer, and icing of the lines and towers that carried the electric energy generated by BPA could become a serious hazard. “My paper was about the formation of radiation fog in the Columbia Basin of Central Washington that can lead to accumulations of rime ice that can damage electrical transmission line towers and other structures,” Thorkildson explained. “My knowledge of this phenomenon was gained when I investigated line outages in this area while working for the Bonneville Power Administration, the federal agency responsible for distributing electrical power throughout the Northwest.” The conference was held June 24-28 under the auspices of the International Workshops on Atmospheric Icing of Structures (IWAIS). About his calling today as the weatherman of Sisters, he said, “My fascination with weather comes
honestly. The Bergen school of Meteorology, founded in 1917 in Bergen, Norway b y Vi l h e l m B j e r k n e s , Tor Bergeron, and other Scandinavian scientists, did groundbreaking work in early development of numerical weather forecasting in the 1940s and 1950s. I still remember learning about some of their achievements, with a touch of shameless pride, as part of my atmospheric science curriculum at Oregon State University.” His interest in visiting Iceland went way beyond that of an engineer wanting to further the knowledge of structural icing — or just being an average tourist. He was and is always interested in finding out more about his Scandinavian ancestry. Although his grandfather immigrated to America from Norway in 1900, Ron notes that his surname is said to have originated in Iceland. From about 800 to 1200 AD Vikings often traveled between the two countries, establishing/sharing ethnic customs. And indeed, while visiting Iceland Ron discovered there are many variations of “Thorkildson” in Reykjavik. While there, he and Sharon decided to take a restaurant walking tour. The name of their tour guide was Thor, his dad’s first name. This discovery led Ron to share this quip: “If I ever get in trouble with the law, my best bet might be to flee to Reykjavik. They’d never find me there; it would be like looking for a ‘Smith’ here.”
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PHOTO PROVIDED
Ron Thorkildson and his wife, Sharon, visiting the grand statue of Ron’s famous Nordic ancestor, Leif Erikson in Reykjavik, Iceland. Sharon and Ron left on their journey on Friday afternoon, June 21 from PDX, and arrived in Reykjavik the next morning. Upon their arrival, they participated in two tours; a driving tour of the city Saturday afternoon, and a walking restaurant tour on Sunday, led by Thor.
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
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Hoodoo Challenge has record turnout the half marathon, Ryan Bak, 37, arrived at the bottom of Hoodoo simultaneously and, though in different categories, raced to the top in the true spirit of competition. Bak captured the title in the half marathon by just over 10 minutes with a time of 1 hour 31 minutes and 25 seconds, an impressive time on a tough course. Singleton crossed the line as the winner of the 5k in 33:41, a testament to the challenge of the final mile of the race. Kevin Cave came through as the runner-up in the half marathon with a time of 1:41:33, and Kirby Garlitz finished third overall in 1:45:36. The top local finishers were brothers Jadon and Asher Bachtold, who finished together in 1:52:28 in seventh and eighth place respectively. Perhaps the most impressive performance of the day came from Lynette Patterson, 64, who finished first among women with a time of 1:55:49, which was 30 seconds ahead of Patti Mode (1:56:18) and two minutes ahead of Whitney Rich (1:57:50). As individual winners, Bak
By Charlie Kanzig Correspondent
The 2019 edition of the Sisters Kiwanis Run to the Top Hoodoo Challenge trail race held Saturday, July 27 had the best turnout in the event’s three-year history under nearly perfect conditions. Course designer Eugene Trahern made adjustments to both the 5K and half marathon (13.1-mile) courses this year. Both courses started in the Hoodoo parking lot and finished at the top of Hoodoo Butte giving the competitors and both races the opportunity to climb the steep road to the top. The half marathon started in the cool of the morning at 8 a.m. sharp, and included 65 total finishers among the 81 who originally entered, while the 5-kilometer race began an hour later. The half-marathon included mostly dirt roads and passed near Island Lake, Link Lake and Sand Camp Lake. Total elevation gain of the course totaled 1,920 feet. As it turned out the leader of the 5K, Ryan Singleton, 47, of Sisters, and the leader of
PHOTO BY JEFF OMODT
Runners had a choice of a 5K or half-marathon distance in the grueling Hoodoo Challenge. and Patterson received season passes to Hoodoo for next season. Eric Liddell of Sisters took second overall in the 5-kilometer race (39:36) with Eric Davis just a step behind in 39:39 for third. Colleen Oliver, 33, the first female, reached the summit five seconds later in fourth place overall in 39:44. Heather Beyel (40:04) and Tamara Zelen (41:32) rounded out the top three, finishing fifth and seventh respectively. After completing the courses runners had to hike their way back down the mountain, but the Sisters Kiwanis
club made all the effort worth it with a generous barbecue lunch along with cold drinks down at the Hoodoo lodge. Matt Kirchoff served as race director and reported that with all the volunteer support
from the club, the event came off “flawlessly.” Proceeds of the race help support services and scholarships offered by the Sisters Kiwanis Club, according to member Suzy Ramsey.
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CRS, Broker, Realtor Emeritus 40+ Years
Shane Lundgren 541-588-9226 Broker
Debbie Dyer 541-480-1650 GRI, Broker
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Greg Davidge 808-281-2676 Broker
Jackie Herring 541-480-3157 Broker
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
A N N O U N C E M E N T S Country Fair and Art Show
The Country Fair & Art Show includes an art show and sale, silent auctions, music, food, homemade marionberry cobbler, games, bouncy house, animals, cake walks, face painting, country store, book sale and more. Free admission! All proceeds are donated to local community support agencies. Art show/artists’ reception is Friday, August 9 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m; art show and country fair on Saturday, August 10 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Held at the Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration at the corner of Hwy 242 and Brooks Camp Road. For information call 541-549-7087.
TH THIS HIS WEEK WEEK’S S
Highlights Thursday, August 1 River Rats Social Group 5 p.m. at Three Creeks Brewing
Friday, August 2 Starshine Kids Performance 3 p.m. at Fir Street Park Saturday, August 3 Friends of Metolius Walk 10 a.m. in Camp Sherman
Quilt Fundraiser for FFF
This year’s fabulous fundraising Calling all River Rats quilt for Furry Friends Foundation, Join other river rats at Three designed & quilted by Valerie Creeks Brewing on Thursday, Fercho-Tillery, is on display on August 1 at 5 p.m. to talk rafting, Tuesdays and Thursdays, from 11 rivers, paddling, and all other a.m. to 2 p.m. at 204 W. Adams river running adventures. Casual Ave. Ste. 109. Purchase tickets conversation, no “club” stuff, no at the office or online at www. volunteers needed. Contact Kathy furryfriendsfoundation.org for at 541-912-0750. $1, 6 for $5, or 25 for $20. Info: Crafters Wanted 541-797-4023 or email info@ Share your creativity! Qualityfurryfriendsfoundation.org. oriented crafters are being sought Music in the Garden as consigners for the 44th Annual An evening of free music from the Snowflake Boutique (November 1 local group Skillethead will be held & 2). Jury will be Saturday, August in the stunning mountain-view 10 at 9:30 a.m. at Highland Baptist location of the Sisters Community Church, Redmond. Info at www. Garden on Monday, August 12 snowflakeboutique.org, or call from 6 to 8 p.m. Light snacks Randi 541-788-4452, Jan 541-350and lemonade will be provided, 4888 or Tina 541-447-1640. or you can also bring an item to share. BYOB. Some seating will be CarFit Event AARP and Sisters-Camp Sherman available, but bringing your own Fire District are sponsoring chair is good idea. Bring a nona CarFit event for drivers on perishable item to benefit Sisters Kiwanis Food Bank, and monetary Saturday, August 10 from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Sisters-Camp Sherman donations will benefit Sisters Fire Station. Find out how the Habitat for Humanity. For more fit of your vehicle affects your info call Lisa at 541-390-9025. driving. Trained technicians will Sisters Garden Club make individual adjustments to The next meeting of the Sisters find the best person-to-vehicle fit. Garden Club is at 9:30 a.m. on These adjustments will help you Saturday, August 10 at Sisters City benefit from your vehicle’s safety Hall. Rick Martinson of Winter features by helping you feel more Creek Nursery will present “Native comfortable and in better control Plants in your Garden.” All are behind the wheel. Event is by welcome! For more information appointment only. To schedule an call 541-549-6390 or go to appointment contact Sharon at sistersgardenclub.com. 541-390-6075.
Talk With A Ranger
Join Discover Your Forest and U.S. Forest Service rangers in an informative talk about current happenings in the Sisters Ranger District on Thursday, August 8 at 6:30 p.m. at the East Portal Community Labyrinth. After a 30-minute talk, you are encouraged to ask questions about the topic of the night, “Restoration Work on the Forest.” Free to the public! Please bring camping chairs for comfort. Info: 541-383-5572.
World’s Children Speaker
Sisters nonprofit World’s Children is offering a speaker for your club, church group or classroom. Topics include street children in developing countries; child trafficking; and child marriage. Each talk is given with a PowerPoint presentation that explains why these issues exist in developing countries and what can be done about them. For more information call 541-904-0789 or email info@ worldschildren.org.
Friends of Metolius Walk
Parkinson’s Benefit Hike
Saturday, August 3 from 10 a.m. to noon, enjoy a free interpretive walk along the Metolius River with amateur botanist David Miller. Learn to identify plants, trees and shrubs. Walk is approximately 2 miles. Children are welcome, but please, no dogs. Meet near the Camp Sherman Bridge fish viewing platform. For more information please call 541550-1441.
Join Hiking Sisters & Misters on August 10 on a hike to raise awareness of Parkinson’s disease’s impact on women and to benefit Parkinson’s Resources of Oregon. The hike will be to Moraine Lake on the South Sister. Register and donate at www. parkinsonsresources.donordrive. com/index.cfm. Info: 630-564-2624.
Starshine Kids Performance
Weekly on Wednesdays at 4 p.m. at 737 E. Black Butte Ave. For more information please email Kathyn at Katindahood2@gmail.com.
Enjoy a delightful original play performed by kids ages 8-13 on the Songbird Stage at Fir Street Park on Friday, August 2 at 3 p.m. For more information call 541-645-0688.
Free Astronomy Lecture cture
Sisters Astronomy Club and Sisters Park & Recreation District present a public lecture by Professor Shane Larson n of Northwestern University: y: “Feeling Small in a Big Cosmos.” osmos.” Dr. Larson will talk aboutt how our understanding of the universe has expanded ed with time, and how we came to understand our place in it. There is no charge arge to attend and this presentation ntation is suitable for all ages. Saturday, August 10, from 2 to 3 p.m. in the Sisters Library meeting room For more information contact Jim Hammond, drjhammond@ oldshoepress.com, 541-617-1086.
Tai Chi/Balance Sessions
Free Tai Chi/Balance Classes based on the CDC “Steadi” Program to reduce injuries and falls in our community are being sponsored by Sisters Drug. Taught by Shannon Rackowski every Thursday from 11-11:30 a.m. (except holidays) at the SPRD Fitness Room next to Sisters High School. Open to all ages. For info: 541-549-6221.
Thich Nhat Hahn Sangha Meditation Group
PET OF THE WEEK Humane Society of Central Oregon 541-382-3537
The second Tuesday of each month, Sisters Parkinson’s Support Group meets at The Lodge in Sisters from 2 to 3:30 p.m. All are welcome to learn, share, and receive support. For more info contact Carol at 541668-6599.
Sisters Newcomers Club
A Newcomers’ Club specific to Sisters-area new residents is starting up! Call Karee at 541-719-0050.
Sisters Library coming events com
Use handheld ha paper punches, stamps, stamps stickers, flowers, and more to embellish handmade cards oon Tuesday, August 6 at noon aat the Sisters Library. Call 541-312-1032 for more info. 541-312
FFamily Fa mi Fun Story Time
Meet WHITE S SHADOW! O This beautiful girl is a black-and-white domestic shorthair who is just two years old. White Shadow loves chin rubs, sitting in laps, laying in beds, and purring the day away. She may also really enjoy the company of respectable dogs. She is looking for a family where she will remain an indoor-only kitty as this is what she is most comfortable with! Come meet White Shadow today! SPONSORED BY
PONDEROSA PROPERTIES, LLC 541-549-2002 800-650-6766
Alexis van der Velde and Taylor Geraths announce they are to wed in Bend, Oregon on January 4, 2020. Alexis is the daughter of Christiaan and Erin van der Velde of Bend, Oregon. She graduated from both Sisters High School and Oregon State University and works as a project manager at Tetherow. Taylor is the son of Richard and Alison Geraths of Sisters, Oregon. The groom is also a Sisters High School graduate and owns and operates a fly-fishing outfit, Taylor Made Outfitters on the Deschutes and Grande Ronde rivers.
SISTERS-AREA CHURCHES Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church (ELCA) 386 N. Fir Street • 541-549-5831 10 a.m. Sunday Worship shepherdofthehillslutheranchurch.com Sisters Community Church (Nondenominational) 1300 W. McKenzie Hwy. • 541-549-1201 10 a.m. Sunday Worship (with signing) sisterschurch.com | info@sisterschurch.com St. Edward the Martyr Roman Catholic Church 123 Trinity Way • 541-549-9391 5:30 p.m. Saturday Vigil Mass 9 a.m. Sunday Mass 8 a.m. Monday-Friday Mass Calvary Chapel (Nondenominational) 484 W. Washington St., Ste. C & D • 541-588-6288 10 a.m. Sunday Worship The Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration 68825 Brooks Camp Road • 541-549-7087 8:30 a.m. Ecumenical Sunday Worship (Sunday school, childcare) 10:15 a.m. Episcopal Sunday Worship (Sunday school, childcare)
A free support group for caregivers of those suffering with Alzheimer’s or other forms of dementia takes place the first Tuesday of each month from noon to 1:30 p.m. at Sisters City Hall. Sponsored by the Alzheimer’s Association, meetings provide emotional, educational, and social support. Call 800-2723900 or go to alz.org/oregon.
Know Pressure – Hand Handmade Cards
engagement announcement
Parkinson’s Support Group
Dementia Caregivers Group
Chapel in the Pines Camp Sherman • 541-549-9971 10 a.m. Sunday Worship Sisters Church of the Nazarene 67130 Harrington Loop Road • 541-389-8960 | sistersnaz.org 10:45 a.m. Sunday Worship | 2sistersnaz@gmail.com Westside Sisters 442 Trinity Way • 541-549-4184 | westsidesisters.org 9 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. Sunday Worship Vast Church (Nondenominational) 1700 W. McKinney Butte (Sisters High School) • 541-719-0587 9:37 a.m. Sunday Worship | vastchurch.com Seventh-Day Adventist Church 386 N. Fir Street • 541-595-6770, 541-306-8303 11 a.m. Saturday Worship The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints 452 Trinity Way • Branch President, 541-420-5670; 10 a.m. Sunday Sacrament Meeting Baha’i Faith Meetings Devotional Gatherings, Study Classes and Discussion Groups. Call for location and times • 541-549-6586
FFamily Fa ami Fun Story Time for kids ages a birth through 5 takes place at the Sisters Library on Thursdays, August 1, 8 and 15 from 10:30 to 11 a.m., with songs, rhymes and crafts, all designed to grow young readers. Caregivers must attend. Info: 541-617-7078.
Project Constellation
Calling all stargazers ages 6 to 11. Discover the stories behind the stars that map the night sky at 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday, August 7 at Sisters Library. No registration required. Call 541617-7078 for more information.
Universe of Crafts
All ages are welcome to join this journey around the world and into space through stories and crafts at 10 a.m. on Saturday, August 10 at Sisters Library. No registration required. Call 541617-7078 for more information.
Pajama Story Time
Stories and activities aimed at the early learning needs of birth to 5-year-olds. Pajamas optional! Sisters Library on Tuesday, August 13 at 6 p.m. No registration required. Info: 541617-7078.
The Nonfiction Book Club Read and discuss “West with the Night” by Beryl Markham with other readers at the Sisters Library on Thursday, August 15 at1 p.m. Info: 541-617-7078.
Yoga Nidra Workshop & Meditation
Kathy Durham will guide participants in meditation to aid insomnia, anxiety and other issues on Friday, August 16 at noon at the Sisters Library. Call 541-312-1063 for more info.
Ready for Kindergarten
A special storytime just for children entering kindergarten will include songs, crafts and more. Thursday, August 29 at 1:30 p.m. No registration required. Call 541-617-7078 for more info.
POLICY: Business items do not run on this page. Nonprofits, schools, churches, birth, engagement, wedding and anniversary notices may run at no charge. All submissions are subject to editing and run only as space allows. Email lisa@nuggetnews.com or drop off at 442 E. Main Ave. Your text must include a “for more information” phone number. Deadline is noon, Mondays.
Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
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Astronomy Club talk confronts vastness of cosmos Standing in a dark country meadow, staring up at a sky full of stars and the diaphanous glow of the Milky Way arching overhead, it is easy to feel small. Staring at pictures from the Hubble Space Telescope, it is easy to be stunned by the effortless beauty of the cosmos. Faced with the knowledge that our planet is only one small speck among a hundred billion galaxies and a billiontrillion stars, it is easy to feel insignificant. Shane Larson understands the feeling. Larson is a research associate professor of physics at Northwestern University, where he is the Associate Director of CIERA (Center for Interdisciplinary Exploration and Research in Astrophysics). He works in the field of gravitational wave astrophysics, specializing in studies of compact stars, binaries, and the galaxy. He works in gravitational wave astronomy with both the ground-based LIGO project, and the future spacebased detector LISA. “…We live at a unique moment in human history,” Larson says. “We are the first humans to ever see a picture of the Earth, hanging against the darkness of the night. We are the first humans to ever
LIVE MUSIC! 9pm•SAT, AUG. 3
APPETITE for DECEPTION A Tribute to GUNS N’ ROSES
bendticket.com for tickets or purchase at Hardtails
know what lies on the surface of Mars, or behind the thick fog of Titan’s clouds. We are the first humans to ever know that we are deeply connected to the stars themselves. It is easy to forget how hard it was to win that knowledge.” Sisters Astronomy Club will present a public lecture on this topic by Professor Larson in the Sisters Public Library meeting room at 2 p.m., Saturday, August 10. Larson grew up in eastern Oregon, and was an undergraduate at Oregon State University where he received his B.S. in Physics in 1991. He received a Ph.D. in theoretical physics (1999) from Montana State University. He
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Dennis McGregor & The Spoilers
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August 23 Cuppa Joe August 30 Brent Alan
& His Funky Friends
$5 cover. Supervised children welcome.
121 W. Main Ave., Sisters | 7 pm | Beer • Wine • Food
in the backyard
Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Night! 9 p.m. Every Wednesday, no cover! For additional information call 541549-6114 or go to hardtailsoregon.com. Food Cart Garden at Eurosports Trivia Night 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Sign up by 6:15 p.m. For additional information call Eurosports at 541-549-2471. Sisters Saloon Poker Night 7 p.m. Every Wednesday! $20. For information call 541-549-7427 or go to sisterssaloon.net.
Fir Street Park Live Music with Town Mountain 6:30 p.m. Sisters Folk Festival Free Summer Concert Series.Bring AUG a chair or blanket. Information: 541-549-4979. 1 Cork Cellars Tasty Thursday Hosted Wine Tasting THUR 5 to 7 p.m. For additional information call 541-549-2675 or go online to corkcellarswinebistro.com. The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse Wine Tasting 5 to 7 p.m. Free and open to everyone 21+. For additional info call 541-638-7001 or go to thesuttlelodge.com. Sisters Saloon Karaoke Night 9 p.m. to midnight. Every Thursday, no cover! For additional information call 541-549-7427 or go to sisterssaloon.net.
hardtailsoregon.com
7 PM
PHOTO PROVIDED
Professor Shane Larson will talk about how our understanding of the universe has expanded over time. universe has expanded with time, and how we came to understand our place in it.” For more information
on the program contact Jim Hammond at 541-6171086 or drjhammond@ oldshoepress.com
Entertainment & Events
175 N. Larch St. 1 t.
SUMMER MUSIC
is an award-winning teacher, and a Fellow of the American Physical Society. He currently lives in the Chicago area with his wife, daughter and cats. He contributes regularly to a public science blog at writescience.wordpress.com, and tweets with the handle @sciencejedi. “We are stardust, wrought into complex machines of atoms that are capable of pondering the Universe itself,” Larson notes. “When faced with the cosmic vastness, it is easy to forget how awesome it is that we can understand — that is the hallmark of our relationship with the cosmos. In this chat, we’ll talk about how our understanding of the
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The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse Live Music with Austin Miller & Kelli Schaefer 6 to 8 p.m. Big Lawn Music series with food & beverages for purchase. For additional info call 541-638-7001 or go to thesuttlelodge.com. Angeline’s Live Music with Dennis McGregor and the Spoilers 7 p.m. Summer music in the backyard. $5 cover. For additional information call 541-549-9122. Food Cart Garden at Eurosports Live Music with Paul Eddy Duo 5 to 7 p.m. Dogs, children & adults all welcome! For information call Eurosports at 541-549-2471. Hardtails Bar & Grill DJK9 Rawkstar Karaoke Night! 9 p.m. Every Friday, no cover! For additional information call 541-549-6114 or go to hardtailsoregon.com.
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Seed to Table Farm Community Pizza on the Farm 4 to 7 p.m. Boone Dog Pizza with farm fresh ingredients, Kids’ farm olympics and live music. Visit seedtotableoregon.org for info. Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Night! 9 p.m. Every Wednesday, no cover! For additional information call 541549-6114 or go to hardtailsoregon.com. Food Cart Garden at Eurosports Trivia Night 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Sign up by 6:15 p.m. For additional information call Eurosports at 541-549-2471. Sisters Saloon Poker Night 7 p.m. Every Wednesday! $20. For information call 541-549-7427 or go to sisterssaloon.net.
Village Green Park SPRD Hawaiian Luau 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Full Hawaiian dinner menu and live music. $15 for AUG adults, $5 for kids. For information call 541-549-2091 or 8 email Shannon@sistersrecreation.com. THUR Cork Cellars Tasty Thursday Hosted Wine Tasting 5 to 7 p.m. For additional information call 541-549-2675 or go online to corkcellarswinebistro.com. The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse Wine Tasting 5 to 7 p.m. Free and open to everyone 21+. For additional info call 541-638-7001 or go to thesuttlelodge.com. Sisters Saloon Karaoke Night 9 p.m. to midnight. Every Thursday, no cover! For additional information call 541-549-7427 or go to sisterssaloon.net.
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Hardtails Bar & Grill Live Music with Appetite for Deception 9 p.m. Guns n’ Roses tribute band. For additional information call 541-549-6114 or go to hardtailsoregon.com. Cork Cellars Live Music with Gabrial 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. No cover! For information call 541-549-2675 or go online to corkcellarswinebistro.com. Fir Street Park Sisters Farmers Market 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Every Sunday: fresh local produce, lunch, live music, & yoga. Call 503-997-0301 or go to sistersfarmersmarket.com. Sisters Saloon Open Mic Night 8 to 11 p.m. For additional information call 541-549-7427 or go to sisterssaloon.net. Hardtails Bar & Grill Open Mic & Jam Night 7 p.m. Every Monday, no cover! For information call 541-549-6114 or go to hardtailsoregon.com. Paulina Springs Books Music, Storytelling & Poetry Open Mic 6 p.m. First Monday of every month. For information call 541-549-0866.
Sisters Saloon Trivia Night 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Sign-up is at 6:15 p.m. Free, every Tuesday! For additional information call 541-549-7427 or go to sisterssaloon.net.
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Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration Art Show & Artists’ Reception 5 to 8 p.m. Many pieces are for sale! For information call 541-549-7087. Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church Live Music with Dennis McGregor and the Spoilers 7 p.m. On the lawn under the tent. Cash and food donations accepted for Sisters Kiwanis Food Bank. Call 541-549-5831 for more information. The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse Live Music with Bear Clouds & Lighters as Guns 6 to 8 p.m. Big Lawn Music series with food & beverages for purchase. For additional info call 541-638-7001 or go to thesuttlelodge.com. Food Cart Garden at Eurosports Live Music with NTT with Chris Brown 5 to 7 p.m. Dogs, children & adults all welcome! For information call Eurosports at 541-549-2471. Hardtails Bar & Grill DJK9 Rawkstar Karaoke Night! 9 p.m. Every Friday, no cover! For additional information call 541-549-6114 or go to hardtailsoregon.com. Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration Country Fair & Art Show 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Music, food, games, book sale, country store, art sale and more! For info: 541-549-7087. Hardtails Bar & Grill Live Music with Syster ’Skin’Nerd 8 p.m. All-female Skynyrd tribute band. For additional information call 541-549-6114 or go to hardtailsoregon.com.
Events Calendar listings are free to advertisers. Submit items by 5 p.m. Fridays to lisa@nuggetnews.com
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Obituaries Jack Milam
Barbara Jean Marshall
Jack Milam, 96, of Bend, Oregon, passed away July 22, 2019, at his residence. A memorial service is being planned at Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration in Sisters, time yet to be announced. In lieu of flowers, the family asks for donations to the Humane Society of Central Oregon or Partners In Care Hospice of Bend. John Dale Milam, known as Jack, was born in Topeka, Kansas, on October 4, 1922, to Morris Dale Milam and Emily Jean Milam. Jack had one older sister, Jean, and a younger sister and brother, Susie and Mose. He was a boy chorister and acolyte at Grace Cathedral in Topeka, and attended Topeka High School and the University of Kansas in Lawrence; at Lawrence he was also a lay reader at Trinity Episcopal Church. During his college years he joined the U.S. Navy and was trained as an officer at Berea College, Kentucky, and Columbia University, New York, before sailing to the South Pacific as an Ensign and then Lieutenant J.G. on an LST. He served four years in the Navy during World War II. When Jack returned from the war, he finished his college education at UCLA, where he met Charlotte Kiffe. Jack and Charlotte were married on May 20, 1949. In the fall of 1950 Jack began teaching English at Downey High School in Downey, California, and that same week his first child, Deborah, was born. Four years later, in 1954, he obtained a master’s degree in education from the University of Southern California, and became the father of his second child, Drusilla. After several years of teaching, Jack moved into administration at the school district office in Downey, first as supervisor of and then as coordinator of secondary instruction. He remained with the Downey Unified
Barbara was born in Amity, Oregon on July 9, 1933. She attended several elementary schools in Oregon and graduated From Gervais High School. In her younger years she was a file clerk at the State Tax Commission in Salem. Husbands Stewart Marshall, Tom Rhoads, Gene Dagenhardt and Vern Catterson; her parents Henry and Rose Kirkwood; and her sister Cecelia and brother Richard precede her in death. Barbara has five children: Tym (Ursula), Kathy (Dennis Levine), Teresa, Lynn, Jason (Judy); and nine step children: Mary, Vicki, Alan, Debbie, Barb, Donnie, Curt, Emily and Cassie. She also has five grandchildren: Clint, Nicholas, Lorne, Keylee, and Adam; five great-grandchildren: Antonio, Cristina, Nestor, Tavin and Ryker. One great-great-granddaughter; Cecilia. Her nieces and nephews are Susan Hagen (Lyman), Jon McDermeit (Michelle), Connie Lopes, David Kirkwood (DeeDee), and Chris Marshall (deceased). She lived in California with her first husband, Vern Catterson (father of Tym, Kathy and Teresa). After Vern’s death in 1962 she moved back to Gervais where her parents lived. She married Gene Dagenhardt (Lynn and Jason’s father). In 1970 they all moved to Central Oregon. While living in Central Oregon she worked at Black Butte Restaurant for 17 years as the lead cook for breakfast and lunch. She even had a sandwich on the menu named after her, “The Dagenhardt” (turkey, cranberries and sprouts on whole wheat). She lost her second and third husbands during this time (Gene Dagenhardt and Tom Rhoads). After leaving employment at Black Butte
October 4, 1922 — July 22, 2019
July 9, 1933 — July 21, 2019
School District for the rest of his career. He was a popular administrator, sought-after for speaking at various district events. At the Milam family’s church, St. Mark’s Episcopal in Downey, Jack served as a lay reader, homilist, lay eucharistic minister, and senior warden, among other things. He also spent much time with Charlotte and the girls on vacations, hikes, and other family activities too numerous to name. He was always ready to lend a hand to friends and colleagues. After Jack’s retirement, in 1991 he and Charlotte moved to Black Butte Ranch, where his sister Jean lived. He loved hiking in the forest. Jack and Charlotte also became active at Transfiguration Church in Sisters. They remained at Black Butte until they moved to assisted living in Bend in 2017. Jack and Charlotte celebrated their 70th anniversary on May 20, 2019. They had a marriage that was a model for their children and grandchildren. When their daughters and grandchildren called to talk to Jack, and said, “I love you,” Jack always responded, “I love you more.” Those children and grandchildren say now, “We love you forever.” Jack leaves behind his wife, Charlotte; two daughters, Debbie Berkley and Dru Winkle; five grandchildren, Peter Berkley, Mary Shadley, John Helton, Becky Clark, and David Helton; and eight great-grandchildren, Kaylin Ryan, Timothy Ryan, Elliot Berkley, Liam Ryan, Maddie Walsh, Alex Berkley, Beatrix Shadley, and Grover Shadley.
Learn & Practice Vipassana Insight Meditation Join us every Saturday 9 to 10:30 a.m. Insight Meditation Center 805 NW 95th St., Redmond Facebook: IIMC. Redmond. | 805-708-3065 For more information contact Ben: bensue@sopris.net or Yee: yeeofsb@hotmail.com
Ranch, she worked at the Sisters School District for over 12 years. She then met her fourth husband, Stewart Marshall. When she retired from the school district, Stu and Barbara traveled all over the USA, as well as Germany, and went on numerous cruises. Barbara valued all friends and family. She had many good friends. Her best friend from middle school remained her best friend for life. Donna preceded her in death by a year. She loved and was faithful to God and her Catholic faith. Her hobby was playing cribbage and other card games, working on puzzles, and traveling. Barbara was considered by all to be one of the most generous, genuine, happy-go-lucky, loving persons known. She treated all with love and respect. She was the type of person who would do anything for you. Her love was unconditional. She also had a great sense of humor and appreciated a good laugh or joke. By her example she taught us all the balance of hard work and enjoying life. Life was not easy for Barbara, but she always looked for the good.
She didn’t waste time being angry and her attitude was “You get what you get and you don’t throw a fit.” Her love of family and friends were foremost in her heart. She will remain an inspiration to her family. Though many may try, it will be hard to be half the person she was. It will be hard to fill her shoes. Service will be at her long-time parish, St. Edwards, 123 Trinity Way Sisters, Oregon on August 3, at 10:30 a.m. In lieu of flowers, donations to hospice are requested. Her hospice contact in San Diego is donna@ agiftkeepsgiving.com or you may mail donations to A Gift Keeps Giving, 450 E. Bradley Ave., #108 El Cajon, CA 92021.
HIT A POTHOLE? WE CAN HELP! Alignments, Shocks, Struts, Wheels, Tires
DAVIS TIRE Serving Sisters Since 1962
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188 W. Sisters Park Dr. In Sisters Industrial Park across from SnoCap Mini Storage
Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
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73-year-old Death investigation and his two underway in truck fire On July 19 the Deschutes Due to the late hour the dogs rescued County Sheriff ’s Office scene was held overnight to was notified by the allow investigators to work in after 4 days (DCSO) Central Oregon Interagency the daylight.
PHOTO BY ROB LAUGHTER
Town Mountain will play on the Songbird Stage at Fir Street Park in Sisters Folk Festival’s free summer concert series on Thursday, August 1.
Bluegrass band to take Fir Street Park stage The bluegrass group Town Mountain will bring their raw, soulful swagger to Sisters on Thursday, August 1 at 6:30 p.m. in the Sisters Folk Festival’s free summer concert series. Town Mountain has earned raves for their harddriving sound, their in-house songwriting and the honkytonk edge that permeates their exhilarating live performances, whether in a packed club or at a sold-out festival. The hearty base of Town Mountain’s music is the first and second generation of bluegrass, spiced with country, old school rock ‘n’ roll and boogie-woogie. It’s what else goes into the mix that brings it all to life — both on stage and on record — and reflects the group’s wideranging influences, from the Grateful Dead’s Jerry Garcia and the ethereal lyrics of Robert Hunter to the honest, vintage country of Willie, Waylon, and Merle. The Bend Bulletin’s Bri a n M cElhine y says Town Mountain, “has serious country and rock ’n’ roll DNA.” Town Mountain features guitarist and vocalist Robert Greer, banjoist Jesse Langlais, mandolinist Phil Barker, fiddler Bobby Britt, and Zach Smith on bass. Town Mountain’s latest album, “New Freedom Blues” is full of new material and features several guest artists including Tyler Childers (who co-wrote one of the songs), Sturgill Simpson, drummer Miles Miller and others. For the summer series SFF encourages patrons to bring blankets and low-back chairs, as seating is not provided.
