WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
2
ImMersion Brewing is expanding to cans!
Canning Release Party
Featuring live music from
Toast and Jam! Feb. 2, 7 - 10PM
Party Only Deals:
$6 six-packs &
$24 mix-and-match cases (2 case limit per guest)
every purchase of a six-pack during the event gets you a chance to win
prizes including a Brew-it-Yourself Session!
550 SW Industrial Way, Ste. 185 Bend | 541.633.7821 www.imbrewing.com | Find us on social media!
The Source Weekly 704 NW Georgia Ave., Bend, OR 97703 t. 541-383-0800 f. 541-383-0088 bendsource.com info@bendsource.com EDITOR Nicole Vulcan editor@bendsource.com
NEWS – Measles Exposure in Bend
p.7
FEATURE – The Many Arms of the Sisters Folk Fest
p.8
Officials say a visitor may have exposed locals to the measles virus.
All the town’s a stage in Sisters during its big fest—but the festival’s reach goes way beyond that summer event. Chris Miller details some of SFF’s recent changes, and where they’re looking to grow.
SOUND – Amsterdam is back
p.13
REPORTER/WEB EDITOR Chris Miller miller@bendsource.com
CULTURE – Winter PrideFest
p.23
REPORTER Isaac Biehl isaac@bendsource.com
CHOW – A visit to Riff
p.25
COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts FREELANCERS Josh Jardine, Nick Nayne, Teafly Peterson, Jim Anderson, Lisa Sipe, Jared Rasic, Damian Fagan, Jeremy Dickman
It’s been five years since Bend-based rapper Amsterdam released a solo album. Isaac Biehl checked out the new tunes and gives his take. Who says Pride has to be restricted to just one month a year? Keely Damara reports on the many happenings at Winter PrideFest this week. Lisa Sipe checks out the cold brew coffee house that’s offering much more than your usual cup of joe.
CRAFT – A woman-owned brewery
p.27
You’ll find contributor Heidi Howard at southeast Bend’s lone brewery many a Wednesday night. She shares what’s special at Spider City in this week’s Craft.
News 6 A model sporting a recycled treasure struts down the runway at the Rubbish Renewed fashion show Jan. 25 at the Midtown Ballroom. The show, featuring upcycled, locally crafted fashions by local students and designers, is an annual fundraiser for REALMS middle and high schools in Bend.
GRAPHIC DESIGNER Shannon Corey shannon@bendsource.com ADVERTISING SALES DIRECTOR Amanda Klingman amanda@bendsource.com
PUBLISHER Aaron Switzer aaron@bendsource.com WILD CARD Paul Butler NATIONAL ADVERTISING Alternative Weekly Network 916-551-1770 Sales Deadline: 5 pm, Mondays Editorial Deadline: 5 pm, Mondays Calendar Deadline: Noon, Fridays Classified Deadline: 4 pm, Mondays Deadlines may shift for special/holiday issues.
The Source Weekly is published every Thursday. The contents of this issue are copyright ©2019 by Lay It Out Inc., and may not be reprinted in part or in whole without consent from the publisher. Cartoons printed in the Source Weekly are copyright ©2019 by their respective artists. The Source Weekly is available free of charge at over 350 locations, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies of the Source Weekly may be purchased for $1.00, payable in advance. Anyone removing papers in bulk will be prosecuted on theft charges to the fullest extent of the law. Writers’ Guidelines: We accept unsolicited manuscripts and comics. Visit our ‘Contact Us’ webpage for freelancer guidelines.
Source Picks
11
Sound 13 Live Music & Nightlife
15
Events 17 Artwatch 23 Chow 25
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Ban Tat, Chris Larro, Ashley Sarvis, Robert Cammelletti advertise@bendsource.com
CONTROLLER Angela Switzer angela@bendsource.com
Call for Artists: If you're interested in being a SW featured artist, email: wyatt@bendsource.com.
Mailbox 5
PRODUCTION MANAGER Wyatt Gaines wyatt@bendsource.com
DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Sean Switzer
On the Cover: Design by Wyatt Gaines
Opinion 4
SYNDICATED CONTENT Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Brendan Emmett Quigley, E.J. Pettinger, Pearl Stark, Tom Tomorrow, Shannon Wheeler
OFFICE MANAGER Wendi Winfrey wendi@bendsource.com
3
Screen 29
EXCLUSIVE THIS WEEK IN:
St. Charles nurses ratify contract
After months of debate, things may be settling down inside the area’s hospital system. Isaac Biehl reports on the latest. Start your day with Central Oregon’s best source for news and local events. SIGN UP AT: BENDSOURCE.COM/NEWSLETTERS
Outside 31 Real Estate
32
Advice 35 Astrology 35 Smoke Signals
38
Puzzles 39
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
REPORTER/CALENDAR EDITOR Keely Damara keely@bendsource.com
IN THIS ISSUE
COVER
OPINION
Hit the Reset Button on the City Council Position WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
4
A
t the time of this writing, messages continue to come into the inboxes of Bend City Councilors, in regard to—to use the words of one resident—the “opaque process” by which the Council selected its recent appointee, Chris Piper. At no point in the past several years have we seen so much public outrage about a political figure. Not even during the recent election, with the emergence of several candidates whose backgrounds came into question, did the disgust rise to this level. During the November election, the Bend Chamber Political Action Committee, as well as the Central Oregon Association of Realtors PAC and the Central Oregon Small Business PAC— funded by local builders—put tens of thousands into the campaign of candidate Andrew Davis, who did not win the Council election. Our investigation has revealed that arms of some of those same organizations were strong advocates of Piper. We mentioned last week that the Bend Chamber supported Piper. Text messages between Mayor Sally Russell and Karna Gustafson of the Central Oregon Builders Association on Jan. 14 discussed which candidate could really “pull support for a [bond]” measure. Gustafson and Russell went on to discuss how candidate Kerani Mitchell needed some “rounding in her experience,” though it’s not clear from those texts why Piper’s experience was viewed as more rounded than Mitchell’s. It’s concerning to see that special interests were able to exert their will during the appointee process, when
voters so recently exerted their will in the opposite direction. That fact alone should give people pause about appointing candidates in the future. The public outrage over this whole process is damning. Citizens are writing letters and speaking out against the appointment on Russell’s Facebook page. A group of locals planned a demonstration for the morning of Jan. 30 to protest the swearing-in of Piper, scheduled for that day. It’s clear the public is not taking this one lying down. Meanwhile at City Hall, things appear to be business as usual. On Jan. 25, the City released a video introducing the public to its new mayor and two new city councilors, including Gena Goodman-Campbell, elected by voters in November, and Piper. (The video listed Piper as being a city councilor, though his official swearing-in wasn’t scheduled for five more days.) In the video, Piper said he saw his role on the City Council as being one of a listener, of being collaborative and working on behalf of residents. Piper may be a perfectly nice person, but the controversy surrounding his appointment should make him think twice about his role on the Bend City Council. We write this just hours before Piper’s swearing-in. In our view, Piper should decline to be sworn in. Someone committed to collaboration and working for the will of the people should see that working on behalf of residents, in this case, means stepping aside and calling for a do-over in this process. Bend deserves a councilor not mired in so much controversy.
O
HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY?
Letters
Send your thoughts to editor@bendsource.com. Letters must be received by noon Friday for inclusion in the following week’s paper. Please limit letters to 250 words. Submission does not guarantee publication. Opinions printed here do not constitute an editorial endorsement of said opinions. Letter of the week receives $5 to Palate!
IN RESPONSE TO, “CLIMATE CHANGE” ON 1/16
Last November two City Council candidates heavily funded by the Bend Chamber of Commerce, Central Oregon Builders Association, and Central Oregon Association of Realtors were soundly defeated by Bend voters. A mayoral candidate supported by powerful special interests also lost. Despite voter preferences, these special interests have won. They convinced four City Councilors to ignore the will of the people and appoint their candidate—Chris Piper—to fill the Council vacancy created when Sally Russell became Mayor. It was Mayor Russell who led the fight to appoint Piper. Dozens of voters urged the Council to appoint Kerani Mitchell. But political lobbyists had more influence over Russell and Mayor Pro Tem Bruce Abernethy. Russell and other Councilors claim they want “balance” on the nonpartisan Council. Much has been written about the political affiliations of Councilors. That conversation ignores the question of power. Powerful, influential, and well-financed interests control Bend. They are in it for the money, not for the people. Five of seven City Councilors are now likely to promote the desires of these special interests. Political affiliation is irrelevant. “Balance” is a myth. Elections are important. But, if Bend residents want to take control of their city away from special interests they have to publicly challenge local power. Power has no divine right. As Frederick Douglass said, “If there is no struggle, there is no progress…power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.” That is true in Bend today. Will Bend residents challenge local power? —Michael Funke
I’m a strong believer in the First Amendment, but publishing Paul DeWitt’s letter denying Climate Change was irresponsible. Neither you, nor he state that he is the Vice Chair of the Deschutes County Republican Party. We live in a desert and forest. We are already suffering from Climate Change, despite what the Liar in Chief, Trump and his sycophants spew. —Pam Monheimer
CONGRATS WOMEN’S MARCHERS! Congratulations to all the wonderful folks who marched last Saturday in support of women’s rights and against the Trump agenda. Despite the rain and cold, no less than 2,875 marchers were out that day. I counted marchers by taking 1-min video samples and frame-by-frame counting all the people in each sample, multiplied by the 25 mins the parade went by. A tremendous turn out! Keep it up Bend Progressives!! —Jerry Freilich
I’m all for voicing opinions and listening to all sides of a debate, especially in the public forum of community journalism. But The Bulletin and The Source have got to stop giving this deWitt character a megaphone. His brand of pseudoscientific chicanery is dangerous. Phrenology and leeching were studied by leading minds not too long ago. Likewise, a few decades from now, we’ll wonder how global warming was ever even a subject of debate. Inactive politicians deserve blame, of course, but smooth-talking, loudmouth deniers like deWitt are gunking up the alltoo-slow wheel of progress. Climate change science is “flat-out wrong,” Mr. deWitt says. He may as well believe in a flat earth. —Andy Wade
ON MT. BACHELOR’S UPHILL POLICY Mt Bachelor’s uphill policy has been an incredible resource for me as an athlete, allowing me to take on serious vertical gain in an environment where I am safe to focus on training rather than the hazards associated with more remote climbing expeditions. In addition to the training aspect, sunrise laps on the cinder cone, known simply as “The Cone,” have become firmly established as a delightful winter tradition for me and many others. In fact, so many are enjoying this winter tradition that privileges at Mt Bachelor are at risk. After years of being relaxed about its rules for uphill travel, the ski area’s team has had to start clarifying and properly enforcing policies for uphill travel on the mountain. This season, as I have talked to others in the community, I have discovered there is a lot of confusion and resentment about the enforcement of these policies. And while I
understand the confusion, I am frustrated by the resentment. Mt. Bachelor is responsible for the safety of thousands of people each season and it is rather remarkable that any one of us is permitted to ski uphill for free, without a waiver. I do not envy the burden of such liability. With folks heading uphill in larger and larger numbers, many of whom ignore the rules in place for their well-being, it should not come as a surprise that the team at Mt Bachelor is putting its foot down. The current policies are simple, straightforward, and easy to follow: - Uphill travel on anything besides “The Cone” is only allowed when the signage states that it is open. - No Dogs, at any time on the ski area and always on leash in the parking lot. - Stay on the flagged “Uphill Route“ situated off to the side of the groomed downhill run. Bend is a fast-growing community of backcountry skiers, split boarders and snowshoers. Whether a local or a visitor, we are collectively responsible to model safety and good stewardship while enjoying Mt Bachelor. It is up to us to keep uphill travel safe and accessible. It is up to all of us to follow the rules. I love skiing and I love skiing uphill. The opportunity to do so within the controlled environment of the Mt. Bachelor ski area is an incredible resource. So let’s protect it. Leave your dogs at home (or well bundled in the car), obey the rules, and ask your friends and fellow skiers/snowboarders to do the same. Let’s make sure that we preserve this resource for years to come. See you out there! Graham Zimmerman Owner of Bed Rock Film Works Professional Alpinist
THANKING WALDEN Opened this week’s publication of Central Oregon’s alternative newspaper entertainment magazine The Source Weekly to find the editors thanking Greg Walden, Oregon US Congressional District Two “representative,” Oregon’s own Donald T Rump, a trustfunder punk who’s never done a day’s work in its life and doesn’t even live in Oregon, for voting in favor of the Consolidated
LIGHTMETER
5
@washingtonnwx givin' us the money shot! Tag @ sourceweekly and show up in Lightmeter.
Appropriations Act of 2019—a piece of legislation aimed at reopening the federal government amid what is now the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. “[H]ope that this break from party ranks is a signal that Walden will do the same the next time more asinine moves by the president come around” is naivete writ large. Walden didn’t cast a vote out of any altruistic concern for those he’s screwing over, he voted for a bill he knew had no chance of ever reaching the Senate floor. Or the pResident’s desk. He voted it because it looked good. Good job TSWeekly, covering Walden’s ass. Did it pay well? —Thomas Ware
LETTER OF THE WEEK:
Thomas: Laughter emoji!! If you believe that we would take money from an elected official to form an editorial board opinion, we must not be doing it very well—because this is one of the few times we have bothered to give this particular elected official kudos. Opinions here are not for sale and never have been. Thanks for the chuckle, though. Come on in for your gift card to Palate! —Nicole Vulcan
@sourceweekly Keep in the know of what's going on in Central Oregon, follow us on Instagram and Twitter.
Monday through Thursday Nights
Lobster Dinner
just
$24
475 SW Powerhouse Drive • (541) 389-8998 www.anthonys.com Anthony’s at the Old Mill District
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
SPECIAL INTERESTS
Measles in Deschutes County?
by Patrick Woodman
Health officials believe a visitor may have exposed locals to the measles virus. Here’s what you should know about vaccinations and exposure By Isaac Biehl
T
541.306.3176
www.redchairgallerybend.com 103 NW Oregon Avenue Bend, OR 97703
Red Chair was voted
Best Gallery by The Source Weekly Readers
Dedicated to healthier pets for over 25 years. Nutrition is our thing. Come talk to us today!
WE DELIVER!
You're busy being a parent, let us help!
Bend, Redmond & Sunriver. 5 days a week. Free. Learn more and sign to be an Insider today!County You'll be the Theupoutbreak in Clark first to know about our upcoming events, promotions and included oforders measles new products! You'll save 5%31 on cases autoship and even take 15% off yourcaused first online purchase. – which Washington
Governor Jay Inslee to declare a state of emergency Join theon Friday, Insiders Jan. 25. today
SCAN ME
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
6
and save!
he Oregon Health Authority and others are the ones who are truly unimDeschutes County Health Services munized,” says local pediatrician Dr. are investigating a potential exposure Linda Steiner of Central Oregon Pediatto measles that happened in Deschutes ric Associates. “Adults should have had County Jan. 26, when officials say an two total for an MR vaccine.” exposed person was visiting the area. For those unsure about their immuDCHS officials suspect that the pos- nization status, Steiner recommends sible exposure is connected to a measles calling their primary care doctor’s office. outbreak that began in Clark County, The State of Oregon also maintains the Wash., earlier this month—which also immunization records of everyone who led to a case appearing in Multnomah was immunized in Oregon. County, Ore., and in Hawaii. Signs of measles include coughThe areas in Deschutes County that ing, runny nose, red eyes, a fever and officials believe may have been exposed a spreading rash. It usually takes two include the Bend Park and Recreation weeks to develop the illness – but people District’s Juniper Swim & Fitness Cen- can still be very much contagious before ter and the Mountain Air trampo- anyone knows they’re sick, according to line park. DCHS advises people who DCHS. Those infected continue to be may have been in those locations over contagious four days prior to the rash the weekend, who believe they are not appearing and four days after. To be considered immune to measles immune to measles, to contact the agenone of the following must apply: cy at 541-322-7418. Officials have not confirmed whether • Born before 1957 the person who was visiting in fact does • Were previously diagnosed with measles by a physician have the measles, as the OHA is waiting • Immunity proven through blood test on test results. DCHS says the measles virus can live • Fully vaccinated against measles (one dose for children 12 months to up to two hours in the air where an infectthree years old, two doses in people ed person may have coughed or sneezed, four years and older) so the two Deschutes County locations named are now considered to be safe. Most Oregonians have been vacciThe outbreak in Clark County includ- nated against measles. However, neither ed 31 cases of measles, which caused Oregon or Washington qualifies for “herd Washington Gov. Jay immunity,” which is Inslee to declare a something that would state of emergency help prevent meaJan. 25. Being such a sles from progressing large outbreak, health once it spreads. For officials expect this example, Deschutes number to rise in the County has 91 perBend High – 541-383-3005 coming months. cent of children vacEnsworth Elementary Officials say while cinated for measles, 541-383-3005 children, unvaccinatbut this is still two La Pine – 541-536-0400 ed pregnant women points off the 93 perand those with weakcent that’s needed to Sisters – 541-526-6623 ened immune sysachieve “herd immuPharmacists can also tems are the most nity,” according to immunize children age 7 susceptible, it’s posThe Oregonian’s counor older. Contact your local sible for certain ty-by-county breakpharmacy for details. adults to also condown. tract the virus and For those who to be aware that they aren’t necessari- aren’t immune, who think they’ve been ly immune. exposed or are experiencing symptoms “The main risk is for those who are of the measles, DCHS is encouraging immunocompromised, and most people people to call ahead before visiting their will know they are in that category. The health care provider.
School-Based Health Centers Offering Immunizations:
unsplash.com
NEWS
Grad Rates Set Record
7
By Chris Miller
S
tudents in Bend-La Pine Schools graduated on time, percentage-wise, at a higher rate during the 20162017 school year than any other year on record—with 82 percent of high school students graduating on time. According to a report from the Oregon Department of Education, all the high schools in the district saw increas-
“In this case, a two-point increase in graduation means an additional 950 students getting their diplomas within four years of starting high school.”
—COLT GILL
es in graduation rates. The district’s graduation rate was over 3 percentage points higher than the state average of 78.7 percent, but still below the national average of 84 percent. “Today I want to recognize our many dedicated staff members and their commitment to building positive
relationships with students because it is those connections that make all the difference,” Shay Mikalson, Bend-La Pine Schools superintendent said in a press release. “Their commitment to knowing every student by name, strength and need has helped us reach this milestone accomplishment. While we are celebrating today, we also will not be satisfied until all of our students graduate ready for the future that they choose.” Part of Gov. Kate Brown’s recent re-election platform was getting the high school graduation rate to 85 percent by the end of her final term. Oregon’s state ranking has hovered somewhere near the bottom five in the nation for nearly a decade. In a release by ODE, data shows Oregon made a 2-percentage point increase in on-time graduation rates in the last year, increasing by 6.7 percentage points over the prior four years. “It’s important to remember that we are talking about students, not statistics,” Colt Gill, ODE director said in the release. “In this case, a two-point increase in graduation means an additional 950 students getting their diplomas within four years of starting high
school. Under the leadership of Gov. Kate Brown, we have enacted equity-focused supports that have helped students of color, students navigating poverty and tribal students graduate at a higher rate than before.” Increases for students of color In Bend-La Pine Schools, graduation rates for students of “underserved races or ethnicities” climbed nearly 8 percent to 67.8 percent, including a 10-point jump for Hispanic/Latino students. The on-time graduation rate for black or African American students jumped from 54 percent to 76 percent. “Underserved races” went from 60 percent to 68 percent and economically disadvantaged students made a small increase from 67 percent to 72 percent. Gov. Brown is proposing a $2 billion investment in education that would dedicate $794 million to reduce class sizes in early grades and lengthen the school year, according to ODE. The governor’s proposal includes $133 million to fully fund the High School Success (Measure 98) program, $7.7 million for Native American student programs and a $6 million increase for
the African American/Black Student Success program. “How our state provides for the needs of our children is a marker of who we are as a community,” Brown said in the ODE release. “Every student in Oregon deserves an education that sets them up for success and helps them graduate from high school with a plan for the future.”
Bend-La Pine Schools’ 2016-17 On-Time Graduation Rates Bend Senior High School
91%
La Pine High School
77.1%
Marshall High School
44.6%
Mountain View High School
87.1%
Summit High School
91.6%
Your child’s good health is why we’re here “Dr. Svendsen is a fantastic doctor. I trust him and I know he has my child’s best interest in mind. He listens and educates us, and never makes me feel rushed. Thank you.” - T.J.B., January 16, 2018
Dr. Dale Svendsen has been with COPA for twenty years and has never wavered in his true purpose - to support your child for a lifetime of good health. All are welcome, so call today and easily join the COPA family.
Together we’ve got this Dale Svendsen, MD FAAP Board Certified Pediatrician
(541)- 389 - 6313 • COPAKids.com
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Bend-La Pine Schools’ on-time graduation rate is the highest ever; rates for students of color jump up
ON SALE NOW!
FEBRUARY 20 –MARCH 3, 2019
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
8
PDX JAZZ
FESTIVAL 2019 presented by
PHAROAH SANDERS
Sisters Folk Festival makes organizational changes, aiming to offer more to a community it already serves in many ways
THE BAD PLUS
BY CHRIS MILLER
FEATURED ARTISTS
STANLEY CLARKE
TERENCE BLANCHARD E-COLLECTIVE with Darrell Grant CHRISTIAN SCOTT AARON DIEHL TRIO VANGUARD JAZZ ORCHESTRA STEVE TURRE Rahsaan Roland Kirk Tribute FREDDY COLE Nat King Cole at 100 CHRIS POTTER TRIO ERIC ALEXANDER QUARTET featuring Harold Mabern VERONICA SWIFT featuring the Benny Green Trio and more … PDX Jazz thanks our major partners.
pdxjazz.com
A
s I’m writing this, Lyle Lovett— yes, the one who sang “Cowboy Man”—is kicking off his most recent tour with a performance with Sisters High School students at the school. Lovett’s performance in Sisters is part of the Sisters Folk Festival’s Americana Project, one of the many arms of a festival that’s been raising money for the Sisters School District for years. And as I’m writing this, the organization is also working through some recent changes.
benefit the organization. “It’s hard to do when you already have personalities and jobs and people feel very strongly about their work, and so it’s easy to get siloed, and so the board wants to have a leadership that then can take these ideas around all these collaborations and bring them all together under one leadership,” Remington said. “From here what the board wants to do is to bring that all together into a more traditional form and then direct it from there.”
