Source Weekly - March 15, 2018

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VOLU ME 2 2 / IS SUE 11 / M ARCH 15, 2018

WELCOME TO THE EMPIRE

NE BEND: YOUR NEW BEER NEXUS

BREWER TALK ARE WE IN POST BEER TOWN, USA?

PINK BOOTS

A COLLAB BEER FOR WOMEN’S DAY

PLUS: BEER EVENTS!

ST. PADDY’S DAY

FUN INSIDE


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The Source Weekly 704 NW Georgia Ave. Bend, OR 97703 t. 541-383-0800  f. 541-383-0088 bendsource.com info@bendsource.com

REPORTER/CALENDAR EDITOR Keely Damara keely@bendsource.com REPORTER/WEB EDITOR Chris Miller miller@bendsource.com COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts BEER REVIEWER Kevin Gifford micro@bendsource.com FREELANCERS Josh Jardine, Nick Nayne, Teafly Peterson, Jim Anderson, Lisa Sipe, Jared Rasic, Anne Pick SYNDICATED CONTENT Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Brendan Emmett Quigley, E.J. Pettinger, Pearl Stark, Tom Tomorrow, Shannon Wheeler PRODUCTION MANAGER Wyatt Gaines wyatt@bendsource.com

Crack open that bottle (or can) of suds and sit down with the Beer Issue, Benditos!

With the smell of mashing grain and boiling wort permeating our nostrils on the regular, it’s kind of hard to ignore that Bend maintains the nickname, “Beer Town, USA.” Love it or hate it; ignore it or embrace it, but beer flows here almost as freely as the mighty Deschutes. In this year’s edition, we’re bringing you a Beer Issue jam-packed with brewy goodness. Start on page 8 with Beer Goggles, a humorous take on how beer makes everything seem better, brought to you by local cartoonist William Friday. Move onto Welcome to the Empire on page 11, where our beer columnist Kevin Gifford covers the new beer mecca that is northeast Bend. On page 13, we talk with two longtime brewers about the state of beer in Bend in 2018, and whether we’re in a post Beer Town, USA. Hook up your out-of-town friends with the info on page 15, covering three great spots for a local Beer Crawl. Looking for some brews that might not be on your radar? Head to page 17 for our take on a few brews to try. Check out page 19 for a story on Pink Boots, the local chapter of a national women’s org, collaborating on a brew for International Women’s Day. Ready to hit the town to bask in the area’s many Beer Events? Get the deets on page 21. Source Spotlight also features the owners of the stalwart homebrew shop in Bend on page 43, while Chow offers tips on brewing your own on page 45.

Cheers!

Mailbox 5 News 7 Source Picks

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Artwatch 43 Chow 45 Screen 49 Outside 53

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Real Estate

DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Sean Switzer

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Advice 58 Astrology 59

CONTROLLER Angela Switzer angela@bendsource.com

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Smoke Signals Senator Ron Wyden speaks at a Town Hall meeting March 9 at Pilot Butte Middle School.

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Puzzles 63

VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

EDITOR Nicole Vulcan editor@bendsource.com

IN THIS ISSUE

COVER


OPINION

A protest is a conversation starter, and it’s started one in Bend

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local social media thread concerning gun safety in Bend-La Pine Schools erupted this week, with some parents, teachers and other adults questioning the effectiveness of the 17-minute long protest scheduled for March 14 at schools nationwide. To recap, school walkouts were scheduled for the 14th as well as April 20, both at 10am. The first one will last a mere 17 minutes—each of the 17 minutes representing one of the students killed in the school shootings in Parkland, Fla., last month. On that thread, some adults questioned why students didn’t simply protest on days when school would otherwise be out, why they didn’t choose a better time, why they didn’t choose a “better” form of protest. Simply put, our students are fed up— and in a world of constant distraction, we should be impressed that our youth have organized in such a way, in schools across the country, to get adults to pay attention. After all, a protest is nothing in itself. It’s disruptive, yes, and that’s the source of some adults’ concerns. But a protest is also a conversation starter, and these two protests are doing just that. These protests are spurring an overdue conversation about gun safety, and about pressing our legislators to do more to tighten background checks, at the very, very least. Students did just that last week, when Sen. Ron Wyden, D-OR, held a town hall in Bend. These students are also helping push conversation about school safety. Since the most recent shootings in Parkland and subsequent threats at local schools, parents have been reaching out to their students’ schools to ask about what steps schools are taking to protect students in the event of an active threat. Your student’s school may have more safety measures in place than you imagined. Then

again, it might not. You’d do well to ask. There are also conversations arising about how students interact with one another—perhaps one of the most productive things coming out of this protest season. Instead of walking out, some students are choosing to “walk up.” What does that mean? It means that students— and the adults around them—are starting to realize that at least some of this nationwide school shooting problem can be attributed to some students getting neither the attention nor the mental health services they badly need. Fellow students can’t do much about the latter—that’s for our local, state and federal health authorities to address, and address seriously—but kids can address the issue of attention and misplaced priorities. Too many students are falling through the cracks, disconnected from their peers, and fellow students can stand up in big and small ways to draw attention to that. We support the students who choose to walk out this March 14 and April 20 (the anniversary of the shootings at Columbine High School)—but we also support the students who choose to “walk up” to other students to let them know they’re noticed, understood and are cared for. And, there’s no reason students can’t do both. Moving forward from a school shooting culture isn’t going to be completely solved by simple walkouts, nor should they be ignored as unnecessary. The conversation these protests are starting is important. That same gun safety thread also pointed out that the High Desert Friends of the National Rifle Association will be hosting a sold-out fundraiser Saturday, March 17 at 4pm at the Riverhouse on the Deschutes— just in case the adults have some thoughts on steps the NRA might take to keep our schools safer.  SW


O

OPINION Letters

HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY? 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. Letter of the week receives $5 to Palate!

LIGHTMETER

Correction:

5 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

In the 3/8 story, “Grow Woes,” the percentage of people who supported legalization in the rural parts of the county was misstated. The correct figure: 47 percent supported legalization, not 47 percent opposed. We regret the error.

IN RESPONSE TO LETTERS REGARDING FREE RANGE CATS

IN RESPONSE TO “WHY A GUN?” (LETTERS) ON 3/8 Winchel is an idiot !! Trying to re interpret the bill of rights to suit your own personal beliefs is the same as twisting someone else’s words around to favor your point of view!! Assuming you know that the bill of rights does not apply to modern society because a musket used in the revolution is so much different from a modern gun never to be used in a fight for “independence” shows how closed minded a person can be ... like there are no wars going on anywhere in the world ... like no one in America is being shot by professional criminals ... or criminals don’t shoot other people in the perfect world that winchel lives in !! He shows

Everyone loves pets! Well, maybe not everyone. @o.g.adventurecat seen here basking at Drake Park. Tag @sourceweekly and show up here!

his true stupidity by claiming the NRA benefits from the proliferation of arms ... a non profit support group does not benefit you dummass !! The firearms manufacturers are the ones who benefit !!! —Ester Iscke, via Facebook The Second Amendment shall continue to serve its purpose. To allow citizens to be able to have a gun and protect themselves. The criminals will always have guns, law-abiding citizens are allowed to have guns themselves to protect themselves against the criminals. And you apparently don’t know a lot of people that hunt for their meat do you? You honestly think people who hunt don’t work? And I agree with Ester, you are an idiot. —Lorraine Burnett Cimino, via Facebook

IN RESPONSE TO “A RIVER OF IPA” ON 3/8 Riverbend had a wonderful dark bourbon barrel cask beer a couple years ago that was amazing! Let’s have more porters and reds and ambers please! I don’t want beer that is sour like grapefruit, darn it. —Jenny Riley, via Facebook

THE WRONG TAKE-AWAY: IN RESPONSE TO PROTESTING AN APARTMENT COMPLEX IS ENERGY BEST USED ELSEWHERE (OPINION), 3/8 I was among dozens of neighborhood residents who recently attended the one hour Q/A session hosted by Evergreen Housing about their upcoming construction of a 187 unit, four story apartment complex. Admittedly, I was among the most vocal opponents of the plan but not for any of the reasons your Opinion section highlighted. In fact, of the dozens of neighborhood residents who

expressed concerns, virtually none voiced NIMBY protests about the apartment complex itself. Instead, the majority of neighborhood stakeholders were advocating on behalf of the entire Bend community about the poorly planned/zoned relationship between the number of cars that will be introduced to an already tight and vital transportation corridor. Contrary to your portrayal of the neighborhood residents harassing a developer for the apartments, we were collectively challenging the wisdom of zoning and development policies that encourage and accelerate private development over the infrastructure development needed to absorb thousands of new cars in Bend. Your Opinion letter was filled with dog whistle rhetoric about NIMBY-ism, respect for private property and West Side entitlement. My sense of the event was very different. I left feeling respect and appreciation for one group of Bend residents advocating on behalf of the entire community’s concern about the asymmetric relationship between private and public investment in how Bend grows. I suspect that regardless of where you live in Bend, if you’re in your in a car 2436 months from now anywhere around the Colorado River Bridge and proximate roundabouts, you are going to have plenty of time to reflect on this debate. —Will Warne

LETTER OF THE WEEK

Will: Thanks for sharing your perspective. I have to respectfully disagree, however, and say that an empty lot in that very central part of town is absolutely best used for this type of development, and it should be welcomed. Given its location, I’ll wager that a portion of those new residents will use the sidewalks and bike lanes—yes, existing infrastructure—for at least some of their trips—likely moreso than the people using the new hotels popping up in the area. With several grocery stores, recreation and other amenities within walking distance, I can think of nowhere else in Bend so ripe for more infill housing. And to be clear, readers, we’re not talking about “thousands” of cars. It’s an apartment complex of 170 to 180 units. Will, come on in for your gift card to Palate. —­Nicole Vulcan, Editor

E.J. Pettinger’s

copyrighted 2018

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When you’re at the Pearly Gates, wondering if your cleanest v-neck and a soul patch will be enough.

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Over the past few months, I have noticed comments in newspapers about Free Range Cats. It is my time to give some input. Sure cats and dogs are a different beast. However, they are still animals and humans still own them. If a pet owner really loves their pet, they should actually care for it and not just assume it can use its own judgement. It is completely unfair that dog owners have to license and leash their dogs as well as “pick up” after them and cat owners have no responsibility or consideration for their neighbors. In all reality, cat owners are not the same type of respectable neighbors as dog owners. At no time ever do I want a cat roaming through our yard. There is a fat orange cat that trespasses on our property frequently and just waits patiently under our bird feeder waiting for a moment to kill a sweet songbird that actually belongs in the oasis of our yard. Then not to mention leaving behind something that should be in a litter box in the so-called loving owner’s home. Cat owners I ask you to pay attention to the fact that if you allow your cat to roam freely in Bend and let the horrible creature in my yard, it will come home with one less eye. Your cats have the right to stay in your home and your yard. Disgusted and Fed-Up People in Bend, I ask anyone that agrees with me to join with me and help remove cats from our quiet and private yards. Get your trusty pellet gun and aim for the eyes. Cat owners, if you are worried about what may happen to your cat once it leaves your yard, you should be. —Daisy Ryder


SIDE NOTES  News in brief, as seen first on bendsource.com Nicole Vulcan

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 15, 2018 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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Larry Kogovsek, with Bridging Hearts, and Sally Pfeifer, of Pfeifer & Associates, show new bunkbeds inside the Sagewood Sanctuary.

Suspect in Missing Woman Case Dies

By Chris Miller Sara Diana Gomez was reported missing on Feb. 19. Her former boyfriend, Bryan Penner, had been held in the Deschutes County Adult Jail for alleged contempt of court since Feb. 22. According to a Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office press release, another inmate found Penner around 9pm Sunday. Rescue teams rushed him to St. Charles Medical Center, but he died around 8am Monday. His cause of death was listed by District Attorney John Hummel as suicide by asphyxiation. The DA says Penner was the sole suspect in the disappearance of Gomez. The Oregon State Police and Central Oregon’s Tri-County Major Incident Team are still investigating the cause of Penner’s death.

The Search for Sara Continues By Chris Miller Since the disappearance of Sara Gomez, Bend Police, Deschutes County Search and Rescue and local community groups have continued looking for the missing 24-year-old. A Facebook page has been created to help find Gomez. “Finding Sara,” a closed group with over 6,600 members, has coordinated search efforts, as well as letting members know about fundraisers in Bend and Redmond, with the proceeds going toward

Gomez’s family and search efforts. Saturday, March 17, the Bend Applebee’s is hosting a Pancake Breakfast Benefit for Sara Gomez from 7am to 11am. The $10 entry fee includes a drink, eggs, sausage and pancakes. “Unfortunately, as the search for Sara extended from hours, to days, to weeks, it became obvious we are searching for her body and she will not be found alive. With Penner’s passing, our chances of quickly finding Sara plummeted,” District Attorney John Hummel stated in a release Monday. “I encourage everyone in Deschutes County to report to law enforcement any suspicious tire tracks, earthen mounds, or other potential evidence they might see on their property. Sara’s family is counting on our community to bring her home.”

A New Warming Shelter for Bend By Nicole Vulcan

Homeless advocates in Bend have long lamented the fact that there’s no low-barrier warming shelter for people when the weather dips below freezing. At least, there wasn’t until recently. About three weeks ago, the Sagewood Sanctuary Warming Shelter opened inside Pfeifer & Associates, a facility offering drug and alcohol treatment support, housing services and other support for some of the area’s most vulnerable. Sally Pfeifer, owner of the building, says she saw a need in the community and decided to act.

Unlike other homeless shelters in the community, Sagewood is “low-barrier,” meaning people are not required to be sober or to participate in faith services in order to use the facility. The facility does not allow drug or alcohol use on site. The Sagewood Sanctuary opens at 8pm on freezing nights, closing again at 7am the following morning.

Governor Signs Gun Loophole Law By Nicole Vulcan

While not directly addressing the issue of gun violence in schools, students and gun safety advocates were among those on hand at the Oregon State Capitol in Salem March 5 to witness Gov. Kate Brown signing HB 4145, Oregon’s “boyfriend loophole” bill, into law. The bill bars convicted stalkers and domestic violence offenders from buying guns. “I’m proud to sign this bill, making Oregon the first state to take action to prevent senseless gun violence since the tragedy in Parkland, Florida,” Brown said. “Today marks an important milestone, but we know we have more to do. It’s long past time we hold the White House and Congress accountable. Now’s the time to enact real change and federal gun safety legislation.”  SW See the full stories online, on the News page at bendsource.com.


NEWS

Bridge Ban Dies

HB 4029 never made it out of the Ways and Means Committee during the short session

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By Chris Miller

VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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721 Desperado Court Sisters, OR 541.549.1963 threecreeksbrewing.com

Drink Responsibly, stay at FivePine Lodge.

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he possibility of a pedestrian bridge over the Deschutes south of town could still be alive, after HB 4029 died when the 2018 short Legislative session in Salem ended March 3. The bill, which would have barred any person, public body or local service district from building a bridge on the Deschutes River within certain areas of the Deschutes River Scenic Waterway, passed the House and was forwarded to the Ways and Means Committee, where it ultimately died.

“We have a responsibility to be good stewards of the river and the wildlife that depend on it.” ­— ERIK FERNANDEZ Bend Park and Recreation District Executive Director Don Horton said in an interview with KTVZ that the district’s goal is to find a way to connect people to the trail area south of Bend, and that a bridge is needed, but he’s open to a planning process that would bring in local agencies, including environmental groups. Julie Brown, BPRD’s communications and community relations manager, said a third-party facilitator will lead the effort to form a committee of individuals and groups that have expressed

interest in participating in the process. “We’re still hoping for a balanced solution that doesn’t involve weakening river protections or damaging wildlife habitat,” Oregon Wild’s Erik Fernandez told the Source. “We hope we can put the controversy of the bridge proposal behind us and find a trail connection that our entire community can be excited about.” Horton said if local stakeholders can find an alternative route, the district is open to ideas, according to KTVZ. Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-Sunriver, who sponsored a similar bill last year, and Rep. Knute Buehler, R-Bend, have both opposed any type of bridge in the area of the Deschutes Scenic Waterway. However, both are leaving the legislature following this session. Buehler is running on the Republican ticket for governor, while Whisnant has decided not to seek re-election. “We have only one Deschutes River, there is no backup river,” Fernandez said. “We have a responsibility to be good stewards of the river and the wildlife that depend on it.” “We look forward to a local conversation about how to best balance environmental concerns, recreation access, and connectivity,” Brown said. “This decision is too important to be taken from Central Oregon.”  SW

2018

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Welcome to the Beer Issue! Let’s talk beer goggles!

No snow on mountain —> snow on mountain

Bēer Gōg’gle (noun): Seeing people and things as increasingly attractive as one’s alcohol intake rises. We’re gonna skip right over the sexual innuendos that can be rife with beer goggles, and instead, look at some of the annoying situations people in Central Oregon face, which can be greatly improved by putting on a pair of beer goggles (even ones In this section: that look mysteriously like Zorro masks). ·· Funnies! In honor of the Beer Issue, we asked local ·· A new “Empire” on Empire Avenue cartoonist William Friday to humor us and ·· Q&A with local brewdraw some of the scenarios plaguing you, ers dear readers, and how they can get better ·· Plan your next pub crawl! with a pair of beer goggles. We hope it gives ·· Source Staff reviews you a chuckle. funky beers Mt Bachelor parking bad —> good Just remember, don’t drink and drive, ·· Ladies’ brew! ·· Beer events! Benditos!


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Bike flat way out on a trail —> It’s a nice hike!

Floaters on the river blocking everything —> clear river for a paddleboard

In laws who hate you —> in laws who bring you treats

VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Crowded trail —> empty trail


McMENAMINS

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VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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et again, it’s been a busy year for beer in Bend— one of the industries that makes the region an Bridge 99 Brewing EMPI international destination, right alongside skiing, RE BL VD. stand up paddle boarding and real estate speculation. EM PIR Sunriver Brewing Company and Monkless Belgian E B Monkless LV Ales are the latest locals to achieve big-name awards, D. Oblivion Brewing Belgian Ales the former cleaning up at last fall’s Great American Lane Beer Fest and the latter earning two medals at the Oreesert igh D Craft Kitchen NE H gon Beer Awards last month. Silver Moon Brewing and & Brewery Bend Brewing Company both completed major remodels, with 10 Barrel Brewing’s Galveston Street pub just 10 Barrel Brewing repopening March 9. The Ale Apothecary launched its long-awaited tasting room, and Boneyard Beer’s new pub off NE Division has...well, a nice-looking sign up, at least, although the actual open is still a ways away. largest taprooms in town, with 20 beers available and Take the opportunity for a quick break at Port of But in the past year, the big story in Bend beer some great mountain views. With the Galveston pub Subs or Wubba’s BBQ, perhaps, before venturing to is how the area around NE Empire Boulevard has running limited hours for now, this is the place to Bridge 99 Brewery (63063 Layton Ave). Open six become the new frontier for the local industry. 10 Bar- check out all the experimental barrel-aged and sour days a week, Bridge 99 was one of the first breweries rel opening up its massive new production facility and beers brewed onsite by Tonya Cornett, Ian Larkin and to open to the public in the NE Empire area, and it’s brewpub close by certainly contributed to this, but— the rest of the gang. For a real change of pace, check always been a chill place to sit around, talk to the brewthanks to cheaper rents out Curryosity, an imperial er and watch the apartment buildings being built litand much less city reguFor a real change of pace, check out ale with pumpkin, toasted erally up and down the street. Plus: A different food lation on brewery access and yellow curry. truck each day. Curryosity, an imperial ale with pumpkin, coconut to the water supply—the From there, it’s easy to To round out the day, why not try out a couple toasted coconut and yellow curry. trend was well underway head to of places that are old to Bend, but even before then. Monknew to the northeast? Oblivion 10 Barrel joins both Boneyard and Crux Fermenta- less Belgian Ales (20750 High Brewing (63027 Plateau Dr.) used tion Project in having large manufacturing sites around Desert Ln.), in a garage site that’s to have a pub where Sunriver’s Galthe area off the US-97 Empire exit, mostly making beer actually rented from 10 Barrel. veston location is, but they’ll begin for packing and out of town export. Those other two Thanks to some choice bottle releasto have regular hours right there facilities aren’t open to the public, but no need to be es such as Friar’s Festivus, around very soon. And remember Craft sad about that—up and down Empire, one spot mostly the state, the four-year-old brewKitchen & Brewery (62988 Laywithin walking distance of another, there’s a wealth of ery is starting to grab some serious ton Ave.)? They’re back, too, offerbreweries and restaurants that make it all too easy to attention outside of the city. The ing pints and growler fills of their while away a Saturday afternoon in the most delicious atmosphere’s still chill around the still-quite-extensive beer lineup— way possible. (Most are open other days as well, but brewery, however—and while the and food will be coming soon at hours can be more limited on the weekdays, so check weather’s still cold, there’s no betthe location, too. in advance.) ter time to enjoy Meet Your Maker, a It all means just one thing: The Where to begin? Well, why not start with the big- strong, bottle-conditioned dark ale Empire, and Bend beer along with it, gest? 10 Barrel (62950 NE 18th St.) has one of the clocking in at a smooth nine percent. is expanding.  SW


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 15, 2018 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 12


Mark Henion

Bobby Jackson

A Q&A with two local brewers By Chris Miller

F

or our annual Beer Issue, the Source sat down with two of Bend’s OG brewers to chat about the state of beer in Bend, what they imbibe and just general beery-ness. Mark Henion is the brewmaster at Boneyard Beer, and Bobby Jackson is innovation head brewer at 10 Barrel Brewing. Source Weekly: Where did you get your start in the industry? Bobby Jackson: I started home brewing when I was in college at the University of Vermont. My buddy Conner and I were like, you can buy those kits for like $45, and so we ended up getting one. Right after we got it, we started [brewing] a whole lot, and I was finishing up my degree at school and didn’t know what I was going to do. There was a brewing school just south of Burlington, Vermont, the American Brewers Guild, so I applied to that. I went to that right after I finished school. And I had been working at a vineyard and going to the brewing school, and then I had an apprenticeship that I did at Otter Creek in Middlebury, Vermont, and then really just went from there. I got a job offer in Salt Lake City when I was finishing up my apprenticeship, so I did that and moved to Salt Lake, brewing lagers at Bohemian Brewery. I was there for five years. Mark Henion: I started brewing at Deschutes Brewery in July 1994. I started out keg washing there and kind of climbed through the ranks. It was a pretty fast-moving company when I got there, like people would change jobs every few months because they were growing really quick. I started right when their production brewery opened up, so I mainly worked down at the original brewery for a while and then I went over to the production brewery, and then after a few years they sent me to Siebel Brewing School, and then I became head brewer. SW: How long have you been in the business? MH: I’ve been in the business for 25 years. I love it, it’s fun. BJ: I’ve been in the business for 10 years. SW: How long have you been in Bend? BJ: I’ve been here for seven years. I moved up here to work for 10 Barrel. I had met the brothers [Chris and Jeremy Cox] in like 2009, and we kind of talked for a couple of years and kept in touch and just kind of hanging out and they made me a job offer in 2011 and I came up.