Picnics are encouraged. The Fir Street Park venue is located in downtown Sisters at 150 N. Fir St. For SFF 2019 Summer Concert Series and artist information, and for information on 2019 Festival tickets, artists, schedules and becoming an SFF volunteer, visit www.sistersfolkfestival.org.
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ADELL (AP) — A 73-year-old man who was stranded in the remote Oregon high desert for four days was rescued when a bicyclist discovered him nearly unconscious and miles from his abandoned car. Lake County Deputy Buck Maganzini said that the man was “out exploring” July 14 when his Jeep got stuck in a dry creek bed about 15 miles from the nearest paved road and he tried to hike out. A mountain biker found the man July 18, nearly unconscious with one of his dogs by his side. Authorities found the Jeep and the second dog two days later using an aircraft. Maganzini says the man had no food and very little water and was near death when found. He’s been released from the hospital, and his dogs are OK, too.
Dispatch Center of a truck fire near Mahogany Butte southeast of Bend. USFS fire crews were on scene and extinguished the fire. A USFS law enforcement officer responded to the scene and later determined human remains were in the vehicle. A DCSO deputy from the special services unit responded to the scene, along with DCSO detectives. DCSO was assisted at the scene by the Deschutes County Medical Examiner’s Office.
On July 20, detectives returned to the scene, along with an investigator from the Deschutes County Medical Examiner’s Office and an arson investigator from the Oregon State Police. Investigators worked throughout the day to collect evidence and to determine the cause of the fire and to identify the deceased person inside the vehicle. Based upon the investigation at this point, foul play is not suspected in this death.
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Josie’s Best food is redefining gluten-free
BUSINESSES: EDCOsponsored event had a festive flair Continued from page 1
which provided some welcome shade. Some the Bend attendees rode the red Bend Trolley to Sisters and back. Josie Johnson made her pitch for investors in her Josie’s Best Gluten Free Mixes (see related story page 17). Attendees then heard company updates from two other Sisters business and a keynote from Samuel Pyke of Hill Shadows Pictures (see related story, this page). Dan Stewart and Christine Funk shared the story of company founder and master luthier Preston Thompson who passed away in April. Six years ago Thompson was at an EDCO Pub Talk pitching for investors. He had no building, and was crafting guitars in his home. In answer to his appeal, Craft3, a regional business that makes loans to businesses, families, and nonprofits in Oregon and Washington, and Mid-Oregon Credit Union stepped up and provided the loans that allowed Thompson to move into their present location on Main Avenue and hire artisans and craftspeople, which allowed Thompson to expand his business. They now have seven equity investors and a “woodshop on steroids,” according to Stewart. They recently completed a $37,000 Masterpiece guitar, a special version of the usual $17,000-$23,000 Masterpiece. Regular Thompson guitars start at about $4,000 and go up from there. They are handcrafted every step of the way by a nine-member crew who Stewart described as highly skilled, independent, and self-motivated. There are currently 60 guitars in production and 68 in the cue, waiting to get in the shop. Generally, a guitar will be in the cue for about five months, with production averaging four months. A Thompson guitar is a
By Sue Stafford Correspondent
PHOTO BY SUE STAFFORD
Dan Stewart and Christine Funk shared the story of Preston Thompson Guitars at a gathering of business luminaries from across Central Oregon. special instrument with the vintage sound of the 1930s Martin D28, the gold standard for sound. Peter Rowan, who will be in town for the 2019 Sisters Folk Festival, is one of Thompson’s customers, as are a number of other well-known performers. Inlay specialist Sima Haycraft has just been hired to join the team and they are currently looking for a set-up person. Both Funk and Stewart issued multiple invitations to come for a visit and tour their workshop. “Come and watch. It’s a heck of a lot of fun,” Stewart told the audience. Jamie Eichman, chief operating officer for Laird Superfood, reported that the company is currently in a rapid growth phase since its founding in 2015 by the world-famous big-wave surfer Laird Hamilton. Sisters resident Paul Hodge, on vacation in Hawaii, met Hamilton and that’s how they ended up in Sisters. The company’s motto is “Better Food Makes a Better World.” What began as Hamilton’s passion project to perfect his personal regimen grew into a dynamic, innovative brand with a mission to bring clean, simple, and thoughtfully formulated superfoods to the masses. In 2018, the operation in Sisters had 37 employees. So far, in the first two quarters of 2019 they have hired an additional 34. Most of the jobs are middle-wage positions. They are currently recruiting for a controller, customer service rep, and a project manager. Their second building is complete and they have
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purchased the rest of the land on Lundgren Mill Drive. “We are here in Sisters to create full-time, middle-wage jobs. We’re here to stay,” Eichman said. Laird Superfood products are currently in a number of grocery stores and in Costco in California and Hawaii. They are establishing distribution centers in a number of locations, with their first international center in Canada. They have started installing hot beverage machines in a number of public places like hotel lobbies and at 7-11. The Laird product line is growing rapidly, with one new product a month coming on line, like the addition of new creamer flavors. The mushroom products contain four different strains of mushrooms that can boost immunity, increase focus, and improve cognitive function. As one of the fastest growing companies in the natural-foods arena, Laird Superfood’s offerings are environmentally sustainable, responsibly tested, and made with whole-food ingredients.
At last week’s EDCO Pub Talk, Sisters resident Josie Johnson, CEO and founder of Josie’s Best Gluten Free Mixes, explained her mission of redefining gluten-free foods. She stressed that her gluten-free baking mixes really do provide classic tastes and textures, rather than the usual cardboard quality so many people object to in glutenfree products. She is intent on providing overall great products, not just “good for gluten-free.” Johnson’s current lineup of products includes a gluten free (GF) pancake mix, a GF waffle mix, GF crepe mix, and GF muffin-and-more flour. The products are available in five-pound (retail) and 25-pound (food service) packages and can be found at Market of Choice across Oregon, Food4Less, Newport Avenue Market and Melvin’s, C.E. Lovejoy’s, and Central Oregon Locavore. They can also be found online at www.josiesbestgf.com and Amazon. Not only is Josie’s Best gluten-free, it is also soyfree, nut-free, and GMO-free, which sets it apart from other gluten-free mixes. The Original Pancake House in Bend is a loyal user of her products as well as
the Hyatt Hotel in Bellevue, Washington. Johnson reported that 90 percent of her foodservice customers used Bob’s Red Mill GF mixes before changing to Josie’s. Bob’s is their biggest competitor. All of their early success has been with Johnson as the only fulltime employee. Johnson’s search for better GF products grew out of her own issues with gluten that showed up when she was in high school. She has been gluten-free for 20 years and she said that has changed her life. According to Johnson, there are 32 million people in the U.S. who have food allergies, 5.6 million of them children under age 18. That means two children in every classroom are dealing with food allergies. In 2018, gluten-free was a $17.5 billion industry and is forecast to increase 9.1 percent a year through 2025. Currently in development is a just-add-water pancake mix and a chocolate chip cookie mix. In three years Johnson is aiming to have frozen and packaged GF foods on the market. Her pitch was for board members who can offer advice and people able to provide mentorship as the business grows and diversifies. When asked what the Sisters community can do to help, Johnson answered, “Go out and buy our product and tell others about us.”
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Sam Pyke loves his niche in film industry By Sue Stafford Correspondent
Lifelong Sisters resident Samuel Pyke shared his passion for his work as the keynote speaker at last week’s EDCO Pub Talk (see story, page 1). Pyke grew up in Sisters, graduated from Sisters High School, and went on to Oregon State University. He and his three brothers grew up watching movies with their father, a real movie buff. Three of the four boys have gone on to work in some aspect of the film/video industry. One brother works on visual effects for movies, including Star Wars. Another brother produces documentaries “on the road.” Samuel’s Hill Shadow Pictures specializes in outdoor video for programs like Frontier Unlimited and other hunting and fishing shows. Pyke also works with businesses to create videos that tell their stories. He looks for the idea behind the brand and tells the story to evoke emotions. In that way, the viewer can relate their lifestyle to what they see in the video. He’s created incredible work for companies including Realtree, Camp Chef, Smith & Wesson, Discovery Studios, and many more. He is particularly moved by stories about veterans out hunting and fishing, some of which he describes as “gutwrenching.” He has also filmed stories about children who have had their wishes granted by the Make-A-Wish Foundation. Pyke says once a year he donates what he calls a passion project. His work has taken him all over the world from India to New Zealand to South Africa. He enjoys the opportunities
that help him gain a global perspective of how things are done differently all over the world. When asked what he considered his most successful project, he quietly replied, “The memorial project for my dad, who died in February.” The best resource for storytelling? Pyke answered, “Listen. Everyone has stories. Listen to figure out what moves you. What got me and why?” He said art is about borrowing and changing it a bit. Pyke likes to edit his own footage because he is always thinking about editing when shooting. His goal is to spend 80 percent of his time shooting and 20 percent editing. Right now he says he spends too much time editing. He has always been interested in the concept of story. A 6-year-old who started with a camera, became the boy who dressed up in costumes to go to the movie theater. In the eighth grade he became serious about photography. His college major was communications. While in college he began working for his brother, who was already involved in the film industry. When it was offered, he took over his brother’s business. He was also a firefighter for five years somewhere along the way. Another Sisters resident who worked in the industry with his gigantic boom cranes shooting overhead shots all over the world, Rick Johnson, gave Pyke a salient piece of advice. “Find a niche,” he said. Pyke’s niche is outdoor videography. He counts himself fortunate to be able to work doing what he loves. For more information visit www.hillshadowpictures. com.
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County purchases Sisters building By Sue Stafford Correspondent
Deschutes County now owns the building that houses the Deschutes County Sheriff’s administrative office that serves Sisters and the western part of the county, located on the corner of North Larch Street and West Barclay Drive (across from the post office). Former owner and Sisters resident Jack Addison notified The Nugget last Friday that the papers had been signed, concluding the purchase of the 6,000-square-foot building for $1 million. Addison made it very clear that “in no way does the sale affect the other two present commercial tenants of the building.” Black Butte Veterinary Clinic has been in that location for 20 years and they have five more years left on their current lease. With the addition of a new vet, the office is now open full-time. Addison said, “It was a five-year effort to get MidOregon Credit Union to Sisters and I was especially grateful to get them, with their financial backing, to come to Sisters. A credit union operates differently from a bank and serves to complement the availability of loans in Sisters.” According to Addison, it took a considerable monetary investment for Mid-Oregon to move into the building, with the installation of their ATM a major expense. “I feel like Mid-Oregon is my gift to Sisters,” Addison offered. A former fighter pilot, Addison has spent 50 years buying and selling real estate. He is particularly proud of construction standards to which the building at 703 N. Larch St. is built. Features include clear-span trusses, special air-filtration system
PHOTO BY SUE STAFFORD
Deschutes County has purchased the building that houses the Sisters substation of the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office. that meets residential standards, and a diesel-powered back-up generator. The roof has special ice dam shields and the foundation is built to support a second story on the building. Two-by-six flooring is anchored to be earthquaketremor-resistant foundation and hurricane clips are holding the trusses on. The sheriff’s office, on the west end of the building, isn’t currently using all their space. Deschutes County Administrator Tom Anderson indicated the extra space could house other County services for the western part of the County such as veterans’
outreach, health inspections, or mental health services. The County owns buildings in Redmond, Bend, and La Pine that provide a variety of services and the Sisters purchase fills a gap that existed. County employees could be housed in the Sisters office rather than commuting from other locations to provide services in Sisters. The purchase of the building, made with money from a reserve fund that is specifically for taking advantage of unexpected real estate opportunities, makes sense for the County in the long run as they will now be collecting rent rather than paying it.
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
‘Unicorns really are real’
Skillethead to play Sisters garden benefit
By T. Lee Brown Correspondent
Ever heard of the smash hit show “Unicorns Really are Real: The Story of How They Save the Earth from Global Warming”? Not yet, perhaps. It just debuted in Sisters last Friday. It was all part of Starshine Theater’s debut theater camp. Director Jennie Sharp, known locally for the winter kids’ performances she directs in Camp Sherman, saw a need for hands-on theater experience in Sisters Country. Options in Bend often present traditional shows in classes that go on for weeks or months. Starshine uses a different model: kids explore and invent their own characters, assemble their own costumes, and help shape the show. It all takes place in five short days. Students registered through Sisters Park & Recreation District. They rehearsed four days in a row at The Belfry, during their three-hour-long camp. They invented their characters and some plot points on the first day. Then Sharp set about writing a script for them. “I had a great time!” she said. She said it was hard to fit so many characters into one play, but she had fun meeting the challenge. Sharp narrated the plot over a microphone, and helped kids remember their lines off-mic.
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The Sisters Community Garden is hosting their 4th annual “Music in the Garden” on Monday, August 12. This popular event has become an enjoyable way to savor the garden’s rich environment and a way for our gardeners and public to give back to the community of Sisters. This year the musical headliner will be Skillethead, a local bluegrass
quartet that will entertain from 6 to 8 p.m. A non-perishable food item or cash/check donation will get you into an evening of great music; with all donations benefiting Habitat for Humanity and the Sisters Kiwanis Food Bank. Light snacks and lemonade are served; bring your own chair and your beverage of choice. For more information contact Lisa at 541-390-9025.
PHOTO BY TL BROWN
Young actors took to the Songbird Stage at Fir Street for the debut of Starshine Theater. “We have a big range of ages,” said Sharp. The group accepted kids aged 4 to 8. Next week, Starshine will work with older kids in the 8-to-13 age bracket. They will create their own original show with Sharp’s guidance. The public is invited to come see their performance free of charge on Friday, August 2 at 3 p.m. The play, as yet unnamed, will take place on the Songbird Stage at Fir Street Park. Starshine will have some chairs available, but suggests that audiences bring their own chairs and sun protection. The show lasts about half an hour; the park’s splash pad fountains will be turned off during this time. Fir Street Park is located at the corner of Fir
and Main, one block north of Cascade Avenue/Highway 20. Sharp thanked The Belfry, SPRD, and the City of Sisters “for providing this amazing stage.” She also thanked middle-school student Addison Russell for her volunteer work as the camp’s stage manager, and local resident Rich Hummel for providing the sound system.
PHOTO PROVIDED
Local bluegrass outfit Skillethead will play in the garden.
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
MUSIC: Festival was a hit with locals and visitors Continued from page 1
are doing. We are really interested in the public’s take on who they are excited to see or maybe just discovered.” On Thursday morning a group of more than 10 Heart of Oregon YouthBuild and young volunteers from AmeriCorps put their labors to use by helping build the stage and fencing for the Sisters Rhythm and Brews Festival. Heart of Oregon YouthBuild is a Central Oregon non-profit that engages local opportunities for youth, ages 16-24. The youth are working toward completing their GED, high school diploma, or college credits while also learning work readiness skills through construction. Yo u t h B u i l d p r o g r a m director Kara Johnson noted, “AmeriCorps volunteers are young people who have graduated high school or college that will receive scholarships after serving with us for a year.”
The volunteers work directly with YouthBuild youth helping them build houses or are in the classroom assisting as a teacher’s aide. Americorps volunteer Sonya Templeton, a graduate from Oregon State University, manned the booth along with Johnson. Templeton said, “My longterm goal is to go back and get my master’s degree in teaching. That’s the reason I applied for this position to be a teacher’s aide helping the kids at YouthBuild. It’s on the job training and I’m getting a feel for what it’s like to be teaching.” Habitat for Humanity had a unit of lumber at the festival and asked people to pay $5 a stud to help build the next home. Folks could write a message of encouragement on the wood. This year’s event had a couple of lastminute changes. Sassparilla was unable make it Friday night and Oregon Blues icon Walker T. Ryan stepped up to open the Festival in their stead. Ryan said to the crowd, “Three days ago I was retired sitting by my pond communing with herons. The legendary White Buffalo returned to Sisters with a potent set on Saturday.
19
PHOTOS BY JERRY BALDOCK
Music lovers danced and lounged at the Village Green venue for the Sisters Rhythm and Brews Festival. Larkin Poe turned in a fiery performance on Saturday night at Sisters Rhythm and Brews Festival.
