VO L U M E 2 1 / I S SUE 1 3 / M A R C H 3 0 , 2017
BEER THE
ISSUE
One Stop Guide Why to go and what to get at C.O. breweries p.10 The art behind your beer labels p.12 Infographic: Foods to go with your brew p.19
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IN THIS ISSUE
COVER
Cheers! It’s another beer issue coming your way. We know you love your beer, Central Oregon, so in honor of it, the Source brings you yet another issue that pays homage to this famous fermented beverage. Pore over this issue for beer-related stories, including:
ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR Jared Rasic jared@bendsource.com
Why go? What to get when you get there? If you’re ready to expand your beer knowledge to more than one or two of your regular go-tos, let this be your guide, courtesy of the Source’s beer guy Kevin Gifford.
CALENDAR EDITOR & STAFF REPORTER Magdalena Bokowa magdalena@bendsource.com
The art behind your beer labels.
COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts BEER REVIEWER Kevin Gifford micro@bendsource.com FREELANCERS Jim Anderson, Josh Jardine, Nick Nayne, Howard Leff, Alan Sculley SYNDICATED CONTENT Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Matt Jones, E.J. Pettinger, Pearl Stark, Tom Tomorrow, Shannon Wheeler PRODUCTION MANAGER Wyatt Gaines wyatt@bendsource.com GRAPHIC DESIGNER Esther Gray esther@bendsource.com ADVERTISING SALES DIRECTOR Amanda Klingman amanda@bendsource.com ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Ban Tat, Chris Larro, Ashley Sarvis advertise@bendsource.com
One-stop guide to Central Oregon breweries.
3
p.10
p.12
Howard Leff met with a host of local artists who contribute their creativity to the labels on your favorite bottles and cans. Now the next time you’re sipping a cold one, you’ll have something cool to tell your friends.
Source Spotlight
p.37
She’s the gal behind Bend Brewfest and a host of other events around town. Richard Sitts talks with a local comedian and self-proclaimed “Beer Goddess” for this week’s Spotlight.
Call for Artists: If you're interested in being a SW featured artist, email: wyatt@bendsource.com.
Also check out these features:
News – Making street crossings safer
p.7
A recent settlement may translate into the largest commitment to accessible transportation in Oregon’s history. Magdalena Bokowa reports.
Book Talk – Hiking the Pacific Crest Trail
p.35
It’s nearly full-blown hiking season, and author and hiking guru Eli Boschetto is here to help you make it a good one with his book “Hiking the Pacific Crest Trail: Oregon.” We sat down with the author to get the scoop.
Outside - Bust out your running shoes!
On the Cover: We had an amazing time visiting Deschutes County breweries in preparation for this cover. Art direction by Wyatt Gaines. Photography by Audrey Bell.
p.45
With the arrival of spring, it’s time for runners—and hopefuls—to start their outdoor training. Magdalena Bokowa has the details on how, where—and even why—you might consider taking up the sport this season.
Opinion 4 Mailbox 5 News 7 Feature 8 Our Picks
Sound 13 Clubs 15 Events 17 Culture 25 Chow 29 Screen 33
OFFICE MANAGER Angela Moore moore@bendsource.com
Outside 37 Thanks to Lyrics Born for an awesome performance at Mt. Bachelor Saturday night! Follow @sourceweekly for an inside look at Central Oregon happenings.