Staff changes In January, SFF announced it was eliminating its managing director position and moving toward an executive director model—meaning Ann Richardson, who’d worked as managing director for the past five years, would be leaving. According to SFF, the board worked on its organizational future for 18 months to address the internal and external challenges created by its past “co-director” leadership model. “Ann was shocked and saddened when we informed her of this strategic decision,” Sue Boettner, SFF’s board chair said in a press release. “We are grateful for all that she has done and all that she continues to do to help SFF serve the community.” Steven Remington, development director for SFF, said he hoped finding a new, sole executive director would
While it’s the most visible element, the three-day celebration of roots music held the weekend after Labor Day is actually the largest fundraiser for the other arms of the organization. Former board member Debbie Newport is leading the search for a new executive director, which began Jan. 25. New digs Organizational changes aren’t the only changes in the works. The Sisters Folk Festival capital campaign is working toward buying and renovating the building where its current offices are located, on West Adams Street, as well as constructing a 400-seat, yearround community events facility in the lot behind the building. According to
SFF, the organization has raised over $1 million toward its $1.4 million goal for Phase 1, which would purchase the building. Phase 2 includes plans to design and build the events center, at an estimated cost of $2.1 million. “We’re like a good three years away from building a venue,” Remington said. “But what we’re envisioning is a 400seat, multi-purpose, community-oriented venue. When you look at that space (behind the current building) it’s critical to our mission not to lose that space as
a large festival site until we’ve got something else built back there, and if we build something back there and it’s not as large as the tent (erected during the summer festival), then we’ll be looking for another site. And we’ve already had communications with the City—discussions about Cliff Clemens Park and some of the other locations in town that would be suitable that would allow us some modicum of growth should the building impact the festival.” Remington says the idea is not just to use the space for SFF, but to open it up to the wider community, as well.
Chris Miller
Other arms My Own Two Hands is SFF’s second-largest fundraiser, and includes a parade, art stroll and an art auction and party held at the Ponderosa Forge in Sisters each year. Remington said the artists who donate their goods are what make the project so successful. “It’s been very successful and earns in the neighborhood of $120,000 each year, and that’s by the grace of the visual artists that donate,” Remington said. “And obviously, the donors who come to purchase and bid up things and remember that, ‘I’m not necessarily here for a bargain, I’m here to support the arts.’ “There’s sort of this three-legged stool of the schools, the festival and then all the other programs that we can offer adults and under-resourced kids outside of the school experience,” Remington said. “And so we’re really grateful for the relationship that we have
Sisters Folk Festival has raised the majority of the funds it needs to buy the lot behind its current office space, where the organization plans to build its own community gathering space in the coming years.
with the visual artists, and are always looking for ways to build those programs and make sure that a significant part of the money that’s raised with My Own Two Hands goes back into visual arts programs.” Music in summer—and winter In 2011 SFF started its Winter Concert Series that kicks off Feb. 2 this year, when the Shook Twins and John Craigie take the stage at the Sisters High School auditorium. The Winter Concert Series has traditionally included three shows. Remington said two of them sold out last year, but thus far, the concerts aren’t big money makers. “It’s really more about creating the opportunities for our supporters to see some great shows and for our students to have some great artists come and residency and talk to them about their music and their art,” Remington said. “If we sell out all the shows, maybe we’ll make $10- or $15,000 over the whole series. So it's not an economic model so much as an arts education and outreach model that we’re able to, by virtue of our expertise and connections, we’re able to monetize a little bit.” SFF also puts on a free, three-concert
Summer Concert Series at Fir Street Park in Sisters around July or August. Remington said SFF made a commitment to help book these shows after the City of Sisters built the park. “It’s a free series, a gift to the community and an opportunity for us to address some of the more underrepresented cultures of Central Oregon,” Remington said. “Because we know we have these populations—they just sometimes remain hidden—and we want to hear their voices and music is a great way to bring out their voice to honor a part of their culture, so that we can just be more comfortable around each other.” Another goal, Remington says, is trying to book more culturally relevant shows. “We had a group from the Dominican Republic two years ago that was really popular and brought out a large Hispanic crowd that we weren’t even aware of,” he said. Building instruments The Luthier Program—part of the Americana Project—is one of only two instrument-building programs in public high schools in the U.S., according to SFF. It was started to inspire high school
students to learn the craft of guitar and ukulele building over the course of two trimesters. Tony Cosby, an engineering/woodworking instructor at Sisters High, and Bill MacDonald, who started Kona Breeze Ukuleles in Sisters, lead the program. Remington said students build about 15 guitars and 25 ukuleles every year. Local companies including Breedlove Guitars and Bowerman Guitars donate materials. SFF provides scholarships to students who can’t afford the materials that aren’t donated. Remington said the SFF got a $50,000 grant for the school to purchase filtration systems, safety equipment and some of the computer numerical control machinery so students could “really do it right.” Because of the CNC machines, Remington said the students leave the class with more than just woodworking skills. “They get science, they learn about the wood, they learned a little bit about forestry and sustainable hardwoods and what’s going on with that in the world,” Remington said. “So there’s this environmental tract kind of piece to it. There’s math involved because they have to program the CNC machines.” Remington said SFF has the skills to make things happen, to organize and implement and to initiate things like grant writing for schools when they don’t have a grant writer. With so much going on, a permanent home is the next step for the organization. “How do we need to change now in order to accommodate the maturity of our various programs and how can we be of greater service to the community?” Remington asked. “We want to better serve the community. I think we can do that by owning a building, by having a more traditional hierarchical structure to the organization and by having a deepening of our relationship with all our stakeholders, so they know that we’re in it for them.”
40 Days to Personal Revolution NOW OPEN IN MADRAS! 141 SE 5TH Street 10AM-9PM 7 DAYS A WEEK
Mention ad get 10% OFF
Radically change your body & awaken the sacred within your soul with a daily combination of yoga, meditation, diet & personal reflection that will cultivate a solid foundation from which you can live and grow.
6 Weekly Meetings beginning February
Tuition: $40 + your yoga pass BUNDLE PACKAGES: $149 existing students $99 new students Includes unlimited yoga throughout the program
Sunday In-Studio: 4pm-5:15pm in Bend, starting Feb 3rd Monday Online: 7pm-8:15pm, starting Feb 4th Tuesday In-Studio: 7pm-8:15pm at both the Bend and Redmond Studio, starting Feb 5th
VISIT US ONLINE AT:
NAMASPA.COM/SERVICES
9 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
A brief history According to Remington, SFF was essentially started in 1995 by Jim Cornelius, editor of the Nugget Newspaper, and Dick Sandvik, co-founder of Paulina Springs Books. Remington said the festival lost money its first year. The founders took a year off and then came back, growing at a slow and organic pace. As it grew, the school district saw a lot of budget cuts, Remington said, so Brad Tisdel, SFF’s creative director, and Kathy Deggendorfer—a Sisters artist who recently donated $500,000 to the SFF Capital Campaign—got involved with the school district to bring back programs that were being cut, like woodshop, as well as integrating more music and arts. Remington said the festival has grown remarkably since around 2008 and is now a year-round arts organization. While it’s the most visible element, the three-day celebration of roots music held the weekend after Labor Day is actually the largest fundraiser for the other arms of the organization.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 10
SOURCE PICKS THURSDAY 1/31
DARK NIGHT OF THE SOUL SUICIDE AWARENESS
THURSDAY 1/31
LYRICS BORN W/ MOWO HIP-HOP
BEND BOULDER BASH CLIMBING
SATURDAY 2/2
THURSDAY-SUNDAY 1/31-2/3
FRIDAY 2/1
TUESDAY 2/5
SUNSQUABI COSMIC JAM
SHOOK TWINS W/ JOHN CRAIGIE SFF WINTER CONCERT SERIES
Sisters Folk Festival’s Winter Concert Series kicks off with the Shook Twins (Katelyn and Laurie, identical twins) and John Craigie! Backed by their full band, the Shook Twins are a true powerhouse of folk music. Craigie, who opened for Jack Johnson in 2017, brings that perfect combination of emotion and fun to an energetic set. 7pm. Sisters High School, 1700 McKinney Butte Rd., Sisters. $22.50/adults, $15/youth.
THE RECORD COMPANY BLUES ROCK
This Grammy-nominated musical trio is touring on the heels of its 2018 album, “All of This Life.” The gritty, blues-driven brand of rock will curry favor with fans of Led Zeppelin, Johnny Cash
TURKUAZ W/ OBJECT HEAVY FUNK / ALT ROCK
Much like drip-painting artists Jackson Pollock and Max Ernst, Turkuaz relies on energetic motion in their art. Expect splashes of funk, alternative, rock, R&B and plenty of psychedelia. Doors, 8:30pm. Show, 9pm. The Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $25/ adv., $30/door. Ages 21+.
8
Arguably the king of modern rockabilly and the godfather of psychobilly —The Rev. Jim Heath, affectionate-
Help celebrate Worthy Brewing’s sixth anniversary with delicious desserts paired with Worthy brews. Proceeds benefit the Family Resource Center. 7-9pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr., Bend. $30/single ticket, $50/pair of tickets.
WEDNESDAY 2/6
MONDAY 2/4
REVEREND HORTON HEAT ROCKABILLY/PSYCHOBILLY
SWEET BITES AND BREWS WORTHY’S 6TH ANNIVERSARY
Prepare to be whisked away to the cosmos aboard the electronic, rhythm-driven funk stylings of SunSquabi, covering a plethora of musical genres, as numerous as stars in the sky. Show, 9pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $13/adv., $16/door. All ages.
WINTER PRIDEFEST LGBTQ SKI WEEKEND
Winter PrideFest is back for its second year — and bigger than ever! This LGBTQ-friendly event is also family-friendly and chock-full of activities, so there’s a little something for everyone. The weekend kicks off Thursday with the Welcoming Snocial at The Box Factory. Don your most colorful wig and join other fun-seekers at Seventh Mountain Resort ice rink for “Wigs: An Ice Breaker,” after a day on Mt. Bachelor. New this year, local drag queens and kings take to the mountain for snow tubing on Saturday — and everyone is welcome to participate! Saturday night, enjoy a low-key cocktail hour at Dogwood and top off the night with the Après Ski Party at Silver Moon Brewing. Various locations in Bend. Activity prices vary. Check out the full schedule of events at outcentraloregon.com/winter-pridefest.
TUESDAY 2/5
FRIDAY 2/1
Held in conjunction with the USA Climbing Open Bouldering Nationals in Redmond, the Bend Boulder Bash welcomes climbers of all backgrounds to compete like the pros! With multiple competition categories ranging from recreational to masters (ages 45+), all competitors have a chance to win gear and a $5,000 cash purse. 1:30-10:30pm. Bend Rock Gym, 1182 SE Centennial Ct., Bend. $70/registration.
Tsutomu “Tom” Shimura, known by his stage name, Lyrics Born, is a truly unique rapper and hip-hop producer, weaving funk and soul into classic hip-hop. Local support from MOsley WOtta. Doors, 8:30pm. Show, 9pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $15/adv., $20/ door. All ages.
and John Lee Hooker. 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. $27-$42.
NATURALLY 7 February 7
CELTIC NIGHTS February 13
EVERLY BROS. EXPERIENCE February 15
MANDY HARVEY March 6
11 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Join This Island Earth and other musical guests for a night of art, music and open discussion about suicide and depression. 7-9pm. Spoken Moto, 310 SW Industrial Way, Bend. No cover.
ly known as “The Reverend,” returns to Bend. The trio has been rocking since the mid-’80s and shows no sign of slowing down. Big Sandy, Voodoo Glow Skulls and the Delta Bombers open. Doors, 7pm. Show, 8pm. The Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $25/ adv., $30/door.
1/31 – 2/6
Bend’s ONLY tuition-free Montessori Elementary Charter School
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
12
Lottery places open now for K-5th grade Also enrolling for the tuition based preschool All are welcome at our open house and school tour Tuesday, February 12 6:00 – 7:00pm Bend River Center 150 NE Bend River Mall Dr., Bend www.dsmontessori.org
Central Oregon’s One Stop Cannabis Super Store
Superbowl
at Seventh Mountain Resort Open to the Public Watch the game on a GIANTTV at the Outfitter Bar Super Ice Skate and only pay your shoe size, Children 6 and under are still free! Call us today at 541-693-9124 or visit seventhmountain.com
LARGEST SELECTION OF CANNABIS
CONCENTRATES, EDIBLES, GLASS AND ACCESSORIES AT THE LOWEST PRICES. REPRESENTING THE BEST GROWERS, PROCESSORS AND ARTISTS IN THE STATE.
NOW OFFERING FLOWER AS LOW AS $2.75 PER GRAM — OUT THE DOOR INCLUDING TAX —
Hours: M-S 8:30am-10pm Sunday 8:30am-9pm
2205 NE Division Street 541-550-7325
Celebrating 2019 as the
“YEAR OF THE WOMAN”
BAR & GRILL
O BINGTU ESDAY 7PM every
TRIVIAESDAY 7PM every
WEDN
642 NW Franklin , Downtown Bend @JCs_Bar_Bend jcsbend.com
Accredited
“Sexual Health Resource” and
Your One Stop Adult Fun Shop!
ONLINE SHOPPING NOW AVAILABLE! visit www.prettypussycat.com 1341 NE 3rd Street, Bend 541-317-3566
S
SOUND
ARTWALK PICKS
Amsterdam is Back
Bend-based rhymer has his first full-length project in five years
By Keely Damara
It’s First Friday this week! Here are some events to have on your radar as you head into downtown Bend Friday evening.
By Isaac Biehl
MINI OREGON WINTERFEST PRE-FEST FUN
Oregon WinterFest is right around the corner — but why wait? OnPoint Community Credit Union’s Downtown Branch is hosting a Mini Oregon WinterFest for First Friday, complete with fire pits, ice carving, games, prizes and ticket giveaways for the 2019 Oregon WinterFest, kicking off Feb. 15! Meet this year’s Ice Queen and Fire King following their royal procession downtown. 5-7pm. OnPoint Community Credit Union, 950 NW Bond St., Bend. Free.
"Honey Marcus Smart as hell, she gotta’ be defensive"
—AMSTERDAM,
FROM THE TRACK, “DANNY AINGE”
These are the issues that Bendbased rapper Amsterdam tackles on the new album, “Crush.” It details modern day “likes,” lust and heartbreak over its nine tracks. While it’s been five years since his last album, Amsterdam is no stranger to the Bend hip-hop scene. A University of Oregon grad, the man has been a strong figurehead for Central Oregon rap for many years. He continues to show love to the artists in the community, and even has a feature from Bend-based singer Kourtni on “Crush.” When he’s not doing the solo thing, you can find Amsterdam doing shows with his collective, Both Teams Played Hard. The title track might be the best song on the album. Amsterdam, also known as Gabe Van Eikeren, flies quickly along with the beat as he speaks of those early-on flutters you get in the beginning of a new relationship. It’s an upbeat and warm R&B-tailored track, which is
FIRST FRIDAY TASTING W/ THE ALE APOTHECARY BEER TASTING You can find “Crush” on all streaming platforms.
synonymous with the whole idea of a crush: It’s all good until it isn’t. “Crush” as a whole definitely has character. The 40-second interlude, “Crash,” will take you back to the days of giant love ballads. Then there’s “Danny Ainge,” a fun shout-out to the current general manager and president of basketball operations for the Boston Celtics. Ainge was born in Eugene and is one of the more noteworthy executives in the NBA. The track is littered with clever basketball references and puns, showcasing the wit Amsterdam possesses as rapper. He’s out here trying to make this girl his #1 pick. As far as the music goes, listeners are
going to get a little bit of everything with “Crush.” It definitely isn’t typical of the mainstream sound you might find in the 2019 rap landscape. “Hooks,” for example, is filled with grand waves of electronic keys. “Never Rains” is the album’s closest thing to a true trap-style beat, in which, if you really focus, you can definitely imagine Offset of Migos coming in for a verse—but Brooklyn’s Skyzoo is just as good of a touch. “Crush” is Amsterdam displaying some of his insecurities and own issues within relationships. These personal additions are what make “Crush” a more relatable listen—a bold step back onto the solo scene.
First Friday celebrates many forms of art — including Bend’s very talented brew masters! Join J DUB for a tasting of The Ale Apothecary’s award-winning vintage batch oak barrel brews. Sahalie Wild Ale will be available for purchase. 6-8pm. J DUB, 932 NW Bond St., Bend. Free.
KICKSTART WALK COMMUNITY ART
Are you an artist looking for a place to sell your creative goods for First Friday? Join Wabi Sabi for its first-ever KickstART Walk! Artists are invited to rent a table to sell personally made products. Contact the store to sign up, table space is limited. 5-9pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St., Bend. Booth Rental: $10. Free to attend.
20% - 50% OFF all house plants, cactus and succulents
TumaloGardenMarket.com | 541-728.0088 19879 8th Street, Tumalo
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
M
Submitted
ost people know the difficulties that come with having a crush on someone. These problems have evolved over time; today we have social media and phones with dating apps like Tinder. The waves of communication are now permanently flowing.
13
Caring for your pets 7 days a week / Urgent Care
S
Cascade Crescendo preps for a second album
14
By Isaac Biehl Submitted
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
Avoiding The Sophomore Slump
Healthy Adventures Await! DOCTORS BYRON MAAS, LAUREN STAYER, ERIN MILLER, MARIE STANLEY & TABITHA JOHNSTON
BENDVETERINARYCLINIC.COM 360 NE QUIMBY AVE 382-0741
P "I WANT MY T&T" Saturday, June 8, 2019
Early Dog Tickets $30 off thru January 31, 2019
register & info: hsco.org
Turning Your Fantasies into Reality 24/7!
20% Off Entire Purchase
LINGERIE, NOVELTIES, ADULT TOYS, AND SO MUCH MORE! SALES • RENTALS • VIEWING
ATM
312-8100
•
197 NE THIRD ST, BEND
• IN THE OLD TRAX BUILDING NEXT TO STARS CABARET
ortland’s high-octane bluegrass band, Cascade Crescendo, will be releasing its sophomore album, “Chasing The Sun,” Feb. 15. Made up of Hunter White (guitar), Taylor Skiles (upright bass), Aden Beck (mandolin) and Harrison Olk on banjo, the guys really brought it this time around and are prepping for a stretch of release shows. The sun is an appropriate element to represent this 15-track gem, as the album itself possesses a warm sincerity, piloted by an assortment of meandering strings. It’s a prime example of well-done bluegrass—or as they call it—“newgrass.” In an email, the band mentioned a focus on expanding its songwriting and arrangements from the first go-round. This includes slipping into instrumental moments more often, as a way to represent their live shows more truly. One of my favorite moments on the album is the beginning of “Spun Like A Record.” The way the tempo creeps in and unveils itself is sneaky good. It’s a song meant to be enjoyed while dancing all around the room. This energy is palpable throughout “Chasing The Sun,” and is something Cascade Crescendo will be bringing to the stage during its upcoming album release shows— including one in Bend this week. From the get go you can tell that “Every Little Thing” is going to be the
Even if bluegrass isn’t your thing, there’s a certain quality to this album that makes it easy to listen to. song that gets stuck in your head. The chorus is simple, but quick and smooth at the same time. It gets you in a summer time, windows down kind of groove. Then the power of “ELT Reprise” is heavy. It’s a raw interlude with heavy focus on the harmony between the vocals within the group. “Chasing The Sun” is just a joyful listen. Even if bluegrass isn’t your thing, there’s a certain quality to this album that makes it easy to listen to. It also offers some variety as Cascade Crescendo works to stretch the boundaries of the genre. There are plenty of moments to sing along to and plenty of moments to just jam to some good fiddling. The album even has a song called “Go Fiddle Yourself,” believe it or not. Anyone interested will definitely want to see these guys deliver the album live. Cascade Crescendo kicks off its release party shows at the Volcanic Theatre Pub Feb. 1. Don’t fiddling miss it!
Cascade Crescendo Album Release Party w/ Pitchfork Revolution Fri., Feb. 1, 9pm Volcanic Theatre Pub 70 SW Century Dr. Bend $10 bendticket.com
LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE
CALENDAR
>
Tickets Available on Bendticket.com
entertaining live trivia on Bend’s Northside! 6:308:30pm. Free.
30 Wednesday
Brasada Ranch House Alex Winters
Project Every Wednesday! $1 per bingo card. Winners take home half the pot! 6-8pm.
Cabin 22 KC Flynn Flynn will be playing acoustic rock and country, solo this week. 7-9pm.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down
At Liberty Arts Collaborative
The Night Light Show with Shanan Kelley & Magnificent Guests A variety-style comedy show featuring film, music and community talent. 6:30 & 8pm. $12-$20.
and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
Currents at the Riverhouse Riverhouse
and free to play! Prizes to win. 7pm.
Music Series Highlighting local Central Oregon talent, the Riverhouse music series focuses on genres ranging from bluegrass, acoustic, indie, blues, jazz, singles and duos. 7-9pm. No cover.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down
Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Latin Fever Join
Crater Lake Spirits Downtown Tasting Room Ablis Party Live band, full-sized cock-
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your
Cabin 22 Locals Night w/ UKB Trivia It’s fun and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
tails, and a raffle. All of the proceeds will be going to OAS (Oregon Adaptive Sports). 5-9pm. Free, raffle tickets $5/for one or $30/for five.
us for a night of Latin music and dance at the cabin! Ages 21+. 8:30pm-Midnight. No cover.
go-to karaoke tune? 9pm.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your
go-to karaoke tune? 9pm.
Bony Chanterelle Original folk rock, chugging rock, alt rock, surf rock and blues-y three-piece rock. All ages. 7-10pm. No cover.
Immersion Brewing Geeks Who Drink Pub
Midtown Ballroom JJ Grey & Mofro w/ The
Trivia Win fun prizes and challenge your friends, or enemies, on obscure knowledge.6-8pm.
JC’s Bar & Grill Trivia Test your knowledge,
or maybe just your ability to remember really random facts, every Wednesday. Ages 21+. 7pm.
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Rockin’ Robin Karaoke Rockin’ Robin takes our stage, running Bend’s #1 karaoke show. 7-11pm. No cover. Level State Beerhouse Bend Comedy Pub
Trivia Bend Comedy brings lively pub trivia to Level State Beerhouse every Wednesday! Free to play, prizes to win and all ages until 9pm! 7pm.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke
Come sing your heart out every Wednesday. 9pm.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Coyote Willow Blending folk and Americana with hints of Celtic influence, to create beautiful music with grit. 7-10pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic
Commonheart Southern/blues rock. All ages. Doors, 7pm. Show, 8pm. $27.50/adv. at Ranch Records or online.
Northside Bar & Grill B Side Brass Band
keep the spirit of community and music alive with a gathering of festive souls at the Capitol feat. Gold Standard, Lil Curry, Tphunk and more. 10pm-2am. No cover.
The Lot Just Cuz - but sometimes Just Mike
Lee Just a couple of cousins playing music...just because they love to. 6-8pm. No cover.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Lyrics Born w/ MOWO A truly unique hip-hop artist who has created a whole new persona for MC’s. MOsley WOtta opens. All ages. Doors, 8:30pm. Show, 9pm. $15/adv., $20/door.
1 Friday
Strictly Organic Coffee Company Songwriters’ open Mic w/ Victor Johnson Popular and welcoming venue for experienced and new performers to play original material. 6-8pm.