Then my friend David JacobsStrain called and asked me to play at a really cool gig and I’ve been practicing ever since.” Artist Jacobs-Strain, from Eugene, who was in the lineup to play on Saturday, told The Nugget, “I learned the blues from Walker. I was 9 years old and saw him play when my parents took me to see him live at a local theater. He became my teacher.” He added, “I really enjoy spending time in Sisters with friends and tell people about how Sisters has a music scene
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that you’d be surprised about.” JacobsStrain has appeared at festivals from British Columbia to Australia. He has been a regular on the blues circuit since he was 11 years old, but he’s really come into his own on recent albums. Also known for his fierce slide-guitar playing, he plays acoustic blues in the tradition of musicians like Bob Brozman and Dave Van Ronk. Jacobs-Strain will be returning to the Sisters Folk Festival with Bob Beach in September. The event welcomed back last year’s festival
favorite, Castro Coleman, AKA Mr. Sipp. “Mr. Sipp is what brought me back to Sisters,” said Laura Ludlow from Portland. Mr. Sipp, a native of McComb, Mississippi, was the winner of the 2014 International Blues Challenge (Band), the Albert King Gibson award, BMA Best New Artist Album winner 2016, and The Spirit of Little Walter Award 2016. Artist Joanne Shaw Taylor was unable to close out the show Friday night because of visa difficulties. Joe Rambo noted, “Luckily for us, after joining Phil Lesh & Friends for a night dubbed ‘Dead Blues’ and releasing his See MUSIC on page 29
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Commentary...
A feast of books By Mac Hay Columnist
A soon as you finish this article, go to the website of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, edbookfest. co.uk, and peruse what is available this year in Edinburgh, Scotland from August 10-26. This year’s festival, the largest in the world with over 1,000 authors, launched its theme, the lineup of authors, speakers, thinkers for 2019. This year being no exception, speakers from all over the world will be available for your pleasure, to hear, to chat and to mingle with 220,000 people like you who appreciate and are stimulated by great subjects and presenters. It’s not too late to book your travel, as this correspondent has done. As the festival’s website says: “Join us for creative, joyful, interactive experiences with the world’s finest writers and thinkers. Whether you meet a hero you’ve always loved or find a new favorite, the Book Festival brings you everything that’s exciting, inspiring and refreshing in stories, ideas and words today.� “Stories are devices that help humans make sense of a complex world,� Book Festival Director Nick Barley said. “Whether we’re listening to scientists and politicians, myth-makers or poets, to understand the world around us ‘We Need New Storie’ — our theme this year.� A huge bonus about heading to Edinburgh in August is experiencing the warmth and genuine friendliness of both locals and fellow visitors, making we tourists feel like locals immediately. The Scots are curious and interested in Americans, our lifestyle and politics. It’s always a pleasure to chat with the people you meet on trains, busses, pubs and events. August is festival month in Edinburgh. The Fringe
Whatever Y r ‌ Dream Des na О
Festival with 56,000 events — music, song, theater along with the arts and international festivals, the bagpiping at the Edinburgh Military Tattoo — can fill your days with fun, stimulating entertainment not found anywhere else. Walking the city with the bonus of an excellent local bus system easily gets you around this compact city of 500,000. The “Hop-on-Hop Offâ€? city tour bus will give you an outstanding overview of Edinburgh. The famous Royal Mile includes the Castle, Scotland’s Parliament, the Whisky Experience, Holyrood Castle, scary Mary King’s Close, St. Giles Cathedral, numerous museums, pubs and restaurants. The Royal Botanic Garden, Rossylin Chapel of Dan Brown’s “The Da Vinci Codeâ€? fame and the Royal Yacht Britannia are also popular attractions. Local touring companies offer day trips to the Stirling Highland Games, Stirling Castle, St. Andrews for golf,  Culloden, site of Bonnie Prince Charles defeat by the British in 1746. Â
Delta has direct flights from Portland, to London Heathrow; from there either get a connecting flight to Edinburgh (EDI) or take the train to Edinburgh — a pleasant four-hour way to combat jet lag, viewing the countryside. I encourage you to put this city, the festivals and events on your bucket list. And get ready for this fall’s Sisters-scaled version of a book festival, inspired in part by the legendary Edinburgh event. The Sisters Festival of Books is a threeday celebration of the literary culture of Central Oregon and the Pacific Northwest, featuring local, regional, and national authors and occurring across multiple venues. The festival will take place Friday, October 18 through Sunday, October 20 in Sisters. Proceeds from the festival will be used to establish a scholarship for Sisters High School students through the Sisters Graduate Resource Organization. For all festival info including venues, author line-up, event details, and FAQs, visit SistersFoB.com.
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School supplies drive underway in Sisters Sisters’ Back to SchoolSchool Supply Drive is underway at Sisters’ Les Schwab Tire Center. Community members can drop off new school supplies during regular business hours and help students in need begin the school year well equipped for a successful year. Les Schwab Tire Center is located at 600 W. Hood Ave., open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The following new school supply items are needed (no used school or office supplies): • One-inch three-ring binders, notebook dividers, college-ruled and wide-ruled notebook paper and collegeruled spiral notebooks. • 4x6 index cards, college-ruled and wide-ruled composition notebooks. • Wooden rulers with inches and centimeters (no plastic rulers).
• Fiskars pointed scissors. • Crayola watercolor paints (cheaper, low-quality paints are not useable). • Yellow highlighters, pens, pencils, basic calculators, dry-erase markers, white erasers. • 12-count box Crayola colored pencils. • Backpacks are needed for all ages. School supplies distribution for those in need will begin the week before school on August 26 from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Sisters Family Access Network (FAN) office located inside the Sisters School District administration building at 525 E. Cascade Ave. Sisters FAN distributes school supplies to over 100 financially struggling students/families each year. Thank you for your donations for our local students. Call FAN at 541-5490155 for more information.
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
A long-awaited amenity...
PHOTO BY GARY GUTTORMSEN
Sisters Trails Alliance was happy to see the culmination of a longterm effort last week as a work crew installed a new permanent bathroom facility at the trailhead for the Whychus Overlook. The amenity replaces porta-potties at the popular destination on Forest Road 16 south of Sisters.
CRIME: Citizens have been keeping an eye out for activity Continued from page 1
simply observe and when they see something, immediately contact the sheriff’s office and let the deputies do their work. Don’t attempt to interfere. There is a curfew for minors in Sisters, which is stricter than the state curfew of midnight to 4 a.m. City ordinance says minors should be off the streets from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. Parents need to be aware of the curfew, which is easily enforceable by sheriff’s deputies. During visitor communication at the Council meeting, new resident John Markley expressed concern about the possibility of a vigilante mentality with the
current effort by a group of citizens who are out driving around in the middle of the night looking for taggers. On a related topic, City Manager Cory Misley reported that City staff has undertaken an extensive evaluation of public safety in Sisters. They are currently gathering data, will conduct a survey of the public around safety issues, and are evaluating all options regarding community public safety. The current contract with the DCSO expires June 30, 2020. To report a crime or incident, call 541-693-6911. There is also a sheriff ’s reporting page for graffiti at https://sheriff.deschutes. org/community/crime-pre vention/reporting-graffiti/. For an emergency dial 911. The Sisters substation is 541-549-2302.
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Women’s health services available Starting August 1, St. Charles Center for Women’s Health will see patients at the St. Charles Family Care clinic in Sisters. Every Wednesday, a provider from the Center for Women’s Health office will be at the clinic to provide obstetric care, well-women exams, contraceptive management, menopause treatment and other services. The Center for Women’s Health has board-certified physicians, women’s health nurse practitioners and certified nurse midwives who collaboratively work together to meet patients’ needs. Offering the Wednesday appointments at the clinic is part of St. Charles’ effort to make obstetric and gynecologic services more accessible to women of all ages in Sisters, Black Butte, Camp
Sherman and throughout the region. “Women may suffer from problems such as pelvic pain, irregular bleeding and bladder incontinence, but delay seeing a provider because they either feel this is ‘normal’ or they encounter barriers to accessing care,” said Tricia Clay, manager of clinic operations at St. Charles Center for Women’s Health. “As women age, it’s important they see a provider yearly for preventive exams and screenings, and to address concerns they have as they get older and approach menopause.” Women seen in Sisters who need care beyond what can be provided at the clinic will be referred to the Center for Women’s Health in Redmond to see a boardcertified OB-GYN. Any surgical procedures needed can
be performed at St. Charles Redmond. “We are so excited to expand our services to another location, making it more convenient for women to get access to the care they need,” said Dr. Beth Murrill, a board-certified OB-GYN. “We’re very much looking forward to connecting with and supporting the Sisters community.”
We are so excited to expand our services to another location, making it more convenient for women to get access to the care they need. — Dr. Beth Murrill
Smoke drift...
PHOTO BY JIM CORNELIUS
Smoke from southern Oregon crept over the Sisters. Escaped campfires are a big threat at this time of year and Sisters has had several that were put out quickly. Extreme care is needed in Sisters backcountry.
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22
Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Tales from a
Sisters Naturalist by Jim Anderson
A hummingbird wannabe Well, Good People, hummingbird moths are in season. Yes, they can fool you; some people think they’re actually hummingbirds, while others don’t know what they are, as evidenced by an email I received the other day with the question, “What, pray tell, is this?” But before we go into the what, why, where and when of hummingbird moths I gotta share one of the events that took place associated with them years back… All through my professional life I have had the good fortune to work with young people, introducing them to various components of the Natural World around us. This really got started during the years I was staff naturalist for the
Tomato hornworm.
Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI) in Portland and when I started the Sunriver Nature Center — or as Bob Royston, the landscape architect called it, The Ecologium. I was standing in the right place at the right time when the young person was not only ready and willing to learn, but was seeking a greater understanding of the world of Nature. Take the Janelle Orsillo young lady who shot the hummingbird moth photo above. This came about while I was out on a North American Butterfly Association count with my wife, Sue, over in the Ochocos. Janelle came up to me and asked, “Jim, I would like to learn to take photographs of insects, can you help me?” That sounded like a wonderful idea to me, so I got my camera rigged up with the close-up lens and we sat down in the shade of an aspen tree and started on the whys and wherefores of insect photography. Janelle is a very bright young lady and caught on quickly. We shot a couple of insects close by and I thought she was ready to go and away she went. As we neared the end of the butterfly count route,
PHOTO BY JIM ANDERSON
near Big Summit Prairie, I was about 50 yards from Janelle and her group of young people when I heard one of them exclaim, “Oh, look at the beautiful hummingbird!” We were in the wrong place at the wrong time for hummingbirds, so I knew something was off-base. I happened to have my binocs around my neck so I focused in on the group. I watched as Janelle stooped over to see what someone was calling a hummingbird. Then, suddenly I caught an image of a brilliant sparkle of wings. I didn’t know what they had going on, but it had to be something I had never seen in that spot before, so I hot-footed it over to them. The closer I got the more that sparkling image began to become something more recognizable. Then, at about 10 feet from her I watched Janelle raise the camera and slowly move toward the subject. She got closer and closer and by the time I arrived at the scene I could see a brandnew, freshly emerged clearwing hummingbird moth hovering in a flower blossom. My first instinct was to snatch the camera away from her and shoot that magnificent moth myself. After all, it was an insect I had never seen before— a “lifer” if you will. But better judgement took over and I whispered, “Go get it dear heart! Shoot it!” And she did. Oh boy! Did she ever! Every one of the images she put on the memory card of that old Canon was a winner. She’s a professional museum photographer today. I’ll always be grateful to her every time I look at those images. So, lets talk for a little about hummingbird AKA sphinx moths: The one most noticeable
PHOTO BY JANELLE ORSILLO
Clear-wing hummingbird moth, aka hawk moth, aka sphinx moth. right now is the lined hummingbird moth, which occurs from Canada to Central America. They feed on a number of plants, and are one of the more colorful pollinators of a wide variety of wildflowers and domestic plants. Like most hummingbird moths, they don’t stay in one place very long, but zip between flowers pretty rapidly. The caterpillar is very distinctive; it can be green or black and has a very obvious spike sticking up from the rear of the animal that looks pretty deadly. But it’s not! It’s a device to scare off predators, and I’ve heard people exclaim about how deadly it looks, so that works to keep humans away,
as well. The most obvious hummingbird moth larva is AKA the tomato hornworm. It is very destructive to tomato plants and not at all enjoyable to find in one’s greenhouse or back porch tomatoes. Be that as it may, our wild sphinx moths are beautiful to observe as they zip around in our flower gardens, or just plain old sagebrush and rabbitbrush backyard. If you happen to come upon my favorite, the clearwing hummingbird moth, please send me a note and let me know when and where: Email jimnaturalist@gmail. com. If you want to include your photo, please, by all means, do so.
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Tickets may be purchased at the Furry Friends office or online at www.furryfriendsfoundation.org For more information: 541-797-4023
“Bark for Our Parks II” - by Valerie Fercho-Tillery This ad sponsored by The Nugget Newspaper
Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
23
The Nugget Newspaper Crossword
By Jacqueline E. Mathews, Tribune News Service
PHOTO BY SUE STAFFORD
A fireplace installation at Camp Sisters.
CAMP SISTERS: Citizens restored Depressionera CCC structures Continued from page 5
maintenance supervisor, was a CCC enrollee in 1935, coming to Camp Sisters as part of a company from North Dakota. When he was discharged in March 1937 in North Dakota, he returned to Bend with two other former CCC boys to live and work. Sadly, when the CCC program ended in 1942, Camp Sisters was abandoned. All the buildings were removed by a salvage company and the meadow returned to its natural state. However, the projects undertaken by the young men of the CCC remained as their legacy. While at Camp Sisters, they completed, among others, the following projects: • Road construction to Three Creek Lake with improvements to the campground. • Nine experimental plots and experimental station development at Pringle Falls. • Seven miles of
forest trail built along Tumalo Creek 11 miles west of Bend. • Amenity development along the Metolius River, at Suttle and Dark Lakes, and along the Santiam and McKenzie highways. Those amenities included outdoor kitchens with fireplaces, cupboards and cooking units, tables and benches, and toilets and garbage pits for picnicking and camping by the public. In 2006-2008, local citizens restored the CCCconstructed shelters along the Metolius to once again be used by the public. The work accomplished by the CCC companies at Camp Sisters made it possible for the public to get to and enjoy many of the beautiful recreation areas on the Deschutes National Forest, because of the many miles of road they built and the improvements made to camp sites. They also helped curb the pine beetle and fire damage to the ponderosa pine, on which the local loggers and sawmills depended. Along the way, they learned valuable skills and life lessons.
A butterfly and a geranium...
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
C L A S S I F I E D S
ALL advertising in this newspaper is 101 Real Estate subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention to make any such 5 acres, borders forestry, preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes beautiful custom 1-story children under the age of 18 living home (2,018 sq. ft.), huge shop, with parents or legal custodians, MLS 201904472, $540,000 pregnant women and people securing 16443 Spunky Dr., A&A Realty, custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly Tracy Duncan, Licensed Oregon accept any advertising for real estate Realtor, 541-480-0346. By appt. which is in violation of the law. Our HEATED CAR STORAGE readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this Gated, w/clubroom & car wash. newspaper are available on an equal Purchase or Lease Option. opportunity basis. To complain of 541-419-2502 discrimination call HUD toll-free at For Sale By Owner $145,000. 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hearing Build your dream home on this impaired is 1-800-927-9275. beautiful 2.5-acre very private CLASSIFIED RATES and quiet corner lot in the desired COST: $2 per line for first insertion, Squaw Creek Canyon Estates. $1.50 per line for each additional Septic has been approved and insertion to 9th week, $1 per line 10th week and beyond (identical community water and utilities are ad/consecutive weeks). Also included at the lot line. Please call in The Nugget online classifieds at no 541-588-2299 for more info. additional charge. There is a 70260 Mustang Dr., Sisters minimum $5 charge for any classified. First line = approx. 20-25 HAVE A characters, each additional line = PROPERTY TO SELL? approx. 25-30 characters. Letters, Advertise it in The Nugget spaces, numbers and punctuation = 1 character. Any ad copy changes will 102 Commercial Rentals be charged at the first-time insertion rate of $2 per line. Standard MINI STORAGE abbreviations allowed with the Sisters Storage & Rental approval of The Nugget classified 506 North Pine Street department. NOTE: Legal notices placed in the Public Notice section 541-549-9631 are charged at the display advertising Sizes 5x5 to 15x30. 7-day access. rate. Computerized security gate. DEADLINE: MONDAY, noon On-site management. preceding WED. publication. PLACEMENT & PAYMENT: U-Haul trucks, trailers, moving Office, 442 E. Main Ave. Phone, boxes & supplies. 541-549-9941 or place online at NuggetNews.com. Payment is due Prime Downtown Retail Space upon placement. VISA & Call Lori at 541-549-7132 MasterCard accepted. Billing Cold Springs Commercial available for continuously run CASCADE STORAGE classified ads, after prepayment of first four (4) weeks and upon (541) 549-1086 • (877) 540-1086 approval of account application. 581 N. Larch – 7-Day Access CATEGORIES: 101 Real Estate 102 Commercial Rentals 103 Residential Rentals 104 Vacation Rentals 106 Real Estate Wanted 107 Rentals Wanted 200 Business Opportunities 201 For Sale 202 Firewood 203 Recreation Equipment 204 Arts & Antiques 205 Garage & Estate Sales 206 Lost & Found 207 The Holidays 301 Vehicles 302 Recreational Vehicles 401 Horses 402 Livestock 403 Pets 500 Services 501 Computer Services 502 Carpet Upholstery Cleaning 503 Appliance Repair & Refinish 504 Handyman 505 Auto Repair 600 Tree Service & Forestry 601 Construction 602 Plumbing & Electric 603 Excavations & Trucking 604 Heating & Cooling 605 Painting 606 Landscaping & Yard Maint. 701 Domestic Services 702 Sewing 703 Child Care 704 Events & Event Services 801 Classes & Training 802 Help Wanted 803 Work Wanted 901 Wanted 902 Personals 999 Public Notice
104 Vacation Rentals CASCADE HOME & VACATION RENTALS Monthly and Vacation Rentals throughout Sisters Country. (541) 549-0792 Property management for second homes. CascadeVacationRentals.net ~ Sisters Vacation Rentals ~ Private Central OR vac. rentals, Property Management Services 541-977-9898 www.SistersVacation.com DON'T RENT, OWN. Camp Sherman Cabin 1/4 or 1/2 fractional ownership of a lovely cabin located at Cold Springs Resort. Completely furnished and ready for you to enjoy all the area has to offer. $24,999 per 1/4 ownership. 503-910-0878 In the Heart of Sisters 3 Vac. Rentals – Quiet 1-2 Bdrm Sleep 2-6, start at $135 per nt. vrbo.com/442970 or /180950 or /337593 • 503-694-5923 THE NUGGET SISTERS OREGON