CONTROLLER Angela Switzer angela@bendsource.com PUBLISHER Aaron Switzer aaron@bendsource.com
Real Estate
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Advice 42 Astrology 43 Smoke Signals
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Puzzles 47
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EDITOR Nicole Vulcan editor@bendsource.com
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OPINION
A New Path Forward for Health Care
R
epublicans in the U.S. House and Senate dealt themselves a political blow this month when they rolled out the American Health Care Act and then killed it before it could reach a vote in the House of Representatives. There were a great many concerns about the plan: the proposed deregulation of the private health insurance industry, the increased prices that would have befallen older Americans, the full repeal of the Medicaid expansion and the cuts to women’s health care. However, most concerning were the estimated half-million Oregonians who were expected to lose coverage when the new plan was implemented, according to a statement by Oregon Gov. Kate Brown. Unfortunately at the helm of that rollout was our own Oregon Rep. Greg Walden. On March 6, Walden released a statement stating: “I’m proud that the plan we’ve put forth today reflects eight years’ worth of conversations with families, patients, and doctors. Simply put, we have a Better Way to deliver solutions that put patients—not bureaucrats—first and we are moving forward united in our efforts to rescue the American people from the mess Obamacare has created. Today is the first step in helping families across this country obtain truly affordable health care, and we’re eager to get this rescue mission started.” After eight years of effort, Oregonians expect more. The rush for implementation of this was more politics than policy—not a good reflection on our district’s Representative in the House. Moving forward, our state needs a bipartisan effort to create a viable health care system. “There are plenty of ideas already on the table that would make health care more affordable for working families,” said Sen. Jeff Merkley, in a release issued just after the announcement
of the failure of the Republican plan, “from a public option, to prescription drug negotiations, to offering older Americans the chance to buy into Medicare. I’m happy to work with anyone, from either side of the aisle, to explore these or any other ideas that would improve health care for working Americans.” We support these efforts to address health care within the Affordable Health Care Act. The plan isn’t perfect, and premiums and deductibles are indeed more than many Oregonians can afford. The state’s share of the burden for Medicaid—what we call the Oregon Health Plan—is about to increase. And while we commend the Oregon Legislature for its ongoing efforts to insure every Oregon child through the current Cover All Kids legislation, it’s yet another thing that doesn’t have a clear source of revenue. Health care is indeed a human right, and while the legislature already has serious budget constraints on its back, our state also has the power to make meaningful moves that could stand as a model for what’s possible nationwide. Oregon has long been a model for what’s possible in health care. Were we to think creatively, rather than politically, Oregon could be a frontrunner in the push for a single-payer health care system. This system has been touted by many physicians and health care professionals in Oregon and beyond—and they should know; they work every day within the system. However, as we have all learned these past weeks, health care is complicated and the ACA, contrary to the current political climate, is a good program that has expanded coverage for tens of thousands of Oregonians. Hopefully the gamesmanship is over surrounding health care, and Oregon’s elected officials can begin to fashion a path forward. SW
OPINION Letters
WEED + CHRISTIANS
WHY BEND NEEDS TO BE A TREE CITY WITH AN ADVISORY TREE BOARD Trees provide essential services like cleaning our air and water and mitigating the effects of climate change. These benefits must be protected. The City of Sweet Home and the City of Sisters have Tree Boards that do great things. The City of Sisters has a tree inventory. There is current data on the urban canopy which allows for knowledgeable advice for city management decisions. The City of Sweet Home’s tree board created a heritage tree program which allows citizens to plant trees with a plaque to someone or something of importance. The citizens say the heritage tree program in Sweet Home has strengthened civic pride in their city. Tree boards are essential in the face of climate change. For those of you that may disagree I suggest an example from the east coast. The Emerald Ash Borer outbreak decimated large swaths of urban forests across 25 states. Over 17 million Ash trees had to be treated, removed and/or replaced. The estimated cost was 10.7 billion dollars according
LIGHTMETER
5 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