The Capitol Big Cat Resident DJ mixing party The Round Butte Inn The Bad Cats Dance to rock ‘n’ roll, blues and soul. Great food and drinks, a fun CATmosphere. 8-11:45pm. No cover.
Cabin 22 Toast and Jam Acoustic rock. 7pm. Checkers Pub Justus Incendiary original
Volcanic Theatre Pub Cascade Crescendo Album Release Come celebrate the release of Cascade Crescendo’s sophomore album, “Chasing The Sun”! Pulling from their vast range of collective influences, they play original, high-energy bluegrass, jamgrass, and Americana music 9pm. $10/adv.
blues rock, soul, funk dance music. 8-11:30pm.
The Domino Room Rev. Horton Heat, Big Sandy, Voodoo Glow Skulls, Delta Bombers There’s nothing like the primal tribal rock ‘n roll transfiguration of a Reverend Horton Heat show. 8pm. $25/adv., $30/door.
Island Earth + guests This January we’re partnering with some dear friends to host Dark Night of the Soul, an evening of music and art to create awareness, speak plainly about depression, and to hold sacred the lives we live. 7-9pm. No cover.
Silver Moon Brewing Bend Burlesque Presents: February In Flight You might see an airplane captain disrobe, or a stewardess tease you with their charms, or maybe someone will ask you to go fly a kite... regardless this will be a night off fun, legs, laughs and live entertainment! Doors, 8pm. Show, 8:30pm. $20/GA, $25/VIP.
Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House The
Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy Open Mic
Spoken Moto Dark Night of the Soul w/ This
Free-For-All: Fuzzy Logic A live, interactive variety show! Produced and hosted by local Bend nerds ready to share their passions and interests with you, as long as you are ready to share yours. Ages 21+ 8-10pm. No cover.; Toasty Takeover Open format dance music. 10pm.
Bend Brewing Company Seth Martin and Tyler Key Members of Georgia Dish Boys bring gritty original folk and Americana. 6:30-9pm.
Dogwood Cocktail Cabin DJ Wicked Old-
All performance types are welcome! Signup by 7:20pm. Ages 21+ 7pm.
Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy First Friday
jams, hip-hop, remixes. 9:30pm.
New Orleans jazz and funk. Ages 21+. 7:30pm. No cover.
The Box Factory Winter PrideFest:
Join us for open mic every Wednesday. 6pm.
The Capitol Bass in the Basement: Ep 1 Let’s
Balkans and the Middle East. The evening will also be sprinkled with local bellydancers and a special guest from Portland. 6-8pm. No cover.
school, hip-hop and R&B. 9pm. No cover.
Legendary Pat Thomas Pat is a one man band featuring easy listening country. 7pm. No cover.
2 Saturday
Hub City Bar & Grill DJ Chris DJ music and
Bend Brewing Company Dennis Dabbs Energetic folk from Portland. 6:30-9pm.
Lava Lanes Karaoke Night Come sing with
Broken Top Bottle Shop Cosmic Evolution Local Phish and Grateful Dead tribute band offer the respectful salute to these jam band greats with improvisational jams and danceable grooves. 7-9:30pm. No cover.
dancing. 9pm. No cover.
us! 8pm-Midnight. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Victory Swig Classic rock, reggae, funk and jam. 8:30pm. $3.
River’s Place The Nomads w/ Bellydancing A musical journey through the Mediterranean, the
Checkers Pub Justus Incendiary original
blues rock, soul, funk dance music. 8-11:30pm.
Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill Texas Hold ‘em Poker Join us for Poker Night upstairs at The Saloon! First hand dealt at 7pm, so grab a seat early! 7pm. $20 buy in. The Capitol Stand Up Comedy Showcase Ipockolyptic Productions is bringing some funny to the basement. Get your mid week haha’s with some of Central Oregon’s favorites! Doors, 7pm. Show, 8pm. Ages 21+. $10/adv., $15/door. The Lot Wednesday Open Mic Night Everyone
from brave amateurs to seasoned pros. Come share your heart, practice your lyrics and feel the support from this great community. 6-8pm.
Volcanic Theatre Pub The Mother Hips w/ AM Clouds Indie/folk rock. Doors, 8pm. Show, 9pm. All ages. $18.
31 Thursday 7th Street Brew House Bow Wow Bingo
Benefitting BrightSide Animal Center. 6:30pm.
Astro Lounge Rockin’ Robin Karaoke Sing your favorites on a rockin’ good system, every Thursday! 9pm-1am. No cover.
The Backyard Brick Oven Pizza & Pub Thursday Night Trivia It’s fun, free and
See Jess Ryan and other local songwriters perform at Songcrafters: Songs and Their Stories at Volcanic Theatre Pub on 2/2.
Submitting an event is free and easy. Add your event to our calendar at bendsource.com/submitevent
15 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Astro Lounge Bingo for Bend Spay & Neuter
Acoustic. 6-8pm.
Welcoming Snocial Start Winter PrideFest weekend at our ‘Welcoming Snocial’! Join us at Immersion Brewing, AVID Cider and The Brown Owl at the historic Box Factory in Bend for a Snocial drink and/or dinner. Pre-purchase. 6-9pm.
LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE Craft Kitchen and Brewery Comedy at Craft: Ken Hamlett We are so excited to bring Ken Hamlett to Craft Kitchen! Featuring Steven Mayes. Special Guest Dillon Kolar. Hosted by Katy Ipock. Doors, 7pm. Show, 8pm. 8-10pm. $10/adv., $15/door. Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Winter PrideFest: Cocktail Hour The fun of 'Winter PrideFest' continues! A low-key alternative to the 'Apres Ski Party'. Hosts 'Madame Tucker' and 'Stella Nova' will provide entertainment with a drag performance. 7-9pm. DJ Wicked Oldschool, hip-hop and R&B. 9pm-Close. No cover.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
16
The Domino Room The Green, Eli-Mac, FIA Going Up Winter Tour. Reggae. All ages. Doors, 7pm. Show, 8pm. $20/adv. at Ranch Records or online.
The High Desert Museum Come Alive
by Courage Tribe Choose your own adventure for this winter night in the woods! Festivities include: food trucks & bar, indoor exhibits, music & dancing, sculpture making, raffles, sound bowl, presentation by Courage Tribe, animal costumes encouraged, photo booth and surprises! 5:30-10pm. $35.
Hub City Bar & Grill Austin Lindstom Coun-
try. 9pm. No cover.
Immersion Brewing Toast and Jam Live
music at Immersion’s first canning party! 7-10pm.
Level State Beerhouse Bend Comedy Pub
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke
of Cadence, hosts open mic. Sign up at 7pm. 8pm-Midnight. No cover.
and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
Juniper Golf Course and The View Tap and Grill Open Mic w/ Joe Fadanzo Join Joe
Join us for open mic every Wednesday. 6pm.
5 Tuesday Broken Top Bottle Shop Eli Madden Hear Eli and friends Jason Plankey on electric guitar and Tom Murphy on mandolin! 7-9:30pm. Craft Kitchen and Brewery Comedy Open
Mic Come test out new material, or even try it for the first time. Sign up, 7:30pm. Show, 8pm. Free to watch, free to perform.
Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise Classic
rock. 6-9pm. No cover.
The Platypus Pub Tuesday Night Trivia
Silver Moon Brewing Winter
PrideFest: Apres Ski Party The fun of ‘Winter PrideFest’ continues at the ‘Après Ski Party’ - a queer dance party. Featuring Music by: DJ Jason Godfrey & DJ Chellybean. Ages 21+. 9pm-2am. $10.
Silver Moon Brewing Production Facility Bouldering National Championship After
Party w/ MOsley WOtta Are you ready for one of the best parties of the entire year? Some of the best food trucks in Centra Oregon — and MOWO will provide music! 8:30pm-1am. No cover.
Sisters High School SFF Winter Concert Series: Shook Twins w/ John Craigie Backed by their full band, the Shook Twins take on the form as a true powerhouse of folk music. Craigie, having opened on tour for Jack Johnson in 2017, brings that right combination of emotion and fun to an energetic set. 7pm. $22.50/adults, $15/youth. The Capitol DJ N8ture & Big Cat Two of our resident DJs splitting the night mixing a wide range of genres. 9:30pm-2am.
Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House The
for bingo, hosted by the High Desert Food and Farm Alliance. 7pm. No cover. Quintet Jazz. 6pm.
Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill Paul
Eddy Bedell Artist and local troubadour fills your cup with memories and forgotten gems, every other Sunday. 3-5pm. No cover.
The Capitol Rockin’ Robin Karaoke Sing some hits for fun — happy hour all night! 8pm.
Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill Texas Hold ‘em Poker First hand dealt at 7pm, so grab a seat early! 7pm. $20 buy in. The Lot Wednesday Open Mic Night Everyone
from brave amateurs to seasoned professionals. 6-8pm. No cover.
7 Thursday 7th Street Brew House Bow Wow Bingo
Benefitting BrightSide Animal Center. 6:30pm.
Astro Lounge Rockin’ Robin Karaoke Sing your favorites on a rockin’ good system, every Thursday! 9pm-1am. No cover.
The Backyard Brick Oven Pizza & Pub Thursday Night Trivia It’s fun, free and entertaining live trivia on Bend’s Northside! 6:30-8:30pm. Free.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down
join A Fine Note Karaoke Too! 6-9pm. No cover.
The Commons Cafe Storytellers Open Mic
Our weekly open mic at the Commons — Sign up starts at 5pm. 6-8pm.
The Lot Trivia Tuesday Bring your team or join one. 6-8pm. Free.
Volcanic Theatre Pub
SunSquabi Prepare to be whisked away to the cosmos along the electronic, rhythm-driven funk stylings of SunSquabi, covering a plethora of musical genres, as numerous as stars in the sky. All ages. 9pm. $12.
6 Wednesday Astro Lounge Bingo for Bend Spay & Neuter Project Every Wednesday! $1 per bingo card. Winners take home half the pot! 6-8pm.
Bend Golf & Country Club First WednesCabin 22 Locals Night w/ UKB Trivia It’s fun
and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
Wednesday night! No cover.
Red Dragon Chinese Restaurant & Lounge Early Bird Karaoke Every Tuesday,
Volcanic Theatre Pub Songcrafters: Songs
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down
Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke Every
Cabin 22 KC Flynn & Friends KC Flynn will be
day Jazz Enjoy live jazz along with great food at a premier club. 6-8pm. $10.
3 Sunday
Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic
(and a board game?) Join Quizhead Games for one of the best trivia nights in town. Easily in the top 50. Probably. Make it a habit and join in the trivia board game: T20 and win even more sweet prizes. 8-10pm. Free.
Legendary Pat Thomas Country. Feb. 1-2, 7pm. No cover. And Their Stories Songcrafters is back! Join us for a night of local songwriters sharing their songs and the stories that inspired them. Doors, 7pm. Show, 8pm. 8-10pm. $5.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Tower Theatre The Record Company Righteous rock ‘n’ roll. 7:30pm. $27-$42.
Northside Bar & Grill Victory Swig Classic format dance music. 9:30pm.
Sing your heart out every Wednesday! 9pm.
Fadanzo and friends as they bring seasoned and novice musicians together to share the stage for an open mic/band jam. 5-8pm. Free.
Lava Lanes Karaoke Night Come sing with
Seven Nightclub Toasty Takeover Open
Trivia Bend Comedy brings lively pub trivia to Level State Beerhouse every Wednesday! 7pm.
Armchair Boogie Hailing from Madison, WI, Armchair Boogie is a powerhouse newgrass band unafraid of exploring the realms of rock, funk and folk. 7-10pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Michelle Van Handel
rock, reggae, funk and jam. 8:30pm. $3.
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Rockin’ Robin Karaoke Rockin’ Robin takes our stage, running Bend’s #1 karaoke show. 7-11pm. No cover.
Astro Lounge Astro Open Mic Chase Elliot,
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Rockin’ Robin
us! 8pm-Midnight. No cover.
Reaching Great Heights in Web Design
4 Monday
JC’s Bar & Grill Bingo Join us every Tuesday
Karaoke Rockin’ Robin takes our stage, running Bend’s #1 karaoke show. 8pm-12:30am.
newcolonydigital.com 541-517-2314
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
and free to play! Enjoy Central Oregon pint specials, all day, all night! Prizes to win. 7pm.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
The Domino Room Turkuaz w/ Object Heavy Energetic splashes of funk, alternative, rock, R&B and psychedelia color the music of Turkuaz. Object Heavy opens. Ages 21+. Doors, 8:30pm. Show, 9pm. $25/adv., $30/door. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your
go-to karaoke tune? 9pm.
Immersion Brewing Geeks Who Drink Pub Trivia Win fun prizes and challenge your friends, or enemies, on obscure knowledge. 6-8pm. JC’s Bar & Grill Trivia Test your knowledge,
or maybe just your ability to remember really random facts, every Wednesday. Ages 21+. 7pm.
playing acoustic rock and country, along with a rotating lineup of local musicians. 7-9pm.
and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
Currents at the Riverhouse Riverhouse Music Series AJ Cohen on keys, Raul Fiol on congas and featuring Lisa Dae on vocals. Jazz, R&B, Motown. 7-9pm. No cover. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your go-to karaoke tune? 9pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Maxwell Friedman Group A local favorite and wunderkind, Friedman plays jazz fusion and can jam with the best of them. 7-11pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Michael Shane Classic rock. 7:30pm.
Spoken Moto Fox & Bones Folk-pop. 7-9pm. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Song-
writers’ open Mic w/ Victor Johnson Welcoming venue for experienced and brand new performers to play their original material. 6-8pm.
The Capitol Hammered History Four local performers will be drinking (heavily) and telling stories from key moments of Bend’s rich history. Dionysus Presents. Ages 21+. 8-10pm. $10/adv., $15/door.; Hatiras, Nathaniel J Hatiras is one of the true, enduring legends of the house music world. 10pm. By donation. The Commons Cafe Quon Sings Spring-
steen An acoustic tribute to The Boss. 6:30-8pm. Free, donations appreciated.
The Lot Bill Powers Award winning sing-
er-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, radio DJ, music instructor. 6-8pm. No cover.
Tower Theatre Naturally 7 The internation-
ally acclaimed a cappella group again takes the Tower stage with complex harmonies, uncanny replication of instruments through “vocal play,” and a wall of sound and charisma felt in every seat of the house. 7:30pm. $37-$63.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Terrapin Flyer feat.
Melvin Seals Terrapin Flyer Featuring Melvin Seals bring Grateful Dead music to the Volcanic Theatre Pub. 8pm-1am. $20/adv., $25/door.
EVENTS
CALENDAR MUSIC Bella Acappella Harmony Chorus
Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice A traditional bagpipe and drum band
with members from the Central Oregon area. Experienced pipers and drummers are welcome to attend, along with those interested in taking up piping or drumming who would like to find out what it would take to learn and eventually join our group. Mondays, 5:30-7pm. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St., Bend. Contact: 541-633-3225. pipersej@yahoo.com.
Community Orchestra of Central Oregon Rehearsals COCO welcomes all
musicians to come have fun with us. A variety of players. A variety of music. No auditions. Annual negotiable fee. Wednesdays, 6:30-9pm. Mountain View High School Auditorium, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend. Contact: 541-306-6768. cocomusicmakers@gmail.com.
Adult Intermediate Level Jazz Dance
Adult Intermediate Jazz Dance Class sponsored by the Jazz Dance Collective. Styles include Broadway, Latin, lyrical. Supportive atmosphere, opportunities to perform. Tuesdays, 7-8:30pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63830 Clausen Drive, Suite 202, Bend. $12 donation, first class free.
Argentine Tango Class & Practica No partner needed. Four-week fundamentals class begins the first Wednesday of every month, 6:30-7:30pm. Followed by intermediate lesson at 8:15pm (recommended after 4 weeks of fundamentals). Wednesdays, 6:30-7:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. Contact: 907-299-4199. admin@centraloregontango.com. $5/class. Bachata Turn Patterns Taken Bachata
Level 1 or have a good understanding of the basics? Learn fun turn pattern combinations with Latin Dance Bend. Dance partner not required but encouraged. Tuesdays, 7:30-8:20pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-325-6676. info@LatinDanceBend.com. $12/class, $40/4-Class package, $65/ monthly unlimited.
less” singing in the aural tradition. Group singing is the most ancient and primal technology of belonging. All voices welcome! Mondays, 6:458:30pm. The Heritage Building, 220 SW Pine St., Sisters. $5-15 suggested donation.
Beginning Cuban Salsa Learn to dance Cuban style salsa! Moves are taught in a “rueda” (wheel), called Rueda de Casino. Learn fun steps that can be danced solo, with one partner, or within a circle. No partner necessary. Thursdays, 5:30-6:30pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-3256676. info@LatinDanceBend.com. $12/class, $40/4-class series.
Public (ROCK) Choir Sing Bend is calling
Bend Ecstatic Dance Dance your own dance
Open Hub Singing Club Modern “paper-
on Central Oregonians — shy or bold, talented or terrible — to celebrate and share in the awesomeness of singing with our Public (ROCK) Choir! The group is designed to provide a fun, non-threatening environment, so people of all skill levels can participate. Mondays, 6-8pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Bend. First time is free, $10/members, $16/ non-members.
in your own way in a supportive community of
kindred spirits. Come explore free form movement, connection, and self-expression, guided by rich, diverse soundscapes. Visit: BendEcstaticDance.com or FB Bend Ecstatic Dance. Tuesdays, 7pm. Bend Masonic Center, 1036 NE Eighth St., Bend. $10-12 sliding scale.
Odissi Indian Classical Dance Whether you are a dancer, yogini, or both, or neither, there is something for everyone in this dynamic & multi-layered practice. Tuesdays, Noon-1pm. Naji’s Midtown Yoga, 369 NE Revere Ave., Bend. Contact: tenley@templetribalfusion.com.
Capoeira for Beginners Discover the joy
Salsa Turn Patterns Taken Salsa Level 1 or
of capoeira in a judgement-free class that will explore the multiple dimensions of this unique Afro-Brazilian martial art form of freedom. Condition your body and mind with the Capoeira Bend community every Thursday. New students are welcomed the first Thursday of each month. Thursdays, 6:15-7:15pm. Capoeira Bend, 63056 Lower Meadow Drive, Bend. $15/drop-in or $50/month..
Intro to Latin Dance - Level 1 In this beginner level class you will learn salsa & bachata basics and simple turns while also paying attention to partner connection through lead and follow technic. Dance partner not required but encouraged. Tuesdays, 5:30-6:20pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: info@LatinDanceBend.com. $12/drop-in. Level 2 West Coast Swing This class goes
over concepts of west coast swing as well as a few more patterns. Really dive into what west coast swing is and how to dance it, while learning the core concepts. Contact Jenny Cooper for questions, 541-401-1635. Thursdays, 7:30-8:30pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-401-1635. $30/month.
Lindy Hop Class Come join us for Lindy Hop
Lessons every Sunday night with Agan Swing Dance and Sara Lee Conners. Beginner lesson from 7-8pm and Intermediate lesson from 6-7pm. Partner not required. Sundays, 6-8pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. $10/drop-in.
have a good understanding of the basics? Learn fun turn pattern combinations with Latin Dance Bend. Dance partner not required but encouraged. Tuesdays, 6:30-7:20pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541325-6676. info@LatinDanceBend.com. $12/class, $40/4-Class package, $65/monthly unlimited.
Scottish Country Dance Class No experience or Scottish heritage necessary. Weekly classes include beginner & advanced dances. Mondays, 7-9pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. $5/class, first class is free.
FILM EVENTS BendFilm - Best of Fest Narrative Shorts Short films pack a big story into a short
format and BendFilm pulled together a stellar selection of narrative shorts from the 2018 festival that includes Oscar-nominated WEEKENDS by Trevor Jimenez. Stories in the program range from heartwarming and illuminating personal journeys to gripping thrillers. Feb. 4, 5:30pm. McMenamins Theater, 700 NW Bond St, Bend. $12.
Fly Fishing Film Tour 2019 Better lace up
your boots before you get your socks blown off! The 2019 Stoke reel for the Fly Fishing Film Tour has landed and will give you a taste of the best fly fishing films of the year. Grab your fishiest friends and we’ll see you at the show! Feb. 5, 7:30pm and Feb. 6, 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. $18.
Wednesday Night Kirtan Devotional group singing. It is yoga for the heart that connects us with our divine, inner nature and the one Spirit that unites us all. Wednesdays, 7-9pm. Bend Community Healing Center, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 133, Bend. $10. West African Drumming Mondays, Level 1 students will learn traditional rhythms, and experience the brain-enhancing, healing and joyful benefits from David Visiko. On Thursdays, Level 2 & 3 students will build on your knowledge, technique and performance skills. Mondays, 5:30-6:30pm and Thursdays, 6-7:30 and 7-8:30pm. Djembe Dave’s Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St., Bend. Contact: 541-7603204. DjembeDave@yahoo.com. $15/class. PICKWhite
Fragility Workshop with Dr. Robin DiAngelo This workshop will provide
an overview of White Fragility and provide the perspectives needed for white people to build racial stamina and develop equitable racial practices. Jan. 31, 9:30am. Wille Hall, COCC Coats Campus Center, 2600 NW College Way, Bend. Free.
LYRICS BORN W/ MOWO at Volcanic Theatre Pub
Lava City Roller Dolls Presents
SPIT FIRES VS OVERBEATERS ANONYMOUS at Cascade Indoor Sports Center
FEB 1
Parallel 44 Presents
FEB 6
FEB 2
JAN 31
See the award-winning short "Weekends" at BendFilm's Best of Narrative Shorts at McMenamins Old St. Francis Theater on 2/4.
CASCADE CRESCENDO at Volcanic Theatre Pub Parallel 44 Presents
TURKUAZ W/ OBJECT HEAVY at The Domino Room
17 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Award-winning Bella Acappella seeks women and girls who love to sing and harmonize. Bella teaches and performs four-part acappella harmony and welcomes singers with high and low voices, all levels, ages 15 and above. Meet upstairs in the Great Room. Tuesdays, 6:30-9pm. Aspen Ridge Retirement, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend. Contact: 541-728-9392. bellaacappellasai@gmail.com. $35/memebership.
DANCE
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
18
#1 RATED DENTIST ON
$99
CLEANING, EXAM AND X‑RAY* *NEW PATIENTS ONLY.
GET THAT SPARKLING CLEAN FEELING YOU CAN ONLY GET AFTER A PROFESSIONAL DENTAL CLEANING. CALL TO SCHEDULE YOUR VISIT TODAY!
6 6 0 N E 3 R D ST S U I T E 3 B E N D, O R 9 7 7 0 1
IN BEND, OR
WE SPECIALIZE IN SEDATION DENTISTRY YOU DON'T HAVE TO FEAR THE DENTIST ANYMORE! NOW YOU CAN RELAX AND LET YOUR CARES FLOAT AWAY WHILE WE COMPLETE YOUR DENTAL TREATMENT.