MH: I’ve been in Bend 26 years. I worked at Deschutes for nine years, then I went to Cascade Lakes for six and went over to the [Willamette] Valley for five years at Ninkasi, and then came back here. Actually, I worked with Tony [Lawrence] at Deschutes, so we’ve been friends ever since and kinda working back and forth together, and I just knew eventually I’d be coming back here. SW: What’s the state of the beer market in Bend? MH: I think it’s a little in flux right now. It’s definitely been a major boon for several years and I think everyone’s kind of feeling that it’s not really a good time to go out and expand. A lot of people are pulling back from major expansions because it’s a little… there’s a bit of a bubble and I don’t know if it’s going to burst, but it kind of feels like there’s a lot of pressure. I’ve heard a lot of different things. The craft brew movement—people are kind of going more local, more small. The little guys and stuff, so it’s kind of putting strain on the bugger guys. And then I’ve also heard just recently the new generations that’s coming up, they’re just tired of seeing their parents drinking craft brew all the time, so they’re just not drinking it as much. It went from like, macro brew drinking, to the craft beer movement, to the rebels back to macro brew— the whole PBR deal—back to craft beer. I think craft beer is a big thing, it’s a big deal, and I think it will continue to grow. It’s just where do those [new beer drinkers come from]. Are we pulling from the macro brew? It will be interesting to see. It’s definitely in flux, but I think everyone’s going to be all right. It’s like in the 90s, when we had a bubble burst, but back then it was a lot of people making really bad beer. So it was pretty easy to, you know—the people making quality product and were in it for the beer instead of the money all survived and did well—and the people who were just trying to, let’s get in here and make a buck, they just kind of went away. And I think now, there’s a lot of people making really good beer, so it’s a different scenario. BJ: Currently, I feel like it’s tumultuous and there’s a lot of stuff going on outside of the beer [industry] itself. Obviously, trends will always be trends. I feel like it’s a whole lot—not to make assumptions or anything—but I think it’s kind of like the same ebb and flow that we saw 10 years ago, where there were a lot of people making beer and at the end of it, the consumers are driving what they want and what they think is

13 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

The State of Beer in Beer Town, USA

good. I mean, there are more breweries now than there ever has been, by a lot. I think it’s good, you know, production is up across the country, the craft thing is as strong as ever. SW: How has the beer market changed? BJ: I feel like there’s definitely been an awesome focus on quality, and even since I started working here. Being able to find what works for you and making sure you can repeat that. And, taking steps to repeat that. I think something you might see with craft beer is variability. But we definitely have had a much stronger shift into the quality of our beers, not only flavor and aroma and the actual physical properties of it, but maintaining a quality, safe, long shelf life. Really, just making sure we’re just putting out quality products all the time. Our lab has grown from nonexistent to four people down there as well as like two other people managing and overseeing it all and alongside with the safety program that was nonexistent before. MH: It’s shifted, kind of like the main product. When I got into it, it seemed like dark beer was a big deal: stouts, heavy porters and stuff. And then it kind of went into the pale ale realm and now IPA is a big crazy deal and has been for several years. I like to think more refined beers like pilsners are kind of starting to show their face a little bit. I’ve always been a fan, that’s my favorite style. I think they really show the art of brewing; any defects are going to stand out heavily in a pilsner, where in a big stout or a big IPA, they’ve got hops and malts to cover up [mistakes]. SW: Do you think we’re in a post-Beer Town, USA? MH: I don’t think so. You see the Ale Trail. We see the Ale Trail coming through all the time. There are a lot of people that come here just to hit all the different breweries and do the tours. I don’t think we’re in post; I think we’re still in it. I mean, there are almost 30 breweries here. It’s crazy, 10 years ago there were six in Bend, Redmond and Sisters. BJ: I don’t think so, I mean Bend is one of those places that like, yes, beer is a draw, but there are so many other things that draw [people here] that beer goes hand in hand with, that I don’t necessarily think it’s a post-beer town. Our production is going up every year and has been since I started. Obviously, there are small places in town that are also growing, like Silver Moon has their offsite production now. Three Creeks has their offsite and some of the more mainstay breweries in Bend are growing as well, along with the new breweries opening up and opening pubs. Is the next Beer Town, USA just waiting to happen? You know, who knows, but I think people will still come here for the beer. SW: What beers do you drink? BJ: I really like Hamm’s, I love Hamm’s (Bobby leans back in his chair and laughs). I’m a big fan of [Boneyard] RPM, I think it’s a great beer. If I go out and they have it, that’s typically what I order. Clay [Storey] and Tony [Lawrence] are awesome. They were some of the first people I met when I moved to town. I actually carpooled up here with a buddy of mine to interview with 10 Barrel and he was interviewing with Boneyard, and Tony ended up taking us out for breakfast before we went back down to Utah. I think they make great beer and they’re just solid dudes. I really like Sunriver’s Hef, too. I’ve been buying a lot of that lately. It’s just great, it’s exactly what I look for in a Hef, and it’s quality and super well done. I like when I can get Kettle House Beers from Montana. They have Cold Smoke [Scotch Ale]; great beers. I really like lagers a lot. I brewed lagers exclusively when I was in Salt Lake City. I think they have a spot in my heart. Easy drinking, clean and complex at the same time. MH: Like I said, pilsner is kind of my favorite style— German style pils—I’m a big fan of that. It kind of depends on the season, I go through the whole realm. I like an IPA as much as the next person. Big stouts— Imperial stouts—for a nightcap or whatever. But I definitely say my go-to is a nice German pils. SW


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BEER CRAWLING

15

By Kevin Gifford

A

NW

NE

WP

Brown Owl

ATLAS Cider Co.

Spoken Moto

W al NW

St . Bo nd

Or eg

on

Av e.

NW

NW

Downtown

Crux Fermentation Project

The lazy drinker’s choice, considering the short walking distances, and still one of the most exciting and crowd-laden in the summer. If the weather’s nice, start at the patio of Bend Brewing Company (1019 NW Brooks) for killer views of the river and a wonderful variety of ever-changing IPAs and darker ales. Deschutes Brewery (1044 NW Bond) should require no introduction at this point, and it’s also a killer place for a fancy (and filling) dinner. But where to round out? The Commons (875 NW Brooks) is a relaxing cafe with an eclectic selection from pFriem and other Oregon favorites, while White Water Taphouse (1043 NW Bond) offers a much wider selection of everything the state has to offer.  SW

SW Industrial Way

SW Industrial Way

N W G A LV E S T O N AV E . Brother Jon’s Public House

NW Galveston Avenue

10 Barrel Aspect Brewing

N W C O L U M B I A S T.

Primal Cuts Market

NW Federal St.

NW 12th St.

NW 13th St.

N W 1 4 T H S T.

Thanks to the Box Factory’s official opening two years ago, the Old Mill District now has a bunch of worthy drinking holes and some worthy mountain views to back them up. Crux Fermentation Project (50 SW Division) is the natural place to start. It’s where everyone starts, it seems, especially on the usually-packed evenings and weekends. And who can blame them? The patio, the food trucks, the in-house beer and food... few other places in Bend nail the whole package so perfectly. From Crux, proceed westward to Spoken Moto (310 SW Industrial), Bend’s only coffee shop, beer bar, and motorcycle repair shop. There’s not that much beer selection, but it’s a nice one, and there are more food trucks to the side. It’s a short walk from there to the Box Factory proper, featuring Atlas Cider, Immersion Brewing and The Brown Owl in one complex. All are worth a visit—Atlas for the seasonals; Immersion for the solid regular selection (and shiny tanks) and The Brown Owl for the awe-inspiring décor and the massive bottle and tap selection—plus a food truck that earned the status of the Source’s Food Cart of the Year in our 2017 Restaurant Guide. After all that, round out the day at Market of Choice (115 NW Sisemore), a supermarket with a great take-home food selection and an equally superb in-house bar, often filled with beer that can’t be found anywhere else in town.

White Water Taphouse Deschutes Brewery

NW ARIZONA AVE. Immersion Brewing

.

Crows Feet Commons

H W Y. 9 7

Market Of Choice

T A VE

lS t.

St . Br oo ks NW

NW Bond St.

NW Wall St.

NW COLORADO AVE.

OR

Bend Brewing Company

NW Bond St.

s anyone who’s been to college (or just has some ribald co-workers) knows, the only thing more exciting than going out to a bar for some beers is going out to several bars at once for some beers. The idea of a pub crawl is nothing new. People have been doing them around New York and London’s subway systems for centuries. Locally, the Cycle Pub will even let groups pedal their way to a couple breweries and bars in one go, earning waves and/or “You go, ladies!” shouts from passersby as they do. But in a town with several times more breweries than grocery stores, one doesn’t need to rent a novelty 14-seat cruiser to enjoy a pub crawl. There are multiple options that are walkable for anyone in decent shape—or less than, depending on one’s beer gut. The breweries dotted around NE Empire Boulevard., as covered elsewhere in this guide, are just the latest neighborhood to draw attention among locals. Here are three more jaunts that anyone can easily tackle over an afternoon or evening—and be guaranteed to enjoy some of the best the entire region has to offer.

Sunriver Brewing Co.

A small set of blocks just south of downtown is packed with options, all centered around the original 10 Barrel Brewing (1153 NW Galveston), which reopened last week after a quick facelift. From the intersection with 13th Street, start at Primal Cuts Market (1244 NW Galveston), a full-service butcher with excellent sandwich deals and 37 taps of beer, cider and kombucha for drink-in or take-out. Brother Jon’s Public House (1227 NW Galveston) is another local institution, offering a small but well-curated set of taps and some excellent (and enormous!) meals. A block over is Aspect Boards & Brews (1009 NW Galveston), a skate/snowboard shop that also has lots of Bend beers, an inviting outdoor space facing the street, and an on-site food cart. Next door is Sunriver Brewing’s Galveston pub, whose award-winning beers are rivaling 10 Barrel’s in quality these days, and which backs it up with another great food menu.  SW

VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

101

Sampling Bend’s best on your own two feet


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Friar’s Festivus MONKLESS BELGIAN ALES 10.2 percent ABV 52 IBU  |  Belgian Quad Won Gold in “Flavored Beers” at the Oregon Beer Awards Monkless is Bend’s best kept secret—but not for long! They were just added to the Bend Ale Trail in May and recently received a license to sell their ales in Washington state. Their recently expanded eastside taproom is cozy, but they make the most of the space by breaking out the patio chairs in the summer and host food trucks every Friday and Saturday. Friar’s Festivus is a winter seasonal, as you may have guessed, but it’s too damn good not to mention. This dark Belgian is big and bold, with warming spice notes and a sweetness to boot. I’m pretty much exclusively an IPA drinker, with a Hefeweizen here and there in the summer, but I have to say I fell in love with Friar’s. I’ve become quite smitten with just about everything Monkless has to offer. If you’re looking for something lighter for those sunny days out on the river, try their Shepplekofeggan Belgian Witbier. At 5.4 percent ABV, you’ll be able to enjoy a few without needing to take a nap. Their Peppercorn Imperial Witbier may just turn me off of IPAs this summer. Fresh orange peel and coriander accents, double the IBUs of their base witbier and a myriad of spices—the flavor profile of Belgian ales is rounded out by yeast rather than hops like an IPA. It’s refreshing. Dare I say I’m suffering from hop fatigue? No, I won’t go that far, but Monkless is a welcome change of pace. Keely Damara Monkless Belgian Ales

20750 NE High Desert Ln #107, Bend monkless.com 541-610-5098

Frontier Justice Coffee Stout THREE CREEKS BREWING 8 percent ABV 55 IBU  |  American Stout Won Gold in “Coffee Beers” at the Oregon Beer Awards

Bog Trotter Irish Ale BRIDGE 99 7.8 percent ABV 24 IBU  |  Irish Ale I discovered Bridge 99 Brewery when my kid was going to the Central Oregon Gymnastics Academy. I had heard of all the big breweries in town, but this one had so far escaped my radar, and I decided I needed to try it. I’m glad I did. The current space has a small tasting area, but will expand this spring with rotating food trucks and a fun, tented area to sit in. I had the beertender pull me a draft of their Bog Trotter Irish Ale, made with all Irish ingredients, including buckwheat honey, harking back to when the English blocked sugar from being imported to Ireland. The beer smelled good and tasted better. The honey’s sweetness on the nose didn’t transfer into sickly sweet when I took a sip. The beer has that traditional European ale flavor, not overly hoppy, but clean and delicious. I’m more of a porter person in the winter, but will definitely put the Bog Trotter high on my summer beer list. Bridge 99 has rotating food trucks and free popcorn. The brewery is hoping to have the expanded space ready for people to relax and enjoy its beers and food by June of this year. Chris Miller Bridge 99 Brewery

63063 Layton Ave., Bend bridge99brewery.com 541-280-1690

Mango Session IPA KOBOLD BREWING 4.4 percent ABV 52 IBU  |  IPA

This collaboration with Sisters Coffee Roasters packs a punch! Each barrel boasts 4 pounds of Sumatra beans, a whole slew of malts and Cascade hops. This is a beer that gets even better with age, as the imperial stout base starts to shine through the rich coffee flavor over time. You can find it on the “Wanted” taps at Three Creeks Brewing or you can pick up 22-ounce bottles to drink (or save for later, if you have the patience to age it—if so, I admire your grit). I recently visited Three Creeks Brewing for the first time and loved it. The interior is fun, with an Old West theme. A quilt hangs on a wall, bearing their name and logo (how cool is that?) The Sisters Movie House is just across the parking lot, making Three Creeks Brewing the perfect date night spot to grab dinner and a movie. Keely Damara

Redmond’s Kobold Brewing is easy to find—located right on the main drag in downtown, in an old shopfront. The small space serves Kobold’s brews as well as guest taps from other Oregon brewers. I’d never had a beer at Kobold before. I picked the Mango Session IPA. I’m not usually into sweet beers, but citric beers are in fashion, so I thought I’d give theirs a try. The taste was good, kind of like a mango-margarita-meets-IPA. It made me think of being in Mexico; all I needed was mystery meat nachos and I was there. The Mango Session IPA is definitely a summer beer. Light, crisp, and like most session beers, low on the ABVs so you can drink all day. Kobold serves Schatz Pretzel products, including pretzels and pretzel dogs. They also have free popcorn and Westside Taco Co. has a truck just behind their outdoor seating area that has a big wood-burning fire pit. Chris Miller  SW

Three Creeks Brewing

Kobold Brewing

721 S. Desperado Ct., Sisters threecreeksbrewing.com 541-549-1963

koboldbrewing.com 245 SW 6th Street, Redmond 541-504-9373

17 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

OFF the RADAR BEERS


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 15, 2018 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 18


T

By Keely Damara

he morning following International Women’s Day, a small group of women gathered in a garage at Bridge 99 Brewery in Bend. I was expecting more pink, but I only spied a single pair of pink rubber boots on a tiny blonde lugging around 50-pound bags of malt. “We grow the barley—we plant it, we grow it, we harvest it and then we malt it,” says Sally Klann, co-owner of Mecca Grade Estate Malt. “So we do everything on site—we don’t contract other farmers.” Mecca Grade Estate Malt donated 135 pounds of malt to the Pink Boots Collaborative Brew Day, an event organized by the Bend chapter of the national nonprofit, Pink Boots Society. The organization aims to help women in the craft beer industry advance their careers through continued education. On March 8 and 9, over 200 collaborative beers were brewed by women worldwide in an effort to raise the profile of women working in the beer industry. Victoria Chaplin, lab manager at Worthy Brewing, started the Bend chapter in May 2017, along with co-worker Shae Maloney, a brewer and lab tech. They’re both relatively new to Bend and felt that Central Oregon was lacking a space for female brewers and beer industry professionals to network. “Tori and I started this last year and it was pretty small,” said Maloney. “There were only probably about four of us, four or five of us, that were part of it, and to now see that we are able to bring more females from different breweries around town and really bringing everyone together, you know, is really awesome.” “We’re kind of at a moment where I think women are really coming together to lift each other up,” said Chaplin. “It was just a good opportunity.”

BREWS

19

These boots are made for brewing—a special recipe.

Chaplin says she expects that they’ll make $2,000 to $2,500 from the sale of their collaboration brew. Bridge 99 Brewery will donate all the money made from sales to the national Pink Boots Society organization. The funds will be used for scholarships and continued education programs for women in the industry. In addition to the malt that Klann’s farm donated, Deschutes Brewery donated yeast. Bridge 99 Brewery lent out its brew facility for the day, as well as donating hops and salts. Chaplin says the malt will create a “biscuit-y” flavor and aroma, hopefully with some graham cracker notes,

paired with the tropical notes from the yeast, adding mango and pineapple notes to the flavor profile. The idea is to create a unique, hoppy table beer. “If you’ve worked a 10-hour day and then you’re trying to have your shift beer and if it’s something really big, you’re like, I still have to drive home, make dinner, go grocery shopping— whatever,” said Chaplin. “So, something that’s well-rounded, complex and really drinkable is what we’re aiming for.” Interested in joining the Pink Boots Society? If you’re a woman and involved in some way with the beer industry, you probably qualify. Whether you’re a woman opening your own brewery, you’re currently employed, you’re retired from a career in the industry or you’re just starting out as a student in fermentation sciences, the Pink Boots Society wants you. The Pink Boots Collaboration Brew will be tapped April 7 at Bridge 99 Brewery. SW Pink Boots Society Beer Release Sat., April 7, 1pm-8pm Bridge 99 Brewery 63063 Layton Ave, Bend pinkbootssociety.org

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VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Pink Boots Society makes special brew for International Women’s Day

Keely Damara

BOOTS&


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FRIDAY 3/16

Deschutes and Immersion breweries along the way. Finish with a full beer while perusing the delicious vendors available at The Bite of Bend! 21+. Noon. Downtown Bend. $20.

KAMA CITRUS IPA RELEASE PARTY SEASONAL RELEASE

SUNDAY 3/25

2ND ANNUAL PRETZEL FEST TWISTED FUN

Pretzel: beer’s best friend. Live music, beer specials, retail blowout, bottled beer sales, giveaways and of course, a whole heck of a lot of pretzels! Choose from four different house-made pretzel flavors and hand-crafted dipping sauce. Live music from Derek Michael Mark, 2pm4pm. 2pm-7pm. Immersion Brewing, 550 SW Industrial Way, Ste 185, Bend.

SUNDAY 4/1

SATURDAY 6/23

CRUXAPALOOZA 7 FESTIVAL Here’s your list of upcoming local beer events to add to your quaffing calendar beer pairings, selected by the battling breweries. 5:30pm. Tetherow Pavilion, 61240 Skyline Ranch Rd. Bend. $69/person.

THURSDAY 4/12

OREGON BEER AWARDS MEDAL WINNERS – TAP TAKEOVER

Bring the kids to Crux for an epic egg hunt. They’re ramping it up with 10 times more eggs this year. Bring your own basket. After the hunt, stay for a special brunch menu. 10am-3pm. Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St, Bend.

The Oregon Beer Awards took place at the end of February and, not surprisingly, Central Oregon did pretty darn well. Boneyard, Worthy, Sunriver, Monkless, Crux and Three Creeks all took gold in various categories. Now you can try all the winners at The Brown Owl’s tap takeover dedicated to the medal winning beers. 6pm. The Brown Owl, 550 SW Industrial Way Suite 120. Bend.

WEDNESDAY 4/11

THURSDAY 5/3

EASTER BRUNCH &BREWS EGGAND HUNT BUNNIES

BREWERY SMACKDOWN – BEND VS BEND

The Brewer’s Battle is back! Last time it was Bend vs Portland and this round it’s Bend taking on Bend to see who really rules this town! Reigning champs Silver Moon and Crux will go head to head against Sunriver and GoodLife Brewing. Enjoy a 5-course meal with 10

STONEFLY FISH FRY CAN RELEASE PARTY

Nothing like a fish fry to kick off a weekend! Join Three Creeks in celebrating the canning of Stonefly Session Ale, a seasonal favorite. Three Creeks Brewing Company, 721 Desperado Court, Sisters.

TUESDAY 5/22

SPRING BREWER’S DINNER BEER-PAIRED DINNER

Enjoy four courses paired with four Three Creeks brews. Taking reservations now, call 541-549-1963 for details. Three Creeks Brewing Company, 721 Desperado Court, Sisters. $55/person.

SATURDAY 6/2

BEND BEER CHASE FUN RUN

A one-day, six-person running relay of approximately 50 miles, consisting of 12 legs of varying distances. The massive course starts in Bend, travels through Redmond, to Sisters and back to finish in Bend. Bring your friends for the relay and pint at the finish line! 6am-9pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr., Bend. $40.

SUNDAY 6/17

BITE OF BEND BEER RUN FUN RUN

Help celebrate Crux’s sixth birthday with a free, all-day music festival! Featuring live music, food carts and delicious Crux beers. This will be a beer-filled bonanza. 1pm-10pm. Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St, Bend.

WEDNESDAY 6/27

DESCHUTES BREWERY TURNS THE BIG 3-0 30TH ANNIVERSARY PARTY

Save the date—the details aren’t hashed out yet for Deschutes Brewery’s birthday bash, but it’s sure to be epic. Stay tuned for details. Deschutes Brewery, Bend.

FRIDAY & SATURDAY

8/31 – 9/1

THE LITTLE WOODY BEER & WHISKEY FEST

Celebrating craft barrel-aged beers from across the Northwest, along with small-batch American rye whiskeys and bourbons. Open to all ages, Saturday from noon-6pm. Otherwise, 21+ Friday, 5pm-10pm. Saturday, 6 -10pm. Deschutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend. $12/adv., $15/door.

Participants run along a 5K race loop through Drake Park along the Deschutes River and back through Columbia Park, enjoying the fine beer from 10 Barrel, Cascade Lakes,

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21 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Kama Citrus is getting a new look—and a new recipe! The new blood orange and guava IPA is clean, crisp and refreshing. An easy beer to fall in love with! 4pm-10pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr, Bend.


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22

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SOURCE PICKS FRIDAY 3/16

FRIDAY – SUNDAY

3/16 – 3/18

3/16 – 3/21

SATURDAY 3/17

JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: LINDSEY WEBSTER SMOOTH JAZZ

Calling all skiers, snowboarders and snow-lovers: It’s a magical festival celebrating all things winter! Enjoy live music, make s’mores with your friends or jam out to SiriusXM while chilling out between runs. Enter prize giveaways and test out the latest gear from Nordica, Lib Tech, Thule and more. Subaru owners are known in the car world as being some of the nicest folks on the road. Ever heard of the “Subaru wave”? Plan to meet some adventurous Subaru owners and learn how you can support Avalanche Rescue Dogs! Friday at 5pm, catch the WinterFest Pre-Party with Funk N’ Roses at Crow’s Feet Commons. Saturday at 7:30pm, celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with Lukas Nelson (son of Willie) & Promise of the Real, again at Crow’s Feet. Sunday, arrive dressed at Mt. Bachelor in your ‘80s snow gear for a chance to win the costume contest! 11am Friday kick-off party. Mount Bachelor Ski Resort - West Village, 13000 SW Century Dr., Bend. Free.

FRIDAY 3/16

LEADBETTER BAND JAM BAND

You may know Eric Leadbetter from his previous band Jive Coulis or his solo shows. His new band, the Leadbetter Band, will be recording a live album during their Friday show at Silver Moon Brewing. They’re starting a bit later, so that you can catch Watkins Glen at McMenamins beforehand—what nice guys! 9:30pm. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $5.

FRIDAY 3/16

AUTHOR! AUTHOR! ELIZABETH STROUT VISITING AUTHOR SERIES

FRIDAY & SATURDAY

ST. PATTY’S WEEKEND AT MCMENAMINS PARTY Leonardo Cendamo

Deschutes Public Library Foundation’s Author! Author! series brings top authors to Bend to discuss current works and their writing process. Elizabeth Strout is the author of six books, including her 2009 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, “Olive Kitteridge.” Proceeds benefit library programs and services not funded through taxes. 7pm. Bend Senior High School, 230 NE 6th St, Bend. $25.

FRIDAY - SUNDAY

3/16 – 3/17

SCALEHOUSE ARTIST TALKS BEND WOMEN’S MARCH

ScaleHouse and Bend Design are highlighting the voices of women creating social, civic and business change. Friday at 6pm, Keira Kotler will speak about her experience living between the fine art and design worlds. Saturday at 11am, Tamar Ettun will speak about her sculpture and performance practice. Saturday at 2pm, Sarah Kavage will talk about “creative placemaking,” a practice that meshes community planning with arts and culture. Tickets a la carte. At Liberty Arts Collaborative, 849 NW Wall St., Bend. Kotler’s event is free. $10 for other events. Must RSVP.

CARL PALMER’S ELP LEGACY

Sunday, March 18

3/16 – 3/18

It’s time to muster up that 1/16th Irish in ya’ and put your drinking pants on! McMenamins is throwing a weekend bash featuring traditional Irish music, live music, food and drink specials and general shenanigans. Friday, Travis Ehrenstrom Band and Watkins Glen kick off the evening at 6pm. Saturday, catch Celtic music from Bend Fire Pipes and Drums at 1:30pm, Whistlin Rufus at 3pm and Five Pint Mary at 5:30pm in O’Kanes. B Side Brass Band and Object Heavy round out the entertainment in Father Luke’s Room Saturday night, joined by Steve Alley, Fiddleplay and Coyote Willow in the courtyard. The menu will be all Irish— from stouts to coffee and stews to corned beef and cabbage. Per the usual, all ages are welcome. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St, Bend. No cover.

THE TEN TENORS

Wednesday, March 21

SATURDAY - SUNDAY

3/17 – 3/18

THE HEMP & CANNABIS FAIR CANNABIS

As if we don’t have enough weed at our fingertips in Central Oregon, right? The THC Fair returns to celebrate and educate! Find hemp and cannabis products, accessories and tools, grow and harvest equipment and more. Listen to industry professionals lead sessions on growing, medicinal benefits and legal discussions. Ages 21+. Saturday, 10am – 4:30pm & Sunday, 11am – 4:30pm. Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond. $10-$15.

SUNDAY 3/18

CARL PALMER’S ELP LEGACY ROCK

One of rock’s most renowned drummers, having played for Atomic Rooster, Emerson, Lake & Palmer and Asia, delivers a high octane celebration of his late band mates Keith Emerson and Greg Lake. A night of famous ELP songs, including; “Lucky Man,” “From the Beginning,” “Fanfare for the Common Man” and more. 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend. $27-$47.