To Whomever, In the great words of the Lord (also the words he gave The Beatles): I am you, you are me We are one and we are all Together All we need is love… but patience helps too! And with that being said, an opinion is just that and should not be put out as gospel. We are all just humans. Being! (Sammy Hagar) We never have the right to judge or condemn on our own opinions. That job already has a committed boss, God! So whoever sends out messages of hate, forever know, I will do my best to put a better spin on it, I will then take your negativity, turn it into a positive and I’m going to send it right back to you with love, kindness and happiness. Peace be with you! You’ve been heard, we appreciate your opinion & we love you. We hope you find what makes you happy & brings you joy, then there will be no need for hate or anger or unkindness. Also quit making us “pot heads” out to be lazy idiots with nothing but problems. Pot is not one of Oregon’s problems and our “legal weed” revenue will help with fixing our real problems. Good people do smoke cannabis, reefer, weed & yes, marijuana. It’s a gift from God! Kudos to Ms. La Fleur. Excellent story teller you are! LMFAO. You are so awesome. You too, Josh (Jardine). (To Everyone, Angela Moore has the patience of Job! She’s Amazing! As we all are!) —Raylene White
to the USDA. Cities with active informed tree boards were a lot better prepared for this disaster than ones without. There are concerns that this push for the Arbor Day Tree City Designation and a Tree Board in the City of Bend will result in overbearing governance. That is not the intention. Tree boards are not governing boards. Their roles are only advisory. The intention is to have a qualified tree advisory board that will advise the city and citizens to best protect the high quality of life in the beautiful City of Bend. As a citizen concerned with the sustainable future of Bend I ask you to please consider the Arbor Day Foundation’s Tree City USA designation and the formation of a Tree Board in this city I call home. — Paul O’Neill
BEND’S (NON-EXISTENT) RENTAL MARKET If you are rich, you are good to go. If you are poor and choose not to work or can’t work, you can live off of the system so the middle class to low income people like myself PAY for it! I am a single mom, I work full time and have done so MY whole life! I make a decent wage, however, it still isn’t enough to really survive in Bend because of the RENT! I have lived seven years on the Westside and my landlord keeps raising my rent! It is now at a point where I have to move and can’t even afford the rentals anywhere else! I have a 10-year-old little girl and may have to rent a one bedroom for the both of us to even try to make ends meet and even those are hard to come by! The greedy landlords are ruining the lives of people like myself who work hard. My landlord just recently raised my rent $100 after raising it $150 last year. Though I still have the crappy carpet/linoleum that is from the 80s and a stove that is even older and I can barely cook on! I am outraged that the landlords get away with raising the rent over and over and over again without having to upgrade the apartments! My neighbor is in her 70s and has lived there for nearly 10 years in the same four-plex as I. She is on a fixed income and is struggling because of the GREED of these landlords. It is ridiculous and maddening that they get away with this!!!! Rent everywhere is way too high! They are building new apartments but are charging $1,200 to $1,600 to live in! How the hell does that help us low income or middle class? It doesn’t! I am just at a LOSS! No wonder people are homeless! I have even thought I may end up in a motel and I am 48 years old with my little girl! There should be some laws for the landlords who are this greedy! Very angry and disgusted about this. And people that aren’t on unemployment anymore are a lot of the time OUT of benefits so they are not getting
@danielmrobbins captures dramatic lines and vibrant colors in Oregon. Tag @sourceweekly and show up here in Lightmeter.
unemployment. That doesn’t mean they have a good job and are prospering now! HELP????! — Kathleen Beck
IN RESPONSE TO CONGRESSMAN WALDEN HAD A TOUGH WEEK (3/24) I have written and called Representative Greg Walden with civil questions and requests about visiting constituents in Bend, and I know I am not alone, and not one response. Good to hear someone trying to get a response to these questions. And we all have every right to be angry! — Cathy Sheldon-Wambaugh, via facebook.com
LETTER OF THE WEEK Susan, congratulations on your stealth maneuvers in civic engagement! You heard it here first, peeps. Want Walden to listen? According to this reader, you need to pretend you’re from Prineville. Susan, come on in for your gift card to Palate!
E.J. Pettinger’s
Mild Abandon
I write Walden weekly to express my opposition to his party only vote/agenda. My biggest issue — legislate — do the job which includes discussion, revision, and compromise. It’s time for Walden to be defeated. — Julie Hudson, via facebook.com I was shocked to find that Walden’s congressional email would not accept my letter. It repeatedly told me that I had not entered the zip code correctly. I thought that it was because I have the new 97703 so I tried 97701. Repeatedly failed. Until I entered Prineville’s zip. Worked 1st time. — Susan Vonbergen
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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!