M O N -T H U : 8 : 0 0 A M - 5 : 0 0 P M FRI: 7:00AM-2:00PM
EVENTS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
Page to Screen: Black Panther at Tin Pan Alley Theater Screen “Black Panther”
sevelt Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-617-0900. jenniferware@rocketmail.com. $10/non-members.
PRESENTATIONS & EXHIBITS
ARTS / CRAFTS
resists the temptation to be stable. Her figurative art is inspired in this resistance by insects – their ability to transform, to connect, to possess an exoskeleton, to have acceptance and to move forward into the unknown. Feb. 1, 5pm-Midnight. Velvet, 805 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-7280303. tarabdoherty@gmail.com. Free.
Art Walk with Tara Doherty Tara Doherty
Acrylic & Yupo 2-Day Workshop with Rebecca Sentgeorge Introduction to
techniques specifically for acrylic painting on Yupo. Explore the unique qualities that can be created on Yupo substrate instead of canvas. Feb. 2-3, 10am-2:30pm. Sage Brushers Art Society Gallery, 117 Roosevelt Ave., Bend. Contact: 541617-0900. rsentgeorge@gmail.com. $120.
Artist Talk Whitney Nye SIFT: A selection of works Hear the artist, currently on
display at At Liberty, discuss her work, which explores the “rhythms and pauses of our natural world.” Fri, Feb. 1, 5pm. At Liberty Arts Collaborative, 849 NW Wall St., Bend.
Art at Dry Fields Dry Fields Cider is pleased
to announce our newest exhibition! Enjoy our 22 rotating ciders, beers and kombucha and view artwork by 33 Central Oregon artists. On display: Jan. 29-March 30. Tuesdays-Fridays, Noon-9pm. Through March 30. Dry Fields Cider, 611 NE Jackpine Court # 3, Redmond. Contact: 971-8000215. artinfo@bendbroadband.com. Free.
Construction / Destruction Exhibit Opening Artist books use the traditional book
form as a departure point. These one-of-a-kind creations incorporate handwriting, calligraphy, or letterpress and typically include art elements such as painting, photography, collage, drawing or print. Often rendered in sculptural forms, artist books encourage a different style of interaction from the viewer. Feb. 1, 5-9pm. Bend Art Center, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 180, Bend. Contact: 541-330-8759. info@bendartcenter.org. Free.
Bringing Your Dream Down to Earth: A Four Directions Workshop Series to Embody Your Vision Gretchen Hingley and Learn to Make Your Own Bath Bombs at Fettle Botanic Bend on 2/2.
Exhibition: “Whitney Nye SIFT: A selection of works” At Liberty’s first exhibition
of 2019, featuring well-known artist Whitney Nye, in partnership with Portland’s Russo Lee Gallery. Wednesdays-Saturdays, 11am-6pm. Through Feb. 23. Free.
Figure Drawing Salon Develop your skills
printing. Ages 16+. Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com. Feb. 6, 5:30pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-3882283. info@diycave.com. $65.
at our live model figure drawing salon hosted by Workhouse studio members Christian Brown and Abney Wallace. This drop-in salon features a live nude model in a sequence of poses. All levels are welcome but no instruction is provided. Participants are encouraged to bring their own easel and materials. Tuesdays, 7-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St., Suite 6, Bend. $15/door.
DIY Date Night - Weld Together You’ll
First Friday Art Walk A celebration of Art in
DIY 3D Printing A beginner’s course for 3D
learn to cut steel with a torch then try your hand at Mig Welding and take your creations home with you. Couples that weld together, stay together! Two students minimum per booking. Kids 13+ welcome. No Welding Experience Needed! Fri, Feb. 1, 5:30-8pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: (541) 388-2283. info@ DIYcave.com. $55.
its many forms. Join us for live music, great art, friends, drinks, snacks and adventures in Downtown Bend! Park in the parking garage on the corner of Lava and Oregon to access all the fun. First Friday of every month, 5-9pm. Downtown Bend, Downtown Bend, Bend. Free.
DIY Glowforge Make things with a laser!
Ages 16+. Learn more and sign up at DIYcave. com. Feb. 7, 5:30pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@ diycave.com. $85.
month, we rotate out the art in the cafe and join in with the rest of downtown in celebrating the arts with free live music from local artists in the house or out in the plaza depending on the weather. First Friday of every month, 6-8pm. The Commons Cafe, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend. Free.
DIY Heart Shaped Trinket Box This is a
First Friday Art Show with Kelly Thiel
two-week class, with one hour of DIYcave shop access for you to do your “homework” between classes. In your first class you will attend a workshop where the teacher will show you all the techniques and tricks to create the first stage of your project. Materials are included! You will need to be available for both dates, as the second workshop will be focused on correcting problems and bringing you up to the finish line. Thurs, Jan. 31, 1-3pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: (541) 388-2283. info@DIYcave. com. $65.
DIY Intro to TIG Welding This Project Based Class will introduce you to how TIG works, how to assemble the torch, and TIG welding techniques. Ages 14+. Learn more and sign up at DIYcave. com. Tues, Feb. 5, 5:30pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-3882283. info@diycave.com. $75. DIY Welding Workshop This hands-on
class is perfect for beginners or anyone needing a refresher class in cutting and welding. You’ll cut steel with a torch and weld those pieces back together. You’ll be introduced to Brazing and Gas Welding and you’ll get to try your hand at Arc and MIG welding. No Welding Experience Needed! Ages 13 and up. Wednesdays, 5:30-8pm. Through Feb. 27. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: (541) 388-2283. info@DIYcave. com. $60/class.
First Friday Art & Live Music Every
Come see Kelly Thiel’s new series of paintings entitled Contained Energy. They are large, fluid and filled with contrast, gesture and energy. Feb. 1, 5:30-8:30pm. Stellar Realty Northwest, 109 NW Greenwood Ave., #105, Bend. Contact: 619.206.6879. rebekah@stellarnw.com. Free.
First Friday: KickstART WALK Join us for a fun arts and crafts night involving local artists! We will be hosting independent booths on First Friday Art Walk for February- support the community while you cut loose for the weekend! Artists please sign up at the store or online. Feb. 1, 5:30-9pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-633-7205. wabisabibend@yahoo. com. Free to attend, $10 booth rental. First Friday: Mini Oregon WinterFest
Join us on First Friday for Mini Oregon WinterFest, where the Fire King and Ice Queen will hold a procession downtown, enjoy fire pits, ice carving, games, Oregon WinterFest ticket giveaways and other fun prizes! Feb. 1, 5-7pm. OnPoint Community Credit Union, 950 NW Bond St., Bend. Free.
First Friday: Valerie Winterholler Join us for First Friday Art Walk as we feature the art of Valerie Winterholler. Feb. 1, 5pm. Peterson/ Roth Gallery, 206 NW Oregon Ave., Suite 1, Bend. First Friday with Austin White Join us for the February Downtown Art Walk at Outside In.
We are featuring local photographer & climber, Austin White, and his beautiful landscape images of climbers in Central Oregon. Celebrate our local climbers & their photography! Feb. 1, 5-9pm. OutsideIN, 845 NW Wall St, Bend. Free.
InspiRED — February Show at Tumalo Art Co. February group show at Tumalo Art Co.
— InspiRED, honors the color red, the month’s most famous color. Feb. 1, 4-8pm. Tumalo Art Co., 450 SW Powerhouse Dr., Ste. 407, Bend. Contact: 541-385-9144. tac@bendtel.net. Free.
Make Your Own Bath Bombs You will learn how to create beautiful bath bombs using organic essential oils, organic dried herbs and other natural ingredients. As we will be gearing up for Valentines Day around this time, we will be sure to discuss some plants with special aphrodisiac properties. Feb. 2, 5:30-7pm. Fettle Botanic Bend, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, #120, Bend. Contact: 541-728-2368. bend@fettlebotanic.com. $25. Nest Box Workshop Encourage birds to nest on your property! Join us to learn about native backyard birds before making your own nest box to take home. Building materials provided. Cost includes materials for one box and two participants. Suitable for ages 8 and older. Feb. 2, 10:30am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: info@highdesertmuseum.org. $50. Rick Bartow: Things You Know but Cannot Explain Rick Bartow (who passed
away in 2016) explored his Native American identity, military service in Vietnam and resulting PTSD through paintings, drawings and sculptures. See one of Oregon’s most celebrated indigenous artists’ works showcased at the High Desert Museum, in a stunning retrospective. Through April 7, 5:30-7:30pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: info@highdesertmuseum.org.; Museum Curator of Art and Community Engagement Andries Fourie will lead a gallery walk through the exhibition Rick Bartow: Things You Know But Cannot Explain. Learn about Bartow’s life, his influences, the importance of his Native American heritage and the methods and materials he used to make his art. Jan. 31, 6-7pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: info@highdesertmuseum.org. $7, members receive 20 percent discount.
Sisters Library Annual Art Exhibit
Exhibit of All Sisters Country artists work, up to two pieces of wall-hung art and 5 pieces of other art forms such as jewelry, ceramics, or sculpture. Wednesdays-Fridays, 10am-6pm and Saturdays, 10am-5pm. Through Feb. 22. Contact: Zeta Seiple: 541-549-6157. Free.
Watercolor Wednesdays Learn watercolor painting basics and techniques through demos, videos and instruction. Bring your own photos and supplies. Wednesdays, 10am-Noon Through Feb. 27. Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 SW Roo-
Halie Taylor are excited to offer you this workshop series that uses the four directions to support you in getting clear about your vision. Week One: EAST – Awareness | Week Two: SOUTH –Embodiment | Week Three: WEST - Reflection | Week Four: NORTH - Celebration Ceremony on Deschutes. Saturdays, Noon-3pm. Through Feb. 16. The Blissful Heart ~ Crystal Sanctuary, 45 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. Contact: sacredgrounding@gmail.com. Sliding Scale Investment of $140-$200.
Challenging Behaviors - Effective Approaches to Common Behaviors Oregon Care Partners will host a free, instructor-led class designed to help anyone who cares for an aging Oregonian better manage challenging behaviors that are common among older adults. Feb. 4, 8:30am-1pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Free.
Computer Starter Pack: Intro to Windows 10 Navigate and maximize Microsoft’s new-
est operating system. Participants should be comfortable using a mouse and internet browser. The library has laptops available or you can bring your own. Space is limited and registration is requested. Feb. 5, 2:30-4pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Contact: 541-617-7080. Free.
“Fragile Legacy: Rare Views of Early Central Oregon” Exhibit The exhibit fea-
tures 60 photographic images hand printed from their original glass plate negatives and taken between 1908 and 1930 around Central Oregon. Through March 31. Deschutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend.
Know Less - Less Is Best Sometimes,
less is best! Learn how to pay less on your loans, including your mortgage, car loan, and student loans. Feb. 1, 3-4pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St., La Pine.; Feb. 5, 6-7pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend.; Feb. 6, Noon-1pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-9238565. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
Know Less - Waste Know Less Waste explores how the stuff we buy, use and get rid of everyday, is impacting our world. Feb. 7, 6-7pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 541-312-1032. lizg@ deschuteslibrary.org. Free. Know Russia: Ra-Ra-Rasputin Hear
about the weird and wicked Russian mystic Grigori Rasputin from Dr. MayaLisa Holzman. Rasputin, self-proclaimed holy man and mystic, who held the ear of Tsarina Alexandra, last Empress of Russia. Jan. 30, 6-7pm. Contact: 541312-1063. paigef@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
Nature Nights: Magnificent Monarch
Join Deschutes Land Trust ecologist Amanda Egertson in the January Nature Nights event for a colorful tour to learn more about our region’s butterflies, with a special focus on the king of the butterfly world: the mighty monarch. Jan. 30, 6-7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-330-0017. rebekah@deschuteslandtrust.org. Free, register online.
19 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
movie at Tin Pan Theater. Following the screening join a librarian-led discussion about the book and the film. Feb. 4, 5-8pm. Tin Pan Alley, Off Minnesota, between Thump and the Wine Shop, Bend. Contact: 5413121063. paigef@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
EVENTS Seeing the Racial Water with Dr. Robin DiAngelo Dr. Robin DiAngelo will explain what
makes racism so hard for white people to see and identify common white racial patterns that prevent us from achieving greater racial equity. Jan. 30, 6pm. Wille Hall, COCC Coats Campus Center, 2600 NW College Way, Bend. Free, please RSVP to reserve seat.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
20
State of the State with Governor Kate Brown At our special forum, the Governor will
talk about her vision of “Moving Oregon Forward” – her vision, priorities and budget for 2019 and beyond. Feb. 1, 11:15am-1pm. Riverhouse on the Deschutes Convention Center, 3075 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-633-7163. joey@cityclubco.org. $30/members, $50/non-members. (Plated lunch is included).
THEATER West Side Story One of America’s most
memorable musicals hits the stage at Tower! A modern depiction of Shakespeare’s tragic love story, “Romeo and Juliet,” West Side Story first graced Broadway in 1957. Fri, Feb. 1, 7pm and Sat, Feb. 2, 3 and 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. $28-$42.
WORDS Blank Pages Writing Workshop: Talk Sense Create tension, reveal character, and
advance story in this creative writing workshop designed to sharpen your dialogue. Feb. 2, 6-8pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St., Suite 6, Bend. Contact: 541-633-6839. blankpagesworkshops@gmail.com. $25.
Current Fiction Book Club Please join us
for Current Fiction Book Club. We will discucss Washington Black by Esi Edugyan. Feb. 6, 6-7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 Northwest Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend.
High Desert Poetry Cell Reading The
High Desert Poetry Cell celebrates Valentine’s Day early with original poems of love and lust. Reading is free but audience will be invited to donate to Central Oregon Veterans Ranch. Feb. 2, 2-3:30pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-330-5615. donrkunz@gmail.com. Free.
Quiet Writing Time with Writer’s Collective of Central Oregon Are you a
creative soul who needs a space and some quiet time to create your art? The Writers Collective of Central Oregon is holding weekly writing meetups through the winter. Meet fellow writers, buckle down and shove off that writer’s block! Mondays, 10am-1pm. Through June 3. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-1063. writehere@deschuteslibrary. org. Free.
Writers Writing - Quiet Writing Time with WCCO Need time to finish your novel
or just answer your emails in peace? Join the Writer’s Collective of Central Oregon and your fellow writers for quiet writing time. Tuesdays, 10am-1pm. Through March 26. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-312-1032. Free.
ETC. Downtown Bend Ski Scavenger Hunt
Each store will have a passport in their location with a list of all participating stores. You pick up the passport, find the ski figurine in each store with the hashtag, #DowntownBendSkiHunt. If you post the picture with the hashtag you could be highlighted on the Downtown Bend Facebook page and Website. Through Feb. 7. Downtown Bend, Downtown Bend, Bend. Contact: downtownbend@gmail.com.
Preventative Walk-In Pet Wellness Clinic The Bend Spay and Neuter Project offers
vaccinations, deworming and microchips at our walk-in wellness clinic. No appointments necessary, first come first served. Visit bendsnip.org for a list of services. Saturdays, 10am-1:30pm. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. A-1, Bend. $10/office visit.
VOLUNTEER Become a Big Brother or Big Sister in Redmond Looking for caring adult mentors
who are willing to spend a few hours a month sharing their interests and hobbies. Ongoing. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon - Redmond, 412 SW Eighth St., Redmond, Redmond. Contact: 541-617-4788. balbert@bbbsco.org.
Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond
Looking for volunteers to receive donations, sort and price items. Volunteers are critical to the operations of our high-save shelter and contribute directly to the care of our animals by ensuring our donations are processed. Ongoing, 10am-5pm. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St, Redmond. Contact: 541-504-0101. thrift@brightsideanimals.org.
Call for Volunteers Volunteers needed at
Second Chance Bird Rescue! Friendly people needed to help socialize birds to ready for adoption, make toys, clean cages and make some new feathered friends! Located past Cascade Lakes Distillery, call 916-956-2153 for hours and location. Central Oregon, County wide.
Fences For Fido Help free dogs from chains! We are seeking volunteers on Mondays to come out and help us build fences for dogs who live on chains. No experience is required. Sign up on Facebook: FFF Central Oregon Region Volunteers. More info can be found at fencesforfido. org. Mondays. City of Bend.
Herd U Needed A Home Dog Rescue In need of foster families and volunteers to assist with monthly adoption events and fundraising efforts. Contact for details. Central Oregon, County wide. Contact: volunteer@herduneededahome.com. Make Your Mark at Bend Spay+Neuter! Compassionate, awesome people to join an incredible team, whether you volunteer in the clinic, festivals or helping with our community cat population. Ongoing. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. A-1, Bend. Contact: 541-617-1010. volunteer@bendsnip.org.
Mentors Needed Heart of Oregon Corps is
a nonprofit that inspires and empowers positive change in youth through education, jobs and stewardship. Heart of Oregon Corps, 1291 NE 5th St., Bend. Contact: John: 541-526-1380. john. griffith@heartoforegoncorps.org.
Teens In Action Service Club Join Camp Fire Central Oregon’s teen community service club and have fun while volunteering! A mainstay of Camp Fire’s leadership and service programs, Teens In Action is all about teens working together to make their community a better place. Open to all 6th-12th graders. Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Through March 13. Camp Fire Central Oregon, P.O. Box 7031, Bend. Contact: 541.382.4682. $50 Sliding Scale. Volunteer Drivers Needed Volunteer drivers needed Mondays-Fridays to transport veterans to the Bend VA Clinic and Portland VA Hospital. Must have clean driving record and be able to pass VA-provided physical and screening. City of Bend, Bend, OR, Bend. Contact: Call Paul for details: 541-647-2363. Volunteer with Salvation Army Opportu-
nities: Emergency food pantry, we visit residents of assisted living centers, and we make up gifts for veterans and homeless. Ongoing. City of Bend, Bend. Contact: 541-389-8888.
Volunteers Needed Help with daily horse care. Duties include; corral cleaning, grooming, walking horses. Flexible days and hours. No experience required. Call Kate Beardsley to set up an appointment. Ongoing. Mustangs to the Rescue, 21670 McGilvray Road, Bend. Contact: 541-350-2406.
EVENTS
GROUPS & MEETUPS Al-Anon Family Groups 12-step group for friends and families of alcoholics. Check afginfo. org or call 541-728-3707 for times and locations. Central Oregon, County wide. Alcoholics Anonymous Call Alcoholics Bend Chamber Toastmasters Develop
and grow your public speaking and leadership skills, whether you’re an executive, stay-at-home parent, college student or retiree. Wednesdays, Noon-1pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend.
Bendharma - Consciousness Discussion Group Exploring pathways to
peace through the study of the energy that is consciousness. A relaxed group discussion facilitated by an experienced western mind-yogi (50+ yrs). First Wednesday of every month, 5:30-7pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend.
Caregiver Support Group Support groups create a safe, confidential, supportive environment or community and a chance for participants to develop informal mutual support and social relationships. First Tuesday of every month, 12-1:30pm. Sisters City Hall, 520 E Cascade Ave., Sisters. Contact: 800-272-3900. Free. Celebrate Recovery Celebrate Recovery is
a Christ-centered, 12-step recovery program for anyone struggling with hurt, pain or addiction of any kind. Mondays, 6:30pm. Faith Christian Center, 1049 NE 11th St., Bend. | Wednesdays, 7pm. Redmond Assembly of God, 1865 W. Antler Ave., Redmond. | Thursdays, 6:30pm. High Lakes Christian Church, 52620 Day Road, La Pine. | Thursdays, 6:30pm. Westside Church, 2051 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend. | Fridays, 7pm. Redmond Christian Church, 536 SW 10th St., Redmond. Visit celebraterecovery.com for more info. Central Oregon, County wide, Bend.
Central Oregon Federated Republican Women Luncheon Guest speaker: Oregon
Speaker of the House, Bev Clarno — a native Oregonian, a rancher, a businesswoman, a wife and mother of four, a community activist, a consistent opponent of taxes and proponent of smaller, more efficient government. Please RSVP by Friday Feb. 1. Feb. 7, 11am-1pm. Bend Golf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Dr., Bend. Contact: 541-593-7680. $20/adv., $25/door.
Community Questions We live in times of great change. How can we move forward with greater understanding of our differences, and our sameness? Join us for an open-ended questions & discussion. Feb. 4, 6-7:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-1032. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Compassionate Communication / NVC Practice Groups Through practicing with
others, we can learn and grow using real-life experiences to become more compassionate with ourselves and others. Some NVC experience necessary. Wednesdays, 4-5:30 pm. Tuesdays & Wednesdays, 6-7:30 pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way, #200, Bend.
A Course in Miracles This a group for mind
training on how to see differently in life. A way to see through the eyes of love rather than fear. Contact Lisa for more info. Every other Saturday, 10am. St. Charles Bend South Clinic, 61250 SE Coombs Place, Bend. Contact: 760-208-9097.
Diversity in Our Community - Telling Our Stories Join the conversation during a
facilitated discussion. Community Conversations invites you to bring your voice to the table for our facilitated conversation on our experiences with diversity. Supper included. Registration required. Feb. 6, 5:30-7:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-3121032. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous Meeting Based on the Twelve Steps of Alcohol-
ics Anonymous. Contact: 831-435-0680 for more info. First Saturday of every month, 9-10:30am. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St., Bend. Free.
21 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Anonymous. Hotline: 541-548-0440. Or visit coigaa.org. Central Oregon, County wide.
Emotions Anonymous EA provides a warm and accepting group setting in which to share experiences without fear of criticism. Wednesdays, 9:30am and Thursdays, 10:30am. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St., Bend.
French Conversation Table All are
welcome! First & Third Monday of every month, 10:30am-12:30pm. Barnes and Noble, 2690 NE Highway 20, Bend.
Garage Night The Pine Shed is the perfect place to talk shop, and tell all of your buddies about your winter projects! Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Spoken Moto, 310 SW Industrial Way, Bend. Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers welcome. For info, call Sue. Mondays, 6-9pm. Round Table Clubhouse, 2940 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-610-3717.
Italian Conversation Group Conversational Italian group in a relaxed atmosphere. Saturdays, 9:45-11am. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. Japanese Group Lesson We offer group
lessons for both beginners and intermediate students for Japanese for all ages. Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-633-7205. $10.
League of Women Voters of Deschutes County Luncheon Speaking will be Klaus Mager, Proprietor, Food with Thought –Transforming Vision Into Food solutions. Everyone is invited. Please arrive by 11am if ordering from menu. First Thursday of every month, 11am1pm. Black Bear Diner, 1465 NE Third St., Bend.
Marijuana Anonymous Meeting Thursdays, 7-8pm. Serenity Lane, 601 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend.