WEDNESDAY 3/21

YONDER MOUNTAIN STRING BAND PROGRESSIVE BLUEGRASS

Two decades in and still going strong, Yonder Mountain String Band has pushed the boundaries of bluegrass music with a lyrical flair, refined technique and progressive fervor that’s strikingly well-crafted. They’re pretty rock ‘n’ roll for a bluegrass band—sure to be a great show. 8pm. Midtown Ballroom, 51 NW Greenwood Ave, Bend. $25.

RUSTED ROOT’S GLABICKI & MILLER

Friday, March 23

KAKI KING

Saturday, April 7

VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

SUBARU WINTERFEST + LUKAS NELSON FESTIVAL

Wouldn’t starting a band with your siblings be grand? Sisters Allison, Meegan and Natalie blend pleasing vocal harmonies with shimmering pop—think the quintessential millennial festival band. The Everly Brothers meets Haim. 8pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr, Bend. $20/adv.

Named Billboard’s #1 Smooth Jazz Artist of 2016, Webster’s smoky vocals and contemporary jazz compositions have enraptured audiences and critics alike. Influences range from Mariah Carey to Earth Wind & Fire. Of the three shows she’s playing in Bend, two are already sold out, with only a handful of tickets left for her 8 pm Saturday performance. 8pm. The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. $42.

t Vog nco Fra

JOSEPH FOLK POP

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541.647.6810 www.MobileCatandDogVet.com


S

SOUND

Sister, Sister, Sister

Natalie Closner of sister trio Joseph discusses success on Spotify, collaborating with family and what’s next for the band By Anne Pick

sisters Allison and Meegan as Joseph at the Volcanic March 16.

Ebru Yildiz

I

n 2015, a few friends and I ventured to Volcanic Theatre thought it could be. It felt like a battle cry in that moment Pub to check out a band called Joseph that we’d heard when we were feeling so bad.” had beautiful harmonies. We were blown away. The three Collaborating and creating music with family is nothing sisters that make up the band, Joseph, vocalize together to new, though the idea of doing so with my own two sisters create stunning soundscapes. A year later, it seemed like seems like a nightmare (no offense, Emily and Lucy). Forevery other Spotify compilation playlist I listened to fea- tunately, it works for the Closner sisters. Natalie started tured the band’s breakout single, “White Flag.” writing songs in 2008, but had been thinking about it for In the three years since Natalie, Allison and Meegan longer. Closner last graced us with their folk-pop presence, they “It’s been so amazing to get to have this experience return to the same venue—this time with a bigger fan base together,” Closner says. “It’s been so fun to see them go and armed with a dreamy arsenal of tunes. with their gut instinct. For me, it was, ‘this is the form, this “We have an incredibly passionate team,” Natalie is the rhyme scheme.’ There’s always two thoughts: ‘I’m Closner says of their success and ability to capture the alone; no you’re not.’ I would never have thought of that. attention of networks including Spotify and NPR. “They It’s really been a cool experience to have their gut instincts have treated this project like they created it themselves. paired with my time working on it.” I just feel really lucky. They are so good. They’ll send it Closner says there’s constant conversation in collaboaround to different people, and the whole idea is to get ration. For her, writing songs has been among the scariest a buzz going. Then it’s really up to those networks to things she’s ever done. Working with her sisters takes a lot decide. It’s been really cool. Spotify is a huge champion of tenderness and communication. The best parts? Closner of artists.” loves the little things, like sharing each other’s clothes and While great management makes a difference in achiev- reading each other’s minds. ing commercial success, raw talent may be the biggest fac“Honestly, it just comes down to the fact that we’ll tor—which the Closner sisters have in spades. Having a get to talk about these experiences when we’re 80 years great producer and mixer doesn’t hurt, either. old,” Closner says. “We’re a family, so we can’t get away “It’s funny because when we wrote ‘White Flag,’ it from each other. There’s some really intense, deep stuff was during an L.A. co-write with an amazing guy named when working with anyone else, we always have to push Morgan,” Closner says. “It was good, we liked it, but to through because it’s not like we’re going to go away. I think be honest it wasn’t our favorite. When we got in the stu- that’s been an extremely nourishing human experience. dio, it didn’t feel like it was coming to life. I’ll never forget The entire spectrum of human emotion, it’s been incredthis moment: We were feeling a little downtrodden from ible to have them by my side. If this thing falls on its face, traveling. He sent a mix and we always have each other. I’m I remember listening to it in really grateful.” Joseph Fri., March 16., 8pm my headphones and being like, Joseph plans to record this Volcanic Theatre Pub ‘Uuh, guys!’ We were dancing summer with plans for a new 70 SW Century Dr., Bend all over the room freaking out. single out by the end of the $20/adv at Bendticket.com It was so much bigger than we year. SW

VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Natalie Closner, right, performs with younger

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S

Full Nelson

Lukas Nelson and his band bring a full-on show of funk, blues, country and rock to Bend By Alan Sculley

L

ukas Nelson has been releasing music and touring for nearly a decade now, but he’s treating the recently released self-titled album from his band, “Lukas Nelson and Promise of the Real” as if it’s a second beginning to his music career. There’s plenty of logic to that thinking. The past few years have seen the band’s profile expand considerably, mainly through a pair of notable collaborations. After seeing Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real perform at Farm Aid in 2010, Neil Young befriended the group, and a few years later drafted them to be his backing band on “The Monsanto Years,” his 2015 album that blasted the use of genetically modified foods. The group also backed Young on the album tour. Young’s 2016 live album, “Earth,” was drawn from the 2015 “The Monsanto Years” tour, and Young and the group then resumed their collaboration on Young’s 2017 studio release, “The Visitor.” The group has also contributed to the soundtrack of a new Neil Young film, “Paradox,” and Lukas and his brother, Micah, will appear in leading roles alongside Young in the movie, which will be released this spring. “The Visitor” arrived alongside a fall 2017 album that united Lukas and Micah with their father, country legend Willie Nelson—“Willie Nelson and the Boys: Willie’s Stash Vol. 2,” an album on which the three Nelsons perform a selection of favorite country songs. Last fall also saw the release of the “Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real,” the group’s first album as part of a new contract with Fantasy Records. That affiliation has given the group the kind of recording budget, distribution and promotion that was never available for their earlier albums. Nelson, 28, knew the attention generated by the projects with Young and his father, coupled with the new record deal, meant a far larger audience. To that end, Nelson not only chose the best songs from a large pool of newly written tunes, but also cut new versions of several tunes that had appeared on earlier albums. “I just wanted it to be a lights-out record, something that really got a lot of attention for us, something that was accessible to a wide audience and that a lot of people would love,” Nelson said. “And we picked the songs that fit that

description.” Nelson, along with producer John Alagia, wanted to give the self-titled album a cinematic and more varied sound than on the three earlier Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real albums, which favored more of a riffy guitar rock sound. The opening track on the self-titled album, “Set Me Down on a Cloud,” is even more beautiful and spacious than the original version, and also gets a previously absent measure of gospel, thanks to the backing vocals of Jess Wolfe and Holly Lessig of the duo Lucius. The songs “Die Alone” and “Four Letter Word” recall the chunky country rock and soul of J.J. Cale and early Eric Clapton, while the group’s country roots shine on the ballads, “Just Outside of Austin” and “Runnin’ Shine.” Funk, blues, country and rock all filter into the sprightly “Fool Me Once” and on “Find Yourself,” which features sassy guest vocals from Lady Gaga. Nelson met Lady Gaga during work on the much-anticipated remake of the 1976 movie, “A Star is Born,” which will star Gaga and Bradley Cooper in the roles previously played by Barbra Streisand and Kris Kristofferson. “I don’t know how much I can say (about the movie), but I know there are a lot of great songs on there,” Nelson said. “I wrote a lot of songs for the movie with her and on my own.” Before the exposure from that film arrives, Nelson and his band, which includes Tato Melgar (percussion), Anthony LoGerfo (drums), Corey McCormick (bass, vocals), Jesse Siebenberg (steel guitars, Farfisa organ, vocals) and Alberto Bof (keyboards), plan to spend a good deal of time touring. What can concert-goers expect? “We like to just make sure it’s a high-energy show,” Nelson said. “So we do a lot of the new record and the new material, and then toward the end we’ll throw in some real rockers from ‘Something Real’ (or the other albums) because there are a lot of fans that we have that love our old material, and we don’t quit playing that.”  SW Jacob Blickentstaff

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Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real Sat., March 17, 7pm-9:30pm Crow’s Feet Commons 875 NW Brooks St, Bend No cover


LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE

CALENDAR 14  Wednesday

talent to this weekly open mic night. 6-8 pm.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Karaoke FUN with DJ Roseybabe. 9 pm. No cover.

Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Sing your

favorite songs every week. 9 pm.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you

narrowed it down to what songs you’ll sing this week? Embrace your inner rock star. 9 pm.

Kelly D’s Banquet Room Karaoke What

will you sing this week? 7 pm.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke

Get in touch with your inner country star. 7 pm.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

The Resolectrics false 7-10 pm. No cover.

M&J Tavern Open Mic Bring your talent or

an encouraging ear to this weekly open mic for musicians. All musicians welcome! 6:30 pm.

Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic

Local artists perform. Derek Michael Marc hosts. 6 pm.

Sisters High School Darlingside Part of the Sisters Folk Festival Winter Concert Series. 7 pm. $25/GA. The Lot Open Mic Showcase your talent or watch as locals brave the stage for open mic. 6 pm.

15  Thursday Cascade Lakes Lodge Beer Bingo Name says it all. Come play some Bingo and drink some beer! 7 pm.

Tickets Available on BendTicket.com

Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill Karaoke Night Come enjoy a few drinks with your community and belt out your favorite songs! 9 pm.

Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe Celtic Jam Bring your guitar, fiddle, or whatever you have an join in for and open jam of Celtic music. All musicians welcome. And if you’re not a musician, come down, tap your feet! Every third Friday. 6:30-8:30 pm.

The Belfry Boot Scootin’ Good Time w/ Dry Canyon Stampede Come learn a few dance steps then get out on the dance floor and try them out with Central Oregon’s premier Country Western Dance Band. Dance lessons at 7pm. Open dance from 8-10:30 pm. $15/couple, $10/single.

Strictly Organic Coffee Company Strictly

Eagle Crest Resort Burnin’ Moonlight at Brassie’s Celtic fiddle tunes, spirited bluegrass, blues, swing and “oldies” for St. Paddy’s Day Celebration. 7-10 pm. No cover.

The Domino Room Joanne Shaw Taylor UK’s number one star of the blues-rock world. 7 pm. $15/adv.

The Capitol Piano Bar Bob 8 pm. No cover. The Lot Larkspur Stand Playing an Americana

Hola! Downtown Latin Dance Social Dance

Spoken Moto Motos & Music: Wonder Sing-

er-songwriter and one-man-band from Seattle. All ages. 7-9 pm. No cover.

Originals Open Mic Hosted by Hal Worcester. A welcoming venue for experienced and brand new performers to play original material. 6-8 pm.

bent, with sounds of the blues, country, rock and bluegrass. 6-8 pm. No cover.

Tower Theatre David Gans & Stephen Inglis

Joining up with the Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar Festival presented by Ki-ho’alu Foundation, the festival will feature 6 artists known in the Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar Genre. 7:30-11:59 pm.

Volcanic Theatre Pub Black Pussy

w/ Woebegone Their name encapsulates exactly what the band is: a psychedelic, ‘70s-influenced rock ‘n’ roll band that sounds like Tarantino directing a Thin Lizzy video in the low desert. 9 pm. $10/adv.

16  Friday Broken Top Bottle Shop Stacie Lynn Johnson Enjoy pipes of gold and acoustic guitar by Bend’s own Stacie Lynn Johnson! 7-9 pm. Broken Top Club She Said, He Said Stunning vocals and stellar guitar come together to make jazz fun again! 5-7 pm.

Checkers Pub HWY 97 Hot classic rock. 8-10:30 pm.

Dogwood Cocktail Cabin DJ Ambush Soul, hip hop, R&B and beyond. 9pm. No Cover.

the night away to latin beats from Andres ‘Andy’ Garcia playing a mix of salsa, bachata, merengue, cumbia and more. All ages. 9 am.

Hub City Bar & Grill DJ Dance music DJ music top 40’s dance. 9 pm.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Line

Dance Lessons 3rd Friday each month couples. 21+. 8 pm. No cover.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School Watkins Glen & Travis Ehrenstrom

Band Watkins Glen, 9pm to 11pm. Travis Ehrenstrom Band. 6pm to 8pm. Ages 21+. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Fun Bobby Classic rock, 80s, dance and light show. 8:30 pm. $3. Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy Presents:

Amanda Arnold Portland based stand-up comic. As soon as Amanda gets on stage you’re ready to laugh. Age: 21+. 8-10 pm. $8/adv., $10/door.

Silver Moon Brewing Leadbetter Band You may know Eric Leadbetter from his previous band Jive Coulis or his solo shows. The Leadbetter Band will be recording a live album tonight! 9:30 pm. $5/cover. Spoken Moto Motos & Music: CoGo & Friends ft. SolSk8 Corner Gospel Explosion mixes it up by welcoming Solsk8 in this month’s installment of CoGo and Friends Variety Show, every third Thursday. 7-9 pm. No cover.

Crow’s Feet Commons Thursday Night

Live Every Thursday we plug in the amp and speakers and liven up our front room with rotating local artists. 6-8 pm. No cover.

Currents at the Riverhouse Mt. Bachelor Riverhouse Jazz Thursday - Smudge Hear fresh, original arrangements of jazz standards, blues, and R&B, in an exposed style. 7-9 pm. No cover. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe Banjo Jam Ragtime, swing, country, folk and bluegrass. Third Thursday of every month 5:30-7:30 pm.

Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Jim Roy and Steve Beaudry Songs from the Delta to Chicago. 7-9 pm. Hola! Downtown A Night with the Nomads

Bring your dancing shoes and join the Nomads and friends for their monthly jam session. Third Thursday of every month. 6-9 pm. No cover.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Embrace your inner rock star. 9 pm.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover. McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Thomas T and the Blue Chips Delivering Chicago-style Blues that will get you out of your seat on and to the dance floor. 7-10 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill SLEEPBANDZ false

7:30 pm. No cover.

Round Table Clubhouse UKB Trivia Night Fun. Free. Win stuff! 7-9 pm.

Seven Nightclub Cocktails & Karaoke Make sure to check out our Thursday Night Karaoke Party! 6 pm. No cover.

Black Pussy brings ‘70s-influenced rock ‘n’ roll to Volcanic Theatre Pub on 3/15.

The Oxford Hotel BendBroadband’s Jazz at the Oxford: Lindsey Webster Influenced by everyone from Mariah Carey and Christina Aguilera to Steely Dan and Earth Wind and Fire, there is an honesty and authenticity that reverberates through Lindsey’s smoky, rich honey-toned pipes. 7-9 pm. $42. The Pickled Pig Bobby Lindstrom Blues, old school rock and his own great music. 6-9 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Joseph w/ Becca Mancari There is nothing like the sound of siblings singing together. Whether it’s the Beach Boys or the Everly Brothers—or, more recently, First Aid Kit—absorbing the same breathing rhythms and speech patterns adds an element to vocal harmonies that can be pure magic. 8-11 pm. $20/adv. Worthy Brewing Juju Eyeball, A Beatles Cover Band Bend’s Beatles cover band. 6-8 pm.

17  Saturday Astro Lounge Shamrocks and Shenanigans A classic St. Paddy’s Day blow out! Appearance by Bend Fire Pipes and Drums, Jamison Girls with free give aways and DJ Raider Mystic dropping Irish jams and dope dance floor bangers! 9 pm.

27 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Astro Lounge Pently Holmes 7 pm. No cover. Cabin 22 UKB Trivia Night 7-9 pm. Checkers Pub Talent/Open Mic Bring your

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LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Locals Night— DJDMP & Friends A night of soul, hip-hop and electronica. 9 pm. Northside Bar & Grill Six Pack Eclectic rock, blues and Americana. 6 pm. No cover. Songwriter Series House Concert Beth Wood & Tom Faulkner Beth’s music is soulful, organic and intelligent. Tom’s has a unique blend of Texas rock, blues, Cajun and Tejano music. Songwriter Series events begin with a potluck dinner one hour prior to the show. RSVP required. 5 pm.

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 15, 2018 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill Paul Eddy Bedell Artist and local troubadour fills your cup with memories and forgotten gems, every other Sunday. 3-5 pm. No cover. Tower Theatre Carl Palmer’s ELP Legacy One of rock’s most renowned drummers delivers a high voltage, multi-media celebration of his band mates Keith Emerson and Greg Lake. 7:30 pm. $27- $47.

19  Monday Astro Lounge Open Mic Night Bring your

talent to the Astro every Monday night. 8-11 pm.

The Damn Truth, described as the love child of Robert Plant and Janis Joplin, plays Volcanic Theatre Pub on 3/23.

Bend Brewing Co. St. Patrick’s Day

Celebration w/ Popcorn & Eric Leadbetter Special holiday inspired food plates and drink specials. Special Irish jam with Popcorn Trio and friends followed by acoustic rock and roll by local favorite Eric Leadbetter. 6:30pm. No cover.

Checkers Pub HWY 97 Hot classic rock. 8-11:30 pm.

Chops Bistro Fiddleplay Playing a festive mix of Celtic tunes on this fine St. Patrick’s Day eve. 6-8 pm. No cover.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Karaoke FUN with DJ Roseybabe. 9 pm. No cover.

Crow’s Feet Commons Lukas Nel-

son & Promise of the Real at Subaru WinterFest The 28-year old singer/songwriter/guitarist and his bandmates have played hundreds of shows and major festivals all over the world and built a devoted underground following. 7-9:30 pm. No cover.

Deschutes Brewery Bend Public House St. Patrick’s Day with The Mostest Get

here early and have dinner while the bagpipe band performs from 6-7pm. All ages welcome. 7-9 pm. No cover.

Dogwood Cocktail Cabin DJ Ambush Soul,

hip hop, R&B and beyond. 9pm. No Cover.

Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe Trailer 31

Founding members Chadd and Byers, will be performing their originals as a duo for the first time in 4 years! 7 pm. No cover.

Kelly D’s Banquet Room Karaoke Get in

touch with your inner crooner at this weekly karaoke night. 8 pm.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Line

Dance Lessons 21+. 8 pm. No cover.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School B Side Brass Band Bringing New Orle-

ans Brass Band sound to the Pacific Northwest. All ages. 7-10 pm. No cover.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School Object Heavy Drawing from the sound

of soul music, inspired by the parameters of rock, funk, blues, R&B and hip hop. All ages. 7-11 pm. No cover.

M&J Tavern Strange Patrick’s Day Good Bye

Dyna open for Strange Rover. Celebrating 4 years of rockin’ together. Join us for the St Patrick’s shenanigans! 9 pm. No cover.

Mount Bachelor Ski Resort - West Village Funk N’ Roses at Subaru

WinterFest A somewhat funky tribute to Guns N’ Roses that is comprised of a full rhythm section, a three-piece horn section and ferocious singer. 12:30-2 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill St. Patrick’s Day Par-

ty with Fun Bobby The ultimate 80s experience. The band lends it’s geeky charm to performing high energy, danceable 80s hits. 8:30 pm. $3.

Seven Nightclub Weekends at SEVEN

Nightclub We’ve got resident and Guest DJs that spin open format dance music—so theres a little something fun for everyone. 9 pm.

The Capitol N8TURE DJ and dance music. 9 pm. No cover.

The Domino Room Shred Is Dead Heavy hitting instrumental Grateful Dead. Doors open 8pm. 21+. 9-11:45 pm. $15/adv, $20/door. The Pickled Pig Bobby Lindstrom Playing

your favorite blues, old school rock and his own great music. 6-9 pm. No cover.

18  Sunday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Karaoke FUN

Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues DJ Dance Night Come dance the night away! Every Monday is DJ Dance Night with DJ Jackie J. Happy Hour all night. 7 pm. No cover. Immersion Brewing Local’s Monday Live, local music and drink specials! 6-8 pm. Kelly D’s Banquet Room Open Mic Monday We welcome single/duet/trio musicians, actors, poets and comedians to share their talents in an acoustic listening environment. Sign up at 5pm. 6-8:30 pm. Northside Bar & Grill Ladies of Laughter Showcasing the women of Central Oregon. Featuring Karen Sipes, Dana Buckendahl, Hillary Carter, Janelle Musson and more! Hosted by Katy Ipock. 6:30 pm. No cover. The Capitol Family Feud - Double Feature!

The first show is family friendly, minors are allowed in the bar until 9:30pm! Stick around, or get down here by 9:45pm to see our explicit showdown between our very own Capitol staff vs. local lady vendors, The Crosstitutes. Sponsored by Altos Tequila and Deschutes Brewery. 8 pm.

Worthy Brewing Geeks Who Drink Trivia Bring your friends, grab a beer and take home cool prizes. 6-9 pm.

with DJ Roseybabe. 9 pm. No cover.

SHATTER MED $12.92 & REC $15.50 | EDIBLES MED $2.50 & REC $3 | BUDS MED $3.33 REC $4

JOIN US FOR HAPPY HOUR, 8PM TO CLOSE, 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR 10% OFF! STORE HOURS 9AM - 9PM MON-THURS / 9AM - 10PM FRI, SAT / 10 AM - 8PM SUN TopShelfMedicine.com / 815 NE GREENWOOD AVE. BEND / 541.389.1043


LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE

20  Tuesday Astro Lounge Trivia Tuesdays Bend’s longest running trivia game—nine years strong! Bring your team of any size. Gift giveaways and different weekly sponsors. 8 pm. No cover.

Crow’s Feet Commons Open Mic with Bill

Juniper Golf Course and The View Tap and Grill Jazz at Juniper Golf Course Join

Jazzesque every third Tuesday of the month! Reservations suggested. 541-548-3121. 5-8 pm.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke Get in touch with your inner country star. 7 pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Dirty Revival Big, gritty, and honest. Their sound is unique, pulling elements of soul, funk, hiphop, R&B, jazz, gospel, and rock. All ages. 7-10 pm. No cover.

Midtown Ballroom Yonder Mountain String Band Two decades and going strong, Yonder Mountain String Band has pushed the boundaries of bluegrass music with a lyrical flair, refined technique and progressive fervor that is strikingly well-crafted. Doors, 7pm, Show, 8pm. All ages. $25.

Kelly D’s Banquet Room Ukulele Jam All

M&J Tavern Open Mic Bring your talent or an

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Comedy

Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic Local artists perform. Derek Michael Marc hosts. 6 pm.

ages. 6:30 pm.

Open Mic Every Tuesday, come down to Maverick’s to watch local comedians... or to perform! Sign up at 7:45pm for 5-minute slots. Show starts at 8pm. 18+. 8 pm. No cover.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Know Neighbors - Local Trivia 6-8 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Carol Rossio Quartet

Jazz. 6 pm. No cover.

encouraging ear. 6:30 pm.

The Lot Open Mic Showcase your talent or watch as locals brave the stage for open mic. 6 pm.

22  Thursday

Relief Pitcher Sports Bar and Grill UKB

Brasada Ranch House Olivia Harms Country western. Reservations are recommended, please call 541.526.6870. 7-9 pm. No cover.

Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill Trivia Night

Cascade Lakes Lodge Beer Bingo Name says it all. Come play some Bingo and drink some beer! 7 pm.

Tuesday Night Trivia (TNT) Fun, free, win stuff! 6:30 pm. No cover.

Get here early to sign up and order a drink! 6:30 pm.

The Lot Trivia at The Lot Bring your team or join one. Rub elbows with Bend’s smartest smartipants who love trivia. 6-8 pm. No cover. The Platypus Pub Tuesday Trivia at the Platypus! Bring your friends! Bring your brains! Bring your friends’ brains!* *do not remove friends’ brains. 8-10 pm. No cover.

21  Wednesday Cabin 22 UKB Trivia Night Fun. Free. Win stuff!

7-9 pm.

Checkers Pub Talent/Open Mic Bring your talent to this weekly open mic night. 6-8 pm.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Karaoke FUN with DJ Roseybabe. 9 pm. No cover.

Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Sing your favorite songs every week. 9 pm. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Embrace your inner rock star. 9 pm.

Crow’s Feet Commons Thursday Night

Live Every Thursday we plug in the amp and speakers and liven up our front room with rotating local artists from 6-8pm. No cover.

Currents at the Riverhouse Riverhouse Jazz Thursday - Innovation Project Outstanding trio of student musicians led by Laz Glickman! 7 pm. No cover. Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Jim Roy and Steve Beaudry Songs from the Delta to Chicago. 7-9 pm. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Embrace your inner rock star. 9 pm.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover. Midtown Ballroom George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic 21+ only. Tickets available online or at Dr. Jolly’s Bend or The Cosmic Depot. Doors at 7pm, show starts at 8pm. $35/adv., $40/door. Round Table Clubhouse UKB Trivia Night Fun. Free. Win stuff! 7-9 pm.