He was dismayed to learn that, while there are special prisons for white-collar criminals, there are such accomodations for musical-theater criminals.
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NEWS By Howard Leff April Anxiety
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U of O Athletics
Oregon Ducks head to their first Final Four since ’39
musical artist
Taking Your
The University of Oregon men got to celebrate their entry into the Final Four, while the women lost to the dominating UConn Huskies.
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en years after the Great Depression, deep into FDR’s second term, the University of Oregon Men’s Basketball team, which ran the somewhat novel (for the times) fast-break offense, wound up in the first-ever Final Four. They would go on to win the national championship – beating Ohio State, 46-33, on March 27, 1939.
victory to get there, the Tar Heels won a 75-73 thriller over Kentucky – the decisive hoop coming with 0.3 seconds left.
This was a long time ago. Like before ESPN. Anyone remember what their bracket looked like? Did they write it on parchment with one of those feather pens?
The Pacific Northwest is well represented at the Final Four, which starts Saturday near Phoenix. The first semi-final pits Gonzaga against South Carolina. The winners will play for the national title April 3.
Either way, the Ducks’ men’s team hasn’t returned to the Final Four since. Until now. Thanks to their upset win over Kansas on Saturday, Oregon will play mighty North Carolina in the second national semi-final game this Saturday. While the Ducks cruised to a 14-point
For a moment, it appeared that the Ducks’ women’s basketball team may have also been a Final Four contender, but the team lost, 90-52, to UConn Monday night.
Eugene has waited 78 years for this, so dig out your Oregon green. The madness is not over yet. SW
NEWS
Landmark Disability Rights Settlement
ODOT to make street crossings safer across state highway system by Magdalena Bokowa
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This landmark agreement means people who use wheelchairs won’t be forced to choose between navigating their chairs in traffic on busy highways or remaining isolated in their homes. — KATHY WILDE, DISABILITY RIGHTS OREGON Upgrades and Installations Specifically, ODOT must install missing or non-compliant curb ramps and upgrade crossing signals. With a whopping 15,000 identified locations, the organization has a steady timeline to fix the issue; 30 percent within five years and 75 percent within 10 years, with total project completion in 15 years. Elizabeth Seaberry, community specialist for Disability Rights Oregon, says, “These improvements are critical for connecting parts of communities that have been difficult or unsafe to access and for enhancing safety along highways...The agreement (is) the largest commitment to accessible transportation in state history.” About time “It has been 23 years since the courts made it clear that fixing curb ramps is part of what you have to do when building or resurfacing roadways,”
says Kathy Wilde, litigation director for Disability Rights Oregon. “But we are talking about 15,000 curb ramp locations throughout the state – and many locations have more than one curb ramp.” She noted that during the settlement negotiations, Disability Rights Oregon pushed for a shorter time frame, but that ODOT “was adamant it just wasn’t possible.” She noted that “any further delay is frustrating,” and hopes that the “quick-hit” remedy sites that plaintiffs have identified will be targeted first. “We wanted to do something that was realistic but aggressive,” says Tom Fuller communications section manager for the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT). The state will use an initial investment of $5 million to tackle the issues that have been flagged as high priority by the plaintiffs and AOCIL, including replacing existing curbs that are too steep, which put wheelchair users at risk of losing control. The project will also replace lips at the bottom of ramps that are deemed too high, which may isolate users onto the street. ODOT has designated another $18 million for spending on curb ramps and other accessibility features from 2018 onward. “We have put together a pretty large group in the agency to oversee this,” says Fuller, who noted that there is now a full-time ODOT employee who will oversee the project’s implementation. “It’s a big job; it will become a piece of people’s jobs here at the department. We’re all in.” City moving faster than state The City of Bend began making its streets accessible in 2004 when the Project Civic Access Settlement Agreement was signed with the U.S. Department of Justice, brought on by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). The ADA put into law safeguards for those facing disabilities including curb ramps and crossing signals. Still, Disability Rights Oregon says that, “More than two decades after the ADA went into effect, individuals with physical disabilities across Oregon still found that they were barred from some of the most important streets of their cities and