201 For Sale “Support Sisters” SHOP LOCAL!
(3) LIGHTED SHOWCASES Durable & Mirrored! $600 ea. or $1,650 for all. 541-549-1140. Bridgestone - Dueller HP Sport AS. 245/45/R18. 4 tires. $100 for set. 541-699-9186 Habitat THRIFT STORE 211 E. Cascade • 541-549-1740 Mon.-Sun. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Donations: Mon.-Sat. 10 to 4 Habitat RESTORE 254 W. Adams • 541-549-1621 Tues.-Sat. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 5x5 to 12x30 Units Available Sun. Noon to 4 p.m. Closed Mon. 5x5 - 8x15 Climate Control Units Donations: Tues.-Sat. 10 to 4 On-site Management SNO CAP MINI STORAGE 202 Firewood www.SistersStorage.com FIREWOOD, dry or green LONG-TERM DISCOUNTS! Lodgepole, juniper, pine. Secure, Automated Facility 541-420-3254 with On-site Manager SISTERS FOREST PRODUCTS • • • DAVE ELPI – FIREWOOD 541-549-3575 • SINCE 1976 • Doug Fir – Lodgepole – Juniper 103 Residential Rentals DRIVE-IN WOOD SALES 2BR, 2 BA in Tollgate, – 18155 Hwy. 126 East – furnished, includes all appliances, SistersForestProducts.com w/d, use of snow-blower, RV Order Online! 541-410-4509 space, swimming pool, tennis/pickleball, basketball, 203 Recreation Equipment community snow removal. No pets, no smoking. $1,900/mo. 541-699-9186. PONDEROSA PROPERTIES –Monthly Rentals Available– Call Debbie at 541-549-2002 Full details, 24 hrs./day, go to: PonderosaProperties.com Raleigh Scout XC Bike (Good Printed list at 221 S. Ash, Sisters for boy or girl, 9 to 12 years old, Ponderosa Properties LLC 54" to 61” tall.) Red, 24-in. tires, Room for rent available August 21 gears, suspension fork, 1. Includes: A/C, private bath, aluminum frame. Always stored kitchen and laundry privileges, in garage. Purchased and common use of living room and regularly maintained at Blazin TV, located in Timber Creek Saddles. Just had tune-up (walking distance to town) including new brake and shifting No Pets. $840 per month. cables, tires, and grips. $160. Call 907-590-0696 541-977-8494
New Pontoon Boat - 9 ft. 2018 403 Pets Wilderness includes rod holders, oars, brass locks, anchor system, A CARING ENVIRONMENT swivel seat, motor mount, 400 lb. for your treasured Best Friends capacity. Brand new in ship box, in your home while you're away! never been used. $300 Firm. Sisters-Tumalo-Petsitting.com 541-306-7551 610-633-1501. Furry Friends Foundation 204 Arts & Antiques helps pets in our community! THE JEWEL – 27 YEARS! Open Tues. & Thurs., 11 to 2 Jewelry Repair • Custom Design 204 W. Adams Ave. #109 gems | 541-549-9388 | gold 541-797-4023 www.thejewelonline.com Bend Spay & Neuter Project Providing Low-Cost Options for 205 Garage & Estate Sales Spay, Neuter and more! MOVING SALE! Go to BendSnip.org Furniture, sports equipment, or call 541-617-1010 tools, garden, kitchen, antiques, Three Rivers Humane Society art & more. Where love finds a home! See the Fri. Aug. 2, Sat. Aug. 3. 8 to 4. doggies at 1694 SE McTaggart 69125 Hurtley Ranch Rd., Sisters in Madras • A No-kill Shelter GARAGE SALE Go to ThreeRiversHS.org Sat, Aug. 3, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. @ or call 541-475-6889 1116 E Creekside Ct, Sisters 500 Services cash only - NO EARLY BIRDS Yard Sale. Antiques, BOOKKEEPING BY KIM collectibles, one-of-a-kind 541-771-4820 handmade beaded jewelry plus Superior Junk Removal usual yard-sale stuff. Sat. only, Residential & Commercial 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. 69033 Barclay property clean-up. 541-706-1756 Ct. Please, NO EARLY BIRDS FIFI'S HAULING SERVICE Cardiostart Thrift. Saving lives Dump Trailers available! one heart at a time. Accepting Call 541-419-2204 donations daily, 11-5. MOVING TRUCK FOR HIRE Closed Sunday. Next to Bi-Mart. –COMPLETE MOVING, LLC– Happy Trails Estate Sales! Sisters' Only Local Moving Co.! Selling or Downsizing? Two exp. men with 25+ years Locally owned & operated by... comm. moving. Refs! ODOT Lic. Daiya 541-480-2806 Class 1-B • Call 541-678-3332 Sharie 541-771-1150 SMALL Engine REPAIR Lawn Mowers, 206 Lost & Found Chainsaws & Trimmers The following items were left Sisters Rental behind at the Sisters airport after 506 North Pine Street the July 4 celebration. If these 541-549-9631 sound familiar, please call Sue at Authorized service center for the airport at 541-719-1112. Stihl, Briggs & Stratton, Gear for Good green packable Honda, Tecumseh jacket, Disney gray sweatshirt, • DERI’s HAIR SALON • Camelbak water bottle, Ford Call 541-419-1279 auto key (possibly a van?) WEDDINGS • CATERING ~ Willow Camp Catering ~ 301 Vehicles Call Wendy, 541-923-8675 We Buy, Sell, Consign Quality SCC PROFESSIONAL Cars, Trucks, SUVs & RVs ~ AUTO DETAILING Call Robb at 541-647-8794 or Premium services by appt. Jeff at 541-815-7397 Sisters Car Connection Sisters Car Connection da#3919 102 W. Barclay Drive SistersCarConnection.com 541-647-8794 • Ask for Robb 2002 Mitsubishi Diamante GEORGE’S SEPTIC 165K, great condition, front TANK SERVICE wheel drive, includes studded “A Well Maintained snow tires, custom car cover, Septic System Protects $2,500 OBO. 541-699-9186 the Environment” CAR TO SELL? 541-549-2871 Place your ad in The Nugget BOOKKEEPING SERVICE ~ Olivia Spencer ~ 401 Horses Expert Local Bookkeeping! Certified Weed-Free HAY. Phone: (541) 241-4907 Orchard Grass or Alfalfa Hay, www.spencerbookkeeping.com Sisters. $250 per ton. SISTERS OREGON Call 541-548-4163 SistersOregonGuide.com ALFALFA TRITICALE 501 Computers & ORCHARD GRASS HAY Communications New crop. No rain. Barn stored. Technology Problems? 3-tie bales. $190-$230/ton. Hwy. I can fix them for you. 126 & Cline Falls. 541-280-1895 Solving for business, home & Horse Boarding in Sisters ~ A/V needs. All tech supported. New barn, arena, round pen, Jason Williams and access to National Forest. Sisters local • 25 yrs. experience $550/mo. Call 541-323-1841. 541-719-8329
Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
C L A S S I F I E D S SISTERS SATELLITE TV • PHONE • INTERNET Your authorized local dealer for DirecTV, ViaSat HS Internet and more! CCB # 191099 541-318-7000 • 541-306-0729
4 Brothers Tree Service Swiss Mountain Log Homes MONTE'S ELECTRIC Sisters' Premier Tree Experts! Hand-crafted Log Homes & • service • residential – TREE REMOVAL & Design Services • Roof Systems • commercial • industrial CLEANUP – & Porches • Railings/Staircases • Serving all of Central Oregon Native / Non-Native Tree Log Accents & Fireplace Mantels 541-719-1316 Assessments, Pruning, High-Risk • Remodels & Log Restoration • lic. bond. insured, CCB #200030 Sawmill & Boom Truck Services Removals, 24 Hr. Emergency 502 Carpet & Upholstery 603 Excavation & Trucking – CCB #162818 – Storm Damage Cleanup, Cleaning Phil Rerat, 541-420-3572 Craning & Stump Grinding, Cascade Bobcat Service is now Debris Removal. www.SwissMtLogHomes.com SCHERRER EXCAVATION M & J CARPET CLEANING – FOREST MANAGEMENT – Lic. & Bonded – CCB #225286 Carpet, area rug, upholstery & Fire Fuels Reduction Brush scherrerexcavation.com tile cleaning. Senior & Veterans Mowing, Mastication, Tree Mike • 541-420-4072 Discounts • 541-549-9090 Thinning, Large & Small Scale Logan • 541-420-0330 GORDON’S Projects! TEWALT & SONS INC. LAST TOUCH Serving Black Butte Ranch, Pat Burke Excavation Contractors Cleaning Specialists for Camp Sherman & Sisters Area LOCALLY OWNED Sisters’ Oldest Excavation Co. CARPETS, WINDOWS since 2003 CRAFTSMAN BUILT Our experience will make your & UPHOLSTERY ** Free Estimates ** CCB: 215066 • 541-588-2062 $ go further – Take advantage Member Better Business Bureau Owner James Hatley & Sons www.sistersfencecompany.com of our FREE on-site visit! • Bonded & Insured • 541-815-2342 Hard Rock Removal • Rock BWPierce General Contracting Serving Central Oregon 4brostrees.com Hammering • Hauling Residential Construction Projects Since 1980 Licensed, Bonded and Insured Trucking • Top Soil • Fill Dirt Becke William Pierce Call 541-549-3008 CCB-215057 Ground-to-finish Site Prep CCB#190689 • 541-647-0384 BULLSEYE CARPET & Sisters Tree Care, LLC Building Demolition • Ponds & beckewpcontracting@gmail.com UPHOLSTERY CLEANING Preservation, Pruning, Liners • Creative & Decorative McCARTHY & SONS Cutting Edge Technology Removals & Storm Damage Rock Placement • Clearing, CONSTRUCTION Over 30 years experience, Serving All of Central Oregon Leveling & Grading Driveways New Construction, Remodels, specialize in rugs & pet stains. Brad Bartholomew Utilities: Sewer Mains, Laterals Fine Finish Carpentry Licensed & Insured ISA Cert. Arborist UT-4454A Water, Power, TV & Phone 541-420-0487 • CCB #130561 – Sisters owned & operated – 503-914-8436 • CCB #218444 Septic System EXPERTS: bullseyecarpetcleaning.net Carl Perry Construction LLC Complete Design & Permit Bear Mountain Fire & • 541-238-7700 • Residential & Commercial Approval, Feasibility, Test Holes. Forestry. Forestry fire reduction Restoration • Repair Circuit Rider Carpet Cleaning Sand, Pressurized & Standard work. Thinning/mowing. – DECKS & FENCES – “A Labor of Love” with Systems. Repairs, Tank David R. Vitelle at 541-420-3254 CCB #201709 • 541-419-3991 35 years exp.! 541-549-6471 Replacement. CCB #76888 JOHN NITCHER 601 Construction Sisters Carpet Cleaning Cellular: 419-2672 or 419-5172 CONSTRUCTION CELEBRATING 39 years in • 541-549-1472 • JOHN PIERCE General Contractor business with spring specials! TewaltAndSonsExcavation.com General Contracting LLC Home repair, remodeling and – Call 541-549-2216 – Residential Building Projects BANR Enterprises, LLC additions. CCB #101744 Earthwork, Utilities, Grading, Serving Sisters Since 1976 504 Handyman 541-549-2206 Strictly Quality Hardscape, Rock Walls LAREDO CONSTRUCTION CCB #16891 • CCB #159020 Residential & Commercial 541-549-1575 CCB #165122 • 541-549-6977 541-549-9764 Maintenance / Repairs www.BANR.net CENIGA'S MASONRY, INC. Insurance Work CCB #194489 Brick • Block • Stone • Pavers ROBINSON & OWEN FRANCOIS' WORKSHOP Heavy Construction, Inc. CCB #181448 – 541-350-6068 Construction & Renovation Int./Ext. Carpentry & Repairs www.CenigasMasonry.com All your excavation needs Custom Residential Projects – Custom Woodworking – *General excavation LAREDO CONSTRUCTION All Phases • CCB #148365 Painting, Decks, Fences & *Site Preparation 541-549-1575 541-420-8448 Outbuildings • CCB #154477 *Sub-Divisions For ALL Your Residential THE NUGGET 541-815-0624 or 541-549-0605 *Road Building Construction Needs N E W S P A P E R *Sewer and Water Systems Home Customizations, LLC CCB #194489 S i s t e r s | O r e g o n *Underground Utilities Res. & Commercial Remodeling, www.laredoconstruction.com www.NuggetNews.com *Grading *Snow Removal Bldg. Maintenance & Painting SPURGE COCHRAN 5 4 1 5 4 9 9 9 4 1 *Sand-Gravel-Rock Chris Patrick, Owner BUILDER, INC. Licensed • Bonded • Insured homecustomizations@gmail.com General Contractor 602 Plumbing & Electric CCB #124327 CCB #191760 • 541-588-0083 Building Distinctive, CURTS ELECTRIC LLC (541) 549-1848 JONES UPGRADES LLC Handcrafted Custom Homes, – SISTERS, OREGON – Home Repairs & Remodeling Additions, Remodels Since ’74 604 Heating & Cooling Quality Electrical Installations Drywall, Decks, Pole Barns, A “Hands-On” Builder Agricultural • Commercial ACTION AIR Fences, Sheds & more. Keeping Your Project on Time Industrial • Well & Irrigation Heating & Cooling, LLC Mike Jones, 503-428-1281 & On Budget • CCB #96016 Pumps, Motor Control, Retrofit • New Const • Remodel Local resident • CCB #201650 To speak to Spurge personally, Barns & Shops, Plan Reviews Consulting, Service & Installs call 541-815-0523 CCB #178543 600 Tree Service & actionairheatingandcooling.com EARTHWOOD 541-480-1404 CCB #195556 Forestry TIMBER FRAME HOMES R&R Plumbing, LLC 541-549-6464 TIMBER STAND Large inventory of dry, stable, > Repair & Service IMPROVEMENT LLC gorgeous, recycled old-growth 605 Painting > Hot Water Heaters All-phase Tree Care Specialist Douglas fir and pine for mantles, > Remodels & New Const. ~ FRONTIER PAINTING ~ Technical Removals, Pruning, stair systems, furniture and Servicing Central Oregon Quality Painting, Ext. & Int. Stump Grinding, Planting & structural beams. Timber frame Lic. Bond. Ins. • CCB #184660 Refurbishing Decks Consultations, Brush Mowing, design and construction services 541-771-7000 CCB #131560 • 541-771-5620 Lot Clearing, Wildfire Fuel since 1990 – CCB#174977 SWEENEY www.frontier-painting.com Reduction • Nate Goodwin 549-0924 • earthwoodhomes.com PLUMBING, INC. Riverfront Painting LLC ISA-Cert. Arborist PN-7987A JERRY WILLIS DRYWALL “Quality and Reliability” Interior/Exterior • Deck Staining CCB #190496 • 541-771-4825 & VENETIAN PLASTER Repairs • Remodeling SHORT LEAD TIMES online at www.tsi.services All Residential, Commercial Jobs • New Construction Travis Starr, 541-647-0146 Top Knot Tree Service can 541-480-7179 • CCB #69557 • Water Heaters License #216081 handle all of your tree needs from CASCADE GARAGE DOORS 541-549-4349 – Earl W. Nowell Painting – trimming to removals. Factory Trained Technicians Residential and Commercial Local! Int., Ext., Stain, Decks... Call Bello at 541-419-9655 Since 1983 • CCB #44054 Licensed • Bonded • Insured Lic. & Bonded • CCB #201728 CCB #227009 541-548-2215 • 541-382-4553 CCB #87587 For free estimate: 541-633-8297
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606 Landscaping & Yard Maintenance
Fencing, irrigation installation & trouble-shooting, defensible space strategies, general cleanups, turf care maintenance and agronomic recommendations, fertility & water conservation management, light excavation. CCB 188594 • LCB 9264 541-515-8462 J&E Landscaping Maintenance LLC Clean-ups, raking, hauling debris, gutters. Edgar Cortez, 541-610-8982 or 541-420-8163 jandelspcing15@gmail.com Affordable Handyman & Yard Care with integrity. Weed-eating & needle cleanup! 541-240-1120 All Landscaping Services Mowing, Thatching, Hauling... Call Abel Ortega, 541-815-6740. Metolius Landscape & Lawn Maintenance Aerating, thatching, mowing, pruning, hauling & more – Call Eric Bilderback 541-508-9672 Buried in Pine Needles? Check out The Nugget's Yard Care advertisers! – All You Need Maintenance – Pine needle removal, hauling, mowing, moss removal, edging, raking, weeding, pruning, roofs, gutters, pressure washing... Lic/Bonded/Ins. CCB# 218169 Austin • 541-419-5122
701 Domestic Services BEST VALUE WINDOW CLEANING, LLC. Providing sparkling clean views out your windows. Call us today 678-934-2767. – CUSTOM HOUSE CARE – TLC for your Home or Vacation Rental in Sisters, Black Butte Ranch & surrounding areas. Let us sparkle your home for a fresh start! Call to schedule an immaculate home cleaning. Lic-Bonded-Ins. Refs Avail. Call Emilee Stoery, 541-588-0345 or email customhousecare@earthlink.net "CLEANING QUEEN" Serving the Sisters area! Call Maria at 541-213-0775 PANORAMIC WINDOW CLEANING Serving all of Central OR. Bonded & insured. Senior & military discounts. 541-510-7918 BLAKE & SON – Commercial, Home & Rentals Cleaning WINDOW CLEANING! Lic. & Bonded • 541-549-0897
704 Events & Event Services Grand Canyon Float Trip Looking for a few more participants. Winter trip Jan. 22 to Feb. 18. You will need your own raft 15'+. Call for info. Leave message as needed. 541-280-9764
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
C L A CS L SA I S F SI IE FD I S E D S