Seven Nightclub Cocktails & Karaoke Make sure to check out our Thursday Night Karaoke Party! 6 pm. No cover.

Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill Karaoke Night Come enjoy a few drinks with your community and belt out your favorite songs! 9 pm. Spoken Moto Motos & Music: The Parnells

Live music that’s beautiful, slightly moody and brings an indie flare to everyone’s fave country songs, new and old. 7-9 pm. No cover.

Strictly Organic Coffee Company Strictly Originals Open Mic Hosted by Hal Worcester. A welcoming venue for experienced and brand new performers to play original material. 6-8 pm.

The Capitol Prezident Brown & Chezidek

Jamaican roots reggae. 9 pm. $20/adv., $25/door.

The Lot Natty Red Soulful acoustic music from Nat Berliner and Jason “Big Red” Schweitzer. 6-8 pm. No cover. Velvet Christina LaRocca Music A blend of

soulful vocals with an alternative, Americana rock sound. 8 pm.

Catch George Clinton at Midtown Ballroom on 3/22.

29 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Powers Every Tuesday, Bill Powers from Honey Don’t and various other local acts hosts open mic in our front great room. Sign up starts at 5. 6-8 pm.

Kelly D’s Banquet Room Karaoke What

will you sing this week? 7 pm.


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30

Mar 17-18 @ Deschutes County Expo Grow. Process. Enjoy. Celebrate!

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EVENTS

CALENDAR MUSIC Alley Cats Jazz Ensemble Dance and

lunch. Contact 541-312-2069 for more info. Tuesdays, 10:30 am. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE 5th St, Bend.

Bella Acappella Harmony Chorus

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. Contact Nancy at 541-383-3142 for more info. Tuesdays, 6:30-9:30 pm. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 60800 Tekampe Rd, Bend. $35/membership.

Big Band Jazz Concert The Central Oregon

Community College Big Band Jazz is proud to present an afternoon of classic and modern big band jazz. Sunday, Mar. 18, 2 pm. Wille Hall, COCC Coats Campus Center, 2600 NW College Way. Bend, OR. $10/GA, $5/students and seniors.

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. Monday, Mar. 19, 5:30-7 pm. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St, Bend.

DANCE Adult Jazz Dance - Intermediate Level

lead and follow technique. Dance partner not required but encouraged. Tuesdays, 6-7pm. Tribe Women’s Fitness, 20795 NE High Desert Ln, Bend. $12/class, $40/4-class package, $65/ monthly unlimited.

Bachata - Level 2 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, 7-8pm. Tribe Women’s Fitness, 20795 NE High Desert Ln, Bend. $12/class, $40/4-class package, $65/monthly unlimited.

Join dancers from the adult dance company Jazz Dance Collective in their weekly class. Styles include Broadway, contemporary, classic jazz and tap. Sponsored by nonprofit Bend Dance Project. Opportunities to perform. Tuesday nights through June 26. First class free. 7-9 pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63830 Clausen Rd #202, Bend. $10/donation.

Bend Ecstatic Dance Dance your own dance 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, 7 pm. Bend Masonic Center, 1036 NE 8th St. Bend. $10-$20.

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). Contact: admin@centraloregontango. com or 907-299-4199 for more info. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd, Bend. $5/class.

Salsa - Level 1 Salsa basics with Latin Dance Bend. Learn simple turns while also paying attention to partner connection through lead and follow technique. Dance partner not required but encouraged. Wednesdays, 6-7pm. Tribe Women’s Fitness, 20795 NE High Desert Ln, Bend. $12/ class, packages available.

Bachata - Level 1 Bachata basics with Latin Dance Bend. Learn simple turns while also paying attention to partner connection through

Salsa - Level 2 Taken Salsa 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. Wednesdays, 7-8pm. Tribe Women’s Fitness, 20795 NE High Desert Ln, Bend. $12/class, Packages available.

Scottish Country Dance Class No experience or Scottish heritage necessary. Weekly classes include beginner and advanced dances. First class is free. Mondays, 7-9pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd, Bend. $5/class.

FILM EVENTS BendFilm presents....FINDING KUKAN BendFilm in support of Women’s

March. Join us for a night of great film and conversation with Robin Lung about “Finding Kukan,” her discovery of the pioneer ChineseAmerican filmmaker Li Ling-Ai, and where the film industry is headed. Doors at 5pm. Thursday, Mar. 15, 6 pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St, Bend. $15/ticket.

Defending Your Life - Friends of Hospice Movie Night Join Partners In Care

and Friends of Hospice for a light-hearted film screening and discussion of “Defending Your Life.” This 1991 comedy starring Albert Brooks and Meryl Streep teaches viewers to conquer their fears before it’s too late. Meet in Wyatt Conference Room. RSVP to events@FriendsofHospiceOregon.org or (541) 410-3918. Thursday, Mar. 22, 5:30-8 pm. Partners In Care / Suicide Bereavement, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct. Bend. Free.

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. Wednesdays, 6:30-9 pm. Mountain View High School Auditorium, 2755 NE 27th St. Bend. Annual negotiable fee.

Latin Dance Social Come out and dance the

night away to latin beats from Andres ‘Andy’ Garcia playing a mix of salsa, bachata, merengue, cumbia and more. All ages. Friday, Mar. 16, 9 am. Hola! Downtown, 920 NW Bond St. Bend.

Open Hub Singing Club We sing oral

tradition songs that re-enchant the world and open our hearts, accessible song-tools that build connection among us. We sing for each other, a participatory sing, not a performance. All voices welcome! Second and fourth Thursdays through May 24. $5-$15 donation. Mar. 22, 7-8:30 pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts, 39 NW Louisiana Ave, Bend. $5-$15.

Public (Rock) Choir Sing in a fun, non-threatening environment with people of all skill levels. Rock and pop favorites—no hymns. Mondays. First time free. Monday, Mar. 19, 5:45-8 pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln, Ste 1, Bend. $16. Ten Tenors Fresh off the success of their 20th Anniversary World Tour, The Ten Tenors return with their new show “Wish You Were Here,” a celebration of musical legends lost before their time. Wednesday, Mar. 21, 7:30 pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend. $42-$72.

Mt. Bachelor Riverhouse Jazz Presents

BLACK PUSSY AND WOEBEGONE

TAYLOR EIGSTI QUARTET RIverhouse on the Deschutes

MAR 22

Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents

Parallel 44 Presents

MAR 23

MAR 15

“Dirtbag - The Legend of Fred Beckey” chronicles an American icon’s adventures across our amazing planet. Catch a special screening at Sisters Movie House 3/14.

MAR 23

The Hawaiian Slack Key Festival The

Bend Burlesque & Company Grand Presents

GEORGE CLINTON & PARLIAMENT FUNKADELIC Midtown Music Hall

YA DIG?

2nd Street Theater

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Banjo Jam Ragtime, swing, country, folk and bluegrass. Third Thursday of every month Mar. 15, 5:30-7:30 pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave, Bend.

festival will feature 6 artists known in the Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar Genre, who have traveled the globe performing for audiences around the world. Each artist will perform as soloist or in a trio combination over a period of 2 hours and showcase their individual style of slack key guitar. Presented by Ki-ho’alu Foundation.Thursday, Mar. 15, 7:30 pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend. $15-$25.


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We Deliver. ORDER TODAY


EVENTS

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT Email bgs@bendbroadband.com for more info. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 10 am-12 pm. Williamson Hall at Rock Arbor Villa, 2200 NE Hwy 20. Bend, OR.

ID Program Info Meeting Stacey Whitte,

Know Neighbors - Immigration 101

Quinn Aldrus, U.S.C.I.S. discusses immigration issues, past and present including family and work based immigration, temporary visitor visas for work or tourism, and other related topics. Sunday, Mar. 18, 1 pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St, Bend. | Saturday, Mar. 17, 3 pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Redmond, OR.

Lessons from Lostine River Rob

Listen to Keira Kotler’s ScaleHouse Artist Talk about living between the fine art and design worlds at At Liberty on 3/16.

Exclusive Screening: “Dirtbag - The Legend of Fred Beckey” Fred was a true

American icon. His legacy is profound, and he has inspired countless people to explore this amazing planet. Our memories with him will live on forever. Wednesday, Mar. 14, 7:15-8:50 pm. Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Ct., Sisters. Sisters. $10/ticket.

Exclusive Screening of “Exhibition on Screen: Cezanne: Portraits of a Life”

Sisters Movie House is thrilled to screen one of the most talked about exhibitions of the year, dedicated to the portrait work of Paul Cezanne. All ages. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 7:15-8:40 pm. Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Ct., Sisters. Sisters. $12.50/person.

Saving Snow - Documentary Film Screening A documentary film that highlights

individuals and organizations who are working to reduce their communities’ impacts on the environment and raise awareness of the need for action. Come learn more about how to get involved in climate action right here in our own community. This event is being organized in partnership by The Environmental Center and Protect our Winters (POW). Hosted by 10 Barrel Brewing. Thursday, Mar. 22, 6 pm. 10 Barrel Brewing Co. Pub & Brewing Facility, 62950 NE 18th St. Bend.

Supercross Live Join us for the weekly showing of Monster Energy Supercross Live, the indoor dirt bike racing championship. Saturdays, 6-8 pm. Spoken Moto, 310 SW Industrial Way, Bend.

LOCAL ARTS A6 Artist Robin Thomas Featured A6 Artist

Member Robin Thomas creates underpaintings with collagraph prints and ventures into bold color and abstraction with her new collection of mixed-media works. On display March 2 - April 1. Friday, Mar. 2, 12 am. Bend Art Center, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 180. Bend. Free.

Artventure with Judy Artist-led painting

event! No experience necessary! Fee includes supplies. Pre-register and see upcoming images at artventurewithjudy.com. Tuesdays. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 6-9 pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln, Ste 1, Bend. $25/pre-paid.

Art & Wine, Oh My! Local artists will guide you through replicating the night’s featured image. Register online. Tuesdays. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 6 pm. Level 2, 360 SW Powerhouse Dr. Suite 210. Bend. $35-$45. Cheers to Art: The Acropolis Art historian

Lorna Cahall unveils the Acropolis, one of the outstanding achievements of Western civilization. An architectural complex from the High Classical

period, the Acropolis holds layer upon layer of myth and history culminating in the Parthenon, a temple to the goddess Athena. Admission includes wine. No RSVP required. Wednesday, Mar. 21, 7-8 pm. Bend Art Center, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 180. Bend.

Figure Drawing Sessions Sessions with

live model. BYO drawing materials, easels provided first come, first serve. No registration required. Tuesdays, 7-9 pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. Bend. $15/session.

Ashley Brehm Photography Exhibit A

full time traveling freelance photographer from Bend, taking photos for a little over 2 years while traveling all over the world. On display through March 30. Velvet, 805 NW Wall St. Bend.

Gallery Event: Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day and see our

new location, new products and even some special sales! Champagne, wine, beer and green cheesecake! Saturday, Mar. 17, 12-6 pm. Jill Neal Gallery, 183 East Hood Ave. Sisters.

“Glacier: Persistent Ice in Motion” by Anna McKee McKee began sketching alpine

glaciers about ten years ago near her home in the Pacific Northwest. Over the years, she has noticed a distinct decline in their extent. Using both realistic renderings, and distorted abstractions, McKee’s work captures both a static point in time, as well as the dynamic nature of these changing masses of ice. On display March 2 April 1. Friday, Mar. 2, 12 am. Bend Art Center, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 180. Bend, OR. Free.

Kate Kerrigan Mosaics Open Studio

Kate will be working in her studio and exhibiting her latest work. Come in and see the process and chat with the artist. Saturday, Mar. 17, 12 am. Bright Place Gallery, 50 SE Scott St. Bend. Free.

ScaleHouse Artist Talk: Keira Kotler Visual artist Keira Kotler will speak to

her experience living between the fine art and design worlds and about her discovery of color and its significance from visual and psychological perspectives. Kotler will provide examples from her visual and design background, and share her personal experience with cancer and how it inspired her to launch Everviolet, a beautiful lingerie and loungewear collection nurturing the changes in a woman’s body following treatment for breast cancer. Friday, Mar. 16, 6 pm. At Liberty, 849 NW Wall St, Bend. Free.

ScaleHouse Artist Talk: Sarah Kavage Creative placemaking is a relatively

new and rapidly expanding practice that meshes arts & culture with community planning, with the goal of place-based social change. This talk will share examples and critiques from the field,

and reflect on the relationship between creative placemaking and placekeeping, feminism, and traditional feminine creative practices. Saturday, Mar. 17, 2-3:30 pm. At Liberty, 849 NW Wall St, Bend. $10/person.

ScaleHouse Artist Talk: Tamar Ettun What happens to a body stilled in space,

when it takes a shape and holds it? How does its relationship to the architecture change? Tamar Ettun (born in Jerusalem, lives in New York) will speak about her sculpture and performance practice exploring empathy as its expressed through the body. Saturday, Mar. 17, 11 am-12:30 pm. At Liberty, 849 NW Wall St, Bend. $10.

Short Term Memory; Art by Megan McGuinness Memories are often all there are

to hold on to, yet can easily fade as time flows on. Megan McGuinness’ acrylic paintings are representations of past moments in her life and other’s lives she would like not to forget. Using bold colors, and high contrast Megan’s pieces try to hold onto a feeling from long ago. Meet the artist on First Friday at 4pm. On display March 2 - April 30. Friday, Mar. 2, 12 am. Lone Pine Coffee Roasters, 845 Tin Pan Alley. Bend.

PRESENTATIONS An Evening with Paleo-artist Gary Staab Join internationally-renowned sculptor

and paleo-artist Gary Staab for a talk about his artwork and extensive experience collaborating with scientists to bring dinosaurs back to life. Friday, Mar. 16, 6-8 pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Bend. $3/member, $7/ non-Member.

Birding Ethiopia Join East Cascades Audubon Society President Ken Hashagen for an unforgettable evening of photographs and stories about the people, wildlife and (especially!) the birds of Ethiopia. Thursday, Mar. 15, 6:30-8:30 pm. Central Oregon Enrivronmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. Bend. Christine Quintasket: A Cultural Activist on the Columbia Plateau Join

Professor Laurie Arnold, director of Gonzaga University’s Native American Studies program, for a talk about Christine Quintasket, author, cultural activist and public intellectual. This program is part of Bend Women’s March, a month-long celebration of the ways that women are shaping our community. Wednesday, Mar. 14, 6-8 pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Bend, OR. $3/member, $7/non-member.

Common Genealogy Research Mistakes & How To Avoid Them This month

at the Bend Genealogical Society, Nancy Noble, who has 30+ years of genealogy experience, will give us advice on how to improve our research habits, so we can avoid many common mistakes.

Kirschner of The Freshwater Trust will present on cooperative efforts between irrigators and conservation groups to restore critical in-stream flows to support threatened Chinook salmon. Wednesday, Mar. 14, 6:30-8 pm. St. Helen’s Hall Trinity Episcopal, 231 NW Idaho St. Bend. Free.

Nature Night - The Era of Megafire Join Dr. Paul Hessburg for an engaging, multimedia presentation about wildfire, its natural role in our Central Oregon forests, and how that role has changed. Learn how we’ve interrupted the natural fire cycle of our forests and how, with a rapidly warming climate, we are experiencing more of these megafires. Registration required. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 7 pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend. Free. Of Plants and Rocks and Peoples: A Geobotanical Tour of Central Oregon

Botanical treasures and how they relate to CO’s spectacular landscape. Ancient floods, glacial sculpting, dramatic lava lands, our rarest plant species: these are special places we’ll explore. Wednesday, Mar. 21, 6:30-8 pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. Bend. Free.

Spring Mushroom Primer and Lecture on Public Lands Dave Prybylowski will give a

short talk about Public Lands in Oregon and their importance to the community. Since most of our gathering is done on these lands, it is important that we are advocates for them. Following Dave, Linda Gilpin will present an overview on spring mushrooms and mushroom hunting. Wednesday, Mar. 14, 6:30-8:30 pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. Bend, OR. Free.

Understanding Your OHP and Community Health Resources NAMI-CO Commu-

nity Education Series explores how to navigate your health care plan and make the most out of our community health resources. Please join us in support of good mental health in our community. The meeting is preceded by our Bend Family Support Group, 5:15-6:45 PM. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 7-8:30 pm. Central Oregon Collective, 62070 27th St. Bend, OR. Free.

What’s the World Really Coming To?

Rapid changes in technology and consciousness are driving our society through a shift unlike anything humanity has seen in thousands of years. Many of the hopeful positive development are being ignores by the media. What new possibilities are emerging now for the years ahead? What does that mean for our children—and their children? Ruth L. Miller guides us through a science-based presentation and dialogue that offers hope. Sunday, Mar. 18, 1:30-4 pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Bend, OR. $10/suggested donation.

Why We Need Darkness: Paul Bogard

Paul Bogard will discuss the wonder of a dark night sky, the issue of light pollution and some possible solutions. In partnership with Oregon State University-Cascades. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 6-8 pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Bend, OR. $7/Member, $12/Non-Member.

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Director of Homeless Outreach, at the Back Door Cafe for Bend Church-United Methodist, will speak about their new ID program for helping those ready to be employed. Soroptimist International welcomes the public. Contact info@sibend. org for more info. Thursday, Mar. 22, 12-1 pm. Deschutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave. Bend.


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t s t e r Bine Aer! FSale Ev l

EVENTS

7th

ua n n A

Great Art!

25-50% off retail! Our artists are cleaning out their studios. Start or add to your collection with the art you

love!

9am-3pm (come early!)

The sale will be held on North end of the Old Mill District, next to Orange Theory in the space recently used for Santaland A F ine A rt G Allery

open everyday in the Old Mill District|www.tumaloartco.com Watch the documentary, “Saving Snow” at 10 Barrel Brewing Co. Pub & Brewing Facility on 3/22.

Wonder Woman: A Feminist Hero in a Leotard? Women’s rights activists have used Wonder Woman as a symbol of empowerment. Yet, her sexualized, white Western image often fails to represent female independence or real women. This program is part of Bend Women’s March, a month long celebration of all of the ways that women are shaping our community. Monday, Mar. 19, 6-8 pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Bend. $3/member, $7/ non-member.

THEATER Auditions for “Hang on the Bell Nellie”

Auditions for this Sunriver Stars spring melodrama/comedy include several roles for men and women and support staff. Also looking for behind the scenes positions. There are lots of jobs for non-cast people. Performance dates May, 11-12 & 17-19. Come join the fun and be a STAR. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 6-8:30 pm. The Door, 56870 Venture Ln. Suite 4, Sunriver. Sunriver, OR. Free.

August: Osage County When the large

Weston family unexpectedly reunites after Dad disappears, their Oklahoman family homestead explodes in a maelstrom of repressed truths and unsettling secrets. Mix in Violet, the druggedup, scathingly acidic matriarch, and you’ve got a major new play that unflinchingly—and uproariously—exposes the dark side of the Midwestern American family. March 9 - 25. Thurs., Fri., Sat., 7:30pm. Sun., 2pm. CTC Cascade Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. Bend, OR. $20/adults, $16/ senior, $13/student.

“Be Aware” play Presented by Pilot Butte

Middle School, “Be Aware” is an original play written by and for students to help raise awareness of issues facing students today. Monday, Mar. 19, 7 pm. 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave, Bend. $10/person.

WORDS Author! Author!: Elizabeth Strout

Elizabeth Strout is the author of six books, including her 2009 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel “Olive Kitteridge.” Her debut novel, “Amy and Isabelle,” won the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction and the Chicago Tribune Heartland Prize. Proceeds benefit library programs and services that are not funded through taxes. Friday, Mar. 16, 7-9 pm. Bend Senior High School, 230 NE 6th St, Bend. $25/person.

Blank Pages Writing Salon Salons are

informal gatherings where we share work, do freewriting based on prompts and discuss craft. Everyone is welcome! Saturday, Mar. 17, 6-8 pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. Bend. $5.

“Hiking the Pacific Crest Trail: Oregon” by Eli Boschetto The Pacific Crest

National Scenic Trail (PCT) meanders from the California-Mexico border north to the border of Washington and Canada. It’s a rigorous trail, first envisioned in 1926 and now encompassing some 2,650 miles. Each volume of this new series focuses on section-by-section pieces of the PCT. Thursday, Mar. 22, 6:30 pm. Roundabout Books, 900 Northwest Mount Washington Drive, #110. Bend. Free.

Mystery Book Club We will be discussing

“His Bloody Project: Documents Relating to the Case of Roderick MacRae” by Graeme MacRae Burnet. Wednesday, Mar. 21, 6 pm. Roundabout Books, 900 Northwest Mount Washington Drive, #110. Bend, OR. Free.

Writers Writing - Devotional Writing with Leora Fridman Fridman is an Artist

in Residence at Caldera, a program that awards creative individuals, collaborations and ensembles the gift of time and space at the Caldera Arts Center near Sisters. Registration required. Contact 541-312-1032. Saturday, Mar. 17, 12 am-1 pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St. Sisters, OR. Free.

VOLUNTEERS Become a Big Brother or Big Sister in Redmond It doesn’t take much to make a big

difference in the life of a child! Looking for caring adult mentors who are willing to spend a few hours a month sharing their interests and hobbies. Contact: 541-617-4788, balbert@bbbsco. org. Ongoing. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon - Redmond, 412 SW Eighth St., Redmond. Redmond, OR.

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. Contact: 541-5040101 or thrift@brightsideanimals.org. Ongoing. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St. Redmond, OR.

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! Do you play a musical instrument? Come and practice for the birds! Located past Cascade Lakes Distillery, call 916-956-2153 for hours and location. Ongoing. , .

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EVENTS 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 or Bend Canine Friends Meet Up group. More information can be found at fencesforfido. org. Ongoing. Bend, RSVP for address. Bend, OR.

Go Big, Bend Big Brothers Big Sisters works

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. Contact: 541-617-1010, volunteer@bendsnip.org. Ongoing. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. Bend, OR.

Mentors Needed Heart of Oregon Corps is

a nonprofit that inspires and empowers positive change in youth through education, jobs and stewardship. For more information or to become a mentor, contact John at 541-526-1380. Ongoing. Heart of Oregon Corps, 1291 NE 5th St. Bend, OR.

The Rebecca Foundation The Rebecca

Foundation is seeking volunteers to help us with an upcoming event and ongoing needs for the Bend area diaper bank. Volunteers of all ages welcome. Ongoing. Bend, RSVP for address. Bend, OR.

Volunteer The Salvation Army has a wide va-

riety of volunteer opportunities for almost every age. We have an emergency food pantry, we visit residents of assisted living centers, and we make up gifts for veterans and homeless. Ongoing. Bend, RSVP for address. Bend.

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. Call Paul at 541-647-2363 for more details. Ongoing.

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 541-350-2406. Ongoing. Mustangs to the Rescue, 21670 McGilvray Road Bend.

CLASSES A Course in Miracles Study Group

Undo the ego thought system of separation and fear. Join us for this transformational journey in six-week increments. Donations gratefully appreciated. Feb. 23 - April 6. Fridays, 10am-Noon. Aingeal Rose and Ahonu, 358 SE Sena Ct. Bend.

Adult Aerial Silks Classes Adult only

aerial silks classes - all skill levels, including beginners. Come fly with us! Thursdays, 5:30-7pm. Central Oregon Aerial Arts, 20700 Carmen Loop #120. Bend, OR. $20/class, $160/10 classes.

Aerial Silks Training Learn how to fly

on aerial silks. Build confidence, courage and strength through play. Thursdays, 4-5:15pm. Silks Rising, 1560 NE 1st Street #10. Bend.

Cannabis Yoga Workshop This is a fun introduction into playing with the ancient art of Ganja + Yoga! We’ll learn, imbibe (optional), honor the plant and move in a gentle and energizing flow in our gorgeous yoga studio. We’ll visit a dispensary together where we will guide you through your options for purchase. Then we relax at the yoga studio for a fun, informative and sacred journey into the use of cannabis as an amazing teacher and helper-friend! Sunday, Mar. 18, 6:30-8 pm. Midtown Juniper Yoga, 369 NE Revere Ave, Bend. $30/workshop. Capoeira Experience this exciting martial art form of Afro Brazilian origins which incorporates music and acrobatic movements. For adults and teens. Mondays & Thursdays, 7-8:30pm. Capoeira Bend, 63056 Lower Meadow Dr. Bend. $30/ two-week intro. Contractors CCB Test Preparation course Take this two-day live class (Friday,

March 16 & Saturday, March 17) to prepare for the state-mandated test (not included) to become a licensed contractor. Required manual included. Based on the new NASCLA Contractors Guide to Business, Law and Project Management, Oregon Construction Contractors 1st Edition. Call 541-383-7290 for more info or to register! Friday, Mar. 16, 8 am. Redmond COCC Campus Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Lp. Redmond. $379/class.