towns by badly-constructed or missing curb ramps.” Since 2008, Bend has been moving toward more accessible infrastructure. Karin Morris, accessibility manager for the city of Bend, says it “improves approximately 200 curb ramps annually.” She also noted the implementation of a barrier removal request process that began in 2010 which “allows individuals with disabilities to notify the City when they encounter a barrier to travel in the public right-of-way.” She also pointed to recent sidewalk initiatives which are bettering accessibility, including the South Third Street Pedestrian Project, the Galveston Corridor Project, the 14th Street Corridor Project and Wilson Avenue. The South Third Street Project, for example, aims to offer a safe and continuous pedestrian corridor in a high-traffic area which previously has had a poor rating for pedestrian accessibility. ODOT just implemented the same complaint model the City has been using for seven years. Wilde, of Disability Rights Oregon urges citizens who notice inefficiencies to lodge a complaint through ODOT’s website so that they may recognize priorities. Moving forward Barry Fox-Quamme, board president of the Association of Oregon Centers for Independent Living, which helped bring the suit to court, commented, “The voices of people with disabilities play a vital role for achieving enduring systems change.” In the end, Wilde is hopeful that the timelines of completing 75 percent of the project in 10 years will be met. “This landmark agreement means people who use wheelchairs won’t be forced to choose between navigating their chairs in traffic on busy highways or remaining isolated in their homes. For people with physical disabilities, being able to safely cross the street is prerequisite for being integrated into their communities,” said Wilde. “From trips to the grocery store to traveling to doctor’s appointments and socializing with friends, this agreement will enable more Oregonians with physical disabilities to participate fully in community life.” SW
ODOT Estimated completion date of 15,000 non compliant locations.
30%
5 Years
75%
10 Years
100%
15 Years
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
I
t all stemmed from the power of protest. Jordan Ohlde, a Bend man confined to a wheelchair, is one of eight plaintiffs who, along with the Association of Oregon Centers for Independent Living (AOCIL) brought a landmark case against the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) to make state street crossings safer. For Ohlde, who suffers from cerebral palsy, it was the missing curb ramps on Greenwood Avenue that forced him to wheel his chair into the bike lane of what Bendites know is a very busy highway. On March 27, a U.S District Court approved a settlement which requires ODOT to make street crossings safer across the entire state highway system. “I’m excited that they decided so quickly,” says Ohlde. “It’s going to make Bend more reliable for all citizens, not only for those using wheelchairs, but those who use walkers and strollers.”
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BEER THE
Prost!
9 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
ISSUE
With Central Oregon blooming into spring, the weather is just screaming the mantra, “the sudsier, the better.” With a slew of craft beer selections, our 2017 Beer Issue delves deep into this yum-tastic world of all things hops, yeast and grain. We offer an in-depth brewery guide that tells you something about each of our 20 local breweries, and what to get once you’re there. Get to know the intricate world of beer labels by meeting some of the artists behind the iconic imagery adorning your favorite bevvy. And finally, did you know IPAs quench your thirst better during a spicy meal or that pale ales work great with cheesy foods? Look no further for a blueprint of what brew to pair with your next meal.
THE BEER ISSUE
ALL ABOUT BEER AROUND BEND WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 9, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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The one-stop guide to breweries in Central Oregon by Kevin Gifford
Almost no place can claim such a density of brewing activity as Bend and its surrounding county. It’s a hive of hops and barley—and with places like Boneyard and Kobold opening new taprooms in 2017, it’s still expanding. Grab a ride (could the timing have been better for Uber and Lyft to begin serving Bend?), find an empty seat, and get exploring.