Overeaters Anonymous Meeting A
fellowship of individuals who, through shared experience, strength and hope, are recovering from compulsive overeating. Contact: 541-3066844 for more info. Mondays & Thursdays, Noon1pm. Saturdays, 9:30am-11am. United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St., Bend. | Wednesdays, 4-5pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave., Redmond.
Pulmonary Hypertension Support Group A supportive group of individuals and
caregivers affected by Pulmonary Hypertension. Social, educational and includes lunch. Topics include: new treatments, traveling with PH, insurance, tai chi, anxiety and depression. First Saturday of every month, 1-3pm.
Socrates Cafe Group People from different
backgrounds get together and exchange thoughtful ideas and experiences while embracing the Socratic Method. Thursdays, 6-8pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend.
Spanish Club Spanish language study and
conversation group. All levels welcome. Call for more info. Thursdays, 3:30-5:30pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-749-2010.
Support Group - Women Survivors of Sexual Abuse Confidential support group for
women survivors of sexual abuse. The primary focus of the group will be to develop a support system to share and work through issues related to sexual abuse. Call or text Veronica for more info. Actual days, times, location TBD. Ongoing. Private Residence in Bend, RSVP for address. Contact: 503-856-4874.
Women’s Cancer Support Group For the
newly diagnosed and survivors of cancer. For info call Judy. Thursdays, 1-3pm. Mountain Laurel Lodge, 990 SW Yates Drive, Bend. Contact: 541728-0767.
♥ Lingerie ♥ Sex Toys ♥ Party Supplies ♥ Costumes & Wigs ♥ Vaporizers ♥ Local Hand Blow Glass Pipes
Your One Stop Adult Fun Shop! ONLINE SHOPPING NOW AVAILABLE! visit www.prettypussycat.com 1341 NE 3rd Street, Bend 541-317-3566
SOURCE SUGGESTS THESE BOOKS
2019 OLK F S R E SIST AL FESTIV
There’s never a bad time for some James Baldwin By Tom Beans, Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
22
SATURDAY FEBRUARY 2
SHOOK TWINS & JOHN CRAIGIE WEDNESDAY MARCH 6
DARLINGSIDE With Special Guest
RIVER WHYLESS
MONDAY MARCH 18
An Evening With
ÍMAR
SISTERS HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM • ALL SHOWS 7PM SERIES TICKET: $55 ADULT / $40 YOUTH (18 & UNDER) TICKETS AT SISTERSFOLKFESTIVAL.ORG/TICKETS
2019 SISTERS FOLK FESTIVAL PASSES ON SALE NOW!
Find your happy place. The Source’s Guide to local drink & food specials
Before you stroll the streets of First Friday, check out these book recommendations, courtesy of Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe. Then head down to the shop for a discount on the books! As we celebrate Black History Month this February, I want to bring attention to an author I believe is just as relevant today as when he was first published. James Baldwin, one of the great writers of the 20th century, wrote about race, class and sexuality with the elegance of a poet and the passion of an artist. If you haven’t had the pleasure, here are three must-reads from Baldwin, accompanied by his own words: “Giovanni’s Room” Essential reading in the LGBTQ community, this 1957 National Book Award finalist tells the story of an American living in Paris struggling to reconcile his sexuality and his masculinity. A groundbreaking work. “People who remember court madness through pain, the pain of the perpetually recurring death of their innocence; people
Animal Adventures Live animals, stories, crafts with High Desert Museum. Ages 3+ years. Wed, Jan. 30, 1-2pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Free. ever-popular Babysitter Training for 5th-8th graders! Whether your child is gearing up to take care of siblings, or thinking of making a little extra cash as a babysitter - they won’t want to miss this educational, hands-on course! Feb. 1, 9am-5pm. Camp Fire Central Oregon, P.O. Box 7031, Bend. $80.
Creativity Lab for Toddlers An art class
FINDER
bendsource.com/happyhourfinder
“The Fire Next Time” Possibly his best-known work, written in 1963, it confronted race and religion at the time of an emerging Civil Rights movement. It will change the way you think about the racial divide in this country. “I imagine one of the reasons people cling to their hates so stubbornly is because they sense, once hate is gone, they will be forced to deal with pain.” “Another Country” Written mostly while in exile in France, this novel follows the unraveling of a group of friends in 1950s Greenwich Village after one of their own commits suicide. “The aim of the dreamer, after all, is merely to go on dreaming and not to be molested by the world. His dreams are his protection against the world. But the aims of life are antithetical to those of the dreamer, and the teeth of the world are sharp.”
FAMILY & KIDS’ EVENTS Babysitter Training Don’t miss Camp Fire’s
happy hour
who forget court another kind of madness, the madness of the denial of pain and the hatred of innocence; and the world is mostly divided between madmen who remember and madmen who forget.”
specifically designed for toddlers to engage in age-appropriate open-ended art making activities. Drop in for ages 1-3 years w/caregiver. Tuesdays, 9:30-10:30am. Through May 31. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd, Bend. Contact:. 503-953-2175. hello@basecampstudio.org. $10.
DIY Kids Skill Building Make a glocken-
spiel, stitch a leather wallet, create sheet metal art and craft a cutting board, cedar birdhouse, classic toolbox, planter box and more. Ages 1014. Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com. First Thursday of every month, 2-4pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-3882283. info@diycave.com. $160.
Kamishibai Workshop Create a stage and a story using traditional Japanese techniques. Ages 10-17 years. Online registration is required. Wed, Jan. 30, 3-4pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Free. Kid-friendly Self-Portrait Workshop
Bring the kids for a fun, hands-on family workshop and learn to draw and paint self-portraits. For ages 3 and above. Children under 10 years of age should be accompanied by an adult. Feb. 2, 10am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact:. info@highdesertmuseum.org.
Little Regulators We practice the wise art of
self-regulation using art, movement and sensory tools to soothe our central nervous systems. This class is grounded in Yoga Calm methods and Tanya’s 20 years of experience working with families. For 1st-3rd graders. Sundays, 9-9:45am. Through Feb. 24. The Hive, 205 NW Franklin Ave., Bend. Contact:. 541-279-5194. tanyabreathes@ gmail.com. $80/4-class series, $20/drop-in.
Mom & Baby Yoga Mothers with babies through early walkers are invited to stretch, strengthen, relax and have fun in a child friendly environment. No experience necessary. Tuesdays, Noon-1pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. $17/drop-in. Sew What? After School Club Have fun
working with fabric and learning to hand sew and use a sewing machine. Share your ideas and get creative in this participant driven sewing class. Open to all K-3rd graders Wednesdays, 2-4pm. Through Feb. 20. Amity Creek Magnet School, 437 NW Wall Street, Bend. Contact:. 541.382.4682. $90.
Starflight After School Club Camp Fire’s age-specific, growth mindset-based national curriculum, exploring what are called “Trails”-themes that build life skills, understanding and a child’s sense of self-worth. K-3rd graders. Mondays, 3:30-5pm. Through Feb. 25. Amity Creek Magnet School, 437 NW Wall Street, Bend. Contact:. 541.382.4682. $60. Youth/Adult Slackline Combination of basic poses, transitions, floor exercises, stamina drills and games. All ages and levels welcome. Tuesdays, 5-6pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. $18/youth drop-in (17 and under), $20/adult drop-in.
C
CULTURE
Winter PrideFest
LGBTQ-friendly events prove Pride can happen outside the month of June By Keely Damara
J
Rainbows and tie dye hit the mountain this weekend for Winter PrideFest.
of Pride events in June. “Last year we had different events throughout the month that led up to the day of celebration,” says Jaime Nesbitt, president of OUT Central Oregon. “But this year we have already started working with HDC to get our organizations to really come up with a strategy based on our strengths to make this year really successful.” OUT Central Oregon inherited its name from a Facebook group originally formed in 2011 for HDC events, which hadn’t seen as much activity since Cliff Cook, once on the board of directors of Central Oregon PFLAG and a prominent leader in the Central Oregon LGBTQ
community, passed away in 2017. “Cliff Cook passed away and left a hole —‘Our Night Out’ fell off for a few months, no one was taking the lead,” says Richard Scharfenberg, secretary of OUT Central Oregon. Since rebranding the monthly social event as “Oh Yess, A Monthly Night OUT,” the nonprofit has regularly hosted numerous other events, significantly ramping up in the last few months. “We’ve had something almost every week —and you can just tell people are now empowered to do things,” says Scharfenberg, who went on to mention recent drag bingo events and RuPaul Drag Race viewing parties. Nesbitt says the nonprofit is excited
ARTWATCH and ink, featuring funny, gross characters that can bring a smile. His work is filled with whimsy and intrigue, brightness and darkness—accessible and yet a Doodling as resilience little challenging. It’s not surprising that Yes, his real name really is Steve Ste- he cites early influences such as Shel Silvens. It’s not one he was born with, but verstein and Ren and Stimpy. His work rather, acquired when he was adopted at is similar in its life and energy. Recently, Stevens took the Inktober age 13. He was already Steve, but when challenge, an Instahe became Steve Ste- “It’s in me. Whenever I feel vens, things got intergram venture for artlost or sad, I draw and I esting. People wanted ists to all draw one thing a day based on to know him and talk instantly come into my own. that day’s prompt. to him. When I asked It just makes sense. Bills While he admits it him how that affect- might pile up and I might be was tough, the bened him, he replied, confused about what I am efits far surpassed “I was pretty shy and doing in life, but what makes the challenges. Often had to learn to break sense is drawing.” out of my box.” —STEVE STEVENS the prompts were motions, something That’s what you see in Stevens’ art, disguised as simple Stevens said he would tend to shy away doodles: The willingness to step outside from in the past. One day the challenge comfort for a minute, even if it feels a was “skulls.” He began looking up skulls little hard. Stevens’ work is largely pen and different types of animal skulls,
to again partner with the Deschutes County Health Services outreach van to offer free HIV testing at its events in 2019. The outreach van, secured by the county last year after receiving a grant from the Oregon Health Authority, will increase the availability of HIV testing services in the tri-county area.
Winter PrideFest
Thur, Jan. 31 – Sun. Feb. 3 Various locations in Bend See the full lineup of events at outcentraloregon.com/winter-pridefest Cost varies by activity, discounts available
By Teafly Peterson resulting in drawings Stevens turned into a small book and stickers. When you hear Stevens talk about drawing, it’s similar to anyone who speaks of something with great love. It’s intrinsic to his being and that shows. “It’s in me. Whenever I feel lost or sad, I draw and I instantly come into my own. It just makes sense. Bills might pile up and I might be confused about what I am doing in life, but what makes sense is drawing.” Stevens’ works shows how the act of doodling can be cathartic and rich in its moment of quietness and reflection. Currently, he’s working on a coloring book for kids and a graphic novel for adults.
Steve Stevens
On Instagram: @StevenSquared
Steven Stevens
Artist Profile: Steve Stevens
23
Alex Lofting
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
une may be Pride Month — but it’s 2019, so why can’t every month be Pride Month? OUT Central Oregon, a local nonprofit that organizes LGBTQ+-friendly events throughout the year, aims for just that. The organization promotes “inclusivity, visibility, and equality for the local Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Q+ community” in Central Oregon, putting on a variety of events from “Oh Yess, A Monthly Night OUT” to various Pride events in June. This weekend, OUT Central Oregon is gearing up to celebrate Central Oregon’s LGBTQ community with a slew of family-friendly activities planned for the Winter PrideFest ski weekend in Bend. In addition to skiing at Mt. Bachelor, the event lineup includes dining and drinks at the Friday Snocial at The Box Factory, ice skating at Seventh Mountain Resort, drag tubing on Saturday at Mt. Bachelor (with drag queens and kings taking to the slopes) and a guided Nordic skiing tour with The High Desert Museum for those who prefer not to downhill ski. Not one, but two, parties happen Saturday night — an Après Ski Party at Silver Moon and a low-key cocktail hour at Dogwood Cocktail Cabin. Winter PrideFest, now in its second year, secured a $10,000 grant from Visit Bend’s Cultural Tourism Fund, helping secure rainbow badges, stickers and psychedelic tie dye buffs for all participating skiers. The year 2019 looks to be the nonprofit’s biggest year yet. OUT Central Oregon is teaming up with Human Dignity Coalition to organize a full month
Steven Stevens took part in Instagram’s Inktober challenge, prompting him to draw a host of things he might not have otherwise attempted.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
24
2019
FEATURI
NG
BoDean
s
Fire Pit Competition
♦
King and Queen
♦
Ice Carving Area
♦
Children’s Area
HEALTH PLANS
♦
Royal Run
♦
Light Show
♦
J.D. Platt’s K9 Kings
CH
CHOW
LITTLE BITES
Redefining the Coffee Experience
By Lisa Sipe
New Riff taproom explores coffee in new ways—and offers much more
25
T
Lisa Sipe
wist open a bottle of Riff Cold Brewed Coffee and you’re welcomed to flavor-forward coffee with notes often found in wine—such as cherry, golden raisin and dark chocolate. Without the heat, the process is milder on the beans and creates a less-acidic cup. When I heard that Paul Evers—who’s worked with craft beverage brands including Humm Kombucha and Crux Fermentation Project—was starting Riff and innovating in the coffee space, I thought he was crazy. That category is flooded with competition and honestly, I couldn’t see where there was room for anything new. One visit to the Riff Taproom in The Box Factory and the innovation is clear.
So Long 123 Ramen, Welcome Root Cellar
Get in and order your favorite bowl: after two years, 123 Ramen closes Jan. 31. Owner Anna Witham is on a new journey and will be launching Root Cellar, a brand of pantry staples including bone broth, sauces, spices, chai and pickles, in early spring. The restaurant will transform into a retail food boutique with her line of pantry staples. Celebrate the transition with cake and punch at the 123 Ramen grand closing celebration on its last day. 123 Ramen Grand Closing Celebration Taster Tray
Thur., Jan. 31, 1-3pm 1289 NE 2nd St., Bend 541-241-2721 123ramenbend.com Free
Riff Cold Brewed Coffee is “celebrating the flavor wheel of coffee.” —PAUL EVERS Evers says Riff is “celebrating the flavor wheel of coffee.” We’ve mostly been exposed to light (blonde) or dark coffee, and many people are familiar with roasted, spicy, nutty and chocolate flavors. Evers showed me the coffee taster’s flavor wheel, with dozens of flavor profiles stemming from these main characteristics: fruity, floral, sweet, nutty/cocoa, spices, roasted, green/vegetative, sour/fermented and other. The wheel is deep and expands out into specific flavors, including whiskey, peapod, papery, malt, molasses and chamomile, to name a few. With so much room for flavor exploration it’s no wonder the taproom has 30 taps. To take your taste buds on a ride, order a flight, exploring regular cold brew, creamy, fizzy nitro cold brew and what Evers says is the world’s first hot cold brewed coffee on nitro. Next, tour the beer collaborations with Crux, Deschutes Brewery, Pfriem Family Brewers and Upright Brewing. Evers says the “spirit of collaboration” is a Riff value. I tried Hold That Thought—a nitro blonde coffee stout created with Crux—a dreamy, perfectly balanced beer I’ll remember for a while. In February, Riff will release its collaboration with Humm Kombucha. Lifting expectations Caffeine affects each person differently. I’ve had cups of cold brew on nitro that have left me buzzing so hard I can’t concentrate. Enter the Riff Lift
Hummus Trio
Pork Brie Sandwich
With 30 taps, order a flight to find your favorite kind of brew.
Index, a chart indicating the level of caffeine in a beverage ranging from 0 (1 milligram per ounce) to 8 (50 milligrams per ounce). Each cold brew on the menu shares where it falls on the index. How has this not existed before? Pastry-free experience Forget the coffee shop experience at the Riff Taproom—no pastries, pre-packaged food or espresso machines. The space feels like a restaurant mixed with a brewery. You can see all 30 taps at the bar. An expressive mural done by local artist Megan Stumpfig, in collaboration with the community, brightens the focal wall. Plenty of tables and bar seating are spread throughout the space. During my visit, no one had headphones on in front of a laptop. People were chatting over food and drink. The food menu includes shareable snacks, sandwiches, bowls, soups, salads and sweet coffee-inspired treats. The hummus trio, including carrot, beet and edamame, is an explosion of flavor and colors. Chef Jackson “Rooster” Higdon said he “was inspired by the brand,” so the menu explores color through foods such as purple forbidden rice, watermelon and purple radishes and candy cane beets.
The pork brie sandwich includes layers of creamy, spicy and sweet. It’s a stack of The Meat Locker pork loin, pepper jam, arugula and soft-ripened brie on a Sparrow Bakery hoagie. The perfect pear salad of coffee-poached pear, spicy coffee crusted pecans, Rogue smoked blue cheese, arugula and apple butter vinaigrette was light and peppery. The coffee notes are subtle and tend to bloom at the end of bites. Into the evening Contrasted with other coffee bars, Riff takes the bar part seriously, with five coffee-inspired cocktails, including two on draft. The Cold Fashioned is a play on the classic old fashioned with rye whiskey, bitters, bourbon maple syrup and decaf cold brew. El Jefe marries tequila with cold brew, cinnamon syrup and bitters. Both draft cocktails were boozy, and the coffee brightened the drink without overshadowing the featured spirit. The Riff Taproom isn’t the place to stop for your first cup of the day, since the space doesn’t open until 10 am, except on weekends. The space opens at 8 am Saturdays and Sundays, with a breakfast menu including chia pudding parfait, forbidden rice cereal, pan quiche and a baked egg sandwich.
Still Vibrato Wins Good Food Award
Ethiopia Shantawene, coffee beans roasted by Clint Rowan at Still Vibrato, has taken home a Good Food Award. The award recognizes American craft food producers who honor social and environmental responsibility while producing a tasty, authentic product. Rowan said he tasted the beans from this farm and explored how the crops changed for years, and says, “2018 happened to be really great” for the certified organic Ethiopia Shantawene. “It’s cool,” Rowan replied when asked how it felt to win, “because we live in a smallish town and we’re serving this community and to know the quality and the roasting can stand up to other palates in other cities is a reminder I’m doing something good.” You can find Ethiopia Shantawene beans at Market of Choice and West Coast Provisions or enjoy a cup at Humble Beet or at the Still Vibrato roastery Fridays and Saturdays. Still Vibrato Roastery 35 NW Bond St., Bend stillvibrato.com
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
By Lisa Sipe
FOOD & DRINK EVENTS FOOD EVENTS
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
26
Adult Cooking Class - Tapas Tapas are a huge part of the social scene in Spain. Join me in this hands-on class where you will learn to make a variety of Spanish Tapas. In this class we will make multiple courses, each course will be paired with wine. Feb. 1, 5:30-9pm. Kindred Creative Kitchen, 2525 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Bend. Contact:. 541-640-0350. kindredcreativekitchen@ gmail.com. $85/person. Chili Fest at BBC Join us for Chili Fest down
at BBC! We will have live music both nights from 6-8:30pm! Feb. 1, 4-10pm and Feb. 2, 11:30am-10pm. Bend Brewing Company, 1019 NW Brooks St., Bend.
Cook Like a Pro 1 Cooking is easy when you know the techniques. Join me in this class where you can learn from a pro how to cook like a pro. In this action packed 4-week series, you’ll learn fundamental techniques including knife skills, stocks, soups, and sauces. These are the foundation for great cooking! Mon, Feb. 4, 6-9pm. Kindred Creative Kitchen, 2525 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Bend. Contact:. 541-640-0350. kindredcreativekitchen@gmail.com. $200/4-week session. Dutch Oven Cooking Clinic Heat up with Tumalo Creek this winter during the annual Dutch Oven Cooking Clinic! Learn to cook and while sampling delicious fireroasted morsels. Jan. 30, 5:30-7:30pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6, Bend. $8. Kids Early Release Cooking - Croissants Buttery and Flaky Croissants! Need I say
more? Have your child (age 7-17) join me in this hands-on class where they will learn to make croissants from scratch. Jan. 30, 2:30-6pm. Kindred Creative Kitchen, 2525 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Bend. Contact:. 541-640-0350. kindredcreativekitchen@gmail.com. $50.
Kids Early Release Cooking - Wontons and Buns Let’s get wrapping. Celebrate
Chinese New Year. Have your child (age 7-17) join me in this hands-on class. We will make a won tons, and steamed pork buns. Feb. 6, 2:30-6pm. Kindred Creative Kitchen, 2525 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Bend. Contact:. 541-640-0350. kindredcreativekitchen@gmail.com. $50.
BEER + DRINK EVENTS Canning Release Party Immersion is
proud to now offer our beer in cans and want to celebrate with our fellow community of craft beer lovers with food, music from Toast and Jam, and plenty of quality craft beer in the back of our brewery party! Feb. 2, 7-10pm. Immersion Brewing, 550 SW Industrial Way, Bend.
Firkin Fridays What will we pour this week?
Stop by to explore our latest cask-beer concoction and maybe — just maybe — be the one to tap it! For one special day each week, drink a pint of cask beer in the Tasting Room — and take it home in a growler or crowler! Fridays, Noon-6pm. Through Feb. 22. Deschutes Brewery Tasting Room, 901 SW Simpson Ave., Bend.
First Friday Tasting with The Ale Apothecary Join us on First Friday as we
welcome award winning Ale Apothecary to J Dub and try some extraordinarily unique craft beer from Bend’s own vintage batch oak barrel brewery! The gold medal winning Sahalie Wild Ale will also be available for purchase. Sour fan? You can’t miss this! Feb. 1, 6-8pm. J DUB, 932 NW Bond St., Bend. Contact:. 541-797-6335. Free.
Palate Trip If you’ve ever wondered, “Where
can I sample craft beer and amazing wine in Bend, Oregon?” we’ve got the answer. Come on down to Newport Avenue Market and take your palate on a trip every Friday! Check our Friday morning timeline post each week to learn what brews and wines we’ll be tasting. Cheers! Fridays, 3:30-5:30pm. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave., Bend.
Pregame at the Silver Moon Brewing Production Facility for their Pre-Super Bowl Bingo on 2/3.
Pre-Super Bowl Bingo: Presented by NCGB Introducing the largest bingo event that
Silver Moon has ever hosted! It is poised to be the ultimate brewery bingo experience! Featuring a Bloody Mary bar, mimosa flights, full light and sound experience, delicious food and over $3,000 in prizes! Feb. 3, 10am-1pm. Silver Moon Brewing Production Facility, 2095 SW Badger Ave., Redmond. Contact:. 541-306-9718. info@ silvermoonbrewing.com. Free.
Pup Crawl Have a howling good time at a local brew pub during the Pup Crawl and help raise money for homeless animals. 100% of the money raised each night benefits the animals. Purchase during any Pup Crawl night. Feb. 5, 4-8pm. 10 Barrel Brewing Co., 1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend.; Feb. 6, 4-8pm. Deschutes Brewery & Mountain Room, 901 SW Simpson Ave., Bend.; Feb. 7, 4-8pm. Sunriver Brewing Co. Galveston Pub, 1005 NW Galveston Ave., Bend. $10/pint glass + one bev, packages avail.