Couples Clay Class Spend an evening on the wheel exploring clay. Class includes all material to make two soup bowls and trimming and glazing afterwards. Contact 321-432-8009 for more info. Thursdays, 6-8pm. Pottery By Yvonne, 65093 Smokey Butte Dr. Bend. $100/couple. Date Night - Wine Bottle Drinking Glasses Date Night, DIY style! Have fun with

a loved one by creating something together. Fill your cupboard with seriously cool drinking glasses that you made from your empty wine bottles. We’ll show you how to cut them using an easy to build jig and how to fire polish the rim of the glasses with our custom torch setup. Beer and soda bottles as well as jars make great looking glasses, too. Learn more and sign up at DIYcave. com. Friday, Mar. 16, 5:30 pm. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St, Bend.

DIY Intro to TIG TIG is the ultimate method

for beautiful welds. This Project Based Class will introduce you to how TIG works, how to assemble the torch, and TIG welding techniques. During class, you’ll create a project you can take home. All materials included. Ages 14 and up, previous welding experience (such as the Welding Workshop class) required. Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com Tuesday, Mar. 20, 5:30 pm. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St, Bend. $70/class.

97 Suite 119, Bend. $20/week.

Happy Hour Veggie Seed Propagation & Nursery Tour Enjoy an informative class

on vegetable propagation for your garden or raised bed. Taught by our Lead Grower, Lindsay. Take home instructions and guided nursery tour are part of this workshop. Wednesday, Mar. 14, 4:30-6 pm. Moonfire & Sun Garden Center, 61944 SE 27th St. Bend. $10/class.

Home Sellers Seminar Central Oregon is experiencing a strong seller ‘s market. So If your thinking of selling your home this year, now is the time to get started! Our home seller seminar will give you all the facts you need to help you make an informed decision. Please RSVP to 541-788-4100. Meets Thursday, March 15 & 22. Thursday, Mar. 15, 5:30-7 pm. Rogue Real Estate Sales & Property Management, 1537 NE 4th Street. Bend. Free. Hula Hoop Fit Fusion In this all levels Hula Hoop class, we will use yoga, dance, and fitness practices with the added benefit of the Hula Hoop. Learn about different sizes of hula hoops and how to find the right size for your body and your practice. Space is limited! Preregister online. Through March 29. Thursdays, 6-7pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100. Bend. $17/drop-in. Intro to Essential Oils Learn how to start

removing toxins from your life. Did you know most products you buy at the store you can make at home with minimal ingredients? Knowledge is the first step. Make 3 items to take home with you. Sign up online to reserve your space. Saturday, Mar. 17, 10 am. Junque in Bloom, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 19. Bend. $10/.

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. $10/ lesson.

DIY Mosaic House Number or Welcome Sign You can make a house number,

Know Neighbors - Make A Flower for a Friend Craft a beautiful flower to share with

Beginning Aerial Silks Class Come fly

Buddhist Mantras Chanting Explore the

DIY Wood Router Class Learn many ways this versatile woodworking tool can be used to get the shapes you want and add interesting details to your project. Both the hand-held router and the router table will be covered. Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com. Thursday, Mar. 15, 5:30 pm. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St, Bend. $40/class.

spiritual insights and learn how to correctly chant mantras in Japanese. Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. 10:30am-4:00pm. Reservations required. Contact: 541-848-1255 or wildlifemusicweb@yahoo.com for more info. Ongoing. Custom Built Computers Of Redmond, 439 SW 6th St. Redmond. $10/class.

Spend and evening on the wheel exploring clay at Couples Clay Class at Pottery By Yvonne, Thursdays.

DIY Kids Welding We have a Welding Workshop at DIYcave tailored just for kids (ages 8-12). Kids 13+ are welcome in our “Welding Workshop”. In this “hands-on” class, kids will cut steel with a torch and weld those pieces back together. They’ll learn some amazing skills and take their creations home with them. This is a powerful experience for kids and adults alike. Learn and sign up at DIYcave.com Saturday, Mar. 17, 11 am. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St, Bend. $45/ child.

sign or family name—lots of choices! In class you will design your piece, select glass and begin gluing your glass. Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com. Wednesday, Mar. 14, 10:30 am. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St, Bend. $70/class.

with us! Get stronger, gain confidence and learn how to fly. Ages 8 and up welcome! Tuesdays, 4-5:30pm. Wednesdays, 3-4:30pm. Saturdays, 2:30-4pm. Sundays, 1:30-3pm. Ongoing. Central Oregon Aerial Arts, 20700 Carmen Loop #120. Bend. $20/drop-in, $160/10 classes.

37

Fine Art Classes Learn the flexibility of acrylics. All ages and skill levels welcome. Join us for two hours of instruction and take home a finished painting you will be proud to share! Fridays, 10am-Noon. Hobby Lobby, 3188 N Hwy

a neighbor. Registration is required. Create paper poppies made with Italian crepe paper. Materials needed: Very sharp scissors, hot glue gun, glue sticks. Workshop led by Jennifer Nordby. Thursday, Mar. 15, 6 pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Bend.

Launch Your Business Avoid costly mis-

takes and position yourself for business success by covering essential details. Three evening workshops (March 14, March 28 & April 11) plus one-to-one advising sessions. Cost includes workbook. Call 541-383-7290 for more info or to register! Wednesday, Mar. 14, 6 pm. COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave. Bend. $199.

Learn to Paint with Coffee & Beer Gather two or more friends and learn to paint using only beer or coffee to make your masterpiece.

Instructor Karen Eland provides a pre-drawn sketch and will lead you step by step to a finished painting in about two hours—and you get to drink your paint! Call to schedule an appointment. Ongoing. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. Bend.

Oriental Palm Reading Discover how the brain, nerves, and lines connect in palmistry. Wednesdays, 6-7 pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. Bend. $10. Pamphlet Pocketbooks Learn foundational bookmaking skills and take home a completed project! This fun class is a great skill builder. Practice the pamphlet stitch, learn how to construct covers and make functional pockets and create a small book with a handy pocket! Taught by Kelley Salber. Price includes supply fee. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 4-7 pm. Bend Art Center, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 180. Bend.

Prenatal Yoga Yoga designed specifically for the expecting mother. All levels and stages of pregnancy welcome. Class cards and monthly memberships available. Thursdays, 5-6pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100. Bend. $17/drop-in. Sculpting Dinosaurs with Paleo-artist Gary Staab Join internationally-renowned

sculptor and paleo-artist Gary Staab for a dinosaur sculpting workshop. Staab will explain the process of how he brings extinct animals back to life and teach workshop participants how to sculpt a dinosaur! This hands-on workshop is designed for the general public and is fastpaced, fun and kid-friendly. Supplies and materials will be provided. All skill levels welcome. Age level: 6 and older. All children should be accompanied by an adult. Registration and prepayment required. Saturday, Mar. 17, 10 am-12 pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Bend, OR. $15/ member, $20/non-Member.

Seasonal Tarot Study w/ Hillary Hurst

Do you feel a spark of curiosity in your soul when you consider diving into the Tarot as a a way of more deeply understanding of self, other and the world? Join Hillary Hurst for a seasonal exploration of the Thoth Tarot. Classes are every 3rd Sunday through winter. Sunday, Mar. 18, 7-9 pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd, #A-5, Bend. $40-$108.

Strength Training with JessBFit Mondays, 12-12:30 pm. Princess Athletic, 945 NW wall St, Ste 150. Bend. $5. Tai Chi A free Tai Chi for health class open to

the Bend community. Focusing on gentle movement, balance and coordination. This ongoing class teaches alignment, standing relaxation and mental awareness progressing into the greater depth of internal energy and movement. For more info, call 541-548-1086. Tuesdays & Thursdays, 9:30-11 am. Brooks Hall at Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 Wall St. Bend.

VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

with kids who need a positive role model and extra support. By being a mentor you have the opportunity to help shape a child’s future for the better by empowering them to achieve. We need caring volunteers to help children reach their full potential! Contact: 541-312-6047 or cbright@ bbbsco.org. Ongoing. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon, 62895 Hamby Rd. Bend, OR.

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT


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EVENTS for Shakti Rising & Sol Alchemy’s Friday Night Salon! For newcomers to our community, we offer an embodied experience of our work, a tour of our space and a delicious potluck dinner. 6:30: Tour & Orientation; 7:45: Potluck Dinner. Friday, Mar. 16, 6:30 pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd, #A-5, Bend. Free.

Tillandsia - Create a Terrarium Air plant? Tillansia? Come learn how to take care of the easiest plant you’ll ever own. You’ll leave with your own treasured plant in a terrarium that you created. Seating limited, sign up online to reserve a space. Saturday, Mar. 17, 2-4 pm. Junque in Bloom, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 19. Bend. $45.

Friends & Family Night - Support High School Robotics McMenamins Old St. Fran-

Weekend Workshop: Oregon Volcanoes Oregon has an explosive past! Discover

how the Cascade Mountains were formed in this workshop for the whole family. Learn about the two types of volcanoes that are found globally, and where you can ascend each type in Central Oregon. Through demonstrations, experiments and artwork, there are many ways to explore what’s beneath our feet. Registration and prepayment required. Saturday, Mar. 17, 10:30 am-12 pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Bend. $10/member, $15/non-Member.

West African Drumming Level 1

Learn traditional rhythms, and experience the brain-enhancing, healing and joyful benefits from David Visiko. A beginner class open to all. Mondays, 5:30-6:30 pm. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. Bend. $15.

West African Drumming Level 3 Build on your knowledge, technique, and performance skills. Teacher/troupe director David Visiko and members of Fe Fanyi study, practice and play joyfully. Thursdays, 7-8:30 pm. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. Bend. $15. Writers Working - Give Me Money, Give Me Time This seminar is open to writers

in all genres. Participants should bring their most recent resume and a short list of “dream” projects. If given an endless supply of time, money and resources (collaborators, technology, training, etc.) what would you write about/create/ learn/research? As part of the seminar DPL Librarians will highlight grant writing resources available at the Library. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 5:307:30 pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St, Bend.

Youth/Adult Slackline This class will be a

combination of basic poses, transitions, floor exercises, stamina drills and games. All ages and levels welcome. Class cards and memberships available. Tuesdays, 5-6pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100. Bend. $18/ youth drop-in, $20/adult drop-in.

EVENTS Central Oregon Ducks Happy Hour

As the UO alumni network grows stronger in our area, we’re excited to hold the first of many happy hour events. Whether you’re looking to meet other Ducks, make new connections in your field, or just enjoy a free beer (your first one is on us!), this is a great opportunity to meet other UO alumni and fans and expand your network of Ducks in Central Oregon. Must be 21+. Price includes entrance to the event first beer free. Questions? Contact Martie Steigleder at martie@ uoregon.edu or 541-968-5284. Thursday, Mar. 15, 5-6:30 pm. The White Water Taphouse, 1043 NW Bond St. Bend, OR. $5/UOAA members, $10/ non-members.

Cozy Craft Night Bring your knitting, color-

ing, stitching or any other project for an evening of crafting! Meet new people, warm up with a cup of tea and enjoy the bookstore. Thursday, Mar. 15, 5 pm. Roundabout Books, 900 Northwest Mount Washington Drive, #110. Bend. Free.

Drawing Under the Influence Bring pa-

per, pen, creativity and draw under the influence! This DUI club is for anyone looking for some fun. Sundays. Sunday, Mar. 18, 6-9 pm. JC’s Bar & Grill, 642 NW Franklin Ave. Bend. Free.

Friday Night Salon & Community Potluck Join us on the third Friday of every month

cis School is hosting a Friends and Family Night fundraiser in support of Mountain View High School’s High Desert Droids and Summit High School’s Chaos Theory Robotics team. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 5 pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St, Bend.

Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers welcome. For info contact Sue at 541-610-3717. Mondays, 6-9 pm. Bend Elks Lodge #1371, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. Bend. $1-$13. National School Walk Out Local teenagers

at Bend and Summit High Schools are leading the Bend demonstration of the student Walk Out scheduled to happen worldwide on March 14. At 10am in every time zone, students all over the world are planning to walk out of classrooms for 17 minutes, representing the 17 deaths resulting from the Parkland shooting. Wednesday, Mar. 14, 10 am. Central Oregon, County wide.

Pool Tournament Cash Cup Anyone can

join in, regardless of experience! APA rules, winnings based on number of participants. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 8 pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St, Bend. $5.

Preventative Walk-in Pet Wellness Clinic First come, first served. Vaccines, microchips, toenail trims and de-worming available. Service fees can be found at bendsnip.org. Saturdays. Saturday, Mar. 17, 10 am. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. Bend.

Texas Hold ‘em Poker Join us for Poker

Night upstairs at The Saloon! First hand dealt at 7pm, so grab a seat early! Wednesdays, 7 pm. Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill, 190 E Cascade Ave, Sisters. $20/buy-in.

The Hemp & Cannabis Fair You’ll find hemp and cannabis products, accessories and tools, grow and harvest equipment and more in our amazing expo hall. Then, take in some great sessions on growing, medicinal benefits, legal discussions and more! 21+ only (18+ with MMP). Saturday, 10am – 4:30pm & Sunday, 11am – 4:30pm. Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond. $15/Weekend Pass, $10/Veteran Weekend Pass.

SENIOR EVENTS Medical Tai Chi w/ Grandmaster Franklin Aid in the treatment of arthritis, Par-

kinson’s, cancer, fibromyalgia and the rehabilitation from surgery and injury. Wheelchairs and Walkers welcome. Contact Grandmaster Franklin at 623-203-4883 for more info. Thursdays, 1-2 pm. Aspen Ridge, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd. Bend. $30/Month.

St. Patrick’s Day Dinner Dance Join us

for a spring celebration with a dance to live music from the Notables Swing Band and an elegant buffet dinner prepared by the Executive Chef from Whispering Winds Retirement. Friday, Mar. 16, 6-9 pm. Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Rd. Bend. $12/adv., $20/door.

Tai Chi w/ Grandmaster Franklin

Certified and endorsed by The Oregon Council on Aging. Wednesdays, 10:30-11:30am & Fridays, 10-11am. Contact Grandmaster Franklin at 623203-4883 for more info. Wednesdays & Fridays, 10:30-11:30 am. La Pine Senior Activity Center, 16450 Victory Way. La Pine. $35/Month.

MEETINGS 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. Ongoing. Central Oregon, County wide.

39 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

The Abraham Inspiration Group With seminar video of Abraham and Esther Hicks, our open discussion allows us to learn from each other and share how the Art of Allowing and Law of Attraction work through us and those in our circle. Saturday, Mar. 17, 5-8 pm. Rosie Bareis Campus, 1010 NW 14th St. Bend. Donation basis.


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 15, 2018 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 40


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VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Dr. Sarah Cummings Dr. Cody Menasco Dr. Deborah Putnam Dr. Jessica Casey

Improve your homebrewing skills with the Central Oregon Homebrewers Organization at Aspen Ridge 3/21.

Alcoholics Anonymous If you want to

drink, that’s your business. If you want to stop, we can help. Call Alcoholics Anonymous. Hotline: 541-548-0440. Or visit coigaa.org. Ongoing. Central Oregon, County wide.

Bend Chamber Toastmasters Develop

and grow your public speaking and leadership skills. Wednesdays, 12-1 pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. Bend. Free.

Bend “Go” Club Expand your mind playing this ancient (yet modern) board game! Beginners welcome. Wednesdays, 2-5 pm. Market of choice, 115 NW Sisemore St. Bend. Central Oregon Homebrewers Organization A fun group of people, dedicated to

improving our craft. Educational sessions, group brewing, competitions, and other beer-related events. Third Wednesday of every month. Wednesday, Mar. 21, 6:30-9 pm. Aspen Ridge, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd. Bend.

Citizens Climate Lobby Monthly Meeting The Citizens Climate Lobby works to

empower citizens to connect with and influence members of Congress to implement climate solutions. Second Wednesday of every month. Mar. 14, 4-6 pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. Bend.

Emotions Anonymous EA provides a warm and accepting group setting to share experiences without fear of criticism. Meets Wednesdays at 9:30am & Thursdays at 10:30am. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. Bend. Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous meeting A fellowship of individuals who,

Italian Conversation Group Conversational Italian group in a relaxed atmosphere. Saturdays, 9:45-11 am. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave, Bend. Free. you need to quit, but can’t? Help is here. Share experience, strength, and hope with each other. Thursdays, 7-8 pm. Serenity Lane, 601 NW Harmon Blvd. Bend. Free.

NAMI Depression & Bipolar Disorder Support Group Mondays, 7-9 pm. First Unit-

ed Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 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. Ongoing. Central Oregon, County wide.

Refuge Recovery Meeting A mindfulness-based addiction recovery community that practices and utilizes Buddhist philosophy and meditation as the foundation of the recovery process. Mondays, 4:30-5:30 pm. Wren and Wild, 910 NW Harriman St Suite 100. Bend. Rheumatoid Arthritis Support Group

Anyone with RA or similar auto-immune syndrome welcome. For more info contact Alyce Jantzen at alyce1002@gmail.com. Third Tuesday of every month. Mar. 20, 4-5 pm. Bend Memorial Clinic, 865 SW Veterans Way. Redmond.

through shared experience and mutual support, are recovering from the disease of food addiction. Based on the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous. Saturdays, 9-10:30 am. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St, Bend.

Socrates Cafe Group People from different backgrounds get together and exchange thoughtful ideas and experiences while embracing the Socratic Method. Thursdays, 6-8 pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave, Bend.

French Conversation Table Every first and third Monday of the month. All are welcome! Monday, Mar. 19, 10:30 am-12:30 pm. Barnes and Noble, 2690 NE Hwy 20. Bend.

Spanish Club Spanish language study and conversation group. All levels welcome. Thursdays, 3:30-5 pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave, Bend. Free.

INCO Public Gathering Mission to promote understanding and respectful relationships among diverse faith communities in Central Oregon by offering opportunities for learning, fellowship and service together. Our gatherings are open to all. Third Wednesday of every month. Mar. 21, 12 pm. Trinity Episcopal Church/St. Helen’s Hall, 231 NW Idaho Ave. Bend.

Transitions: Mama Circle Join us for free, non-judgmental support. Share your concerns, questions, joys, challenges, experiences and practical tips. Open to pregnant women and moms with littles. Wednesdays, 11 am-12:30 pm. Baby Phases, 759 NE Greenwood Ave. Bend.

Infant & Pregnancy Loss Support Group MISS Foundation peer-mediated support

group for mothers and fathers enduring the death of a child from any cause. Including, but not limited to: Infant/young child death, SIDS, stillbirth. Second Wednesday of every month. Mar. 14, 7-8:30 pm. Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct, Bend.

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Women’s Cancer Support Group For the newly diagnosed and survivors of cancer. For information call: Judy, 541-728-0767. Thursday, Mar. 15, 1-3 pm. 990 SW Yates, 990 SW Yates Dr. Bend. Free. Zen Discussion & Meditation A weekly lay-led Dharma discussion and meditation (zazen). Open to all. Mondays, 6-8:30 pm. St. Helen’s Hall - Trinity Episcopal, 231 NW Idaho St. Bend. Free.

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KIDS’ EVENTS Absolutely Incredible Kid Day Celebration Skate, eat and have fun with incred-

42

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WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 15, 2018 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

ible kids! Join us at The Pavilion to celebrate Absolutely Incredible Kid Day! The first 50 kids to register skate free! Wednesday, Mar. 14, 1:30-4 pm. The Pavilion, 1001 SW Bradbury Way. Bend.

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Backpack Explorers – Interstellar We will have a blast with the stars, the moon and the sun in a space-themed day that focuses on everything outer space! Parents and children ages 3-5 investigate science, art, music, stories and culture in a fun, hands-on manner. $10/ child (member). $15/child (non-member) plus museum admission for accompanying adult. Pre-registration and payment is required. Wednesday, Mar. 14, 10-11 am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Bend, OR. $10/members, $22/non-member. Backpack Explorers – What’s a-buzz?

Spring is here and the pollinators are out! Explore how bees, butterflies and hummingbirds help take care of the forest. Wednesday, Mar. 21, 10 am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Bend, OR. $10/member, $27/non-member.

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LaPaw Animal Hospital, PC Deborah A. LaPaugh, VMD 541-389-3902 1288 SW Simpson Ave., Bend

Big Kids Yoga This class is for older kids who want to learn more of the fundamentals of yoga through mindful games, breathing techniques, handstands and restorative poses with Deven Sisler. Learn how to self-regulate, focus and build stamina. Wednesdays, 4-5:15pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave, Bend. $6/ drop-in, $20/4-class series. Cupcake Baking and Decorating Class

A beginning baking and cake decorating class for kids! Parents, drop off your 1st-5th graders for a three-hour, hands-on baking class. First we’ll mix our homemade batter using wholesome ingredients, then bake our cupcakes safely in a professional bakery oven. Call Angelena at 760-415-6345 if you have questions or would like a child of a different age to join the class. Saturday, Mar. 17, 10 am-1 pm. Prep - A Chefs’ Kitchen, 212 NE Revere Ave, Bend. $45/child.

DIY Kids Skill Building Series: Sheet Metal Art Kids age 10-14 will learn a lot of

great skills and educational knowledge in this class series from assembling Glockenspiel to stitching leather wallet to welding sheet metal art to creating cutting board. All materials will be supplied and the kids will go home with a handcrafted project each week. Students aren’t required to take the whole series. Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 2-3:30 pm & 4-5:30 pm. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St, Bend. $25/child.

DIY Kids Woodshop Kids will learn a lot of

great skills in this class including measuring, cutting with a saw, and building their project. All materials will be supplied and the kids will go home with a handcrafted wooden box that’s perfect for storing small treasures. Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com. Sunday, Mar. 18, 11:30 am. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St, Bend. $35/child.

Early Learners Creativity Lab An art class for children ages 0-5 years old w/ caregiver. A fun-filled hour of open-ended art activities designed specifically for the early learner. Children will be introduced to a variety of media and techniques. Wednesdays through May, 11am-Noon. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd. Bend. $10/class, $90/10 classes. EGG-TASTIC Baskets! Make and take

seasonal baskets; stories and crafts. Ages 3-11. Online registration required. Saturday, Mar. 17, 11 am. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. La Pine, OR. Free. | Saturday, Mar. 17, 3 pm. Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Ln. Sunriver, OR. Free.

I Am Strong! I Am Brave! I Am Worthy! Girls Empowerment Workshop

Join us and Ashley Grewe of Obsidian Education for a kiddos-only evening full of yoga, crafts and overall girls empowerment to celebrate Women’s History Month. We believe everyone has something important to share with the world. We

Do your kids love to bake? Sign up for Cupcake Baking and Decorating Class at Prep-A Chef’s Kitchen 3/17.

want to inspire girls by cultivating confidence, personal love, and self-respect so that they can go into the world and fully express themselves. Thursday, Mar. 15, 6-7 pm. OutsideIN, 845 NW Wall St, Bend.

Kids ROCK(!) Choir This is a place where kids ages 12 and under can come and sing their faces off! No training, experience or long-term commitment required. Mondays. Monday, Mar. 19, 4:30-5:30 pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln, Ste 1, Bend. $10. Kidz Night Out Kids ages 7 and up get a chance to play and celebrate with their peers for 3 hours of healthy, fun time without parents! We’ll feed them dinner, do activities (game night, DIY project, etc.) and play. Every other Friday. Mar. 16, 5:30-8:30 pm. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St, Bend. $10/child. Middle School Climbing Team Designed

for the committed middle school aged participant who has previous climbing experience and is looking for an introduction to competitive rock climbing. Our experienced and professional coaches spend time working on intermediate to advanced movement drills. Rolling enrollment. Jan. 15 - June 7. Mondays & Thursdays, 3:306:30pm. Bend Endurance Academy, 442 NE 3rd Street. Bend. $655/spring session.

Mindful Monkeys: Kids Yoga (ages 5-8) A special yoga class designed for kids

age 5-8. This class is a combination of yoga, movement play, meditation, breathing exercises and mindful games. Class cards, youth and family memberships available. Mondays, 4-5pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100. Bend. $15/drop-in.

Outing Club 6th-10th graders! Explore the outdoors, learn new skills and shape activities around your passions and interests with experienced outdoor staff and friends. Join Camp Fire’s new Outing Club! Sunday, Mar. 18, 3-4:30 pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St, Bend. Preschool Creativity Lab Witness the

limitless possibilities of what a preschooler can do when given the opportunity for open-ended art experiences. Children will be introduced to a variety of media and techniques through process oriented exploration and investigation. Ages 3-5 w/caregiver. Tuesdays, 11am-Noon. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd. Bend. $10/drop-in, $90/10 classes.