ÎÎ 10 Barrel Brewing
ÎÎ Bridge 99 Brewery
1135 NW GALVESTON, BEND. 10BARREL.COM
63063 LAYTON, BEND. BRIDGE99BREWERY.COM
Why go? It may be an AB InBev-owned brand and one of four (soon to be five) brewpub locations across the Western US, but Bend’s 10 Barrel is still a fun, festive neighborhood joint in the middle of beerand dog-laden Galveston Avenue. It helps that the beer has remained just as good.
Why go? Located in northeast Bend—
What to get? The Crush series of flavored Berliner weisses when it’s hot; anything in the barrel-aged “Fancy Beer Series” when it’s cold.
ÎÎ The Ale Apothecary RIVER RD., MOUNTAINBREWERY.ORG
Why go? Well, don’t go to that ad-
dress—it’s where Paul Arney lives, up in the forest, and it’s where he and his team experiment with all kinds of barrel-aged, wild-fermented, and other off-the-beatenpath delights. Head down to Crow’s Feet Commons by the river for a nice selection of their bottles.
What to get? Spencer is a Brettano-
myces and black currant-infused ale with a flavor structure as complicated as its oddly mesmerizing label.
ÎÎ Bend Brewing 1019 NW BROOKS, BEND. BENDBREWINGCO.COM
Why go? What looks like a normal
enough pub-n-grub joint at first glance hides one of the most award-winning brewing programs in the whole state. Their secret lies in variety—releasing some pretty avant-garde stuff since early days and having one of Oregon’s first successful sour-beer brewing programs.
What to get? The Ching Ching Berliner weisse remains a fan favorite when it’s on tap, but try the Lovely cherry Baltic porter—dark, fruity, and exciting.
ÎÎ Boneyard Beer 37 NW LAKE PL., BEND. BONEYARDBEER.COM
Why go? Their reputation speaks for themselves. Boneyard is the IPA king of Oregon (though Barley Brown’s ain’t far behind), and a Bend resident is rarely more than a few minutes away from the nearest RPM tap. Head to the tasting room to try some of their other stuff; they do some mean dark beers, too. What to get? RPM for a bit of IPA; Hop Venom for a fair bit more IPA, and Notorious for the most IPA of all (11.5% of it!).
home to a lot of production breweries, but not a lot of taprooms yet—Bridge 99 is a low-key taproom that’s become a go-to afternoon spot for locals in this rapidly-growing area. Pair their beer with some KC-style barbecue from Wubba’s across the parking lot, and it’s like a backyard party.
What to get? Rock Crawler Red is a
classic amber which goes great with ‘cue, sausages, and anything else being cooked up outdoors.
ÎÎ Cascade Lakes Brewing 1441 SW CHANDLER, BEND. CASCADELAKES.COM
Why go? In business since 1994, Cas-
cade Lakes has always retained a lower profile than the Boneyards of the realm, despite all the skiers and golfers their Lodge location in SW Bend entertain daily. It’s a cozy place, especially on bingo nights, and the tap-only offerings have steadily improved as of late.
What to get? Drop the M.I.C. is their
latest seasonal, a sessionable IPA made with Mosaic, Idaho 7 and Citra hops for maximum aroma.
ÎÎ Craft Kitchen and Brewery 803 SW INDUSTRIAL WAY, BEND. CRAFTKITCHENANDBREWERY.COM
Why go? For the view, one, especially in the summertime whenever concerts take place in the nearby Les Schwab Amphitheater. Food has always been a major focus at this gastropub, from their tapasstyle lunch stuff to po-boy sandwiches the likes of which are hard to find elsewhere. What to get? Beer production’s
ramped up here as of late, too—try the India Nut Brown for a smart, piney approach to mixing big hops with dark malt.