Tetherow’s 6th Brewery Smackdown
2018 Brewery Smackdown champs Crux and Silver Moon face off against Wild Ride and Boneyard for the 2019 title! Feb. 7, 5:30-10pm. Tetherow, 61240 Skyline Ranch Rd., Bend. $75/person.
Worthy Brewing Dock Sale Just in time for the big game, Worthy Brewing is hosting a Dock Sale, offering an assortment of cases for a deep discount! Load up and have plenty of craft beer to enjoy as you root for your team. Feb. 2, 11am-1pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr., Bend. Contact:. 541-639-4776. events@ worthybrewing.com. Sweet Bites & Brews Celebrate Worthy’s 6th Anniversary! Join us for a fun night of delicious desserts paired with local brew masters libations — all supporting Family Resource Center. Feb. 5, 7-9pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr., Bend. Contact:. 541-639-4776. events@worthybrewing.com. $30/single ticket, $50/two tickets.
CRAFT Getting Cozy
Providing private, compassionate euthanasia services for your cats & dogs in the privacy of your pet’s home.
at Spider City Brewing
27
By Heidi Howard Heidi Howard
Libby Hays, DVM
MobileCatandDogVet@gmail.com
DR IN
4
E CAL
BILITY S KA
Spider City’s taproom opens to the brewery.
S
pider City Brewing is a new kid on CLEAN. They were phenomenal. Soleil the beer block, opening this past Rubis fits that bill for sure. November. I had the opportunity to Soleil Rubis is a fruity kettle sour. speak with one of the owners, Melanie Over a half-pound mix of raspberries, Betti, who started the brewery with her blackberries and blueberries go into this twin sister Michele Betti and their col- beer. With all those berries, you would lege friend Tammy Treat. think it to be very sweet, yet it’s not. Yes, this brewery is owned by wom- Instead, it’s kissed with the sweetness of en. Cool, right? the berries. It’s a kettle sour, so it must Melanie said the three of them always pucker you right up, right? Wrong again. talked about opening a brewery while It’s so well balanced. You get the touch attending California State University of sour, the touch of sweet and this in Chico. As of now, it’s the only brew- beautiful, balanced finish of the simple ery in southeast Bend—but with Bevel malt profile that screams of Colorado’s Brewing in the works, I’m excited about clean and balanced beers. the prospect of the My mouth is expansion of brewOver a half pound mix of watering just thinkeries on this side of raspberries, blackberries ing about it. It starts town. tangy and bubbly, and blueberries go into I’ve been to Spiand then the sweetthis beer. With all those der City several ness of the berries times. The taproom berries, you would think comes out. The beer feels very comfinishes bright and it to be very sweet, fortable, with a clean. Did I mention yet it’s not. vibe that’s modern how clean this beer industrial, but also is? That’s importcozy. You’ll catch me there nearly every ant! This beer is my current favorite. Wednesday. My favorite beer thus far On the drinkability scale I give it a four is the Soleil Rubis, a mixed berry sour out of five. Beer enthusiasts who don’t weighing in at 5.9 percent on the ABV loathe sours will be excited about this scale. The brewer who created this beer beer. For the beginning beer drinker, is Michael Frith, who began brewing for this would be a great intro into sours, Spider City shortly after it opened. Prior but kettle sours aren’t for everyone. to Spider City, he worked at Our Mutual Spider City’s Soleil Rubis is expected to be the first of a series of kettle sour Friends in Denver, Colo. Frith told me that he named this beer beers. I cannot wait to try the next beer after the “vibrant, ruby-colored sunrise” of the series. that we see often here in Central Oregon. When I drink Soleil Rubis, it takes Spider City Brewing me back to my recent Colorado vaca1177 SE 9th Street, Bend tion. I went to many breweries (like, a spidercitybrewing.com whole lot) and the beers I had were very
541.647.6810
www.MobileCatandDogVet.com
Super Bowl Party Paks Score big with our award-winning BBQ. Let us do the work... Includes everything needed for your bash!
Check out our Party Paks at baldysbbq.com or on Facebook Order soon from any of our locations: 541-385-RIBS Bend-West Bend-East 541-388-4BBQ Redmond 541-923-BBQ1
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Women-owned brewery’s Soleil Rubis sour pays tribute to Central Oregon’s bright red sunsets
FILM SHORTS By Jared Rasic
Woman of the Year Carol Stiles – Head Start
2018 RECIPIENTS
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
28
“Stan and Ollie”
AN ACCEPTABLE LOSS: Jamie Lee Curtis as
Lifetime Achievement Pamela Hulse Andrews – Cascade Publications, Inc.
a steely eyed political shake sounds nice. Director Joe Chappelle made the 1998 Ben Affleck stinker “Phantoms.” Which talent will outweigh the other? Sisters Movie House
Entrepreneur of the Year Dana Barbato - InvestiPro
A DOG’S WAY HOME: The story of a plucky dog
Community Hero Kristin Lingman - AirLink
that loses its master and travels across the country to find him. Cute, ridiculous and heartwarming all at the same time—though we know nothing can top “The Adventures of Milo and Otis” when it comes to movies about adorable animals searching for their owners. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
Young Hero (Ages 14-17) Heather Davenport – Mtn. View High School Young Hero (Ages 18-21) Isabelle Rice – Mtn. View High School
AQUAMAN: The DC movies have been pretty
terrible so far (with the exception of “Wonder Woman”), so here’s hoping “Conjuring” director James Wan can take a goofy hero that talks to fish and make him badass. Jason Momoa is a beast, so fingers crossed. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema
BUMBLEBEE: Just what we needed: a
prequel to the “Transformers” franchise. Even though the trailers make it look like an updated version of “Herbie the Love Bug,” director Travis Knight comes from Laika, the brilliant animation studio out of Hillsboro, Ore. Cautiously optimistic? Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
ESCAPE ROOM: While the film has a fun
concept and is executed well, the film just stops without an ending. A hugely disappointing wrapup to what could have been a solid little thriller. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
GLASS: The stories and characters from M.
Night Shyamalan’s “Unbreakable” and “Split” combine here for a fascinating look at the basic building blocks of how we as a modern society create our new myths and origin stories. Worth it just for James McAvoy’s astounding performance. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema
GREEN BOOK: A well intentioned but tone-
deaf look at friendship and racism in the 1950s. While the movie isn’t terrible, there are too many missed opportunities to give the movie a pass. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
INSTANT FAMILY: Nothing about this movie focused on a white couple adopting three Latinx kids should work, but it really does. Heartwarming, brutally honest and lovely, “Instant Family” is a surprise joy. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX THE KID WHO WOULD BE KING: Expect a typical YA adaptation of the King Arthur myth—though director Joe Cornish was the dastardly mind behind 2001’s cult classic “Attack the Block,” so this Merlin could have more up his sleeves than it looks. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema
April 4
Award Cermony
Eagle Mountain Event Center Woman of the Year Lifetime Achievement Entrepreneur of the Year Community Hero Young Hero
NOMINATE NOW!
DEADLINE FEBRUARY 4 WWW.BENDCHAMBER.ORG 541.382.3221
MARY POPPINS RETURNS: Emily Blunt is the actual greatest, so she just might be able to pull off a sequel to the timeless classic. It’s a tall order, but with the help of Lin-Manuel Miranda, this might be a keeper. Old Mill Stadium 16 & MAX THE MULE: Clint Eastwood stars and directs
this tale of an elderly horticulturalist who becomes a drug mule for a Mexican cartel. Surprisingly funny and light, “The Mule” takes a brutally serious topic and turns it into a lark. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema
THE NUN: A part of the “Conjuring” Cinematic Universe,” this tells the story of a haunted Romanian nunnery and the heroes that try to re-consecrate the grounds. Surprisingly creepy, “The Nun” is another solid entry in the remarkably entertaining franchise. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
STREAMING THIS WEEK
ON THE BASIS OF SEX: A long overdue biopic about trailblazer Ruth Bader Ginsburg as she fights for equal rights as a young woman. Featuring the always welcome Felicity Jones, “On the Basis of Sex” is a great way to introduce people to the Notorious RBG. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX RALPH BREAKS THE INTERNET: Sarah
Silverman and John C. Reilly are both back playing the roles they were born for as video game characters unhappy with their strictly programmed routines. The original was a lovely surprise, so here’s hoping Disney can find a way to make lightning strike twice. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
SERENITY: No, this is not another “Firefly”
sequel. Instead we’ve got a very bizarre-looking mystery/thriller featuring Matthew McConaughey and Anne Hathaway as exes with a terrible past. This is from Steven Knight, the writer of the criminally under-seen “Dirty Pretty Things,” so hopefully the film is better than it looks. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX.
SPIDER-MAN: INTO THE SPIDER-VERSE: Finally, we nerds get a deep dive into the Spider-Man mythology in an animated masterpiece aimed at kids, adults and everyone in between. I mean, John Mulaney plays Peter Porker AKA Spider-Ham…a pig bitten by a radioactive spider. What else is there?! Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
STAN AND OLLIE: Steve Coogan and John C. Reilly were born to play Laurel and Hardy. As weak as the movie can be in spots, their performances keep the movie moving quickly through a succession of cliched dialogue and construction. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House THE UPSIDE: An American remake of the lovely
French film, “The Intouchables,” starring Kevin Hart and Bryan Cranston.If you’ve see the original then you can avoid this one altogether—unless you’re a Kevin Hart completist. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
VICE: I’m not sure why anyone needs a movie about Dick Cheney unless it was about him finally getting tried for being a war criminal, but here we are. Are we supposed to empathize with him? Who is this movie for? Liberals who already hate him or conservatives who also hate him? Hard pass. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX THE WORLD BEFORE YOUR FEET: This is not a documentary about hacky sack, but instead is a doc about Matt Green, a man who has been walking every street in New York City for the last six years. It’s a fun and fascinating story, plus gives a very nice, non-touristy look at the city that most movies fail to capture. Tin Pan Theater
TRUE DETECTIVE: Season One of “True Detective” is an all-timer, while Season Two was a bit terrible. Luckily, Season Three is off to a strong start with an unnerving mystery and a hypnotic lead performance by former Oscar winner and current nominee Mahershala Ali. The season is only halfway through, but so far, it’s unforgettable. The first four episodes are available on HBO NOW. New episodes air Sundays.
SC
Changing of the Old, White Guard SCREEN The Oscars not as white; still quite male By Jared Rasic 29
Starting at $2 per gram, best prices in Oregon.
From left, John David Washington in "BlacKkKlansmen," Michael B. Jordan in "Black Panther" and Olivia Colman in "The Favourite."
change for a while. Look at the big four awards this year. While there are some adventurous films and performances on the list, the nominees are still overlooking some truly important work. For Best Picture, we’re looking at “Black Panther,” “BlacKkKlansman,” “Bohemian Rhapsody,” “The Favourite,” “Roma,” “A Star is Born” and “Vice.” As excited as I am that we finally have a superhero movie up for Best Picture, moves like “Vice,” “Green Book” and “Bohemian Rhapsody” don’t belong anywhere on this list when similar (and much better) films like “Sorry to Bother You,” “First Reformed” and “Blindspotting” are ignored. Just because Rami Malek is astounding as Freddie Mercury doesn’t make “Bohemian Rhapsody” a good movie, and just because “Green Book” has its heart in the right place doesn’t make it less of a cloying pile of sentimentality.
We will match the price from any central Oregon dispensary to be your one stop shop! TopShelfMedicine.com
For Best Director we’ve got Spike Lee for “BlacKkKlansmen,” Pawel Pawlikowski for “Cold War,” Yorgos Lanthimos for “The Favourite,” Alfonso Cuaron for “Roma” and Adam McKay for “Vice.” Hey look! It’s still just a bunch of dudes. I have yet to see “Cold War” or “Vice,” but it’s hard to imagine the work being “better” than Lynne Ramsay’s blood-boiling direction of “You Were Never Really Here,” or Paul Schrader’s haunting touch on “First Reformed.” Best Actor sees Christian Bale, Bradley Cooper, Willem Dafoe, Rami Malek and Viggo Mortensen nominated, and right off the bat I can guarantee two things: 1) Malek has this one in the bag and 2) Mortensen should be nowhere near this award. Instead he should be replaced by Ethan Hawke’s flawless work in “First Reformed.” (See a pattern here?)
WANT TO PROMOTE YOUR UPCOMING EVENT IN CENTRAL OREGON? SUBMIT IT FOR FREE AT BENDSOURCE.COM!
As strong as Yalitza Aparacio, Glenn Close, Olivia Colman, Lady Gaga and Melissa McCarthy are in the race for Best Actress, none of them came close to the work Toni Collette did in “Hereditary.” OK fine, Olivia Colman is astounding, you’re right. This Oscar belongs to her. The point is, even as things in the academy get better, they’re still gonna get a bunch of stuff wrong…it’s what they do. But when the nominees are so different from what has come before, it’s kind of hard to complain. Really though, the best thing about the 91st Academy Awards so far??? That we now get to say “Oscar Nominee Kendrick Lamar.” See how good that feels? Look for Rasic’s full Oscar breakdown and predictions as we get closer to the big day, Feb. 24.
E.J. Pettinger’s
copyrighted 2019
Mild Abandon
IT’S SIMPLE
1. Click on the “Submit Event” tab at BendSource.com 2. Log in (or create a username and password)
815 NE GREENWOOD AVENUE, BEND MON-SAT 9AM-10PM, SUN 9AM-8PM 541.389.1043 TopShelfMedicine.com
BEST PRICE IN BEND
18 NORTH F STREET, LAKEVIEW MON-SAT 10AM-9PM, SUN 12PM-6PM 541.219.8036 BEND LAKEVIEW topshelfmedicine COMING TO NEWPORT IN SUMMER 2019! lakeview@gmail.com
10% OFF for Veterans, Seniors, and anyone sporting Top Shelf Medicine swag
3. Enter the venue, date, time and details of your event and click SUBMIT
“I have a kind of feeling. There, I said it.”
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
I
’m not sure if you noticed, but the Oscars are more interesting now than ever before. In 2012, The New York Times did a study on the demographic breakdown of voters among the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, with all 5,100+ members questioned. At 94 percent white, 77 percent male and 54 percent over the age of 60, it’s been very easy to predict the Oscar winners for a long time. Oscar was indeed so white. After the 88th awards ceremony, in 2016, was targeted with a boycott and the hashtag #OscarssoWhite, the academy initiated what they are calling “historic” changes to more accurately reflect the diversity and gender of filmmakers across America. By 2020, the academy aims to be fully reflective of the modern makeup of filmmakers by including many more women and people of color in the academy membership. These are changes that have been a long time coming, and a younger and more diverse voting body means we get some truly unpredictable nominees and winners breathing new life into the ceremony. In 2017, no one could have predicted that a gentle arthouse wonder like “Moonlight” would win Best Picture over the jazz and show-biz musical that was “La La Land.” Things are finally getting interesting. Still, the Oscars do tend to focus more on what has buzz over what genuinely deserves the accolades. I mean, this is still an organization that gave Best Picture awards to “Forrest Gump” over “Pulp Fiction” and “Kramer vs. Kramer” over “Apocalypse Now.” They’re legendary at getting it wrong and that might not
OUTSIDE EVENTS ATHLETIC EVENTS Bend Area Running Community (BARF) Join us for a 3.5-mile loop through
the Old Mill and along the Deschutes River! No registration or membership required. All paces welcome. Mondays, 5:30pm. AVID Cider Co., 900 SE Wilson St., Bend. Contact: bendarearunningfraternity@gmail.com. Free.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
30
Bend Babes Brew & Running Crew
Women of Bend, if you like to run in the woods and celebrate with post-run beers and food, then join us! Each week we meet at a different trail, decide as a group how far to run (usually 40-50 minutes), and then meet at a brew pub for post-run drinks and dinner! All paces welcome! Thursdays, 5:30pm. City of Bend. Contact: b3runningcrew@gmail.com.
VOTE TODAY The Best of the Nest Ballot is live online and on stands now! Vote for your favorite family-oriented businesses by Feb. 12. Winners will be announced in our March issue!
Cascade Cycling Classic Youth Foundation Kick Off Party! Learn more about
what’s in store for the 39th Cascade Cycling Classic while enjoying appetizers and a complimentary glass of wine or beer as we kick off 2019 with the grand unveiling of CCC Youth Foundation with Executive Director (and two-time National Road Champion) Bart Bowen. Jan. 30, 6-8pm. 900 Wall, 900 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541241-8862. info@cccyouthfoundation.org. $10 suggested donation.
parenting magazine
WINTER 2019
ALL THE RIGHT MOVES » PRESCHOOL WINTER FUN! » SPRING BREAK OREGON STYLE » KID’S CORNER CRAFTS
Chicks in Bowls Ladies’ Night Seed of
e
Ballot Insid
Look for the ballot inside the current issue
Vote online now at www.BendNest.com
$22 ADV. @ BENDTICKET.COM
GATE SALES
$25
Life Skateboard Company “Solsk8s” and Bearings Skateboard Academy have joined forces to provide a weekly ladies night! This park is ideal for every level of skater and open to all ladies whatever wheels you choose to shred (skateboard, blades, rollerskates, etc.)! Wednesdays, 7-9pm. Bearings Skateboard Academy, 615 SE Glenwood Drive, Bend. $10.
CORK Thursday Run Join us for a run from 3-5 miles. Stay afterward for a drink and food. All ability levels welcome along with friendly on leash dogs. Thursdays, 6-7:30pm. Spoken Moto, 310 SW Industrial Way, Bend. Free.
Rise and Run Early riser? This group is for
you! FootZoner Colton Gale will leads this run. All paces are welcome; 3-5 mile routes will usually take advantage of snow-free and lit paths in the Old Mill. Tuesdays, 5am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: colton.gale@gmail. com. Free.
OREGONWINTERFEST.COM
FEBRUARY 15 5-9
PM
Register now for this unique tasting experience!
Walk Up Pilot Butte Join JessBFit for this breathtaking walk up Pilot Butte. Stick around after the walk to learn how to use the pull-up bar station at the trail head for strength training and stretching. Tuesdays, 8-9am. Pilot Butte State Park, Pilot Butte State Park, Bend. Contact: 503446-0803. jess@jessbfit.com.
OUTDOOR EVENTS 10 Barrel Locals Only You don’t have to
be a true Bend local to enjoy some of the locals’ favorite things: Live music, 10 Barrel brews, and making laps on Skyliner lift. Come hang out, grab a few beers, play a few games, and win some free swag! Festivities in Skyliner parking lot. Feb. 2, 11am-3pm. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Drive, Bend.
Know Before You Go Avalanche Awareness Seminar Know Before You Go is
welcome. Find the Redmond Oregon Running Klub on Facebook for weekly run details. Saturdays, 8am. City of Redmond. Contact: rundanorun1985@gmail.com.
OLD MILL DISTRICT
USA Climbing Bouldering Nationals
Coming to the Expo...the USA Climbing: Bouldering Open National Championship competition on February 1 and 2, 2019; and the USA Climbing: Bouldering Youth National Championship competition on February 8, 9 and 10, 2019. These events will feature the most elite adult and youth athletes in the country competing for a place on the national US Team in the discipline of bouldering. Feb. 1-2, 8am-8pm. Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond, Redmond.
Ready, Set, Register! FootZone has in-
Redmond Running Group Run All levels
10 tasting tickets valid at participating stores
your time with focused, intense efforts. All ages and abilities welcome. Sessions led by accomplished trail runner Max King. Tuesdays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: max@ footzonebend.com. Free.
Hump Day Run Celebrate getting over the
vited 26 race directors of all the best local and regional races to FootZone to hawk their races, all on the same day! Sign up at a discount for your favorites, and be able to pepper RDs with questions about races with which you’re not yet familiar. Feb. 2, 11am-4pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-317-3568. michelle@ footzonebend.com. Free, please RSVP.
Oregon WinterFest 2019 wineglass
Tuesday Performance Group Maximize
2019 Bend Boulder Bash Join us for Central Oregon’s premier bouldering competition presented by USA Climbing! This year’s Bash is super special as it will be hosted in conjunction with USA Climbing Open Bouldering Nationals. Competitors will receive a bunch of great swag from Bend Rock Gym – shoe vouchers, free memberships, apparel and more. Finalists will win some awesome bouldering gear from Metolius Climbing and a chance at the $5,000 Cash Purse! Feb. 1, 3-10pm. Bend Rock Gym, 1182 SE Centennial Ct., Bend. $50/registration.
mid-week hump with runners of all paces. During the winter, we’ll typically run 3-5 miles down to the Old Mill and back. Bring a few bucks if you want to get a beer after! Wednesdays, 6pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: michelle@footzonebend.com. Free.
Entry into 2019 WinterFest for the full three days
afterwards with your new running buddies! Saturdays, 9am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: michelle@footzonebend.com. Free.
Roller Derby: Lava City’s Spit Fires vs. Overbeaters Anonymous
LCRD’s Spit Fires take on Overbeaters Anonymous. Join us for hard-hitting derby action from Bend’s only all-female flat track derby league! Feb. 2, 5:30pm. Cascade Indoor Sports, 20775 High Desert Ln., Bend. $8/adult, $5/seniors, students, military, kids.
Saturday Coffee Run Wish you had a
running posse to make your weekend run fly by? Marla Hacker will facilitate this group, which welcomes all paces for a 3-5 mile run on Saturdays. Bring a few bucks for coffee at a local shop
a free basic avalanche awareness presentation aimed at highlighting introductory concepts and tools for traveling in avalanche terrain. Wed, Feb. 6, 6-8pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Bend. Free.
Winter PrideFest 2019 - An LGBTQ+ Ski Weekend A full weekend of
community events to include organized groups for Alpine and Nordic skiing, snowshoeing, drag tubing and on-mountain Apres Ski Celebration at Mt. Bachelor. Wigs Ice Skating, Hey Honey Dance Party, brunch and Super Bowl viewing in downtown Bend. Thurs, Jan. 31, Fri, Feb. 1, Sat, Feb. 2 and Sun, Feb. 3. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Drive, Bend & various locations in Bend.
Winter PrideFest: Drag Tubing
Calling all Queens and Kings to participate in this special event of ‘Drag Tubing’ at Mt. Bachelor. As part of WinterPrideFest we invite you to bring your best ‘look’ or just come out to watch and join in on the fun. Feb. 2, 2-3pm. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Drive, Bend.
Winter PrideFest: Wigs, An Icebreaker Let's kick off 'Winter PrideFest'
with a real ice breaker. Come meet local darlings and welcome all the guests coming in from out of town. Don't be shy give us your best Tonya, your Michelle Kwan, your Brian Boitano and lest we forget Adam Rippon (in a wig of course). Feb. 1, 7-9pm. Seventh Mountain Resort, 18575 SW Century Drive, Bend. $5/entry or $10/with skate rental. Free to watch!