Puddlestompers: Watery Wonders

Spark a sense of wonder for nature through imaginative play, exploration, songs and stories. This week’s program is Watery Wonders with

Upper Deschutes Watershed Council. Ages 3-5 with family. Saturday, Mar. 17, 11 am-12 pm. Shevlin Park, 18920 Shevlin Rd. Bend.

Redmond Mothers of Preschoolers A great place to make new friends, get encouragement, and know that you’re not alone in this wonderful journey of motherhood! Our free meetings consist of short inspirational videos, fun crafts/activities, exciting speakers and time for connection. Thursdays, 9-11 am. Community Presbyterian Church, 529 NW 19th St. Redmond. Sisters Science Fair Experience interactive exhibits to expand and challenge your scientific knowledge and talk to students, research and business experts. An event for all ages. Saturday, Mar. 17, 12-4 pm. Sisters High School, 1700 McKinney Butte Rd. Sisters. Free. Story Time - Music, Movement & Stories Movement and stories to develop skills.

Ages 3-5 years. Thursday, Mar. 15, 10:30 am. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. La Pine, OR. Free. | Thursday, Mar. 15, 10:30 am. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St, Bend. Free. | Tuesday, Mar. 20, 10:30 am. Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Ln. Sunriver. Free.

Story Time - Pajama Story Time Eve-

ning story time with songs, rhymes, crafts. PJs welcome! Ages 0-5 years. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 6 pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Redmond. Free.

St. Patricks Day Cupcake Decorating Class Cupcakes are tons of fun! Parents, drop

off your 1st-5th graders for a three-hour, handson baking class. First we’ll mix our homemade batter using wholesome ingredients, then bake our cupcakes safely in a professional bakery oven. We’ll make icing from scratch and decorate our cupcakes! Each child brings home a gift box of four cupcakes. Call 760-415-6345 with any questions. Saturday, Mar. 17, 10 am. Prep - A Chefs’ Kitchen, 212 NE Revere Ave, Bend. $45/ child.

Toddler Creativity Lab Children will have

the chance to explore a variety of materials with a caregiver in a safe and playful environment ready for a mess that you don’t have to clean up! Continues through May 31. Tuesdays & Thursdays, 9:30-10:30am. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd. Bend. $10/drop-in, $90/10 classes.

Youth Acro Fusion Program A dynamic, performance-based youth program combining hoop dance, partner acrobatics and circus yoga. Fridays, 4-5pm. Friday, Mar. 16, 12 am. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100. Bend. $50/month.


A S P O T L I G H T O N T H E P E O P L E O F C E N T R A L O R E G O N

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S O U R C E

Capturing the magic of a mountain in a ring

Hawes. “IPAs are still number one. I like IPAs. It took me a while to get into sours, but I can appreciate a Glen Samuel good sour. But in the wintertime, I really get into imperial stouts.” Besides the current popularity of hazy IPAs, Hawes says Block 15 from 1990, when he decided it was time to Corvallis is a hot seller, especially its move to Central Oregon. “Sticky Hands” releases. “When that As for beers, “I’m all over the board. hits, it flies off the shelf,” he adds. I like a clean, crisp pilsner, but I really “Cans are really catching on around like the sour beers now. I like all styles, here. In the summertime, gotta have some more than others,” Samuel says. ‘em. It’s better for the beer. Absolutely Besides the 15 rotating tap handles in no light can get to them, and that affects the Platypus Pub, there’s a tap dedicatthe flavor,” he says. ed to the unofficial beer of Central OreHawes grew up in Madras, attend- gon: Boneyard’s ubiquitous RPM. The ed Central Oregon Community College rotating kegs range from 5 to 15 gallons and then earned a degree from the Uni- and can last from two to three days or versity of Oregon. When the business longer, Samuel says—who agrees with opened around 2006, there were four Hawes that the New England-style, hazy partners who met while working at the IPAs are especially popular these days. post office in Bend. “It was kind of one “We try to have something on for of those things where we could become everybody: IPAs, pilsners, ciders, sours our own bosses,” he recalls. The busi- and we always have a nitro on tap,” ness started out on Division Street but Samuel says. “It’s hard to keep things has been in its current location since on an even keel sometimes,” he adds, 2011. referring to the variety of beers on tap. Samuel is from the small communi- Now and then, the pub scores a prized ty of Scio, south of Salem, but has been keg of Pliny the Elder, from Russian Rivcoming to the Bend area for hunting and er Brewery in Santa Rosa, Calif. Saumel fishing since he was about five. Samuel recalls a special occasion about six years says he was in the Marines, stationed at ago when Platypus obtained a keg of the Camp Pendleton near San Diego around ultra-sought-after Pliny the Younger.

—GLEN SAMUEL

“We sold tickets for that,” he recounts. “We wanted to control the chaos. People were lined up on a Sunday.” A portion of the proceeds went to the local Humane Society. “It was a good day for the dogs, for us and for the customers,” Saumel says. “We do have a good local following, a good customer base, and they are knowledgeable. We want something a little different and our customers help us,” he adds. Besides a fresh rotation of tasty brews, Platypus Pub’s main feature is trivia night on Tuesdays. Regular participants include not one but two repeat champions on the national TV game show, Jeopardy. The next big event is a tasting on March 22, 5-7 p.m., for a collaboration beer between Deschutes and Crux.  SW The Brew Shop/Platypus Pub 1203 NE 3rd St., Bend 541-323-2318 541-323-3282 thebrewshopbend.com

By Teafly Peterson ‘Enlightenment thru Huckleberries’ 24x24 acrylic on panel by Karen Bandy

the gem she’s working with, Bandy credits design skills, combined with the ability to listen to a customer’s needs, as the recipe to her success. It was the jewelry business that sparked her next passion: painting. While hosting various artists in her shop for First Fridays, she realized she wanted to give painting a try. A move into a new house with a spare room already set up as a studio helped solidify the idea, and Bandy has never looked back. That was 12 years ago. While the two mediums might seem completely opposite, Bandy’s approach to each is similar. With jewelry, she begins with the gem and allows it to inspire her with its color and shape. When painting, Bandy completely covers her canvas in magenta and yellow as her base coat, allowing that to inspire what she paints over it—even allowing

‘Uplifted Path’ 20x20 Acrylic on canvas by Karen Bandy

Karen Bandy

How do you capture the feeling of a mountain in a ring? Or the magic of a dance in a painting? Somehow, Karen Bandy does just this. Whether through jewelry or painting, Bandy has the unique ability to capture movement and the feeling it projects. Bandy landed in Bend over 30 years ago after various stints from Southern California to Portland. It was in Portland that Bandy worked under a master jeweler, honing her craft and learning the ins and outs of the business before moving to Bend and opening her own shop. “I love redesigning and collaborating with a customer. Taking an old piece and making it new,” Bandy says. Inspired by

I G H T

some of the color to come through. Her emphases, whether creating in 2D or 3D, are color, shape and lines, inspired by architecture and the natural world. The feeling of creating, for Bandy, is the same, regardless of the medium. “The difference is jewelry is so permanent and exacting, and paint is so feeling. It is totally different, like a little release.”  SW

Karen Bandy Studio

25 NW Minnesota Ave., Ste. #5, Bend karenbandy.com

Works on display at The Oxford Hotel through April 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend

43 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Karen Bandy

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“We try to have something on for everybody: IPAs, pilsners, ciders, sours, and we always have a nitro on tap.”

Story and photo by Richard Sitts

ARTWATCH

T

Jeff Hawes

Amid a throng of local world-class brewers, these guys offer a home for those who want to brew their own In a town steeped in hops and yeast, one business, housed in a stately old church on Northeast Third Street, stands out as a beer mecca. If the largest brew selection in Central Oregon—located in the upstairs portion of the building— isn’t enough to satisfy your beery curiosity, perhaps the 15 rotating taps downstairs will offer something to your liking. Either way, owners of The Brew Shop/Platypus Pub, Jeff Hawes and Glen Samuel, invite you to stop by and check out the choices. If they don’t have it, they’ll try to order it for you. Hawes manages the Brew Shop upstairs while Samuel takes charge of the Platypus Pub downstairs. While not a home brewer himself, Hawes stocks everything to get the home brewer started, from the basic equipment to convenient starter kits. He recommends the latter for newbies who want to start brewing at home. “I have watched people do it and I was always interested in it. It’s kind of fun and addictive, really,” Hawes says. Even in the land of professional breweries, home brewing is still a popular hobby. “Once you get over the initial cost of the equipment, you can get a recipe dialed in to get a beer that you really want and really like,” Hawes says. Concerning trends and what’s hot in the brewing world, it’s still the hazy IPAs that are all the rage, according to

S P O


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Love for the DIY Set CHOW Beer In honor of the Beer Issue, seasoned home brewers dish tips By Lisa Sipe 45 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Home brewing has always been a thing, happening long before commercial production, craft brewing and all the other hoopla. With as many beer choices as we have in Central Oregon, you might think a beer lover wouldn’t need to brew at home—but they do, for multiple reasons. Home brewing can be a hobby, but it can also turn into a business. Many breweries in town, including Bridge 99 Brewing and Oblivion Brewing Company, were started by home brewers, so you never know where that interest will lead you. Here’s what a few home brewers had to say about their favorite hobby.

Adam Mendel, brewing since 2012 How he got into it: I love beer so when my friend Dave mentioned that he also wanted to give home brewing a shot we took a trip to The Brew Shop and split a beginner’s kit. Tips for new brewers: Less is more. Start with simple recipes and perfect them. Learn what your ingredients taste and smell like. You can add a million ingredients, but it doesn’t necessarily mean a superior beer. One of the best beers I’ve ever brewed was a simple single-malt, single-hop IPA, but I nailed all of the steps and it was a real champ. Why he keeps brewing: Fun. I love the technical aspects, the chemistry and the rhythm of the brew session. Of course, I also like having a good excuse to have an afternoon beer while I watch the boil kettle roll. What it takes to be a home brewer: To find out how to become a home brewer I asked Jeff Hawes, co-owner of The Brew Shop in Bend. “For under $250 you can get started,” he said. “We have the equipment and 10 different home brewing kits to make 5 gallons of beer.” Five gallons of beer is equivalent to nine six packs. Hawes also has advice for a first-time brewer. Like Koester, he said, “sanitization is the number one thing. If you make it through that you get a decent beer.”

Tim Koester, brewing since 2002 How he got into it: A neighbor was brewing, and I hung out and watched him and was interested. We brewed together for a while and then I bought my own equipment. Tips for new brewers: Many new brewers get discouraged because they get a bad batch, but it’s easy to make good beer as long as you follow good sanitation processes. Why he keeps brewing: It’s a very creative process, I can design my own recipes. I get to share my results with friends and family and enjoy my effort. There are so many fun aspects to the hobby.

Mike Dugan, brewing since 2011 How he got into it: I was inspired by my son who was brewing beer in college. Since I started I’ve tried to brew once a month. I just completed my 78th brew. What he wishes someone would have told him when he first started: You learn a little every time you brew. If someone would have told me 25 years ago how easy it was I would have done it then. If you can boil water, you can brew beer. Why he keeps brewing: It’s fun, I like to drink it, and I’m retired so I have the time. I can get it from start to the carboy and cleaned up in just under four hours. I get a kick when people drink it and tell me how good it is.

New brewers can find support and camaraderie at the Central Oregon Homebrewers Organization. They meet twice a month, on the third Wednesday, for a regular meeting, and the first weekend for a group brew at a member’s home. Koester, a COHO member, said the group brew is a “hands-on opportunity to learn new techniques, and learn from other members. You watch a batch of beer being made and everyone stands Central Oregon around and asks questions.” Koester said the group has grown Homebrewers Organization a lot in the last eight years and currently has around 100 memcohomebrewers.org bers. Anyone is welcome to attend a meeting. If you like it, you can join. Membership is $30 a year.  SW


FOOD & BEER EVENTS

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Enjoy a four-course dinner paired with whiskey at Wild Oregon Foods’ St. Patty’s Day Whiskey Dinner 3/17.

FOOD Dinner With Dave - St. Patty’s Day Edition Each month we pick a different theme

and make a whole bunch of specials and drinks around it. Then, on the 3rd Thursday we make a 5-6 course, themed dinner for around $46-$55. This month expect Irish Soda Bread with Homemade Preserves, Sheppard’s Pie Ravioli, Corned Beef & Cabbage Soup, Irish Cabbage “Wedge” Salad, Banger Bowl and Whiskey Chocolate Cake with Bailey’s Ice Cream, Irish Whiskey Flights, and Good Times! Two seatings, 5:30pm and 7:30pm. Call For Reservations: 541-318-8177. Thursday, Mar. 15, 5:30 pm. Rockin’ Daves Bistro & Backstage Lounge, 661 NE Greenwood Ave. Bend. $44/person.

Four Elements Potluck Series: Spring Earth We have decided to create a potluck

series dedicated to honoring the Elements so important to our lives: earth, water, air and fire. Our Spring Equinox potluck will honor Earth. What to bring: a local food potluck dish to share, seeds if you have them (we will have some to share), warm clothes, a story or two about your garden, what you are going to do this year to help the Earth, or some gardening successes and hiccups! Sunday, Mar. 18, 5 pm. Boundless Farmstead, 25360 Walker Road, Bend.

St. Patrick’s Day Dinner Dance Join us

for a spring celebration with a dance to live music from the Notables Swing Band and an elegant buffet dinner prepared by the Executive Chef from Whispering Winds Retirement. Advance tickets available at Bend Senior Center. A limited number of tickets will be available at the door. Dinner Served from 6-7pm; Dancing 7-9pm. Friday, Mar. 16, 6-9 pm. Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Rd. Bend. $12/adv., $20/door.

VegNet Potluck Join central Oregon’s veg community at our monthly vegan potlucks! Socialize and learn about upcoming events. Please join our Facebook group “VegNet Bend Group” and Meetup group “VegNet Bend.” Third Saturday of every month. Saturday, Mar. 17, 6-8 pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. Bend.

BEER & DRINK Ancestry Brewing Tasting We will have Ancestry Porter and Tiny Umbrellas IPA on tap for the evening. Come for the brews, stay for the live music performance by Stacie Lynn Johnson starting at 7. Friday, Mar. 16, 5-7 pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln, Ste 1, Bend. Central Oregon Ducks Happy Hour

As the UO alumni network grows stronger in our area, we’re excited to hold the first of many happy hour events. Whether you’re looking to meet other Ducks, make new connections in your field, or just enjoy a free beer (your first one is on us!), this is a great opportunity to meet other UO alumni and fans and expand your network of Ducks in Central Oregon. Must be 21+. Price includes entrance to the event first beer free.

Questions? Contact Martie Steigleder at martie@ uoregon.edu or 541-968-5284. Thursday, Mar. 15, 5-6:30 pm. The White Water Taphouse, 1043 NW Bond St. Bend, OR. $5/UOAA members, $10/ non-members.

Firkin for a Cause - Deschutes Land Trust Enjoy a beer for a good cause! Firkins are

a small batch specialty beer that is cask conditioned in a firkin. They are tapped at 2pm and all proceeds of the firkin will benefit Deschutes Land Trust. Every third Sunday. Mar. 18, 2 pm. Immersion Brewing, 550 SW Industrial Way Suite 185. Bend.

Food Truck Fridays Experience a little

taste of Belgium in Bend! Tasting flights take center stage when paired with the fine bratwurst, Belgian frites and European cuisine provided by We’re the Wurst, European Food Truck. Fill a growler while there for your weekend adventures. Friday, Mar. 16, 12-8 pm. Monkless Belgian Ales, 20750 High Desert Ln. Suite 107. Bend, OR.

Fresh Chair NW tasting: Deschutes & Crux collab Pale Ale In celebration of De-

schutes Brewing 30th year they are collaborating with past brewmasters to release some more great beers! The Platy will have Fresh Chair NW on tap along with some other favorites from Descutes and Crux. All profits will be donated to the Deschutes River Conservancy. Thursday, Mar. 22, 5-7 pm. Platypus Pub, 1203 NE 3rd St, Bend.

Happy 32nd Birthday, Ruby! Ruby Ale, you gorgeous thing, you. Celebrate our signature Ruby Ale’s 32nd Birthday with Ruby pints for $4, Ruby growler fills for $9, and specials on food. All ages welcome, 21+ to drink. Wednesday, Mar. 21, 12 am-11:59 pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St, Bend. Mindful Mondays Beer Yoga Enjoy a Bel-

gian-style ale in a funky industrial setting while you energize your mind, body and spirit! Free for Recharge members. Please arrive 15 minutes early to purchase your beer(s) or kombucha! BYO mat. Reserve spot on Recharge website. Monday, Jan. 29, 6:30 pm. Monkless Belgian Ales, 20750 High Desert Ln. Suite 107. Bend. $10/class.

St. Patrick’s Day Craft Cocktail Tasting

false Saturday, Mar. 17, 6-7:30 pm. Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. Bend, OR.

St. Patricks Day weekend! Enjoy live music, food and drink specials including Irish Stout, Irish Coffee, Irish Reuben, Irish Stew, Corned Beef & Cabbage. 5-9pm, Fri, Mar. 16-18. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St, Bend. Free. St. Patty’s Day Whiskey Dinner This St. Patty’s Day, forget the green beer and join Wild Oregon Foods Executive Chef, James Fink, for a very special four-course Whiskey Pairing Dinner. Smoked Sockeye Salmon, Egg Yolk Ravioli, Venison Wellington and more. Doors open at 5:30pm, dinner at 6pm. Please RSVP. Saturday, Mar. 17, 5:30-8:30 pm. Wild Oregon Foods, 61334 S Hwy 97 Suite 360. Bend. $50/person.


LITTLE BITES

By Lisa Sipe

Lisa Sipe

47 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

EMW Fusion Tries GF Pandos

The EMW Fusion food truck is known for its pandos—Korean-style pancake sandwiches—and now they are testing a gluten-free option. For the month of March they have a small batch of gluten-free pandos available. Just ask for them. I went there with a gluten-free friend, Samantha Barsky, to try them. She said the pando was, “perfectly doughy and soft in the middle, yet still crispy on the outside. This in particular was good because doughy and gluten-free are hard to find.” You can find EMW Fusion on Wednesday and Friday at Bridge 99 Brewery until the end of March. After that they’ll head to On Tap, the new food truck lot on the east side of Bend. EMW Fusion

emwfusion.com 503-853-4482

Best Venue for live music, dancing, food and libations

Lisa Sipe

Live Music 5 Days a Week Thu 3/15

Sleep Bandz 7:30 to 10:30 Fri 3/16

Fun Bobby 8:30 to 12 Sat 3/17

Fun Bobby 8:30 to 12 Sun 3/18

Six Pack 6 to 8

Thump Opens Cafe in NWX

Tucked near Bend’s Summit High School, next to Hydro Flask on York Drive, is a new Thump location. The cafe has been open for about a month. Owner Bobby Grover said he wanted to “combine the bakery, roastery and a cafe to create a cool, local spot to hang out.” In addition to your coffee house favorites there’s a simple food menu that includes breakfast options, toast, salad, soup and smoothies. Everything is made on-site, from scratch. The coffeehouse seats 50 and features an outdoor fire pit and a spectacular view of the Cascades. With beer, wine and a specialty cocktail on the menu, Grover has plans to take advantage of that view with a sunset happy hour. Thump Roastery & Bakery in NWX 549 NW York Dr., Suite 200, Bend Thumpcoffee.com 541-668-6824

Mon 3/19 Ipockolyptic Productions Comedy 8 to 9 Tue 3/20

Carol Rossio Quartet 6 to 9

Wed 3/21

Acoustic Open Mic w/ Derek Michael Marc

6 to 9

Saturday and Sunday Breakfast 62860 Boyd Acres Rd in Bend

(541) 383-0889

Facebook.com/NorthsideBarAndGrill northsidebarfun.com


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Strangest Brews SCREEN The Hopheads and the movies that love them By Jared Rasic

It’s hard to know whether art imitates life when it comes to beer (and drunks!) in movies, or whether the reverse is true, but in any case, we’re taking a quick look at some good-hearted cinematic drunks, in homage to this year’s Beer Issue.

Beerfest (2006) The comedy group Broken Lizard (responsible for “Super Troopers” and “Club Dread”) tells the story of a group of Americans who inherit the recipe for “the greatest beer in all ze world” from their dead German grandfather. They put together an American team to head to Germany and compete in the Olympics of drinking: Beerfest. They brew their mysterious recipe (known as Schnitzengiggle Beer) and it’s so good that it literally makes them cry. I’ve been there. The drunks in Beerfest are mostly good-natured and either pass out or get ridiculous when they hit the blackout marker. Someone does get murdered for a beer recipe, so the brewing is taken much more seriously than the drinking, which seems like a valid way to live.

Strange Brew (1983) When you think of a Canadian masterpiece loosely based on Hamlet, “Strange Brew” should be the first and only movie that pops into your head. The film follows slow-witted and broke brothers Bob and Doug McKenzie as they get in way over their head at the Elsinore brewery. All they wanted was to blackmail a local beer store into giving them some free brews, eh. The evil Brewmeister Smith is putting a mind-control drug in Elsinore beer so he can take over the world and only the McKenzies can halt his evil plans. The McKenzies are those brain-damaged drunks you see piecing together their weekends on Monday morning. They mean well, but the beer comes first. It’s the spinach to their drunken Canadian Popeyes. If Bob and Doug McKenzie are superheroes, then sobriety is their kryptonite.

Young Einstein (1988) Remember when Yahoo Serious was a thing? Me, neither. But I do remember “Young Einstein,” a comedy so ridiculous that it was my favorite thing ever when I saw it at eight years old. Serious plays the young genius, a youngster obsessed with physics. When he finds the family shed full of brewing instruments, he learns his family is desperately trying to change the world by adding bubbles to beer. Einstein drinks his face off throughout the day and comes up with the theory of Mass-energy equivalence (E=MC2) as a way to split beer atoms and create bubbles. After splitting the beer atom with a hammer and chisel (yeah, I know), the bubbles appear and he rejoices. By the end of the movie he also invents surfing and rock music, so take this one in stride.   SW

HEALTHY ADVENTURES AWAIT!

OPEN 7 DAYS / URGENT CARE DOCTORS BYRON MAAS, LAUREN STAYER, ERIN MILLER, MARIE STANLEY & TABITHA JOHNSTON

BENDVETERINARYCLINIC.COM 382-0741

49 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Living in Beer Town, USA has its ups and downs. The culture of people who genuinely care about craft brew and the artisanal nature of beer is a fun and inclusive group, but the drunken shenanigans in downtown Bend on a Saturday night can be a little exhausting. I’ve hosed down enough vomit in Tin Pan Alley to last me a lifetime.


“Gringo”

FILM SHORTS By Jared Rasic

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LINGERIE * SEXTOYS PARTY SUPPLIES COSTUME & WIGS VAPORIZERS & E-CIGS LOCAL HAND BLOWN GLASS PIPES 1341 NE 3RD STREET | 541.317.3566 | WWW.PRETTYPUSSYCAT.COM

ANNIHILATION: Easily the weirdest and most  surreal theatrical fi lm since Cronenberg was  experimenting with body horror. Five women cross a  boundary into an area slowly changing into something  otherworldly and dangerous. The imagery in this fi lm  will stay with you. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

HAPPY END: The new fi lm from Michael  Haneke, the devious mind behind “Funny Games”  and “Cache.” Haneke’s fi lms are always unforgettable and this one looks to be right in his disturbing and unsettling wheelhouse. Tin Pan Theater.

BLACK PANTHER: The hype for the newest

a pair or Alabama brothers who take on a group of  robbers during a deadly hurricane. Basically, it’s  the best episode of “The Dukes of Hazzard” ever.  Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema

fi lm in Marvel’s slate of superhero fl icks has been  overwhelming and, amazingly, the fi lm completely  deserves it. “Black Panther” is less of a superhero  movie with some drama thrown in than a family drama with some superheroes sprinkled throughout. A  genuinely thoughtful and powerful fi lm that fi nally  puts an African-American hero front and center. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema

CALL ME BY YOUR NAME: A heartbreakingly romantic and natural drama focused on a  17-year-old student as he falls in love with an older  man in summertime Italy. A gorgeous fi lm that  deserves to be seen by anyone interested in the art  of motion pictures. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Tin Pan Theater. DEATH WISH: Bruce Willis stars in this remake  of a bad Charlie Bronson movie. This movie isn’t  just poorly timed, but it’s also an offensive wet  dream for gun lobbyists and wanna-be vigilantes,  desperate for their own movie to show how tough  a “good guy with a gun” can really be. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX,

EARLY MAN: A new animated adventure from

Aardman, the team that brought us the wonderful  “Wallace and Gromit.” Since it’s about cavemen  fi ghting back against the Bronze Age, it should be  another delightfully strange look at the world from  the brilliant British team of animators. Sisters Movie House

EVERY DAY: Check out this synopsis: A romance  based on a bestselling novel about a 16-year-old  girl who falls in love with a mysterious soul that  inhabits a different body every day. I hope all the  different bodies are also teenagers, or else this  movie is way more disturbing than it should be. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX.