ÎÎ Crux Fermentation Project 50 SW DIVISION, BEND. CRUXFERMENTATION.COM
Why go? Larry Sidor, former head brewer at Deschutes, left to co-found this place in the middle of Bend in 2012. His brewery and kitchen’s been hitting it out of the park ever since, and the Cascade Mountain view and massive outdoor space make this location a great place to kill a Saturday afternoon. What to get? It’s easy to get distracted by the taproom’s experimental IPA
and Banished barrel-aged series, but the Prowell Springs lager is one of Bend’s most dependable thirst quenchers.
ÎÎ Deschutes Brewery 1044 NW BOND, BEND. DESCHUTESBREWERY.COM
Why go? If Gary Fish hadn’t dared to
open this brewery in 1988, back when Bend was a wayward ex-lumber town, this beer guide wouldn’t even exist. Deschutes is a national brand now, but the original brewpub’s still a homey place, often packed with regulars—and the food goes well above and beyond typical pub fare, too.
What to get? Beer fans can’t go wrong with Black Butte, but why not try some of their constantly-rotating pilot system taps? That’s how Fresh Squeezed began, after all.
ÎÎ GoodLife Brewing 70 SW CENTURY, BEND. GOODLIFEBREWING.COM
Why go? GoodLife was one of the first local breweries to can, and their success with it has made it grown exponentially. Their taproom (conveniently located near a dispensary and The Ale Apothecary’s barrel room) is a friendly, high-ceilinged affair, and like Crux, their outdoor area’s a great big party in the summer months. What to get? Comatose is one of the great heavier IPAs this region offers, but the Sweet As ale has a crushable property that’s hard to put down.
ÎÎ Immersion Brewing 550 SW INDUSTRIAL WAY, BEND. IMBREWING.COM
Why go? Bend’s newest brewpub offers a friendly atmosphere and hypnotically shiny copper brewing tanks in the middle of the city’s newest brewing hub (Crux, Craft and Atlas Cider are all nearby). They’re also Bend’s only brew-it-yourself place, letting people brew and bottle their own stuff using on-site equipment. What to get? Bender sticks out the
most in their regular lineup; it’s an IPA with a wheat base and some Belgian-style spiciness.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 NW BOND, BEND. MCMENAMINS.COM
Why go? The atmosphere’s the main reason anyone goes to a McMenamin’s location, and Bend’s got a grand one. Four bars (one sort-of hidden) are there to explore among all the art and décor, and the sheer selection of libations is amazing in itself—and that’s not even counting the brew system in the basement. What to get? Ask for a Rubinator, a mix of the Ruby raspberry ale with the Terminator stout. Trust us on this one.
ÎÎ North Rim Brewing 384 SW UPPER TERRACE, BEND. NORTHRIMBREWPUB.COM
Why go? It didn’t open with a lot of
fanfare, but North Rim took over the old Rat Hole location in the Old Mill a while back, an out-of-the-way spot offering an inviting deck and a bunch of Southwest-inspired cuisine in a compact space. Both the location and the beer they produce are off the beaten path—in all the good ways.
What to get? South Slope is unexpectedly one of the best saisons made in Central Oregon, a light, spicy, and delicate sipper in this land of big hop flavors.
ÎÎ Rat Hole Brewing 56880 VENTURE LN, SUNRIVER. RATHOLEBREWINGATSUNRIVER.COM
Why go? Between here, Sunriver
Brewing, and the nearby Mountain Jug taproom, Sunriver’s become a great afternoon beer destination for Bendites to check out. Rat Hole’s also open mornings from Wednesday to Sunday, offering plates like chicken and waffles to go with a morning quaff.
What to get? The Haystack
Hazelnut has been a regional favorite since way back at the old location—dark with just the right amount of nuttiness.
ÎÎ RiverBend Brewing 2650 NE DIVISION, BEND. RIVERBENDBREWING.COM
Why go? Located in the former Rivals sports bar, RiverBend is slowly increasing production across the state from its brew facility across the parking lot. There’s always a dozen or so beers to sample, and the dining space definitely remains sports-oriented—head here for at least one Ducks game this fall. classical northwest IPA, but take a look at AshRiver as well, a German-style dark wheat beer.