O
OUTSIDE
USA Climbing Raps into Central Oregon Bouldering National Championships on tap at the Expo Center By Damian Fagan Colin Michael Photography
all over the Northwest to compete. Climbing has grown exponentially in the U.S. over the past five to 10 years. “We conduct climbing camps with some of the youth climber competitors in the summer, and it’s cool that these kids especially want to travel and meet other climbers,” said Jim Abalo, owner of Chockstone Climbing, a guide service based in Bend. “Some of those kids are from places where there’s just not much climbing or much of a climbing community, so coming to nationals or a place where there is a lot of climbing is really a great opportunity and a big deal.” So big that the stakes are making the U.S. National Teams—with an eye toward the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan.
The Bend Boulder Bash is a premier Central Oregon climbing event.
course, climbers feed off the interactive energy of a crowd cheering them on. “The stadium-like seating in the Convention Center bodes very well for spectators to get loud for these climbers, cheer them on and watch our next male and female national champions get crowned,” said Breuner. The Youth Championship is invitation-only and will mostly follow a similar format to the Open Championship. The final round will feature the top 10 competitors and any special cases from the semi-final round. “We have five kids from our team that qualified for the national championships,” said Mike Rougeux, climbing director at Bend Endurance Academy. Owen Jenkins (Male Jr.), Hamish Reinhart (Male Youth B), Mira Capicchioni (Female Youth B), Nathaniel
Perullo (Male Youth D), and Shae McCarl (Female Youth D) will represent Central Oregon in various categories in the Youth competition. In addition to the championships, Bend Rock Gym is partnering with USA Climbing to host the Bend Boulder Bash as a kickoff event. The Boulder Bash takes place after the Friday Open qualifying round, on Feb. 1, starting at 3 pm. The competition is open to all, with a Recreational division for youth climbers new to the sport. “It will be cool because these newer climbers can compete on the same problems as the Open category climbers, getting a fun chance to test their skills and get introduced to competition climbing,” said Breuner. What started as a local event has evolved into a regional competition with climbers coming from
BEND’S LOCAL INDEPENDENT OUTDOOR RETAILER
USA Climbing: Open National Bouldering Championship
Fri., Feb. 1- Sat., Feb. 2, times vary Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond expo.deschutes.org Qualifiers | $10, Semifinals | $15, Finals | $20, Weekend Pass $40
USA Climbing: Youth National Bouldering Championship Fri., Feb. 8- Sun., Feb. 10, times vary Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center 3800 SW Airport Way Redmond expo.deschutes.org Qualifiers | Free, Semifinals | $10, Finals | $15
Bend Boulder Bash
Fri., Feb. 1, 1:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. Bend Rock Gym 1182 SE Centennial Ct, Bend bendrockgym.com Registration | $70, Spectators | Free
OUTDOOR RESEARCH PATAGONIA PETZL RAB PRANA MERRELL SMARTWOOL THERMAREST METOLIUS SALEWA SCARPA SEA TO SUMMIT OBOZ MOUNTAIN HARDWEAR HYDRO FLASK ZEAL MONTRAIL ARC’TERYX FIVETEN GARMONT KEEN LA SPORTIVA MAMMUT DARN TOUGH OSPREY CHACO SMITH
WINTER STOKE SALE! ON SALE NOW:
– SKI & WINTER APPAREL – WOOL & FLEECE – SNOW BOOTS (some restrictions apply)
Bend’s #1 Climbing Shop & Outdoor Retailer 834 NW Colorado Ave Bend, Oregon 97703 541-388-0688 www.mountainsupplybend.com
Monday - Thursday 10am-6pm Friday & Saturday 9am-6pm Sunday 9am-5pm
31 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
C
ompetitors will literally be climbing the walls as the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center hosts the USA Climbing Bouldering National Championship during the first two weekends in February. The event will feature many elite climbing athletes competing for spots on the U.S. National Team and U.S. Youth National Team in the discipline of bouldering. Event dates for the Open National Championship are Feb. 1 to 2, and Feb. 8 to 10 for the USA Climbing Youth National Championship. “In the context of competition climbing, this is the Super Bowl,” said Rich Breuner, Bend Rock Gym director of operations. “Some of the best route setters in the U.S. are coming here to set routes that will test the abilities of some of the best boulderers in the country on all aspects of climbing: technical, strength, power, athleticism and gymnastics—all of the different movements that defines what we climb.” Bouldering is climbing simplified: no ropes, no hardware—just a chalk bag and bouldering mat to cushion a fall—where each hold or bouldering “problem” can test the limits of any climber. Falls are usually short and cushioned by mats. The Open competition is a registered event but will feature some of the best boulderers in the U.S. During the competition, each climber in the Open Championship climbs four or five boulder problems, with four or five minutes to attempt each boulder and a short rest in between. The number of boulders and the time allotted depend upon the rounds, whether it’s a qualifying, semi-final or final round. Unlike the hushed tones on a golf
REAL ESTATE
Otis Craig Broker, CRS
ADVERTISE IN OUR REAL ESTATE SECTION ADVERTISE@BENDSOURCE.COM
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
32
FIND YOUR PLACE IN BEND
www.otiscraig.com
541.771.4824 otis@otiscraig.com
BUNGALOWS AT NWX / PHASE 4 The Bungalows at NorthWest Crossing is a 24 unit condominium. OFFERED AT $499,000 –$519,000
Terry Skjersaa
Principal Broker, CRS
Jason Boone
Principal Broker, CRIS
Mollie Hogan
Principal Broker, CRS
Cole Billings Broker
Skjersaa Group | Duke Warner Realty 1033 NW Newport Ave. Bend, OR 97703
541.383.1426
www.SkjersaaGroup.com
2803 NE Faith Dr, Bend • $449,995
WE CAN DIG UP
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 11AM-2PM
THE BEST DEALS
Single-level high-quality, modern Craftsman styled home features numerous builder and owner upgrades. Large open floor plan, with oversized kitchen that features stainless steel appliances and dual ovens, large designer kitchen island. Vaulted ceilings in the great room. Fully fenced and landscaped backyard with stamped concrete patio. Oversized garage with fenced RV parking.
IN REAL ESTATE FOR YOU! NICK NAYNE
PRINCIPAL BROKER, GRI CELL 541.680.7922 OFFICE 541.647.1171 The Broker Network of Central Oregon, LLC. www.TheBrokerNetworkRealty.com 505 NW Franklin Ave, Bend, OR 97703
26695 Horsell Road, Bend • $1,400,000 2070 Sq Ft. Remodeled farm house located on 67.9 acres with 39.7 acres of COI irrigation. 1344 SqFt building for Office/Recreation/Studio. 4502 SqFt shop/RV/Toy/Boat storage & indoor gardening. With Mountain Views.
Tony Levison
RYAN HOOVER BROKER Licensed in the the State of Oregon
(541) 728-8627 ryan.hoover@windermere.com ryanhooverrealestate.com 695 SW Mill View Way Suite. 100, Bend
Broker 541.977.1852
alevison@me.com
I go the extra mile, and it’s never crowded.
Jamie Garza Broker 541.788.0860
CENTRAL OREGON
JamieGarza@windermere.com
695 SW Mill View Way Suite 100 • Bend, OR • www.Alevison.withwre.com
TAKE ME HOME
By Nick Nayne Principal Broker, The Broker Network, LLC
Microsoft Pledges $500 Million For Seattle Affordable Housing Housing trust funds increase in popularity
33
HURRY— SPACE IS LIMITED!
doing to come up with solutions. Housing trust-type scenarios such as this stand out as being very promising.
HOME PRICE ROUND-UP
Photos and listing info from Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service
2019
Dont miss the opportunity to reach tens of thousands of tourists and locals in the
2019 Winterfest Guide
— and receive Free Tickets!
Ad Deadline: FEB 8 On Stands: FEB 14
Be seen by the largest winter festival audience in the PNW!
For more details: 541.383.0800 advertise@bendsource.com <<LOW
6 3302 Vogt Road, Bend, OR 97701 3 beds, 1.5 baths, 1,285 square feet, .17 acres lot Built in 1980 $265,000 Listed by Keller Williams Realty Central Oregon
N U R N O M L A S
MID>>
61138 Halley Street, Bend, OR 97702 3 beds, 2.5 baths, 1,749 square feet, .14 acres lot Built in 2004 $425,000 Listed by John L Scott Central Or Bend
BEND, OR
APRIL 7th 2019
5k · 10k · HALF MARATHON <<HIGH
61090 River Bluff Trail, Bend, OR 97702 4 beds, 3.5 baths, 3,841 square feet, .80 acres lot Built in 1983 $1,295,000 Listed by The Pennbrook Company
REGISTER AT www.runsalmonrun.com HEALTH PLANS
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
M
icrosoft recently revealed it’s pledging $500 million for affordable housing in the Seattle, Wash. area. The company will commit $25 million in grants and subsidies to address homelessness, $250 million to low-income housing developers, and $225 million in below-market rates to workforce housing developers. Microsoft will continue making more loans as the money is repaid. The affordable housing crunch is bringing out innovators trying to come up with solutions. In many larger U.S. cities, local problems are magnified, so it’s beneficial to look at what others are
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 34
ASTROLOGY By Rob Brezsny
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: You’ll have a knack for enhancing the way you express yourself and present yourself. The inner you and the outer you will become more unified. MARCH: You’ll discover two original new ways to get excited. APRIL: Be bold as you make yourself available for a deeper commitment that will spawn more freedom. MAY: What are the gaps in your education? Make plans to mitigate your most pressing area of ignorance. JUNE: Your body’s ready to tell you secrets that your mind has not yet figured out. Listen well.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: You’ll be invited to make a pivotal transition in the history of your relationship with your most important life goals. It should be both fun and daunting! MARCH: Don’t waste time and energy trying to coax others to haul away the junk and the clutter. Do it yourself. APRIL: The growing pains should feel pretty good. Enjoy the uncanny stretching sensations. MAY: It’ll be a favorable phase to upgrade your personal finances. Think richer thoughts. Experiment with new ideas about money. JUNE: Build two strong bridges for every rickety bridge you burn. Create two vital connections for every stale connection you leave behind. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: You have access to a semi-awkward magic that will serve you well if you don’t complain about its semi-awkwardness. MARCH: To increase your clout and influence, your crucial first step is to formulate a strong intention to do just that. The universe will then work in your behalf. APRIL: Are you ready to clean messes and dispose of irrelevancies left over from the past? Yes! MAY: You can have almost anything you want if you resolve to use it for the greatest good. JUNE: Maintain rigorous standards, but don’t be a fanatic. Strive for excellence without getting bogged down in a counterproductive quest for perfection.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: Be alert for vivid glimpses of your best possible future. The power of self-fulfilling prophecy is even stronger than usual. MARCH: High integrity and ethical rigor are crucial to your success — and so is a longing for sacred adventure. APRIL: How can you make the best use of your likability? MAY: Cheerfully dismantle an old system or structure to make way for a sparkling new system or structure. JUNE: Beginner’s luck will be yours if you choose the right place to begin. What’s a bit intimidating but very exciting?
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: Your sensual magnetism peaks at the same time as your spiritual clarity. MARCH: You want toasted ice? Succulent fire? Earthy marvels? Homey strangeness? All of that is within reach. APRIL: Sow the seeds of the most interesting success you can envision. Your fantasy of what’s possible should thrill your imagination, not merely satisfy your sense of duty. MAY: Deadline time. Be as decisive and forthright as an Aries, as bold as a Sagittarius, as systematic as a Capricorn. JUNE: Go wading in the womb-temperature ocean
of emotion, but be mindful of the undertow.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: There’s a general amnesty in all matters regarding your relationships. Cultivate truces and forgiveness. MARCH: Drop fixed ideas you might have about what’s possible and what’s not. Be keenly open to unexpected healings. APRIL: Wander out into the frontiers. Pluck goodies that have been off-limits. Consider the value of ignoring certain taboos. MAY: Sacrifice a small comfort so as to energize your ambitions. JUNE: Take a stand in behalf of your beautiful ideals and sacred truths.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: Master the Zen of constructive anger. Express your complaints in a holy cause. MARCH: You finally get a message you’ve been waiting to receive for a long time. Hallelujah! APRIL: Renew your most useful vows. Sign a better contract. Come to a more complete agreement. MAY: Don’t let your preconceptions inhibit you from having a wildly good time. JUNE: Start your own club, band, organization, or business. Or reinvent and reinvigorate your current one. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: Be open to romantic or erotic adventures that are different from how love has worked in the past. MARCH: You’ll be offered interesting, productive problems. Welcome them! APRIL: Can you explore what’s experimental and fraught with interesting uncertainty even as you stay well-grounded? Yes! MAY: You can increase your power by not hiding your weakness. People will trust you most if you show your vulnerability. A key to this season’s model of success is the ability to calmly express profound emotion. JUNE: Wild cards and X-factors and loopholes will be more available than usual. Don’t be shy about using them.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: The world may finally be ready to respond favorably to the power you’ve been storing up. MARCH: Everything you thought you knew about love and lust turns out to be too limited. So expand your expectations and capacities! APRIL: Extremism and obsession can be useful in moderation. MAY: Invisible means of support will become visible. Be alert for half-hidden help. JUNE: Good questions: What do other people find valuable about you? How can you enhance what’s valuable about you?
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: You’ll have the need and opportunity to accomplish some benevolent hocus-pocus. For best results, upgrade your magical powers. MARCH: Make sure the Turning Point happens in your power spot or on your home turf. APRIL: You should be willing to go anywhere, ask any question, and even risk your pride if necessary so as to coax your most important relationships into living up to their potentials. MAY: If at first you don’t succeed, change the definition of success. JUNE: You can achieve more through negotiation and compromise than you could by pushing heedlessly ahead in service to your single-minded vision.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: A new phase of your education will begin when you acknowledge how much you have to learn. MARCH: Initiate diplomatic discussions about the Things That Never Get Talked About. APRIL: Revise your ideas about your dream home and your dream community. MAY: You have the power to find healing for your oldest lovesickness. If you do find it, intimacy will enter a new Golden Age. JUNE: Solicit an ally’s ingenuity to help you improvise a partial solution to a complex problem.
Homework: What’s the kind of joy you’re not getting enough of? How could you get more of it? FreeWillAstrology.com
Care Bare
Bad Stare Day
I’m dating this new woman. I like her a lot, but she keeps complaining that I still have pictures of my ex-girlfriend on my wall, saying that it makes her uncomfortable, especially when we’re having sex. I was with my ex for a while, and we lived together. They’re just pictures. What’s the big deal? —Irritated
Do men fall in love at first sight more than women do? My male friend says it’s mostly men who’ll see a woman from across a room or subway platform and fall for her. Yeah, I know that happens. Don’t women do this, too? Like, a lot? —Wondering Dude
There’s a place for the photographic Museum of Relationships Past, but it isn’t the area around your bed—assuming that your sex partners don’t require inflation with a bike pump. Actual human beings have feelings. They long to be treated with dignity—to be given the sense that others value them and care about how they make them feel. This would be reflected, for example, in replacing what, to a woman, probably looks like a wall shrine to the ex with pix of your other, less inflammatory loves, like Linda, your family’s late Rottweiler. It’s possible that you have some sort of empathy gap—something keeping you from the usually automatic “fellow feeling.” This is a way researchers have described the sort of empathy that involves “emotional contagion” — “catching” and then feeling an emotion another person’s feeling, to some degree. Even if this isn’t natural for you, you can bring it into your relationships through “perspective-taking”—making an effort to imagine how another person feels in a situation. (This is different from imagining how you would feel.) Research by C. Daniel Batson suggests that trying to feel what another person is feeling leads us to have empathy, “which has been found to evoke altruistic motivation.” This means that it motivates a person to behave in kind and compassionate ways. In contrast, though imagining how we would feel if we were in the other person’s shoes produces empathy, too, the researchers found that it also produces “personal distress, which has been found to evoke egoistic motivation”—which is to say, “Me! Me! Me! All about me!” In general, treating other people as if their feelings matter—even when you don’t share their feelings or think they’re entirely legit—makes for far happier relationships. If you aren’t interested in putting in the work to show empathy, you can still have a relationship—but with an atypical partner. Your best bet is probably a Boston fern—specifically one advertised to have “durable plastic leaves that are resistant to fading.”
A guy’s claim of “love at first sight” plays better with the ladies than “I wanted to spend eternity with your boobs.” Research by psychologists Andrew Galperin and Martie Haselton finds that men, far more often than women, report experiencing “love at first sight.” Amy Alkon However, they conceded that “some men might be reporting some episodes of sheer sexual desire as ‘love at first sight.’” (Ya think?) This sex difference in love at first sight aligns with the different pressures ancestral men and women had to contend with to survive and pass on their genes. Because women alone get pregnant from sex, female emotions evolved to push women to take the slow route in mating -- to assess a man over time for his level of commitment and character—lest a woman end up with a baby daddy who’s all “Beep, beep!—I’m outta here” like the Roadrunner. Men, on the other hand, have an evolved sexual business model of volume and variety (kind of like Walmart). However, because ancestral men could bolt right after sex and still have a chance of leaving surviving descendants, it was in men’s evolutionary interest to hook up with an endless parade of hot-erellas. As I often mention, female features we think of as beautiful—like youth, clear skin, an hourglass figure, and pillowy lips—are actually cues of health and fertility. So, not surprisingly, male mating imperatives evolved to be visually motivated—“Do you look like the woman for me?”—in a way female ones did not. Ultimately, though evolved male mating psychology is pushing you—even today— to be eyeball-driven, understanding its origins can help you be mindful to take a step back and put in the time to explore a woman’s character. This may help keep you from jumping into a relationship with some woman who turns out to be an extremely hot sociopath. As you might cry to your friends, “I’m so confused; she seemed so genuinely interested in me—wanting to know where I bank, the name of my first pet, and the last four of my Social.”
Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave. Suite 280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (advicegoddess.com).
© 2019, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved.
35 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the next five months. FEBRUARY: Start a new trend that will serve your noble goals for years to come. MARCH: Passion comes back into fashion with a tickle and a shiver and a whoosh. APRIL: As you expand and deepen your explorations, call on the metaphorical equivalents of both a telescope and a microscope. MAY: This is the beginning of the end of what you love to complain about. Hooray! JUNE: You’ll have an abundance of good reasons to celebrate the fact that you are the least normal sign in the zodiac. Celebrate your idiosyncrasies!
SCIENCE ADVICE GODDESS
WELLNESS
COME SEE US AT OUR NEW LOCATION!
Couples & Individuals * Relationships * Grief * Trauma * Transitions
I strongly believe in each person’s ability to discover their full health potential.
419-3947
Steven Foster-Wexler, LAc 541.330.8283
Acupuncture / Herbs / Massage / Qigong / Addictions
D’Arcy Swanson, MC NCC ADVERTISE IN OUR WELLNESS SECTION ADVERTISE@BENDSOURCE.COM
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
36
628 NW York Dr., Suite 104
www.bendacupuncture.com
Blue Heron Hypnotherapy Remove blocks to your success and free yourself from limiting habits through hypnosis.
Call for free consultation
• FLAT FEET OR FALLEN ARCHES • BALL OF FOOT PAIN OR MORTON’S NEUROMA • ACHILLES TENDONITIS • BUNIONS • BACK, HIP & KNEE PAIN
362 NE Dekalb Ave. Bend, OR 97701 541.647.1108 CycleSoles.com
Ph: 541-233-8695 • www.blueheronhypnosis.me
LASER TEETH WHITENING
INSTANT RESULTS! $99 Special! ($200 value)
Scott Peterson, C. Ped, CO ABC Certified Pedorthist/Orthotist
Feng Shui in Bend Offering Balance & Soul-utions
A professional Feng Shui consultant will use his or her skills to find imbalances in a home, and then offer Feng Shui suggestions to balance. Tip: Balance the 5 elements in each room of your home Dixie Boggs
Cynthia Crossman, CH
Western School of Feng Shui
(541) 389-1226
dixie.fengshuibend@aol.com
Understanding the Gut Brain Connection
Healthy Happy
Natural Digestive Wellness
By appointment only. Offer expires 2/28/19
Winter
Less Fatigue, Constipation, Bloating, Cravings, Headaches, Irritability, Skin Issues, etc. Restoring your healthy bacterial balance
856 NW Bond St #3 Call 541.480.4516
azurasalonspabend.com Call for an appointment & get your teeth 6-10 shades whiter in just 60 minutes!
Salon & Laser Spa
• HEAL PAIN OR PLANTER FASCIITIS
Gentle, Effective Health Care
BOBBYE ROTELLO, CCT, CNC Experienced, Gentle, Effective
805.218.3169
COLONHYDROTHERAPYBENDOREGON.COM
Ronald D. Rosen, MD, PC Board Certified Internal Medicine and Medical Acupuncture Acupuncture and herbs Nutrition and functional medicine Osteopathic manipulation Regenerative medicine: Prolotherapy, PRP, Stem cells 541.388.3804
|
918 NE 5th St. Bend
|
www.ronaldrosenmdpc.com
DEEP TISSUE THERAPEUTIC LASER
Healing Without Drugs or Surgery SAFE * PAINLESS * EFFECTIVE
Andrew Scott, L.A.C. * 541.480.9785 Sports Injuries * Post-Op Healing * Arthritis * Migraine * Plantar Fasciitis
PLACE YOUR AD TODAY!
Elevate your mind
and your business by advertising in the only local cannabis publication in Central Oregon!
PRINT DEADLINE
MARCH 1 ON STANDS
MARCH 14 541.383.0800 | advertise@bendsource.com
Acupuncture & Massage 461 NE Greenwood Ave. Suite A, Bend (541) 241-3135 | www.EvolutionaryMed.com
Get your HEALTH Back at
Strictly
CBD
1052 NE 3rd Street, Bend 541-610-3637 CBDBendOregon.com
PLACE YOUR
WELLNESS AD HERE!
541.383.0800
COMING FEB 7
HEALTH & WELLNESS EVENTS Adult Aerial Silks Classes All skill levels,
Free Barre Class BYO mat. Barre is a
Aerial Silks Training Learn how to fly on
Free Intro to Iyengar Yoga Designed for
including beginners. Come fly with us! Ages 18+. Thursdays, 5:30-7pm and Sundays, 3-4:30pm. Central Oregon Aerial Arts, 20700 Carmen Loop, #120, Bend. Contact: centraloregonaerialarts@ gmail.com. $20/class, class packages avail.
Awakening to Divine Love Meditation
Beginners to learn basic poses and how to use props to minimize discomfort and ensure a successful experience. Nadine Sims teaching in Bend since 1998. Feb. 2, 1-2:15pm. Iyengar Yoga of Bend, 660 NE Third St., Bend. Contact: 541318-1186. iyengarbend@gmail.com. Free.
Awaken and for those deepen the awakening to divine love, some call God, Christ, Buddha. Drop the judgments and fears and join us in meditation. Mondays, 12-12:30pm. Through Feb. 18. Bend Golf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Dr., Bend. Contact: 971-217-6576. $10.