Gym Only OR Classes Only 3 Month Special $129 Full Use 3 Months $169 New Members only

FIFTY SHADES FREED: The awkwardness  of watching a movie with tons of graphic sex  scenes in public just isn’t worth it and the adventures of Grey and Steele aren’t enough to carry  a movie. The best thing about the movie is the  soundtrack, which is exactly what was best about  the last two fi lms. If you have to see it, Redbox  is the way to go. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema GAME NIGHT: With a cast featuring Jason

Bateman, Rachel McAdams, Kyle Chandler,  Lamorne Morris and Jesse Plemons, it’s really  hard to go wrong. Luckily, “Game Night” works as  a hilarious comedy and a mystery/thriller in equal  measures, making for one of the most entertaining movies of the year. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema.

THE GREATEST SHOWMAN: Hugh Jack-

man started his career as a song and dance man,  so it’s fi tting that he returns in a giant Hollywood  musical about the life of P.T. Barnum. Who wants  to guess whether the fi lm soft pedals the animal  abuse and mistreatment of the side show attractions? Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

GRINGO: An action/comedy with a perfect

550 NW Franklin Ave. Suite #328 (in the Franklin Crossing building)

benddac.com 541-323-2322

cast featuring David Oyelowo, Charlize Theron,  Thandie Newton and Joel Edgerton. It focuses on  a peaceful Nigerian businessman caught between  mercenaries, drug lords and a groundbreaking  weed pill. Looks like a fun ride at the movies. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House

THE HURRICANE HEIST: This movie follows

I, TONYA: This blisteringly funny biopic about the  infamous Tanya Harding manages to make the fi gure skater much more human than the news ever  did. Just when you think the story can’t get more  outrageous, a dozen new barriers are crossed. Tin Pan Theater.

JUMANJI: WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE:

Loosely connected to the original “Jumanji” starring Robin Williams, this reboot updates the story  of kids sucked into a board game into something  for the digital age. Starring Kevin Hart, Jack Black,  The Rock and Karen Gillan, this looks much more  entertaining than it has any right to be. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

PETER RABBIT: From the director of “Easy A”

comes the story of “Peter Rabbit” and his war with the  nasty Mr. McGregor. Combining CGI with live action,  “Peter Rabbit” looks like a cute companion to fi lms  such as “Paddington” and “Babe.” Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

RED SPARROW: Jennifer Lawrence re-teams

with her “Hunger Games” director to take on a  paranoid spy thriller. Reviews are mixed and there’s  some weird Lawrence backlash going on right now,  but she’s still one of the fi nest actresses of her generation. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema

SAMSON: From the studio that brought us  “God’s Not Dead” comes a Christian swords and  sandals fl ick featuring history’s favorite hair model.  Didn’t Samson also light a bunch of foxes on fi re  and kill a bunch of people with the jawbone of a  donkey? I wonder if that’s gonna be in the movie.  Count me in, I guess. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX THE SHAPE OF WATER: The delightful love  story about a mute cleaning woman and her torrid  romance with a fi sh monster. It begins to make  more sense knowing it’s from the mind of visionary  fi lmmaker Guillermo Del Toro, the mastermind  behind “Crimson Peak” and “Pan’s Labyrinth.” Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX THE STRANGERS: PREY AT NIGHT: The

long-awaited sequel to one of the creepiest home  invasion horror fl icks of all time. If it’s half as  scary as the original, then it will have been worth  the wait. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

THOROUGHBREDS: A blackly funny look at  disaffected youth, being compared to such genre  staples as “Heathers” and “American Psycho.”  The fi lm also contains the fi nal screen performance of Anton Yelchin, just to make things more  uncomfortable. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX A WRINKLE IN TIME: Based on the beloved

children’s book by Madeleine L’Engle, this adaptation takes the important thematic and story points  and leaves the rest. At turns lovely and gentle, and  while not a perfect movie, it does enough right  to feel like a genuinely humanist motion picture.  Without a drop of cynicism, “A Wrinkle in Time”  makes a bit of magic. See full review on p 51. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema


SC

A Bit of Magic

“A Wrinkle in Time” has its audience in mind By Jared Rasic

51 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

A world of magic awaits in “A Wrinkle in Time.”

E

arnestness is almost impossible in a very lovely touch, DuVernay’s vision of 2018. Any time a show tries gen- “darkness” isn’t violence or hatred, but uine emotion like that, it’s very hurt feelings, jealousy, unfettered ego quickly undercut with either a winking and self-disgust. moment of humor or a liberal dose of At points, I found “A Wrinkle in cynicism. Heart-on-the-sleeve gentle- Time” hard to connect with, but then I ness doesn’t seem to work with modern realized it wasn’t really for me. This is audiences and can be misinterpreted as a movie specifically designed for young sugary cheese instead of kindhearted girls dealing with bullies and struggling optimism. Mr. Rogers might not work to love themselves. So many films try to for kids today without a few winks and reach every demographic that they can, a fart joke or two. so it’s nice to see a movie that couldn’t The film version of “A Wrinkle in care less about critics or an audience Time” doesn’t concern itself with how unaccustomed to this kind of gentle it’s interpreted by critics or anyone who optimism. refuses to watch the film with an open The real find here is Storm Reid as heart. Madeleine L’Engle’s book was the Meg Murray, who will easily become same way, as the just as famous as entire novel (and she wants to be. This is a movie the “Time Quintet” Whenever I found series as a whole) is specifically designed for the good versus evil analogous to some of the stoyoung girls dealing with aspects aspects of Christiry getting a little anity. It’s even more bullies and struggling to repetitive, her perobvious than in The formance kept me love themselves. Chronicles of Narinvested. I couldn’t nia, which used the have cared less lion Aslan as a Christ-like figure, since about the fate of Calvin or Charles Walthe novel version of “Wrinkle” uses actu- lace, but I needed Meg to have the hapal Bible verses to get the point across. piest of endings and get everything she Director Ava DuVernay removes reli- wanted. gion from the story, instead focusing “A Wrinkle in Time” isn’t perfect, on female empowerment, conformity and some kids might think it’s borand absentee fathers. The center of the ing compared to some other spectacles story remains the same, with 13-year- such as “The Avengers,” but this will old Meg Murray, her younger brother speak directly to some kids’ dreams of Charles Wallace and fellow student Cal- the future. It’s aimed at such a specifvin O’Keefe teaming up with a trio of ic audience that it seems like DuVernay magical women to search for the Mur- took the basic gist of the classic novel, rays’ missing scientist father. The group threw out the rest and made the movmust also take ie she hoped to on the mysterisee as a young girl. A Wrinkle in Time ous entity known Ninety-nine perDir. Ava DuVernay as The It, which cent of movies are Grade: B threatens to bring made for people Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema darkness to the like me. It’s OK if entire universe. In this one isn’t. SW

B


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O

OUTSIDE

Pow-Ow

Can certain sorts of injuries be tied to low-powder years? By: K.M. Collins

A

Rebound Physical Therapy

Body core strengthening can help reduce injuries during low-snow winters.

back or shoulder issues related to snow removal. Specific to skiing and snowboarding, injuries can often include

Due to the four to six weeks that patients may wait before making it to a physical therapist, the toll this winter has taken is still unfolding. at several World Championships and Grand Prix events, Doden has seen a trend. “With respect to yearly fluctuations and in snowfall and snow sport injury patterns, we do see a pretty clear relationship. In years where we have predominant icy, hard-packed conditions, we definitely notice an increase in fractures as a whole.” Doden says typical winter accidents include slips and falls often resulting in fractures, motor vehicle accidents related to poor driving conditions, and

53 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

t the risk of bringing up a sour subject, the base depth and snowfall for the 2017-18 snow season has been low compared to last season’s inundation. According to Mount Bachelor historical snowfall data, this season’s snow pack depth maxed out in early March at 104 inches, compared to last season’s 145 inches. As for total snowfall, the 2017-18 winter has seen 161 inches, while 201617 winter saw a whopping 469 inches. Besides feeling slighted, you should also be extra careful on the slopes when the snow is slight. According to physical therapists, certain kinds of snow sports injuries are associated with powder drought conditions. Mike Doden, physical therapist and co-owner at Central Oregon’s outpatient orthopedics chain, Rebound Physical Therapy, has gathered plenty of winter injury rehabilitation experience. During his 19 years with the company, assisting the U.S. Snowboard team

ACL reconstructions, various knee and shoulder issues and fractures. “Many people assume that because we live in a ski town that we must see a large amount of ski related injuries during the winter months,” Doden explains. “Although we do see our share of injured snow-sport athletes during the winter months, we probably see an equal share of winter weather related injuries across the general population.” Joyce Stahly, ccupational and certified hand therapist for 24 years and a

Rebound Physical Therapy staffer for 12 years, treats a number of common wintertime snow sports-related hand injuries sustained from falls onto the outstretched hand, including wrist fractures and skier’s thumb (a sprain or rupture of the thumb ligament). “Of the skiing related injuries, this year I would say we may be seeing more fractures than we did last year,” Doden speculates. “This is likely related to the low snowpack which exposes more rocks, and also resulted in icy, hard packed conditions which is prime for causing injuries, especially fractures. When there is a good snowpack level with soft surface conditions, we typically see less fractures compared to what we have seen so far this year.” Due to the four to six weeks that patients may wait before making it to a physical therapist,

BEND’S LOCAL INDEPENDENT OUTDOOR

the toll this winter has taken is still unfolding. To avoid an unhappy ending to an already somewhat-disappointing shred season, follow some recommendations from Stahly and Doden. For snowboarders, wrist splints are proven to significantly lower chances of wrist injuries. There are also various breakaway adaptations for ski poles or supportive devices for the thumb to assist in the prevention of skier’s thumb. Maintaining an exercise program that focuses on core strengthening and conditioning to help reduce the chance of injury is also key. Sports-specific exercises that target muscle groups and movements geared to a sport are valuable. When it’s icy in town—rare this season—Stahly suggests over-the-shoe traction devices for fall prevention.  SW

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OUTSIDE EVENTS ATHLETIC

ND BE

Hump Day Run Celebrate getting over the

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. This run is ideal for folks new to town and wanting to meet some runner friends, long time runners keeping the motivation going through the winter and training groupies wanting company for their Wednesday night workout. No one will be left behind! Be ready to run at 6pm from FootZone, and bring a few bucks if you want to get a beer after. Email nrschoppe@gmail.com for more info. Wednesdays, 6 pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St, Bend. Free.

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54

Know Before You Go Avalanche Awareness Seminar A free basic avalanche

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awareness presentation aimed at highlighting introductory concepts and tools for traveling in avalanche terrain. Learn about the destructive power of avalanches, safety equipment, how people get in trouble and the basics of how to avoid them. In line with COAA’s mission of increasing avalanche awareness and safety in Central Oregon, this presentation will provide a good foundation for learning about backcountry travel or is an excellent refresher for more experienced backcountry users. Wednesday, Mar. 14, 6-8 pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln, Ste 1, Bend. Free.

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 afterwards with your new running buddies! Email Marla.Hacker@oregonstate.edu for more information. Saturdays, 9 am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St, Bend. Free.

St Patrick’s Day 5k Dash 2018 Gather the

family to walk, jog, crawl or run, and be sure to wear your green as there will be prizes for best costume and best wearin’ o the green! The J Bar J is the main beneficiary of this event. Saturday, Mar. 17, 8 am-12 pm. Old Mill District, Powerhouse Drive. Bend.

Tuesday Rise and Run Rise and Run.

Early riser? This group is for you! FootZoner Colton Gale will lead this run. Meet Tuesdays at FootZone with lights and layers, and get your run done for the day! All paces are welcome; 3-5 mile routes will usually take advantage of snow-free and lit paths in the Old Mill District. Email colton@footzonebend.com with questions. Tuesdays, 5 am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St, Bend.

WalkStrong Info Night Come learn about our 5k and 10k training program that helps all bodies move towards improved fitness. This 12-week group meets twice weekly and walks our way up to a 5k or 10k (your choice!) event together. Make new friends, get moving, and have fun with us! RSVP online. Monday, Mar. 19, 6 pm. FootZoneBend, 842 NW Wall St, Bend. Free. Weekly Steel Bicycle Ride Weekly Steel

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Road Bicycle Ride 30-mile route east of town. Conversational pace, all are welcome. Steel bikes are recommended, but not required. All are welcome to hang out at Jackson’s afterward to tell stories and make new friends. Wednesdays, 6-8 pm. Jackson’s Corner Eastside, 1500 NE Cushing Dr. Suite 100. Bend. Free.

OUTDOORS BARC Bend Adventist Running Club Weekly Run Join us for weekly Sunday Runs!

We meet in front of the Dog Park at Pine Nursery. Distances vary. We offer community, running and walking support and fun! Runners of all levels, walkers, kids, strollers and friendly dogs are all welcome! Sundays, 8:30 am. Pine Nursery Park, 3750 NE Purcell Blvd. Bend. Free.

Bend Area Running Fraternity (BARF)

Join us for 3.5 mile run (options avail. for longer or shorter distances) through the Old Mill District

and along the Deschutes River! Then stay after the run for a discounted pint courtesy of Atlas Cider! Rewards for attendance. All paces and faces welcome! No registration required. Mondays, 5:30-7:30 pm. ATLAS Cider Co. Taproom, 550 SW Industrial Way Suite 190. Bend. Free.

Birding Ethiopia Join East Cascades Audubon Society President Ken Hashagen for an unforgettable evening of photographs and stories about the people, wildlife and (especially!) the birds of Ethiopia. Thursday, Mar. 15, 6:30-8:30 pm. Central Oregon Enrivronmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. Bend. Easy Breezy Run Fun, unintimidating, conversationally paced runs between 2-3 miles, geared toward training group alumni, but all are welcome! Wednesdays, 5:30 pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St, Bend. Free. FootZone Noon Run Lunch hour 3 to 5 mile

run. Wednesdays, 12 pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St, Bend. Free.

Mt. Bachelor Winter Wonderland Helicopter Tour This scenic helicopter tour

includes aerial views of the City of Bend, the Old Mill District and the Deschutes River as well as the spectacular snow-capped Cascade range. Feb. 10 - April 29. Big Mountain Heli Tours | Bend, Oregon, 63132 Powell Butte Rd, Bend. $799/1-hour flight.

Outing Club 6th-10th graders! Explore the outdoors, learn new skills and shape activities around your passions and interests with experienced outdoor staff and friends. Join Camp Fire’s new Outing Club! Sunday, Mar. 18, 3-4:30 pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St, Bend. Puddlestompers: Watery Wonders

Spark a sense of wonder for nature through imaginative play, exploration, songs and stories. This week’s program is Watery Wonders with Upper Deschutes Watershed Council. Ages 3-5 with family. Saturday, Mar. 17, 11 am-12 pm. Shevlin Park, 18920 Shevlin Rd. Bend.

Ski with a Forest Service Ranger Take a run with US Forest Service Naturalist and learn about the Mt. Bachelor volcanic and ecological environment. Tours are free (with lift ticket). Saturdays & Sundays, through March 25. 2-3 pm. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 SW Century Dr, Bend. Free. Snowshoe with a Ranger Join a naturalist on a snowshoe tour at Mt.Bachelor and learn about alpine environments and the natural features of the Cascade Range. Snowshoes will be provided. No experience necessary. Saturdays & Sundays, 10am and 1:30pm. Through March 31. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 SW Century Dr, Bend. Free

Subaru WinterFest 2018 Calling all skiers, snowboarders and snow-lovers for a magical festival celebrating all things winter! Enjoy live music, make s’mores with your friends or jam out to SiriusXM while chilling out between runs. Enter prize giveaways and test out the latest gear from Nordica, Lib Tech, Thule and more. Plan to meet some adventurous Subaru owners and learn how you can support Avalanche Rescue Dogs! Friday at 5pm, catch the WinterFest Pre-Party with Funk & Roses at Crows Feet. Saturday at 7:30pm, celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real Crows Feet. 11am Friday kick-off party. Activities all weekend. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 SW Century Dr, Bend. . Walk Up Pilot Butte Join JessBFit on Tuesdays 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. Tuesday, Mar. 20, 8-9 am. Pilot Butte State Park, Pilot Butte State Park. Bend. Free.


O

Tunes for Owls

Local violinist brothers to perform in support of a Great Horned Owl By Jim Anderson

I

Jim Anderson

55 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

t’s safe to say that the Oncken brothers, 9-year-old Ezra and 11-year-old Nicolas, have spent their lives growing up with the sounds of violin strings. Elder brother Nicolas can distinctly remember the first time he heard a violin and how powerful that moment was; and so can his mom, Akiko. “From that first day Nicolas heard the sweet sounds of the violin, he spent hours practicing his love of the instrument by holding a frying pan under his chin and using the first stick he could find for a bow, and began making the music he was hearing in his mind.” It’s a good thing violins come in full size, 3/4, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16 and even 1/10 sizes, so people with short arms can start practicing with a violin at just about any size and age. Both boys started out practicing on a 1/10 size and are still working their way up to the full size, instrument by instrument size. Today, Ezra is using a 1/4 size violin, built in France and made famous in 1941 by winning a musical instrument contest in Paris. Nicolas is using a 3/4 size violin. Both boys each have a personal three-ring binder they use for practicing at home, taking the binders with them to Eugene every Saturday for lessons with their teacher, Kara Eubanks. No matter what the weather, the boy’s dad, Scott Oncken, loads his family

It’s all in the family: Brothers Ezra and Nicolas Oncken, of Sisters, discuss the many sizes of violins with their mom, Akiko, in their home, just before evening practice.

BLM - Utah / flickr.com

into the family Toyota Highlander and off they go for Referencing their upcoming March 18 recital, a benefit their weekly lesson. for Wild Wings Raptor Center, Ezra especially recalls During those lessons with Eubanks the boys use the day the center arranged for their rehabbed Great the three-ring binders conHorned Owl, Marly, to visAnd every school morning both Ezra and taining the printed musiit his classroom at Cascal score of The Masters to Nicolas tune up their violins and happily go cades Academy, and how memorize the notes, and through 40 minutes of practice before school. thrilled he was to see that then work on their form handsome owl up close. He and develop a personal style for performing their work. knows his talented contribution is helping to keep the And every school morning both Ezra and Nicolas rehab operations going, and he’s looking forward to tune up their violins and happily go through 40 min- the next educational raptor visit. SW utes of practice before school. When they get home they practice again before and after supper. Mom The Oncken Brothers Violin Recital doesn’t seem to find it necessary to coax them into with Natalie Fortin on piano practice times; they both have such a love for the vioA fundraiser for Wild Wings  Raptor Rehabilitation of Central Oregon lin that practicing is just another opportunity to get Refreshments and live raptor demo to follow intimate with their instruments and glory in the music Sun., March 18, 2pm they bring forth as they play. Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration With such dedication, it isn’t out of the ordinary for 68825 Brooks Camp Rd., Sisters both Ezra and Nicholas to perform the way they do.

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REAL ESTATE

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Debbie Walsh, Broker GRI, ABR, SRES, RENE Bend Premier Real Estate 541.419.4576 debbie@bendpremierrealestate.com

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TAKE ME HOME

By Nick Nayne

REAL ESTATE

Principal Broker, The Broker Network, LLC

Bend Median Home Price Unchanged from January to February

A

HOME PRICE ROUND-UP

Photos and listing info from Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service

<<LOW

60869 Jasmine, Place, Bend, OR 97702 3 beds, 1 bath, 1,050 square feet, .43 acres lot Built in 1978 $229,900 Listed by Remington Real Estate

MID>>

20268 Morgan Loop, Bend, OR 97703 4 beds, 3.5 baths, 2,721 square feet, .44 acres lot Built in 1971 $400,000 Listed by Keller Williams Realty Central Oregon

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<<HIGH

1687 N.W. Farewell Drive, Bend, OR 97703 3 beds, 2.5 baths, 3,371 square feet, .71 acres lot Built in 1997 $949,000 Listed by John L. Scott Central Or Bend

57 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

ccording to real estate statistics earner, is steadily growing in price due released this week in The Bea- to higher demand, as evidenced by sales price growth in Redcon Report, which is mond. In contrast based on Central OreMedian Sales Price of to Bend home pricgon real estate statises, the median home tics of single family 1 acre or less price in Redmond residence sales of 1 Bend was $285,000 for Febacre or less, the Bend ruary 2018, up from median sales price Feb. 2017 $354,000 $279,000 in Januremained unchanged Feb. 2018 $410,000 ary 2018. Prices per at $410,000 from square foot in Bend January to FebruRedmond increased by almost ary 2018, but still Jan. 2018 $279,000 2.5 percent over Febup from $354,000 in ruary 2017 and RedFebruary 2017. InvenFeb. 2018 $285,000 mond increased by tory remains tight at almost 9 percent for two months. Sales volume was up by 20 homes over Jan- the same period. A recent CoreLogic report forecasts uary and up by 30 units over February an increase of 4.8 percent nationally for 2017. What is interesting to note on a January 2018 to January 2019, but that national as well as regional level is that among homes with a local purchase the lower end of the market, which is price of less than 75 percent of the mediwhat is affordable for the average wage an, it will be more like 9 percent.


REAL ESTATE

SCIENCE ADVICE GODDESS

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4 Beds, 3 Baths, 1972 Sq. Ft. Light and bright 2006 built home. Less than one mile from the Old Mill. Low maintenance yard, patio for entertaining. Large well equipped Kitchen, stainless appliances, and granite tile counters. New carpet 2017. Spacious master bedroom with walk in closet, double sinks in master bath. Plenty of storage throughout the home. Detached 2 car garage, extra deep for all your outdoor equipment storage. Would make a great full time residence, second home or monthly rental.

936 SW Hill Street, Bend, OR 97702 MLS #201711615 Contact Broker Karen Whiteid 541.977.2953 kwhiteid@bhhsnw.com or Broker Nora Spangler 541.728.4020

Remaining Chased

Pedal To The Settle Â

I have a history of terrible relationships that end in awful heartbreak. The advice I keep getting is to date down -- get together with a man who is less attractive than I am and who likes me a little more than I like him. I was kind of into the idea of equality on all levels, but maybe I’m wrong. — Rethinking Woman

There’s a mutual attraction between this guy in my doctoral program and me, and we have great conversations. I’d date him, but he’s in a long-distance relationship. Recently, he started giving driving lessons to earn extra cash. I need to learn to drive a stick shift, so I signed up. This has morphed into our spending time together on weekends, having lunch, etc. My friends say this is a bad idea. But I guess I’m just following my heart. Is that so wrong to do? — Crushing

After you’ve had your heart broken, it’s tempting to opt for romantic safety measures. For example, a garden gnome could be an ideal partner—because few women will fight you for your 18-inch “Man of Resinâ€? and because his stubby little legs are molded together, making it impossible for him to run away. There’s a name for this “dating downâ€? thing you’re contemplating: â€œthe principle of least interest.â€? This is sociologist Willard Waller’s term—from his observations of dating dynamics between college students—describing how whichever partner is the least emotionally attached is in a position to “exploitâ€? the other. Now, you aren’t looking to clean out a guy’s bank account or make him scrub the baseboards with Barbie’s toothbrush. Regardless, you’re likely to have more power in any relationship—and be less likely to be the exploitee—if your response to a guy’s “I love you SO much!â€? involves polite gratitude or pointing skyward: “Look! A UFO!â€? The problem is, how do you engineer this sort of situation? Only “swiping rightâ€? on men you have the lukewarmies for? Only accepting dates from men you don’t entirely respect? Of course, even an “I’m just not that into youâ€? strategy like this isn’t foolproof, because what anthropologists call “mate valueâ€? can shift—like when the mouth-breathing nerdy loser becomes the mouth-breathing but unexpectedly sexy startup multigazillionaire. Tempting as it is to look for hacks to avoid heartbreak, it’s probably more helpful to look at whether there was anything you could’ve— and should’ve—done differently in your past relationships. (Were there red flags you spotted and then dropped off at Goodwill with the weird tablecloth from your aunt?) Beyond any willful blindness on your part, the reality is, relationships sometimes end in heartbreak. It’s just the price of getting together with a man you love and lust after—as opposed to one you approached with “You know, I’ve always kinda pitied you and found you borderline sexually repellant. Whaddya say we get a beer?â€?