Black Butte SchoolBlack is recruiting Anderson Perry &Anderson Associates, Butte School isADVERTISEMENT recruiting ADVERTISEMENT Perry & Associates, Street, FORInc., BIDS1901 N. FirInc., 1901LaN. Fir Street, La pool. Maintenance pool. Maintenance workers CITY workers OF SISTERS, OREGON Grande, Oregon CITY OF SISTERS, OREGON Grande, Oregon are needed for current HOODand/or AVENUE NORTH Anderson Perry &Anderson Associates, HOOD AVENUE NORTH Perry & Associates, areand/or needed for current future vacancies. PT.future Duties ALLEY WATER LINE Inc., 2659 S.W. 4thInc., Street, Suite ALLEY WATER LINE vacancies. PT. Duties 2659 S.W. 4th Street, Suite include light maintenance, IMPROVEMENTS - 2019 200, Redmond, IMPROVEMENTS - 2019 Oregon 200, Redmond, Oregon includerepair, light maintenance, repair, ers, Pageant Manners, Training, Pageant Training, and groundskeeping.and groundskeeping. City of Sisters, Oregon Anderson Associates, City of Sisters, OregonPerry &Anderson Perry & Associates, hrs/$49. Call Karee 3 hrs/$49. Call Contact Karee Shawn Russell E. Cascade Avenue / Cascade Inc.,Avenue 214 E. / Birch Inc., Street, Walla 520 E. 214 E. Birch Street, Walla Contact Shawn520 Russell 719-0050 for brochure 541-719-0050at srussell@blackbutte.k12.or.us for brochure P.O. Box 39 Walla, P.O. Box 39Washington Walla, Washington at srussell@blackbutte.k12.or.us or 541-595-6203 for more info. Sisters, Oregon 97759 Bidding DocumentsBidding are available Sisters, Oregon 97759 or 541-595-6203 for more info. Documents are available H E N U G G ETTH E N U G G E T The City of Sisters, Oregon at http://www.andersonperry. The City of Sisters, Oregon http://www.andersonperry. at E W S P A P E RN E W S PSisters A P E Habitat R for Sisters Humanity Habitat for Humanity for invites the comBids under Docs link.the Bid Docs link. (Owner) for thetheBid com under 42 E. Main Avenue442 E. Main Avenue Join our fun team! Join our (Owner) fun team! invites Bids construction of the Hood Avenue The digital Bidding Documents construction of the Hood Avenue The digital Bidding Documents 698, Sisters, OR 97759 POB 698, Sisters, ORThrift 97759Store Asst. Thrift Store Asst. North Alley Water Line may be downloaded for a North Alley Water Line may be downloaded for a 541-549-9941 541-549-9941 Fri/Sat 1-5 p.m., SunFri/Sat 9-5 p.m., 1-5 p.m., Sun 9-5 p.m., Improvements 2019 project. non-refundable payment of $15 Improvements 2019 project. non-refundable payment of $15 Mon 9 a.m. -1 p.m. Mon 9 a.m. -1 p.m. The Work for this Contract will by inputting QuestCDN eBidDoc Work for this Contract will inputting QuestCDN eBidDoc The by 02 Help Wanted802 HelpWork Wanted as a team, ability to as lifta30 Work team, ability to lift 30 consist of the installation of the a Number 6452000 the website. consist of installation of a onNumber 6452000 on the website. lbs., excellent customer service, lbs., excellent customer service, CLEAR SPA SERVICE AQUA CLEAR SPA SERVICE new water line and appurtenances Assistance with free QuestCDN new water line and appurtenances Assistance with free QuestCDN including cashiering,including donationcashiering, donation ub cleaning technician Hot tub cleaning technician to replace existing undersized membership registration, to replace existing undersized membership registration, intake/inventory. $15/hr. intake/inventory. $15/hr. Training provided needed.with Training provided with water lines. The Work includes document downloading, and water lines. The Work includes document downloading, and ReStore Assistant ReStore Assistant unity for advancement. opportunity for advancement. installation of approximately 590 working with the digital Project of approximately 590 with the digital Project installation working 20 hrs./wkdys. 20 to hrs./wkdys. Ability to titive pay. Clean driving pay. Clean Competitive driving Ability linear water information obtained atmay be obtained at feetline, of 8-inch water may line, beinformation regularly lift 50+ lbs., work aslift a 50+ regularly lbs., feet workofas8-inch a linear ord required. Serious record required. Serious connections to existing main QuestCDN.com, at connections to existing main QuestCDN.com, at customer service, including team, customer service, including ts only. Callapplicants or email for only.team, Call or email for lines including an 8-inch hot tap, an 952-233-1632, or via e-mail at or via e-mail at lines including 8-inch hot tap, 952-233-1632, cashiering, donationcashiering, donation view: 541-410-1023; interview: 541-410-1023; water $15/hr. service water lines and info@questcdn.com. No paper service lines and info@questcdn.com. No paper intake/inventory. $15/hr. intake/inventory. earoregon@gmail.com aquaclearoregon@gmail.com connections, a newconnections, fire hydranta sets provided bidding new will fire be hydrant be provided for bidding setsforwill Custodian Custodian s Meat & Smokehouse Sisters Meat & Smokehouse assembly, and fire hydrant barrier purposes. assembly, and fire hydrant barrier purposes. 10 hrs./wk. $15/hr, cleaning 10 hrs./wk. $15/hr, cleaning ow hiring! Call Molly is now hiring! Call Molly curb, together with other The an Owner equal curb,all together with Owner all otheris The is an equal Thrift Store/ ReStore/offices. Thrift Store/ ReStore/offices. tails at 541-232-1009. for details at 541-232-1009. Work shown on the Drawings opportunity employer. Minorityemployer. Minority Work shown on the Drawings opportunity Email resume and cover to: and Emailletter resume cover letter to: me Receptionist position, Part-time Receptionist position, and as specified. and as specified.and women-owned businesses are and women-owned businesses are angela@sistershabitat.org angela@sistershabitat.org Sun. 12-6 p.m., available 12-6 Fri./Sat./Sun. p.m., Sealed Bids line for the described encouraged to bid. encouraged Minority and to bid. Minority and Sealed Bids for the described indicate available which job inindicate subjectwhich line job in subject ew Relaxation at Room the newatRelaxation Room at Project will thebewomen-owned businesses should businesses should women-owned Projectbywill received by the Full job descriptions at job descriptions Full at be received n Renaissance Sisters. theinSalon Renaissance in Sisters. City of Sisters, Oregon, Kerry Oregon, indicate c/o they are aindicate minoritythey on are a minority on City c/o of Sisters, Kerry sistershabitat.org/hiring. sistershabitat.org/hiring. ore details call Tim More details call Tim Prosser, City Recorder, at City City Recorder, the Planholders List.the Planholders List. at City Prosser, NuggetNews.com NuggetNews.com 541-420-5627. 541-420-5627. Hall, 520 E. Cascade A non-mandatory pre-bid Hall, Avenue, 520 E. Cascade Avenue, A non-mandatory pre-bid Sisters, Oregon 97759, until 2:00 conference will be held at 10:30 will be held at 10:30 Sisters, conference Oregon 97759, until 2:00 Butte SchoolBlack is seeking Buttea School is999 seeking a Public Notice 999 Public Notice p.m., local time, p.m., August a.m., August local time, August local14, time, on August 14, local21, time, 21, ona.m., Driver. $18.85+ DOE. Bus Driver. $18.85+ DOE. BEFORE THE PUBLIC BEFORE THE 2019,PUBLIC at which time City Bids of Sisters City Hall,of Sisters City Hall, 2019, at City 2019,theat Bids which2019, timeat the ng to train. Split shift to train. Split shift Willing UTILITY COMMISSION OFCOMMISSION UTILITY received will OF be publicly opened E. Cascade will be520 publicly openedAvenue, 520 E.Sisters, Cascade Avenue, Sisters, received :15 a.m. and 2:15-4:15 6:15-8:15 a.m. and 2:15-4:15 OREGON OREGON and read. Oregon 97759. Oregon Bidders 97759. are and read. Bidders are add'l hours for field add'l trips hours for field trips p.m. + UW 176, In the Matter of, In The UW 176, the Matter of, is subject Contract to the isencouraged The Contract subject toto attend. the encouraged to attend. perwork. For and morepaperwork. For info: more info: Aspen Lakes UtilityAspen Company, Lakes Utility Company, applicable provisions of ORS Owner: City Sisters, Oregon Owner: City of Sisters, Oregon applicable provisions of of ORS 541-595-6203 or 541-595-6203 or Advice No. 19-1, Request Advicefor No.a19-1, Request a 279C.800ORS through 279C.800 for through By: PaulORS Bertagna By: Paul Bertagna l@blackbutte.k12.or.us srussell@blackbutte.k12.or.us General Rate Revision. Notice General Rate Revision. 279C.870,Notice the Oregon Prevailing Title: Public Works Director the Oregon Prevailing Title: Public Works Director 279C.870, es and Transportation Facilites and Transportation of Public CommentofHearing Public Comment Hearing Wage Law. Date: July 31, 2019 Wage Law. Date: July 31, 2019 r: Black Butte SchoolBlack is Manager: Butte School is Conference and Prehearing and Prehearing Conference Bid security shall be furnished in Bid security shall be furnished in • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • ly looking forcurrently someonelooking for someone Aspen Lakes UtilityAspen Company Lakes Utility Company the amount of 10 percent of the of 10 SERVICE percent of TO the PROVIDE? the amount SERVICE TO PROVIDE? can fill all threewho of our can fill all seeks three of our to increase its seeks rates for to increase itsBid rates for Total Price. Total Bid Price. BUSINESS TO PROMOTE? BUSINESS TO PROMOTE? ancies (maintenance, vacancies (maintenance, water service in Oregon. waterThe service The in Oregon. The Office Issuing the Office The for Issuing for the VEHICLE FOR SALE? VEHICLE FOR SALE? ial, and transportation). custodial, and transportation). Public Utility Commission will Commission Public Utility will Bidding Bidding Documents is: City of Documents is: City TO of RENT? HOUSE HOUSE TO RENT? ed, the threeCombined, positions are the three positions are hold a telephone public holdcomment a telephoneSisters, public comment Oregon, 520 E. Cascade Sisters, Oregon, 520 E. Cascade LOOKING FOR LAND? LOOKING FOR LAND? ximately 35 hours per approximately 35 hours per hearing and prehearing hearing andAvenue, prehearing Sisters, Oregon 97759, Sisters, Oregon 97759, Avenue, GARAGE TOO FULL? GARAGE TOO FULL? Contact Shawn Russell week. Contactconference Shawn Russell on August 21, 2019 on at August conference 21, 2019 at Public Paul Bertagna, Works Paul Bertagna, Public Works in Advertise Advertise in ell@blackbutte.k12.or.us at srussell@blackbutte.k12.or.us 4:00 p.m. To participate in the 4:00 p.m. To participate Director, in the 541-323-5212, Director, 541-323-5212, The Nugget Newspaper's The Nugget Newspaper's 595-6203 forormore info. 541-595-6203 for more info. public comment hearing publicand comment hearing and pbertagna@ci.sisters.or.us. pbertagna@ci.sisters.or.us. CLASSIFIEDS CLASSIFIEDS Butte SchoolBlack is seeking Buttea School is seeking a prehearing prehearing conference, use theconference, use theBidders Prospective may Bidders Prospective may For no additional cost For no additional cost om Aide forClassroom the 2019-20Aide for the 2019-20 dial-in telephone number dial-in of telephone number of examine the Bidding Documents the Bidding Documents examine your classified goes ONLINE! your classified goes ONLINE! l year. Contactschool Shawnyear. Contact Shawn followed 888-363-4735 by the at 888-363-4735 followed by the the Issuing Officeaton theMondays Issuing Office on Mondays Go to www.NuggetNews.com Go to www.NuggetNews.com ussell for more info Russell foraccess more code info of 9787621. accessPersons code of 9787621. through Persons Fridays through between Fridays the DEADLINE: between Every the DEADLINE: Monday by Every Monday by ll@blackbutte.k12.or.us srussell@blackbutte.k12.or.us not able to call in may notsubmit able to callhours in may of submit 8 a.m. andhours 5 p.m., at and noon. of or 8 a.m. 5 p.m., or 541-549-9941 at Call noon. Call 541-549-9941 541-595-6203 541-595-6203 comments to the Commission comments via to thethe Commission via listed other locations below. the other locations listed • below. • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • email to email to r person, noCounter experience person, no experience puc.hearings@state.or.us, via puc.hearings@state.or.us, via y, will train.necessary, Short order will train. Short order U.S. Mail toand OPUC,U.S. Attn:Mail UWto OPUC, Attn: UW 8 and over. Property and over. cook, 18 and Property 176, PO Box 176, POOR Box 1088, Salem, OR ng maintenance, P-T. maintenance, building P-T.1088, Salem, 97308-1088, or by telephone to or by telephone to 97308-1088, f-house PIC, experience PIC, Front-of-house experience may 1-800-522-2404. Customers may y, bring resume. Sno Cap necessary, bring 1-800-522-2404. resume. Sno CapCustomers contact the Hearingscontact Division thefor Hearings Division for sters. Apply in person. in Sisters. Apply in person. more information atmore 503- information at 503rden Angel The is now fillingAngel is now filling Garden 378-6678 or e-mail 378-6678 or e-mail ape maintenance crew maintenance crew landscape puc.hearings@state.or.us. puc.hearings@state.or.us. r positions. LCB 9583. member positions. LCB 9583. Megan W. Decker, Chair Megan W. Decker, Chair re at 541-549-2882 or at 541-549-2882 or Inquire Stephen M. Bloom, Stephen M. Bloom, rdenangel@gmail.com thegardenangel@gmail.com Commissioner Commissioner Custom Landscaping is VOHS Custom Landscaping Letha is Tawney, Letha Tawney, ing! Competitive wages, CompetitiveCommissioner now hiring! wages, Commissioner ompany. 541-515-8462 great company. 541-515-8462 IF YOU HAVE A IF YOU HAVE A utte SchoolBlack is recruiting Butte School is recruiting ANDDISABILITY DISABILITY NEED AND NEED custodial pool. Custodial for our custodial pool. Custodial ACCOMMODATION TO ACCOMMODATION TO rs are neededworkers for current are needed for current PARTICIPATE INPARTICIPATE THIS IN THIS r future vacancies. PT. and/or future vacancies. PT. EVENT, PLEASE EVENT, LET US PLEASE LET US nclude general custodial Duties include general custodial KNOW KNOW Contact Shawn Russell work. Contact Shawn Russell Oregon 503-378-6678, Relay 503-378-6678, Oregon Relay ell@blackbutte.k12.or.us at srussell@blackbutte.k12.or.us Service: 7-1-1, or e-mail Service: 7-1-1, or e-mail 595-6203 forormore info. 541-595-6203 for more info. puc.hearings@state.or.us puc.hearings@state.or.us
Classes & Training 801 Classes & Training for our maintenancefor our maintenance FOR BIDS
LOCAL ART: Format change opens up fair art show Continued from page 3
For 2019 The Art Show newly includes painter Sylvia Avenius-Ford, potter Diane Miyauchi, pastel artist Norma Holmes, watercolorist Sue McLaughlin, photographer Conrad Weiler and collage artist Linda Wolff. An artists’ reception is set for Friday, August 9, from 5 to 8 p.m. The Art Show and Country Fair continues on Saturday, August 10, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. with the Art Show/Sale, the Marketplace, and more silent auctions. The Country Store offers homemade preserves, fresh produce, candy, pies, cakes, home-baked breads and cookies, potted plants, and handmade craft items. The Good Book store offers a great selection of gently read books. The Sweet Tooth Booth dishes up famous homemade marionberry cobbler with ice cream. Face painting, a bouncy castle, children’s games, cake walks, fire truck tours and animals can be followed by hamburgers and hot dogs, coleslaw and chips at the Café Transfig. All proceeds go back to the Sisters community through donation to various community organizations. All funds earned at this event are distributed to community support agencies including Family Action Network, Kiwanis Food Bank, Neighbor Impact, Sisters Habitat for Humanity, Healthy Beginnings, Bethlehem Inn, Circle of Friends, and Saving Grace. The Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration is at 68825 Brooks Camp Rd, at the corner of Hwy 242 just west of Sisters. Admission and parking are free! Information: 541-549-7087
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Easy ways to be sustainable in the garden By Kym Pokorny Oregon State University Extension Service
CORVALLIS – In the midst of the gardening season, you may want to think about how you can be kinder on the environment – and your wallet, too. “Everyone can be sustainable,” said Ross Penhallegon, a horticulturist for Oregon State University Extension Service. “If you use drip irrigation, you’re doing your part to save this resource. If you take leaves and make compost and put that compost in the soil, we’ve won. Penhallegon shares these tips for being more sustainable in the garden:
• Instead of putting yard debris in the recycling cart, start a compost pile. If a hot compost pile (http://bit.ly/ OSUcompost) seems overwhelming or too time-consuming, use the cold composting method, where you throw yard debris in a pile and wait until it breaks down in a year or more. Composting keeps all the nutrients stored in yard debris in your garden on site and feeds the soil. It also saves you money since buying compost isn’t necessary. • Switch from standard sprinklers to drip irrigation or soaker hoses. You can reduce your water use by up to 80 percent. Also, consider using drought-resistant plants to
save water – for your wallet as well as the environment (see http://bit.ly/OSUplantlist). Another publication – Conserving Water in Your Yard and Garden (http://bit.ly/ OSUconservewater) – offers additional ways to save water. • Plant larger seedlings, which will fend off pests and diseases better than small ones, making it easier to control problems without using pesticides. • Save seeds of your healthiest plants, which is a fun way to see what develops the next year. If they turn into healthy plants, that will mean less problems. Saving seeds also saves you money. Find out more in the Extension
article Seize some seeds from the garden for planting next year (http://bit.ly/OSUseeds). • Practice Integrated Pest Management (IPM), which uses the least-toxic methods for controlling pest and disease problems while minimizing risks to the environment, humans, animals, pollinators and other beneficial insects. Some easy ways to use IPM are to manage pests by squishing them, washing them off with a strong spray of water, using fabric cloth and planting plants that attract good bugs to help take care of the bad ones (learn more about IPM at http://bit.ly/OSUfightbugs). If you must use a pesticide, use a low-toxicity one.