Free yoga An hour of yoga with Shawn
Bhakti Church Using guided meditation,
Friday Night Yoga Nidra A conscious
breathwork, mudra and chanting we will gather in circle to dive deep into the heart space of “Bhakti”. First Sunday of every month, 7-8:30pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Road, Bend. Contact: lalotheelf@gmail.com. $10 suggested donation.
Buddhism: Start Here Michael Stevens,
director of the Natural Mind Dharma Center, will offer an introduction to Buddhism. First Monday of every month, 7-9pm. Natural Mind Dharma Center, 345 SW Century Drive, Suite 2, Bend. Contact: elizabethhanley@hotmail.com.
Buddhist Mantras Chanting Explore
the spiritual insights and learn how to correctly chant mantras in Japanese. Reservations required. Mondays-Tuesdays-Thursdays-Fridays, 10:30am-4pm. Custom Built Computers Of Redmond, 439 SW 6th St., Redmond. Contact: 541-848-1255. wildlifemusicweb@yahoo.com.
Community Healing Flow A gentle flow
class by donation, which go to a local charity each month. Fridays, 4-5:15pm. Bend Community Healing Center, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 133, Bend. By donation.
Contact Improvisation Workshop An art,
sport, meditation and a living, evolving practice that retrains and heals the nervous system. No preregistration required. Call for more info. First Saturday of every month, 4:30-6:30pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. Contact: 541-633-3456. $25.
Dream Interpretation Class Dream groups are devised to give people an opportunity to explore their dreams alongside others, in a supervised and gentle manner. Thursdays, 6:308pm. Riverside Wellness, 2955 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: michael@naturalwayofbeing.com. $12/class, $90/10 classes. Eat to Run, Don’t Run to Eat! Stephanie Violett, Ph.D will address how runners can maintain a healthy body composition - fat, muscle, and bone - through diet. Feb. 4, 7pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-317-3568. michelle@footzonebend.com. Free, please RSVP. EFT For Healthy Balance With Tammy Goen EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques),
also known as Tapping, is a very simple, easy to learn technique for resolving nearly any issue, from physical pain to unhelpful habits, cravings to trauma. Feb. 1, 6:15-7pm. Fettle Botanic Bend, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, #120, Bend. Contact: 541-728-2368. bend@fettlebotanic.com.
Endurance Blast Intense circuit training
using many of the same modalities as our staple group functional strength training. Tuesdays, 11am, Mondays-Fridays, 7am, Thursdays, 5:30pm and Fridays, 10am. Camp Victory Personal Training, 20370 Empire Ave., #C5, Bend. Contact: 541-897-7668. $10.
Energy Yoga Yoga was created to directly
stimulate and move us at an energetic level. Call or email to register. Tuesdays, 9:30-10:30am. The Blissful Heart ~ Crystal Sanctuary, 45 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-408-3720. soulroarbreathwork@gmail.com. $10/class.
Anzaldo. BYO yoga mat. Thursdays, Noon-1pm. Princess Athletic, 945 NW wall St, Ste 150, bend.
relaxation practice, experiencing a deep state of release while at the same time maintain complete awareness. Fridays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend. $15.
Guided Meditation for Relaxation with Christine Frazer Join us for a free guided meditation class led by Christine Frazer. Thursdays, 6:45-7:30pm. The Blissful Heart ~ Crystal Sanctuary, 45 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-233-7815. cccfrazer@gmail.com. By donation for Saving Grace.
Guided Meditation with Singing Bowl by Shiv Meditation is an experience of Celebra-
tion and joy. This Meditation is structured to easily allow participants to reconnect to their hearts so that they may feel their own bliss, satisfaction and joy. Feb. 1, 2-3:15pm. Blissful Heart ~ Yoga Barn, 29 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. $20.
Gyrokinesis Movement method for the entire body. This class will benefit all levels of fitness and is a great modality to help improve range of motion, coordination, flexibility and mobilization of the joints to make every day movements easier! BYO mat. Thursdays, 10:45-11:45am. The Blissful Heart ~ Crystal Sanctuary, 45 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. Contact: 760-271-3272. angela@ blissful-heart.com. $15/class, first class free. Healthy Living for Your Brain and Body Join us to learn about the latest research
providing insights into how to make lifestyle choices that may help you keep your brain and body healthy as you age, and use hands-on tools to help you incorporate these recommendations into a plan for healthy aging. Feb. 6, 1-2pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 800-272-3900. Free.
High on Life Force Using the inner technologies of kundalini yoga, breathwork and mantra, we will align our bodies, breath, and minds toward unification with our True Self. Tuesdays, 5:30pm and Fridays, 10:15am. The Hive, 205 NW Franklin Ave., Bend. $11/suggested donation. High Performance Fitness Join Cascade
Boomer Fitness for an energetic, fun and challenging workout that develops strength, flexibility, agility, coordination and power. Call to reserve a space. For 60+ adults. Mondays-Wednesdays-Fridays, 10:15-11:30am. Smith Martial Arts and Fitness, 100 SE Bridgeford Blvd. Suite A, Bend. Contact: 541-233-6765. $15.
Hula Hoop Yoga Fusion Movement arts overlap in a myriad of ways, and in this series, the arts of Yoga, Hula Hoop, and Dance combine in an accessible form of movement exploration. Thursdays, 7-8:30pm. Through Feb. 7. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. Contact: 541.322.6887. Full Series: $65/non-member, $35/member, (Drop-in: $20/ non-member, $10/member). Know Less: The Continuum of Meditation This presentation will offer a few facts and
many experiences about a wide variety of meditation practices. Feb. 2, 1-2:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-1063. Free.
MultiLevel AcroYoga An all levels AcroYoga class. Blends partner acrobatics and yoga in a fun, safe and accessible way. No partner necessary. Tuesdays, 7:30-9pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, # 100, Bend. $17.
+
Natural Meditation Class Designed
to make meditation enjoyable and effective. Tuesdays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend. Contact: michael@ naturalwayofbeing.com. $12.
37 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 05 / JANUARY 31, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
aerial silks. Thursdays, 4-5:15pm. Silks Rising, 1560 NE First St., Suite 10, Bend. $20.
combination of pilates, ballet, yoga and strength training. Mondays, 8:30-9:30am. Through May 20. Terpsichorean Dance Studio, 1601 NW Newport Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-410-2826. First class free; $9/drop-in.
Relax! Learn techniques for reducing and
managing stress on a daily basis; enjoy guided imagery and relaxation, breathing and mindfulness exercises. Thursdays, Noon-1pm. Through Jan. 31. The Blissful Heart ~ Fireside, 105 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-815-8901. $40/4-class series, $12/drop-in.
Sit. Breathe. Rest. (Meditation & Yoga)
Awesome local businesses, natural beauty, recreational opportunities galore, good beer, community events and people who care….
Sunrise Vinyasa All levels Vinyasa Flow taught by Katie Pinto. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 6:30-7:30am. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. Contact: 541322-6887. $10/drop-in.
these are just some of the Reasons to ❤ Central Oregon. The Source presents this feel good, community hug just in time for Valentine’s Day!
10 minutes of breath work, followed by a 10-15 minute meditation and finishes with Yin and/or Yoga Nidra. Wednesdays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend.
Tai Chi Taught by Dr. Rob Neilson in the Yang style of Taiji. Tuesdays, 8-9am. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend. Contact: robsneilson@gmail.com. Free.
Need another reason to ❤ C.O.? Local nonprofits — the amazing work they do and fun-filled fundraisers they produce.
Tai Chi w/ Grandmaster Franklin This is the original form that is taught in the monastery. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:45-10:45am. Terpsichorean Dance Studio, 1601 NW Newport Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-797-9620. $70/month, 2 classes per week.
Plan your year of good living and giving with our first-ever Calendar of Fundraisers! Purchase an ad in this special pullout calendar and you will receive a FREE Fundraiser Listing and a great deal of exposure!
The Key to Thriving A Unique Gut / Brain
/ Life Conversation with Lyndsey Lee. Feb. 5, 6-7pm. Eclectic Soul Athletics, 2754 NW Crossing Drive, Bend. Contact: 541-797-0119. lisa@ eclecticsoulathletics.com. Free.
Ad Deadline 1/6 Horizontal 1 February
Total Core Core, core and more core! Come
try one of our great Total Core workout classes! Mondays-Wednesdays-Noon and Thursdays, 11pm. Camp Victory Personal Training, 20370 Empire Ave., #C5, Bend. $10.
Twist & Shout: New Year’s Yoga Detox Workshop Feeling sluggish after the holi-
1/6 Vertical
days? Explore a variety of standing, seated and supine twists, plus preparations for safely adding inversions to your practice. Feb. 3, 3-6pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. Contact: 541-639-9695. info@ tulamovementarts.com. $35.
U-Jam Fitness* Master Class and Instructor Training Experience a free U-Jam
Fitness Master Class (1hr) led by elite trainer Lauren Powell. Interested in becoming a certified U-Jam Fitness instructor? Stay for the seven hour training! Feb. 2, 10am-6pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63830 Clausen Drive, #202, Bend. $149.
2019
/GIVEGUIDE
BENDSOURCE.COM January
Fr
Sa
2
6
7
1
5
2
3
7
4
6
3
5
12
14
14
11
13
10
10
12
9
9
11
8
13 20
21
15
19
21
18
20
17
19
16
24
28
28
25
27
23
27
26
22
26
29
30
31
Sa
Su
Mo
6
7
1
Su
Mo
Tu
4
6
2
3
5
1
5
7
13
14
14
8
12
13
10
12
9
11
8
16
17
17
20
15
19
25
27
22
24
26
23
28
24
26
23
25
22
25
18
15
19
21
18
20
16
21
18
30
31
29
30
31
We
Th
1
2
3
4
8
9
10
11
15
16
17
22
23
24
29
30
31
May
28
27
29
June
August
Th
Fr
Sa
Sa
We
Fr
Tu
Th
Mo
We
Su
Tu
4
5
6
7
7
3
3
6
1
2
5
2
4
11
13
14
9
10
13
10
12
9
11
8
12
14
16
20
21
19
15
19
21
18
20
17 24
28
28
25
27
23
27
26
22
26
29
30
31
July Th
Fr
Sa
Su
Mo
6
7
1
Fr
Sa
Su
Mo
Tu
We
1
2
3
4
5
7
11
12
13
14
8
20
21
15
16
17
18
28
22
23
24
25
29
30
Su
Mo
Tu
We
Th
1
2
3
4
5
6
12
9
10
11
8
9
14
8
13
10
18
15
16
17
20
17
19
16
18
15
19
21
26
22
23
24
25
22
25
27
24
26
23
29
30
31
29
30
31
September
1/6 Vertical
We
Th
Sa
4
March
Fr
Sa
Tu
April Fr
Tu
Th
Mo
We
Su
Tu
Th
Fr
Mo
Yin Yoga & Yoga Nidra Community Class Talented teachers practice teaching
lay-led Dharma discussion and meditation (zazen). Open to all. Does not meet 12/24 or or 1/31. For more info, contact Tom. Mondays, 6-8:30pm. St. Helen’s Hall - Trinity Episcopal, 231 NW Idaho St., Bend. Contact: 541-382-6651. Free.
February We
Su
United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St., Bend. Contact: 541-420-1587. By donation.
Zen Discussion & Meditation A weekly
Fundraisers
Calendar of
Vin/Yin Yoga Mondays-Thursdays, 3pm. First
Yin Yoga and/or Yoga Nidra. Mondays-Thursdays-Sundays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend. Contact: namaspayoga@gmail.com. $5.
1/6 Vertica
28
27
Fr
2
3
4
5
6
7
4
7
1
3
6
12
13
14
10
14
11
13
10
12
9
11
8
16
20
21
15
19
21
18
20
17 24
28
28
23
26
27
22
27
30
31
Su
Mo
7
1
2
Sa
Su
Mo
Tu
We
1
2
3
4
5
6
11
12
13
14
8
9
21
16
17
18
20
15
19
23
24
25
26
28
22 29
30
31
Mo
Tu
We
Th
3
4
5
6
7
1
2
12
9
10
11
8
9
14
8
13
10
18
15
16
17
20
17
19
16
18
15
19
21
23
24
26
23
22
25
22
26
28
25
27
24
29
30
31
29
30
31
April 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame 13 - Dolor sit r tigis 21 - Executuu
February 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame 13 - Dolor sit r tigis 21 - Executuu
Tu
Sa
Su
Th
Sa
We
Fr
5
Sa
Su
May 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame 13 - Dolor sit r tigis 21 - Executuu June 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame 13 - Dolor sit r tigis 21 - Executuu
27
December
Th
Mo
We
Fr
Tu
Th
Fr
January 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame 13 - Dolor sit r tigis 21 - Executuu
31
November
October
July 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame 13 - Dolor sit r tigis 21 - Executuu August 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame 13 - Dolor sit r tigis 21 - Executuu September 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame 13 - Dolor sit r tigis utuu 21 - Exec
Ask your Source ource.com dar.bendsyou representative calenhow can be a part of
March 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame 13 - Dolor sit r tigis 21 - Executuu
ine View this onl
at
Reasons to LoveoriC.O. H zontal and the1/6
Calendar of Fundraisers today.
advertise@bendsource.com
541.383.0800
29
25
October 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame 13 - Dolor sit r tigis 21 - Executuu November 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame 13 - Dolor sit r tigis utuu 21 - Exec December 7 - Lorem ipsum t ame sit r Dolo 13 r tigis 21 - Executuu
SMOKE SIGNALS
smokesignals@bendsource.com
Lawmakers May Give OLCC Moratorium Power By Jeremy Dickman
canstockphoto.com / Wyatt Gaines
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / JANUARY 31, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
38
N
ot long after the U.S. Attorney for in Deschutes County—that cannabis the District of Oregon, Billy Wil- farms are simply producing more than liams, warned that overproduction and Oregonians can possibly consume, and interstate marijuana trafficking would thus the oversupply is shipped across attract his prosecutorial wrath, the Ore- state lines. gon Liquor Control Commission halted the processing of new recreational mar- AG Nominee May Respect Cole Memo ijuana applications. Now, the state legWith the firing of Attorney General islature may give the OLCC permanent Jeff Sessions and the president’s nomipower to issue moratoriums on produc- nation of William Barr to fill the vacancy, er licenses whenever marijuana businessThose wearing green- es may, believe it it sees fit. Senate Bill 218, or not, have reacolored sunglasses introduced in the son to breathe easimight even interpret er. More than a year infancy of the 2019 legislative session, Barr’s statements to ago, Sessions forauthorizes the OLCC mally rescinded the be suggestive of deto refuse to grant recCole Memorandum, reational producer scheduling marijuana. which instructed fedlicenses, “based on eral law enforcement market demand for marijuana and oth- to respect state laws legalizing cannabis, er factors the commissioner deems rele- provided that state regulatory schemes vant,” for however long the OLCC feels prevented interstate trafficking, money necessary. laundering, violence, etc. While this proposed bill is far from When the president nominated Barr, being passed into law (and its finished a former Reagan staffer and Attorney form may not even resemble the cur- General under George H.W. Bush, there rent language) cannabis attorneys in was reason to fear the worst. Yet under the state have begun mulling the ram- Senate questioning during his confirmaifications of refusing to grant licenses tion hearings, Barr said, “I’m not going to farmers who have invested millions to go after companies that have relied to break into the industry. For example, on the Cole Memorandum.” Barr made would the bill invoke the Fifth Amend- clear he’s not personally a fan of legalment’s guard against unlawful “taking” ization. “I think it’s a mistake to back off of property from individuals without marijuana. However, if we want a federdue process after they’ve filed an OLCC al approach—if we want states to have application and paid the fee? their own laws—then let’s get there and “The fact that a person has paid a get there in the right way.” fee does not, in and of itself, guarantee This is a stark departure from the the person would have an application anti-pot firebrand Sessions. Those approved,” said Ross Day, a Portland wearing green-colored sunglasses might attorney. “Just because I submit a even interpret Barr’s statements to be land use application and fee does not suggestive of de-scheduling marijuana mean that my application is guaran- so as to keep federal law in tune with teed to be approved.” states’ rights. “It’s incumbent on ConThat doesn’t mean a prospective gress to make a decision,” Barr said. licensee who invested a huge amount Now that we have what Rep. Earl of money into a marijuana farm in reli- Blumenauer (D-OR) calls “the most ance on an application being duly con- pro-cannabis Congress in history,” sidered wouldn’t have a legal gripe, Day Barr’s remark could end up as a de facto said. “The OLCC would likely argue that endorsement of legalization. There are it intends to process the applications, currently at least five newly introduced but [they] need some time to catch up (or re-introduced) cannabis bills in the on the applications themselves.” 116th Congress which would ease federThe fact that no other licensee types al interference in states where marijua(processors, wholesalers, retailers, na is legal, or outright legalize marijuana etc.) are being targeted with the bill nationwide. That we have an AG nomisuggests it’s a direct response to the nee who claims he will not tip the scales frequent concerns aired by Williams— to favor prohibitionists is just an unexand echoed by local law enforcement pected bonus.
THE REC ROOM Crossword
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Tales of High Crimesâ&#x20AC;?
Questions, comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark at pearl@bendsource.com
39
Š Pearl Stark mathpuzzlesgames.com/quodoku
â&#x2DC;&#x2026;â&#x2DC;&#x2026;
Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re Local!
Difficulty Level
VOLUME 23â&#x20AC;&#x201A; ISSUE 05â&#x20AC;&#x201A; /â&#x20AC;&#x201A; JANUARY 31, 2019â&#x20AC;&#x201A; /â&#x20AC;&#x201A; THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Š2017 Brendan Emmett Quigley (www.brendanemmettquigley.com)
By Brendan Emmett Quigley
Pearlâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Puzzle
B O R N
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Men travel faster now, but I do not know if they ________s.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201D;Willa Cather
ACROSSâ&#x20AC;&#x201A; 1 â&#x20AC;&#x153;Letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s go team!â&#x20AC;? 4 Refused a seat 9 Actress Kenney of â&#x20AC;&#x153;Shamelessâ&#x20AC;? 13 Latin 101 word 14 Ethan of Broadwayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;True Westâ&#x20AC;? 15 Present day? 16 Stonerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s pulp fiction? 18 With 54-Across, hapless victim in a 16-Across? 19 Like the record labels Merge and Matador 20 Office reminder 22 NHL All-Star Karlsson 23 Crime syndicate in a 16-Across? 28 Megan who is tri-captain of the US Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s National soccer team 30 How some stock is sold 31 Some DEA agents 33 Caesarean greeting 34 Imprisonment in a 16-Across? 39 Classified ad abbr. 40 â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve got ___ feeling about thisâ&#x20AC;? 41 Type of salami 44 Style of Chicagoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Palmolive Building 48 Bit of a shootout in a 16-Across? 51 Venezuelan opposition party leader GuaidĂł 52 Clarifying phrase 53 Heart tube 54 See 18-Across 57 Super spy in a 16-Across? 60 Met highlight 61 Permanently, at least with writing 62 Thanksgiving dessert 63 â&#x20AC;&#x153;Aw sheeshâ&#x20AC;? 64 Sides in an eternal â&#x20AC;&#x153;Battleâ&#x20AC;? 65 National Kite Mo.
E I G H T
The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote:
Fill in every row, column, and 3x3 box with each of the letters exactly once.
DOWNâ&#x20AC;&#x201A; 1 Swashbucklerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s weapon 2 Egyptian sun god 3 Spicy salsa, e.g. 4 Sneak, for one 5 Skater Babilonia 6 Bird comically drawn with spectacles 7 Vermont ski resort 8 Dancer Hough 9 Strongly encourage 10 UFC discipline 11 More, in Madrid 12 Flame proof? 17 Suit that shows off a navel 21 ___ culpa 23 Put into piles 24 Hajj destination 25 Device with an Apple Pencil 26 Blue hue 27 Test with a Verbal Reasoning sect. 29 Bread with biryani 32 Coffee additive 34 Taunt 35 Chaplinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s wife 36 Achy 37 Little one 38 Dropping off dry cleaning, e.g. 39 Cadbury â&#x20AC;&#x153;Cremeâ&#x20AC;? confection 42 Certain bullet train rider 43 Pompous imbecile 45 One of Jupiterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s moons 46 Persian intoxicant 47 Donkeyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s cousin 49 Some bottles of water 50 Buffoonish 53 Posits 54 Reading raincoat 55 Supply with heat 56 Christ The Redeemer overlooks it 58 Potpourri 59 Dayton-to-Canton dir.
ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S PUZZLES $ ) 7 $
â&#x20AC;&#x153;I spend money as if I had it.â&#x20AC;? - Mike Todd
6 / 2 %
. $ 5 /
6 : ( ( 7 $ / ' ( 1 ( , 1 . , 6 6 $ & + 5 $ 7 ( $ 6 2 1 : $ 2 3 ( & + , / 7 0 ( 6 6
: $ ) 6 ( 8 5 1 6 , 1 1 $ ' * ( ; < 2 8 5
( 7 ( ; 7
' $ 5 < /
* / $ 5 (
( 1 ' * % 2 * $ 1 7 5 8 & (
+ , 7 2 1
( 9 ( 1 7
( / / $ 0 ( ; $ 2 1 ; < 2 ' ) ( ( 5 5 1 6
. 2 5 ( $ 1
& 2 , 1 6 $ : 5 2 2 5 $ ' ' : , $ % < ( 6 7
8 3 1 $ 2 7 ( ' , 7 ( '
/ 8 6 + / <
5 ( / <
( / / (
Carson's American Kitchen
FEB 16
FEB 14 - 16
VALENTINE'S DAY DINNER
5K RUN FOR CHOCOLATE
FEB 23
MONTH OF CHOCOLATE
OREGON WINE & CUISINE STROLL
The Main Lodge
Carson's American Kitchen
SPA SPECIALS FOR TWO | CHOCOLATE-INSPIRED FOOD AND DRINKS | SWEET RETREAT LODGING PACKAGE Click "Things To Do" at SunriverResort.com for details.
MT. BACHELOR $129 SKI & STAY
TAKE SOME TIME FOR YOU
SUNRIVER RESORT'S SKI PACKAGE FOR TWO
$99 SPA-CATION GETAWAY FOR TWO
This package for two starts at $129 per person and includes two $99 full-day lift tickets. After a day on the slopes, enjoy a discounted Sports Enthusiast Massage and some Après Ski drinks and Happy Hour specials at the Lodge.
Relax and unwind with our Spa-Cation package! Book a room at Sunriver Resort starting at $99 per person and get a free 50 minute massage, facial or manicure-pedicure at Sage Springs Club & Spa!
Click "Offers" at SunriverResort.com for details.
Click "Offers" at SunriverResort.com for details.
800-354-1632
SunriverResort.com