“Follow your heart!â€? is like that “forget about money; do what you love!â€? Amy Alkon professional advice. And go right ahead with that career in lentil sculpture—assuming you’re looking forward to spending your golden years in a very nice retirement tent. As for all this time the guy is spending with you, consider that we seem to have evolved to have the romantic version of a spare tire in the trunk—a “backup mateâ€? (to the partner we’re with). Evolutionary psychologists David Buss and Joshua Duntley explain that “mates might cheat, defectâ€? (run off with another), “leave, or die. They might suddenly drop in mate value.â€? Their research finds that both men and women seem to maintain backup mates—three on average—and “try to keep their backup mates out of other relationshipsâ€? (like by giving them false hope during automotive lurchings around the parking lots of closed superstores). You might also consider that there’s more to making yourself attractive to a potential boyfriend than a few swipes of MAC and Maybelline. Social psychologist Robert Cialdini, reflecting on what he calls “the scarcity principle,â€? points out that we value is what seems out of reach (as opposed to what’s all over us like orange “cheese productâ€? on a kid’s veggies): â€œStudy after study shows that items and opportunities are seen to be more valuable as they become less available.â€? In other words, until a man is girlfriend-free, it’s in your best interest to be about as accessible to him as the upholstery of my late Grandma Pauline’s couch was to the rumps of most of humanity. There were people she would remove the plastic covering for -- visiting movie stars and members of the British royal family (a la “I’m bored with St. Barts. How about a slushy January in suburban Detroit?â€?).Â

Get noticed in our Real Estate section Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon,

contact

advertise@bendsource.com

171 Pier Ave. Suite 280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (advicegoddess.com).

Š 2018, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved.


REAL ESTATE LISTINGS

ASTROLOGY

Stunning Home VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Cultivating a robust

is among the best Russian literature of the twentieth century, poet Marina Tsvetayeva lived in poverty. When fellow poet Rainer Maria Rilke asked her to describe the kingdom of heaven, she said, “Never again to sweep floors.� I can relate. To earn a living in my early adulthood, I washed tens of thousands of dishes in restaurant kitchens. Now that I’m grown up, one of my great joys is to avoid washing dishes. I invite you to think along these lines, Pisces. What seemingly minor improvements in your life are actually huge triumphs that evoke profound satisfaction? Take inventory of small pleasures that are really quite miraculous.

sense of humor makes you more attractive to people you want to be attractive to. An inclination to be fun-loving is another endearing quality that’s worthy of being part of your intimate repertoire. There’s a third virtue related to these two: playfulness. Many humans of all genders are drawn to those who display joking, lighthearted behavior. I hope you will make maximum use of these qualities during the coming weeks, Virgo. You have a cosmic mandate to be as alluring and inviting as you dare.

ARIES (March 21-April 19): The British science fiction TV show *Dr. Who* has appeared on BBC in 40 of the last 54 years. Over that span, the titular character has been played by 13 different actors. From 2005 until 2010, Aries actor David Tennant was the magic, immortal, time-traveling Dr. Who. His ascendance to the role fulfilled a hopeful prophecy he had made about himself when he was 13 years old. Now is an excellent time for you, too, to predict a glorious, satisfying, or successful occurrence in your own future. Think big and beautiful!

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): New York City is the most densely populated city in North America. Its land is among the most expensive on earth; one estimate says the average price per acre is $16 million. Yet there are two uninhabited islands less than a mile off shore in the East River: North Brother Island and South Brother Island. Their combined 16 acres are theoretically worth $256 million. But no one goes there or enjoys it; it’s not even parkland. I bring this to your attention, Taurus, because I suspect it’s an apt metaphor for a certain situation in your life: a potentially rich resource or influence that you’re not using. Now is a good time to update your relationship with it. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The iconic 1942 movie *Casablanca* won three Academy Awards and has often appeared on critics’ lists of the greatest films ever made. That’s amazing considering the fact that the production was so hectic. When shooting started, the script was incomplete. The writing team frequently presented the finished version of each new scene on the day it was to be filmed. Neither the director nor the actors knew how the plot would resolve until the end of the process. I bring this to your attention, Gemini, because it reminds me of a project you have been working on. I suggest you start improvising less and planning more. How do you want this phase of your life to climax?

CANCER (June 21-July 22): If all goes well in the coming weeks, you will hone your wisdom about how and when and why to give your abundant gifts to deserving recipients -- as well as how and when and why to *not* give your abundant gifts to deserving recipients. If my hopes come to pass, you will refine your ability to share your tender depths with worthy allies -- and you will refine your understanding of when to *not* share your tender depths with worthy allies. Finally, Cancerian, if you are as smart as I think you are, you will have a sixth sense about how to receive as many blessings as you disseminate.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): How adept are you at playing along the boundaries between the dark and the light, between confounding dreams and liberated joy, between “Is it real?� and “Do I need it?�? You now have an excellent opportunity to find out more about your capacity to thrive on delightful complexity. But I should warn you. The temptation to prematurely simplify things might be hard to resist. There may be cautious pressure coming from a timid voice in your head that’s not fierce enough to want you to grow into your best and biggest self. But here’s what I predict: You will bravely explore the possibilities for self-transformation that are available outside the predictable niches.

305 Northwest Newport, Bend

$489,000

A few short blocks to downtown Bend., this open and airy 3 bedroom 1 bath has been painted inside and out, counters and cabinets updated. Maria Halsey, Broker 541.788.0876 Listed by My Lucky House

Pioneer Park Condominium 1565 NW Wall Street #154 $215,000 Enjoy stellar views of the parklike courtyard from either of the two private balconies. This one bedroom, two bathroom unit features a built in murphy bed in the living room, gas fireplace, air conditioning and so much more.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I suggest you gaze at exquisitely wrought Japanese woodcuts . . . and listen to jazz trumpeter Miles Davis collaborating with saxophonist John Coltrane . . . and inhale the aroma of the earth as you stroll through groves of very old trees. Catch my drift, Libra? Surround yourself with soulful beauty -- or else! Or else what? Or else I’ll be sad. Or else you might be susceptible to buying into the demoralizing thoughts that people around you are propagating. Or else you may become blind to the subtle miracles that are unfolding, and fail to love them well enough to coax them into their fullest ripening. Now get out there and hunt for soulful beauty that awakens your deepest reverence for life. Feeling awe is a necessity for you right now, not a luxury.

Maria Halsey, Broker 541.788.0876 Listed by My Lucky House

FOR SALE Rare Downtown Bend near Bond St

Commercial Building 75 foot height limitation Best Location at 505 NW Franklin Ave. Price $1,745,000 Owner Financing Available Contact John R Gist, Principal Broker Cascadia Properties 541.815.5000

FOR RENT 2052 SW Helmholtz Redmond Vacation Rental 5 Way, NW Minnesota Ave.

7.52 Amazing Acre Development parcelFirehall in SW Redmond runs Fully Furnished Condo in the along the west side's primary arterial. Heart of Downtown Bend.transportation All Utilities, Cable TV, Property has been included in the$3,300 Higher Density WiFi included. Monthly Rent Overlay Zone, which permit density up to 30 units per For More Information www.cascadiapropertymgmt.com acreJohn for multi-family and residential. R Gist, Principal Broker Cascadia Properties 541.815.5000

SCORPIO (Oct. 23Nov. 21): In the Sikh religion, devotees are urged to attack weakness and sin with five “spiritual weapons�: contentment, charity, kindness, positive energy, and humility. Even if you’re not a Sikh, I think you’ll be wise to employ this strategy in the next two weeks. Why? Because your instinctual nature will be overflowing with martial force, and you’ll have to work hard to channel it constructively rather than destructively. The best way to do that is to be a vehement perpetrator of benevolence and healing.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): In 1970, a biologist was hiking through a Brazilian forest when a small monkey landed on his head, having jumped from a tree branch. Adelmar Coimbra-Filho was ecstatic. He realized that his visitor was a member of the species known as the golden-rumped lion tamarin, which had been regarded as extinct for 65 years. His lucky accident led to a renewed search for the elusive creatures, and soon more were discovered. I foresee a metaphorically comparable experience coming your way, Sagittarius. A resource or influence or marvel you assumed was gone will reappear. How will you respond? With alacrity, I hope!

2052 SW Helmholtz Way, Redmond

7.52 Acre Development parcel in SW Redmond runs along the west side's primary transportation arterial. Property has been included in the Higher Density Overlay Zone, which permit density up to 30 units/acre Tony Levison, Broker 541.977.1852 Listed by Windermere Real Estate

Open House Saturday 11-2 $339,950 20884 Top Knot Lane, Bend

Immaculate 3 bed, 2 bath 1732 sq.ft. single level in Quail Crossing.

Listed by John L. Scott Bend Angie Cox, Broker 541.213.9950

Restaurant

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The Velcro fastener is a handy invention that came into the world thanks to a Swiss engineer named George de Mestral. While wandering around the Alps with his dog, he got curious about the bristly seeds of the burdock plants that adhered to his pants and his dog. After examining them under a microscope, he got the idea to create a clothing fastener that imitated their sticking mechanism. In accordance with the astrological omens, Capricorn, I invite you to be alert for comparable breakthroughs. Be receptive to help that comes in unexpected ways. Study your environment for potentially useful clues and tips. Turn the whole world into your classroom and laboratory. It’s impossible to predict where and when you may receive a solution to a long-running dilemma! AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): On May 29, 1953, Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay climbed to the top of Mount Everest. They were celebrated as intrepid heroes. But they couldn’t have done it without massive support. Their expedition was powered by 20 Sherpa guides, 13 other mountaineers, and 362 porters who lugged 10,000 pounds of baggage. I bring this to your attention, Aquarius, in the hope that it will inspire you. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to gather more of the human resources and raw materials you will need for your rousing expedition later this year.

Homework: Describe what you’d be like if you were the opposite of yourself. Write Freewillastrology.com.

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59 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Although her work


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WELLNESS EVENTS All Levels Vinyasa Flow Prepare your body and mind for a fun weekend with an hourlong Vinyasa yoga class. All levels welcome. First class is free! Meets Saturdays, 10-11 am. Camp Victory Personal Training, 61511 American Ln Suite 5, Bend. $10/drop-in. Beginners Tai Chi w/ Grandmaster Franklin Designed for those who have never

Community Gathering Grief comfort and

support in a group setting. All are welcome. Tuesdays, 6-8 pm. Good Grief Guidance, 33 NW Louisiana Ave. Bend. Free.

Community Healing Flow A gentle flow

class by donation with all proceeds will benefit the Humane Society of Central Oregon. Fridays, 5-6:15 pm. Bend Community Healing Center, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 133. Bend.

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, 4-5:30pm. Tuesdays & Wednesdays, 6-7:30 pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way Suite 200. Bend. Free.

Evolutionary SELF-Healing Through guided imagery, you’ll learn how to tap into your internal power. Thursdays, 6:30-8 pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd, #A-5, Bend. Free. Free Yoga Keep your body and mind healthy

and well. Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays. 7:458:30 am. Plantae, 2115 NE Hwy 20 Ste 107. Bend.

Good Grief Guidance Community Drop-in We all live with grief—death, divorce,

loss, illness, conflict, abandonment, disappointment. But is it possible to thrive? Learn about the first three steps to well being. Meets Tuesdays, 6-8pm & Fridays, 11am-1pm. Good Grief Guidance, 33 NW Louisiana Ave. Bend, OR. Free.

Intro to the Practice of Yoga Workshop

Are you new to yoga but don’t know how to begin? Have been away from it for a while, or just want to deepen your practice? Learn basic yoga poses, how to safely practice yoga if you have an

Meditation and Relaxation Class Join us! As a certified hypnotist, you’ll experience relaxing the body, mind and emotions. Silence any chattered thoughts and feel deeper inner peace, love and joy. Enjoy an amazing journey through visualization. Leave feeling peaceful. Please call 971-217-6576 to register. Meets Mondays, 10-10:30am. Bend Golf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Dr. Bend. $9/minimum donation. Men & Stress Learn the causes of stress and reduce the negative effects of stress. Let go of anger, manage anxiety and improve relationships. Call Dan Anderson, M.A. to reserve your place 541.390.3133 or email: dan@anderson-counseling.com. Wednesdays, 6-7:30 pm. Old Mill District, 475 SW Powerhouse Dr. Bend. $25/week.

Mom & Baby Yoga Moms will focus on

shoulder opening, easy yoga sequences and postnatal core-building while spending time bonding with their babies and connecting with fellow new moms. No yoga experience necessary. Tuesdays, Noon-1pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100. Bend. $17/ drop-in.

Morning Vinyasa Flow Yoga Start you day energized and refreshed with an all levels Vinyasa Flow class. Meets Mondays & Wednesdays. 6-7 am. Camp Victory Personal Training, 61511 American Ln Suite 5, Bend. $10/Drop-in. .

Morning Yoga Join Outside In every Monday morning for free all levels hatha or vinyasa yoga. No experience necessary, mats are available for use. First time students receive a $10 Outside In gift certificate. Mondays, 8:45-9:45 am. OutsideIN, 845 NW Wall St, Bend. Free. MultiLevel AcroYoga Blends partner acro-

batics and yoga in a fun, safe and accessible way. The class will follow the same basic theme with various tracks for beginner, intermediate and advanced students. No partner necessary. Tuesdays, 7:30-9pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100. Bend. $17/drop-in.

Noon Yoga Link breath to movement in this

First class is free! Meets Mondays, Wednesdays & Saturdays. 12-1 pm. Camp Victory Personal Training, 61511 American Ln Suite 5, Bend. $10/ drop-in.

Pranic Healing & Body Aesthetics Short

exploration of Pranic Healing and the structure of our energy body. Learn how our energy shapes all the ways we feed the physical body and what our body looks like. Short meditation is included. Bring a notebook. RSVP to Andrea at andreafurber@mac.com. Pay online or at the door. Intro class, full class on March 24 & 25. Friday, Mar. 16, 6:30-9 pm. Pure Light A Family Health Studio, 497 SW Century Dr Suite 120 Bend. $10/class.

Pranic Healing for a Beautiful Face

Learn about the science of Pranic Healing and the art of moving energy in our auric field to promote wellness and peace, the basis for beauty. A meditation for peace and loving kindness is included. Bring a notebook. RSVP to Andrea at andreafurber@mac.com. Pay online or at the door. Intro class, full class on March 24 & 25. Saturday, Mar. 17, 2-4:30 pm. Pure Light A Family Health Studio, 497 SW Century Dr Suite 120 Bend. $10/class.

Pranic Healing - The Art & Science

Restore You Restorative yoga formulas taught with sandbags and an array of props to boost circulation, reduce stress/tension both physical and mental. Customized attention with smaller class sizes and individualized support to inspire body’s natural healing capacity. Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Sundays at 10:30am. Wednesdays at 5pm. Sundogyoga, 1245 SE Division Street. Bend. $8/class. Tai Chi w/ Grandmaster Franklin The

focus is on the individual, not the group. This is the original form that is taught in the monastery. This holistic approach focuses on the entire body as well as the mental and spiritual aspects. Certified and endorsed by the Oregon Council on Aging. Contact Grandmaster Franklin at 623203-4883 for more info. Tuesdays & Thursdays, 9:45-10:45 am. Terpsichorean Dance Studio, 1601 NW Newport Ave. Bend, OR. $70/Month.

The Vance Stance/Structural Reprogramming Get to the root of why you are tight,

crooked and suffering. In this series of two-hour classes in posture and flexibility, reduce pain in back, neck, shoulder, knees, hips and bunions. This 12-week series begins Feb. 12 and runs through May 8. Mondays, Noon-2pm & 6-8pm. Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Thursdays, noon-2pm. Call 541-330-9070 for more info. EastSide Home Studio, 21173 Sunburst Ct. Bend. $180/12 class series.

Explore the science of our body’s energetic structure. See how moving the energy can make our bodies strong, healthy and balanced. Short meditation for peace and loving kindness included. Bring a notebook. RSVP to Andrea at andreafurber@mac.com. Pay online or at the door. Intro class, full class on March 24 & 25. Wednesday, Mar. 14, 6:30-9 pm. Pure Light A Family Health Studio, 497 SW Century Dr Suite 120 Bend. $10/class.

Tuesday Performance Group Maximize your time with focused, intense efforts. All ages and abilities welcome. Sessions led by accomplished trail runner Max King. Email max@ footzonebend.com for details. Tuesdays, 5:30 pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St, Bend. Free.

Qigong/Relaxation Classes Learn 2

Vin/Yin Yoga Mondays and Thursdays. 3 pm.

standing forms for Detox and Building Qi and 2 Qigong Relaxation techniques. This class will review ideas to assist with sleep issues and pain management. New material added. Pre-register with joyce52brown@gmail.com or 541-420-5875. Fridays, March 2 through 30. 12:45-1:45pm. $50/5 weeks or $12/1 hr session if unable to attend all 5 classes. Blissful Heart, 29 NW Greeley St. Bend.

Recovery Yoga Wherever you are on the road of recovery, this yoga class offers a safe and confidential place to explore how meditation, breath work, journaling and yoga can aid in your recovery. Not limited to drug and alcohol dependence—we are all on the road to recovery from something! Thursdays, 7-8 pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave, Bend. $8.

hour-long Vinyasa class. All levels welcome.

First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. Bend.

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, 7-9 pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd, #A-5, Bend. $10. Yoga for 50+Plus Learn accuracy in poses under an experienced teacher’s knowledgeable guidance. Correct alignment is taught resulting in a safe, yet transformative experience. This highly adaptive method is open to all adults of any age or physical condition through the use of yoga props. You will gain strength, flexibility and stand tall! Mondays & Wednesdays, 11 am. Iyengar Yoga of Bend, 660 NE Third St. Bend.

plants & rocks HIGH DESERT GARDENING

Jake Ringold PN-8392A FALL CLEANUPS-PRUNING-TREE CONSULTING

61 VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

taken Tai Chi or for those who have learned and forgotten. Mondays & Wednesdays. Contact Grandmaster Franklin at 623-203-4883 for more info. Mondays & Wednesdays, 10-11 am. Finley Butte Park, 51390 Walling Lane La Pine. $35/ month.

injury, pain or other medical or physical conditions or limitations. You will learn alignment and modifications unique to you and how to practice breath work effectively in yoga or every day life. Contact Ruth Ann Clarke at yogarunnergal@ gmail.com for more info. Saturday, Mar. 17, 3-5 pm. Functional Fitness Personal Training & Yoga Therapy, LLC, 1693 SW Chandler, #140, Bend. $25/workshop.


smokesignals@bendsource.com

SMOKE SIGNALS Leafly, the Book

By Josh Jardine

Yes, a real-life book, made from actual tree pulp Julia Sumpter/Leafly

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 15, 2018 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

62

L

DAILY SPECIALS

$4 & $5 GRAMS AVAILABLE

for Recreational and Medical Customers Limited Supplies

Hours 9 am - 9 pm 923 SE 3RD STREET, BEND

cannacopiabend.com

541.678.5199

eafly is an app and website that, along with Weedmaps, is fairly well known to consumers of cannabis, be it medical or recreational. It’s great for finding dispensaries nearest to your GPS location, and can show you the menus, prices and customer reviews of individual dispensaries and their products. It’s popular AF, receiving 10 million monthly visitors and 40 million page views on both platforms combined. Yet for many, myself included, it’s real value are the News and Strains sections. The content in the News section is well researched and written, and a great way to keep up with cannabis happenings around the globe. The Strains section is a goldmine of information. You can sort through hundreds, if not thousands, of strains and filter your search by strain name, moods and activities, medical conditions and nearly 100 other filters. It’s a very comprehensive repository of information that you would otherwise need to source out from various other sites. In addition, there’s an equally valuable and often even more useful section comprised of user reviews of strains and products. It’s both remarkably unbiased and specific about the benefits and effects consumers obtained from individual products. Now Leafly has assembled a “book.” Millennials, let me explain: It’s like an uber-analog Kindle, upon which you can consume content, but it uses dead tree pulp to make “pages” that you “turn” using your “fingers,” much like swiping. Ask your parents. I’m in love with this book. It’s rare that you find a cannabis guide that would be of interest and have value to both the neophyte and the seasoned veteran. Many are too focused on just one area, and become pot porn tomes with lots of pictures of very pretty buds and plants. I like pretty, too, but substance always trumps it. And this is a substantive book. I’ve been giving away and loaning out the additional copies provided to my medical marijuana patients, as it could conceivably answer any questions they might have for me, and actually give better information. The chapters include:

Understanding the Basics, covering cannabinoids, terpenes, genotypes and phenotypes, and tips for beginners Smoking, covering how a grinder works, how to pack a bowl, what is shake and the difference between joints, blunts and spliffs Edibles, Topicals, Oils and Concentrates, Buying and Consumption tips, and even a Troubleshooting chapter with a section on what to do if you get too high. It’s a hefty 227 pages, but beautifully produced. Tons of color photos make the science you’re reading about easier to understand, and it is science heavy, albeit extremely accessible. The authors help the reader appreciate and understand cannabis in ways that they’ve never known or may have forgotten. Example: “If you find yourself combating paranoia and anxiety...and too much cannabis has you on the verge of freaking out, just sniff or chew on a few black peppercorns for almost instantaneous relief.” I didn’t know this, but I’m now including a small container of peppercorns in the cannabis I provide to patients who are prone to unpleasant side effects of consumption. For those using cannabis to treat Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or geriatric patients with limited experience, this can be an easily accessible safety valve. As with anything that has been demonized and prohibited, education and experience is how cannabis is gaining wider understanding and acceptance. This book is a great tool to that end. (Full disclosure: The box with review copies of this book from Leafly also included stickers, pins and socks. As I’m not a 6-year-old girl, at least not on the outside, I gifted the stickers and pins and kept the socks, the only item I might perceive as bribe-worthy. I’ve written several pieces for Leafly, but that was well over a year ago. In other words, I have no favoritism toward this book even though the company that produced it gave me a couple pairs of socks. If you have an item you would like considered for review, please don’t send socks with said item with the expectation that they will garner you a review.)


THE REC ROOM

Crossword “Are you amused?�

Questions, comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark at pearl@bendsource.com

Š Pearl Stark mathpuzzlesgames.com/quodoku

Fill in every row, column, and 3x3 box with each of the letters exactly once.

I D L E

“When a man _____, he ______ in addition to everything else he usually eats.� — E. W. Howe

ACROSS 

DOWN 

1. Begin to swarm

1. Embarrassed

6. Stale

2. Singular opening?

9. Awkward shiver

3. Have a quick bite

14. Noah’s great-grandfather

4. Somewhat bitter

15. Spot for current events?

5. House party?

16. Muppet in a striped shirt

6. “Astro Boy� creator Tezuka

17. Shabbiness

7. Fancy lens

19. British film icon Michael

8. Laundry load

20. Important and often arrogant person

9. Religious subgroup

22. “___ have to?�

10. Mecca-facer’s spot

23. Comparative words

11. Ill feeling

24. Ending for Senegal

12. From that time

25. One of the golfers in the Big Five Era

13. Mousy

28. Rapper born Park Jae-sang

18. “Billy Breathes� jam band

30. Territory split up during perestroika: Abbr.

21. The Orient

32. Qatar’s capital

25. Head start, say

34. Problems with the ticker

26. Deafening

40. Batshit

27. Entertainer who makes a big splash?

42. Dana Loesch is its spokesperson

29. Urges

43. “Let’s move!�

31. Pleased with oneself

44. Jimmy Carter’s secretary of state

33. Big name in women’s sportswear

47. “Jane the Virgin� star Rodriguez

35. Ham’s boat

48. Superlative ending

36. Fence post part

49. Weight lifter’s nos.

37. Some city bonds, briefly

51. Blue overhead

38. Place to see camels

52. QB Prescott

39. “Take your coat off�

54. Duet number

41. Some Narcan cases, briefly

57. Sci-fi regulars, briefly

45. Pooches

59. Rome’s founders 63. Stares at

46. Film critic who was the subject of the documentary “Life Itself�

64. One who always comes clean

50. Bill Hader “SNL� role

67. Promotional piece

52. Animal that “gits along�

68. Water holder

53. Charm

69. Legal

55. Comedian Sykes

70. Humana rival

56. NBA legend who released $500 in cash attached to balloons for his 46th birthday

72. Stocking material

58. How you might feel if you see Gargamel slip and fall in a big mud puddle 59. “The Godfather� composer Nino 60. Annapolis coll. 61. Titled British woman 62. Close up 65. Back in the day 66. Boy toy?

A T O M S

The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote:

71. Goose Island drink

63

★

We’re Local!

Difficulty Level

VOLUME 22  ISSUE 11  /  March 15, 2018  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Š2017 Brendan Emmett Quigley (www.brendanemmettquigley.com)

By Brendan Emmett Quigley

Pearl’s Puzzle

ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S PUZZLES

“It is not true that the English invented cricket as a way of making all other human endeavors look interesting and lively; that was merely an unintended side effect.� — Bill Bryson

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