Oregon liquor license cost raised for 1st time in 70 years SALEM (AP) — The cost of a liquor license in Oregon is going up for the first time in 70 years after newly passed legislation doubled the amount the agency will charge bars, restaurants, breweries and wineries for the right to sell alcohol to customers. The law moves Oregon’s liquor fees from among the cheapest in the nation to just below the national average for such fees, but the agency says getting on a par with other states was not the motivation. The Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC) wants to use the new revenue to move
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its license renewal process online, deal with the increase in applications statewide as the population grows and create a more efficient, two-year renewal option. “Our fees were set in 1949, as far as we know, back when bread was 10 cents a loaf,” said OLCC spokesman Matthew Van Sickle. Starting Oct. 1, a full liquor license will be $800, up from $400, and winery or brewery license fees will increase from $250 to $500. OLCC’s revenues from distilled spirit sales and beer and wine privilege taxes,
forecast at more than $1.5 billion for 2019-21, are the thirdlargest source of revenue for the State of Oregon. The increase in licensing fees is projected to raise an additional $9 million for the 2019-21 biennium. The agency processes an average of 454 new licenses a year, adding to a load of more than 18,000 active licenses. Another goal for the new revenue is increased stings where the State sends in underage people to attempt to purchase alcohol at licensed establishments. The Legislature sets the benchmark
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for compliance, recently raised from 80% to 90%.
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HOME: Families put in ‘sweat equity’ on homes Continued from page 3
into their house. The future homeowners attend classes and earn sweat equity hours by working at the Thrift Store, ReStore and working on their house. Nancy spent time painting her home during Women Build Week and Roberto would often be at the house at the end of his work day working on various projects. Sisters Habitat for Humanity is an option for qualified families to achieve strength, stability and the independence they need to build a better life for themselves and their families. Those interested in homeownership or the Sisters Habitat home repair program can visit www.sistershabitat.org and review the qualification guidelines, or call the Habitat office at 541-549-1193.
THANK
YOU!
Thankk you tto th Th the amazing i community it we call home! To the fire hall and firefighters who shared their space with us for the weekend. To Angeline Rhett and the rest of the Rhett family who went above and beyond to accommodate artists, transport, assist with setup and teardown and be a shoulder to cry on if needed. Bill Moss, JJ Jones, Jon Fox and The Heart of Oregon for transporting everyone safely to and fro. Thank you to Kerry Prosser and Shawn Diez for welcoming folks and managing volunteers. All the entry gate folks scanning with a smile. Roise Dahms and Katie Diez for being the green room queens. To Meghan Flaherty, Heather Walden, Lynn Bancroft, Mardy Hickerson, Teresa and Chris for holding down the fort in the gazebo. Ara and Michelle for amazing vendor coordination and backstage traffic flow. David Jacobs Strain, the stage-managing king! Jim Goodwin, Katie Cavanaugh and Jim Cornelius for pumping up the crowd. Elias Munro, the volunteer of the year, what a great addition to the team! Jimmy Miller and Chance Dahms, on opps, we wouldn’t do it any other way. Drew and Erin from the Trail Stop, the Porch and Sisters Meat and Smokehouse, thanks for feeding us all! To all our sponsors, volunteers, friends and family thank you, thank you from the bottom of our hearts.
It really does take a village, and we are proud to be a part of this one! — Love, Jenn and Joe!
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Scientists warn Oregon is lagging in disaster preparedness Legislature fails to approve hemp commission By Sarah Zimmerman Associated Press
SALEM (AP) — Oregon state lawmakers abandoned a multimillion-dollar project to develop early warning systems for earthquakes and wildfires, and scientists warn that the funding shake-up could endanger public safety and put Oregon further behind other West Coast states in preparing for natural disasters. Researchers were shocked when nearly $12 million to expand ShakeAlert and AlertWildfire — early warning systems to help detect significant earthquakes and wildfires — unexpectedly went up in smoke last month, just days before the end of the legislative session. Money for the projects was included as part of a larger funding package, but was stripped in a lastminute amendment. Disaster preparedness has continually been a focal point as western states are poised to enter the hottest and driest months of wildfire season. And two massive earthquakes in remote areas of Southern California this month reminded the public it’s only a matter of time before the next destructive quake hits. “We don’t know when the next big earthquake or wildfire will strike, but we know it will happen at some point,” said Douglas Toomey, a seismologist and earth sciences
professor at the University of Oregon who helps run both early warning detection systems. And Oregon is “woefully” unprepared, he said. Gov. Kate Brown, who included the $12 million in funding for the projects in her proposed budget last year, has told reporters the decision not to expand the early detection systems was one of the “biggest disappointments” of this year’s legislative session. ShakeAlert and AlertWildfire are designed to detect natural disasters as they start and alert responders and the public before significant damage occurs. They are managed by a consortium of public universities and funded through state, federal and private partnerships. In Oregon, the programs are in the initial phases and need significant state investments to expand to a point that they’ll be useful to the public, Toomey said. AlertWildfire is a system of cameras stationed in some of the most remote and fire-prone parts of Oregon, Nevada and California. It has provided critical information to first responders in over 600 fires during the past three fire seasons, allowing firefighters in some cases to contain blazes before they spiral out of control. ShakeAlert, meanwhile, is a sensor system being built out across California, Oregon
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Sisters
and Washington. The sensors pick up on faster-moving but less-damaging energy waves that emerge during the start of an earthquake. They can then sound the alarm before the stronger, more destructive secondary wave, giving people seconds or minutes to prepare depending on the size of the earthquake and their distance from the epicenter. Other western states have thrown significant cash behind the two systems, allowing them to build out hundreds of earthquake sensors and wildfire cameras. Cities and states need at least 75 percent of their earthquake sensors in place before officials can begin alerting the public through the ShakeAlert app. Los Angeles became the first U.S. city to make the app available in January. The system could be sending alerts to the rest of California by the end of the year thanks to a $16.3 million investment from state lawmakers. Additional emergency management funds also have allowed California to expand its use of AlertWildfire, and the state is expected to install 200 to 300 new wildfire cameras by October. Washington’s ShakeAlert system could be ready by October 2020, and the state contributed $1 million this year to enhance the network. Meanwhile, only three
wildfire cameras have been installed in Oregon, and the state still has to build over 100 more earthquake sensors before alerts can be sent through ShakeAlert. Without any additional money from the state, ShakeAlert will remain dependent on federal funds. That could mean the system won’t be online until 2021 at the earliest — far later than Oregon’s neighboring states. State lawmakers didn’t specify why funding for ShakeAlert and AlertWildfire was abandoned, but it’s common for last-minute funding shake-ups to happen based on available resources, according to the office of Sen. Elizabeth Steiner Hayward, who chairs the legislative committee in charge of funding decisions. Lizzy Atwood Wills, chief of staff to Steiner Hayward, said ShakeAlert and AlertWildfire were some of the many projects not to receive funding this year. Investments are prioritized “within the limited resources available,” she said. Toomey said he still doesn’t understand why it wasn’t considered a priority, saying the money would have created jobs and attracted additional federal matching funds besides possibly saving lives. “It feels like the State is demoting public safety,” he said. “There are lives at stake here.”
A Partnership Beyond Your Expectations Stop by and visit with Tiana Van Landuyt & Shelley Marsh. 220 S. Pine St., Ste. 102 | 541-548-9180
SALEM (AP) — A proposal for an Oregon Hemp Commission has died in a Legislative committee. The East Oregonian reported Friday that the proposal for a commission to raise research funds for Oregon’s hemp industry failed to pass the Joint Ways and Means Committee in June. The committee approves budget measures in each legislative session; a similar proposal was rejected by the committee two years ago. An Oregon State University researcher says an industrywide organization would help increase understanding of the difficulties faced by hemp growers. Annual hemp production in Oregon has increased from less than a square mile to more than 78 square miles in the past five years.
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
MUSIC: Last-minute changes in line-up worked for festival Continued from page 19
new album ‘Off at 11,’ contemporary blues phenom JD Simo packed up his gear and flew across the country to get here in time.” Simo was a hit for Walt Lewis from Boise, Idaho. He grew up in Chicago listening to the blues. “My wife and I really loved JD Simo. He seemed to channel so many blues greats throughout his act!” he said. Simo brought down the house, closing the first night of Sisters Rhythm and Brews Festival. From Issaquah, Washington, Bruce Fish took a couple of days off for the festival to hear Larkin Poe. He said, “I saw them in Seattle and they’re good old blues even with some of the new stuff they write. They are a variety of blues and I love the way Megan (Lovell) plays slide guitar.” Larkin Poe stars sisters Rebecca and Megan Lovell, who began their career in 2005 as teenagers with their bluegrass/Americana group, The Lovell Sisters. They are an American roots rock band from Atlanta, Georgia, featuring strong Southern sibling harmonies and heavy electric guitar riffs. Christone “Kingfish” Ingram blew the doors off to close the festival, bringing up fellow guitarslingers Eric Gales and Mr. Sipp
for crowd-pleasing extended blues jams. Jennifer Rambo said, “I think the thing that means the most to me is the feedback we have gotten from the artists and crew. They are taking time out of their lives to be here for us. Many of them thanked us to be here and appreciate our professionalism. Joe and I wanted our musical tastes to be expressed, and knowing that the artists were impressed and excited to be a part of this experience is fantastic.” She reflected on some changes made for this year’s festival — changes that paid off. The festival went to a single venue at Village Green, and they offered single-day tickets as well as weekend passes. There were more than 1,200 ticket-buyers, not counting walk-ups. “Having one venue certainly helped us run a tighter ship,” Rambo said. “We stretched ourselves too thin last year… Through all the hard work, tears, and laughter at the end of the day knowing we put on a good show for the ticket-holders and artists combined is a pretty epic feeling.”
BOOK CLUB: Program will ‘bridge divide’ among viewpoints Continued from page 3
Books will be selected by Jacobson and a professional moderator to represent differing points of view on a variety of challenging political and cultural subjects. “It will very specifically not shy away from the difficult discussions,” Jacobson said. The sessions will encourage vigorous but collegial discussions. “Of course further discussion is encouraged,” Jacobson said. “Go grab a beer at the saloon afterward…” In fact, that is a desirable outcome — getting to a point where people can get past sound bites and memes and slogans and really talk with each other about often complicated issues. Jacobson notes that delving into books encourages greater depth of understanding and discourse. “You’re not getting shown those complexities in a threeminute thing on whatever cable news you’re watching,” he said.
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“This is not meant to change anybody’s mind,” the bookseller noted, but rather to “illuminate things that people might miss when they’re in their echo chambers.” The first book on the curriculum is a means of laying the groundwork for what Jacobson hopes will be an ongoing Sisters cultural institution. It is titled “Think Again: How to Reason and Argue.” The publisher notes that author Walter SinnottArmstrong “says there is such a thing as a ‘good’ argument: Reasonable arguments can create more mutual understanding and respect, and even if neither party is
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convinced by the other, compromise is still possible.” “As much as they hoot and holler about stuff, I think people really do want these discussions, and when you have it in an environment where they don’t feel like they’re walking into a trap, they’ll engage with it,” Jacobson said. The survey will be available this week either on the paulinaspringsbooks.com web site or by emailing Jacobson at Lane@paulinasppringsbooks.com. The selected members will be notified by Monday, August 19, and the first session will be scheduled for mid-September.
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
LOGGING: Project is part of broad program on Sisters forests
area was hit hard by mountain pine beetle infestation and the 2012 Pole Creek Fire, leaving dense areas of standing dead trees. “This is where the fire was stopped or held for Pole Creek,” Orange noted. A commercial firewood sale is bid out exactly like any other timber sale, Orange and Elpi explained. Prior to the Pole Creek Fire, the area was a popular site for public firewood cutting. Orange explained why the Forest Service decided to bid the project out as a commercial sale rather than opening up the area for public cutting. “We can regulate slash cleanup; we can regulate stump heights; we can regulate safety of cutting near one of our busiest roads,” he said. The project is designed to minimize impact on the landscape. The sale requirements allow for only 20 percent of the sale area to be disturbed by logging operations. The project area runs to a depth of 1,000 feet from Road 16.
Continued from page 1
the area. Sisters Ranger District Timber Sale Manager Steve Orange explained that the current effort is “removing large amounts of dead fuel adjacent to one of the busiest recreation roads on the District.” Forest Road 16 leads from Sisters to Three Creek Lake. Orange also notes that “providing quality firewood — and forest products generally — is something that is an asset to the community.” A side-effect of the project is that it opens up some impressive mountain vistas west of the roadway. The project, which allows cutting of lodgepole up to 21 inches in circumference, is part of an overall effort to improve ecological health and reduce wildfire risk along that corridor. Lodgepole pine in the
PHOTO BY CEILI CORNELIUS
Logging contractor Dave Elpi, right, works with Steve Orange of the USFS to make sure that his work is within parameters of the project.
A tradition of excellence, ce, trust t ust & service se ce
PHOTO BY CEILI CORNELIUS
The Melvin Butte Project on the Sisters Ranger District has opened up vistas along Forest Road 16, removing lodgepole timber and providing for better conditions to fight potential wildfire. There is a detailed plan lining out how far apart skidding trails have to be and there are only three landings along the 2.5-mile stretch where logs are stacked to be limbed and bucked for hauling. “I’m skidding a long, long ways,” Elpi said. Elpi is operating a twoman crew “when it’s not me, myself and I,” hauling the logs to the two-acre Sisters Forest Products woodlot along Highway 126 where they will be processed into firewood. While the current work is a straight commercial sale, Elpi said he particularly enjoys working on stewardship projects, where the focus can include restorative efforts as well as timber cutting. “If you go back in history, he said, stewardship forestry dates back to Europe in the Middle Ages,” he said. The object was to maintain forests as a sustainable resource for wood and for hunting and recreation (then, of course, restricted to the nobility). “We as a people benefit more from stewardship than
from timber sales,” Elpi said. Orange said that the Deschutes National Forest produced about 44 million board feet of timber last year, about evenly divided between timber sales and stewardship projects. “That being said,” he
noted, “Sisters has favored stewardship over the past decades.” A variety of stewardship projects based on improving ecological health and reducing fire risk have been conducted in a sweeping arc from the west to the south of Sisters.
RESIDENTIAL FARM & RANCH VINEYARD PATTY CORDONI
541.771.0931 patty.cordoni@cascadesir.com Principal Broker/Sisters Branch Manager Cascade Sotheby’s Farm, Ranch, Vineyard Division Manager CascadeSothebysRealty.com | Each office independently owned and operated.
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315 S. Timber Creek
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HAVING BEEN A RESIDENT SINCE 1989, 9, I KNOW SISTERS… LET’S FIND YOUR DREAM HOME!
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FEATURES BEYOND COMPARE! • Walking distance to Whychus Creek • Well maintained, many upgrades • 2,100+ sq. . home, 6,534 sq. . lot • 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths • Open floor plan, vaulted ceilings, hardwood/carpeted floors, lots of built-in storage throughout, surround sound • Office or 4th bedroom • Master/en suite on main floor • Kitchen has granite countertops, stainless steel appliances • Beautifully landscaped backyard, privacy fencing, stone patio, BBQ hook-up
Principal Broker & Loan Originator NMLS #1612019
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
VISIT OUR LOCAL SISTERS LOCATION 290 E CASCADE AVENUE SISTERS, OR 541.588.6614 MLS MLS#201904304 #0000000
MLS MLS#201807003 #0000000
546 E JEFFERSON AVE
MLS MLS#201906611 #0000000
15939 NUTHATCH LANE
18211 GOLDCOACH ROAD
4 BD | 2.5 BA | 2,664 SF | .11 AC | $575,000
3 BD | 2.5 BA | 2,760 SF | .99 AC | $649,000
3 BD | 3 BA | 2,553 SF | 5.14 AC | $650,000
Income property with a nightly rental permit approved by the City of Sisters! Prime downtown Sisters, Oregon location. Sleeps 10 +. w/ gourmet kitchen, granite tile countertops, hickory cabinets, stainless appliances, a propane range, a breakfast bar plus teak wood & slate tile floors. Suzanne Carvlin, Broker 541.595.8707 | suzanne.carvlin@cascadesir.com
Stunning setting in Sisters, Oregon bordering Indian Ford Nature Preserve in Sage Meadow. River rock fireplace, builtin entertainment center, formal dining, master walk-in closet, wrap-around porch, oversized 3-car garage, glass greenhouse, paved circular driveway & cascading water feature. Suzanne Carvlin, Broker 541.595.8707 | suzanne.carvlin@cascadesir.com
Custom home bordered by BLM. Great room, family room, office, new kitchen appliances, large laundry room, finished attic that has separate outside access to be a self-contained studio. Peek-a-boo views of the Three Sisters Mountains. 16812RoyalCoachman.com
MLS MLS#201900789 #0000000
Suzanne Carvlin, Broker 541.595.8707 | suzanne.carvlin@cascadesir.com
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16812 ROYAL COACHMAN DR
17700 MOUNTAIN VIEW ROAD
68015 EDGINGTON RD
3 BD | 2.5 BD | 2,609 SF | 2.5 AC | $749,000
4 BD | 3 BD | 3,533 SF | 1.11 AC | $849,000
2 BD | 1.5 BD | 1,024 SF | 60.88 AC | $975,000
You can't re-build this quality for this price! Must see to appreciate, relax on the back deck and fall in love with the wildlife. 2 1/2 acres of peaceful tranquility & serenity located less than 20 minutes from downtown Sisters in Squaw Creek Canyon Estates. Single level living w/ master on own wing. Suzanne Carvlin, Broker Heather Jordan, Broker 541.595.8707 | suzanne.carvlin@cascadesir.com
This French Country Chateau overlooks the 10th fairway at Aspen Lakes Golf Course Estates in Sisters. Enjoy the fresh mountain air in the outdoor living area overlooking the lush lawn with flowering lavender, landscape lighting and a bubbling water feature.
Meditate, write, paint, raise chickens, grow a garden, or simply relax among your own private 60-acre-getaway a mere mile from the western town of Sisters, Oregon. View the North, Middle & South Sisters in the Cascade Mountain Range and striking sunsets. SouthernEagleRanch.com Suzanne Carvlin, Broker 541.595.8707 | suzanne.carvlin@cascadesir.com
Suzanne Carvlin, Broker 541.595.8707 | suzanne.carvlin@cascadesir.com
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66900 FRYREAR RD
16747 OLD MILITARY DR
68879 CHESTNUT DR
2 BD | 2.5 BA | 2,271 SF | 38.76 AC | $1,325,000
3 BD | 2.5 BA | 3,567 SF | 31 AC | $1,495,000
3 BD | 3.5 BA | 3,585 + SF | 9.41 AC | $2,250,000
38.76 Acres includes two residences; a 2,271 SF main house built in 2015 & 1,542 SF guest house built in 1915 (3,813 total SF of living space); large shop with an office; horse stalls, tack room & covered hay area; greenhouse & storage building. Panoramic Cascade Mountain views. WildRyeSisters.com Suzanne Carvlin, Broker Patty Cordoni, Principal Broker 541.595.8707 | suzanne.carvlin@cascadesir.com
Open layout with 2,942 on the main level & upstairs bonus room. Quality craftsmanship includes distressed oak & southwestern tile floors, solid alder doors, wood casement windows, exposed beams and painted tile accents, red barrel concrete tile 40-year roof, and multiple patios. OldMilitarySisters.com Suzanne Carvlin, Broker Patty Cordoni, Principal Broker 541.595.8707 | suzanne.carvlin@cascadesir.com
Exceptional lodge style home with mountain views, secluded landscaped setting minutes to town in Sisters, Oregon. 3,585 SF main home. 3,456 SF barn includes guest quarters, additional bunk room, workshop & stalls. Fenced pastures, 2 wells, large pond with dock. ChestnutHillSisters.com. Suzanne Carvlin, Broker Jeff Jones, Principal Broker 541.595.8707 | suzanne.carvlin@cascadesir.com
Phil Arends Principal Broker Black Butte Ranch 541.420.9997
Joanna Goertzen Broker 541.588.0886
Suzanne Carvlin Broker 541.595.8707
Heather Jordan Broker 541.640.0678
CASCADESOTHEBYSREALTY.COM
Patty Cordoni Managing Principal Broker Farm, Ranch, Vineyard Division 541.771.0931
Meg Cummings Principal Broker Jefferson Co./Billy Chinook 541.419.3036
Chris Scott Mark Morzov Broker Broker Farm, Ranch, Vineyard Division Farm, Ranch, Vineyard Division 541.599.5614 307.690.7799
Marcea DeGregorio Broker 541.408.5134
Ellen Wood Broker 541.588.0033
Sotheby’s International Realty© is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates, LLC. Each office is independently owned and operated. All associates are licensed in the State of Oregon.
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Wednesday, July 31, 2019 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Serving the Sisters, Camp Sherman and Black Butte Ranch Areas
Ponderosa Properties R E A L T O R S
541-549-2002 1.
1- 800-650-6766
New Listing
26324 SW METOLIUS MEADOWS DRIVE Borders National Forest! Quality, energy efficient & well maintained home. Reverse living floor. Main level w/beamed vaulted great room & kitchen, large master suite, office/den, 2 baths & laundry room. Lower level has 2 bedrooms and a bath. Granite counters, stainless appliances & gas fireplace. Lots of windows. Low maintenance landscaping w/irrigation; private paver patio, deck w/hot tub. Triple garage w/extensive builtins. Furnished or unfurnished. Move in ready. All season fun — ski, hike & bike out your back gate, fish in the Metolius River & enjoy the community pool & tennis courts. It’s time to live where you play.$539,000. MLS#201801824
505 S. OAK STREET Wonderful 3-level townhome in Sisters. Approved as a short-term rental. Nice setting located close to downtown. Features throughout and a spacious floorplan provide ambiance and charm. Wonderful main-level greatroom for gathering with family and friends. Or just relax near the gas fireplace while looking out the windows to this quiet, mature neighborhood. Plenty of sleeping space for guests on the 2nd floor, which includes the master suite, 2 guest bedrooms and a bonus room currently used as an additional bedroom. Stairs lead to a large 3rd-floor finished attic for more sleeping/living space. Spend time outdoors on a lush and private rear patio. Attached single garage is used as owner’s bonus space. Convenient to biking trails, tennis, downtown shops and restaurants. $399,000 MLS#201906592
CRS, GRI, Principal Broker
Rad Dyer 541-480-8853
ABR, CCIM, CRB, CRS, GRI, Principal Broker
P R O P E R T Y
www. P onderosa P roperties.com
221 S. Ash St. | PO Box 1779, Sisters
-D D
18557 MCSWAIN DRIVE Nearby access to public land, BLM and trails. McKenzie Canyon open terrain views. Filtered views of the Three Sisters. Quiet, dark skies, friendly neighborhood. Spacious and open. Completely fenced 5 acres, great for horses. Approximately 1,000 sq. ft. shop with woodburning stove, carport with office. Indoor pool. Covered porch, large deck. Woodburning stove on tile hearth. Handcrafted log home, large logs. Well insulated. Great wildlife viewing. Open floor plan. $575,000. MLS#201906779
Kevin R. Dyer 541-480-7552
A N D
The Locals’ Choice! M A N A G E M E N T
17920 WILT ROAD Cascade mountain views from this private 38± acre homesite, ready for your new home. A permitted gated driveway, buried power lines to homesite, installed permitted septic tank and lines, and a water system await you at the top of the drive. Borders miles of public lands. A rare property in the Sisters School District with a permanent CUP in place. $350,000. MLS#201808510
GOLF HOME 245 Located on the 14th fairway of the Big Meadow Golf Course. Open greatroom floor plan with fireplace, hardwood floors, large master suite, loft and single-car garage. Four bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, 2,242± sq. ft. Large rear deck overlooks the golf course. Home is in a vacation rental program and can be rented when the owners are not using it. $539,500. MLS#201811380
BEAUTIFUL TREED LOT IN METOLIUS MEADOWS! This .42± acre lot with mature ponderosa pines borders open space/common area overlooking Lake Creek Basin to the north and Black Butte to the south. Paved road and underground utilities. Ownership includes common area privileges, tennis courts, pool and more. Close to National Forest and Metolius River. This is a great lot to build your vacation getaway cabin.$249,500. MLS#201900507
ROCK RIDGE #37 Vacation location at Black Butte Ranch! One-half ownership for all of the fun at half the expense! 3 bedrooms plus a bunk room in this 1,540 sq. ft. Rock Ridge home. So many upgrades, including granite countertops in the kitchen, new decks, efficient propane stove and more. Easy access to several pools, tennis courts, bike paths and the Glaze Meadow Sports Center. $239,500. MLS#201905281
Carol Davis 541-410-1556 ABR, GRI, Broker
Catherine Black 541-588-9219
CRS, Broker, Realtor Emeritus 40 years
16676 JORDAN ROAD Mountain views! Part of the original Lazy Z Ranch. Fenced on two sides with Kentucky black fencing. Power close by. Septic feasibility in place, may need new evaluation. Close to town, yet off the beaten path, overlooking a 200-acre site of the R&B Ranch, which currently is not buildable. Needs well. Owner will consider short terms. $395,000. MLS#201802331
GOLF COURSE & MOUNTAIN VIEWS 3,598 sq. ft., 5+ bedroom /5.5-bath home perched high above Glaze Meadow 12th green & fairway & the 13th fairway with Mt. Jefferson & Black Butte views. Updated in 2017, featuring open greatroom, gourmet kitchen, separate family room, river-rock fireplace & oak hardwood floors. Warm natural wood paneling & steamed European birch & cherry wood cabinets throughout, natural polished stone slab countertops. Four master suites, each with private bath, additional bedroom & bonus room, could be 6th bedroom, each sharing 5th bathroom. Large utility room & staging area with 1/2 bath, storage & workshop. Attached double garage & extensive decking for outdoor living on all sides of the home. $1,650,000. MLS#201905530
IT’S A NATURAL! This 39.5-acre parcel is ready for your dream to come true. Beautifully treed with mature pines, character junipers, bunchgrass and wildflowers. Public lands to the west and north keep you neighbor-free for miles in those two directions. Power nearby. Easy access at the top of a small public road cul-de-sac. $299,000. MLS#201905467
YOU BELONG HERE 2.5-acre parcels with community water, power and phone available. All lots offer you treed privacy and easy paved-road access. Be one of the first buyers in to claim a mountain view. Just minutes to Sisters. Priced $196,000 to $247,500. Call listing office for MLS#.
Shane Lundgren 541-588-9226 Broker
Debbie Dyer 541-480-1650 GRI, Broker
BE A PART OF IT... Sisters’ Only Custom Mixed-Use Community INNOVATIVE NEW CONCEPT • Light Industrial/Commercial • Live/Work Loft Apartments • Opportunity for Economic Diversity • Small Condo-type Spaces • Perfect for Start-ups and Entrepreneurs Lot 17 MLS#201803204 ............$200,000 Lot 5 MLS#201803205 ............$235,000 Lot 4 MLS#201803206 ........... $245,000 Lot 7 MLS#201803202 ........... $250,000
LAKE CREEK LODGE, #27 One-quarter shared interest in this beautiful 3bedroom, 3-bath cabin at historic Lake Creek Lodge in Camp Sherman. Features modern amenities with the feel of yesteryear. Built in 2011 and furnished with a combination of antiques and quality reproduction pieces. The cabin features fir plank floors, knotty pine paneling, stone/gas fireplace, butcher-block countertops, gas cooktop, farm kitchen sink, tile bathroom floors and showers, washer/dryer, cedar decks, stone exterior accents and locked owner storage. $215,000. MLS#201903016
SPRING HOME 23 Black Butte Ranch hassle-free! One-sixth share in this single level log home, with fabulous recent upgrades, bordering USFS. Cross country ski right off the back deck, heaven for those who love to hike and miles of bike paths on the Ranch. Two championship golf courses, recreation centers, pools, tennis, lakes, trails, etc.. Eight weeks a year as a BBR property owner. Truly “turn-key” affordability in one of the most beautiful vacation spots in the Northwest.$99,000.#201811006 17705 WILT ROAD Incredible mountain views! Private 39.6 acres bordering miles of public land on west side. Elevated building site with mix of pine and junipers. Well and septic are in place; power close by. Only 8± miles from Sisters. $429,000. MLS#201905826
Greg Davidge 808-281-2676 Broker
Jackie Herring 541-480-3157 Broker