ÎÎ Silver Moon Brewing 24 NW GREENWOOD, BEND. SILVERMOONBREWING.COM
Why go? What was once a dive bar (there used to be a disco ball!) is now a beloved brewery and music venue putting out some killer beer in cans. The crowd here is still much more a regular crew than Deschutes and such nearby, but that shouldn’t dissuade visitors from coming in and checking out why Silver Moon’s slowly taking over the Northwest.
ÎÎ Sunriver Brewing 1005 NW GALVESTON, BEND. SUNRIVERBREWINGCOMPANY.COM
Why go? The original brewery and tap-
room remains at Sunriver’s main business park, but the new Bend taproom, a stone’s throw from 10 Barrel, has been packing it in for over a year with its beer, food, atmosphere and great views of the Galveston people-watching scene. The outdoor patio out back’s just as inviting, too.
What to get? Vicious Mosquito,
freshly available in cans, will be more than enough for the IPA crowd. Cocoa Cow, a milk stout, is just as great.
Three Creeks Brewing 721 S DESPERADO CT., SISTERS. THREECREEKSBREWING.COM
Why go? Like many breweries around
the county, Three Creeks has been expanding, opening up a production facility and seeing more and more distribution outside of Bend. Its Sisters restaurant, though, is the same as always—warm, wood-paneled and offering a wide variety of food for the entire family.
What to get? If the Tenpine Chocolate Porter is around in bottles, grab it— it’s a turbo-charged dark ale that’s a full dessert in itself.
ÎÎ Wild Ride Brewing 332 SW 5TH, REDMOND. WILDRIDEBREW.COM
Why go? Wild Ride started big in 2014, and it’s remained at the forefront of Redmond beer ever since. That’s thanks in no small part to its large taproom, complete
with an equally huge patio and the three or four food trucks parked out front, ensuring there’s never a lack of decent eats to soak up the dozen or so taps inside.
What to get? Nut Crusher, their peanut butter porter, does exactly what it says on the label and has become Wild Ride’s de-facto flagship as of late.
ÎÎ Worthy Brewing 495 NE BELLEVUE, BEND. WORTHYBREWING.COM
Why go? They’re one of the few good options on the far east side of Bend, but that doesn’t mean it’s something to just “settle” for. Worthy launched with a fabulous custom-built location in 2013, and they’ve expanded on it with an external hop garden and the “Hopservatory” space telescope. Good pizza, too. What to get? The Worthy IPA and
Worthy Imperial IPA are both...well, worthy, but for something new, try the strikingly fruity Stoker Red Ale.
ÎÎ Save Room for Beer Week
Why should Bendites start thinking about Central Oregon Beer Week when it doesn’t even begin until May 19? Because it’ll be packed with can’t-miss events from start to end, that’s why. The Why should Bendites startheld thinking 19th is the opening party, at the new about Central Week when taproom set toOregon open atBeer 10 Barrel’s brew it doesn’t even untilCrux Maywill 19? hold Because facility off NEbegin Empire. it’ll be packedonwith events a fundraiser the can’t-miss 20th featuring 10 from start end, that’s why. The 19thinisgames the local to brewery teams competing opening party, the “spent new taproom like “cheap beerheld toss”atand grain set to” open at 10 Barrel’s brew facility off relay, and the climax—the yearly SMaSH NE Empire. Crux will hold a fundraiser Beer Fest at McMenamins—arrives the on the 20th featuring brewery following Saturday on10 thelocal 27th. Keep teams competing in games like “cheap beer toss” and “spent grain relay,” and the climax—the yearly SMaSH Beer Fest at McMenamins—arrives the following Saturday on the 27th. Keep a close eye on centraloregonbeerweek.com for all the latest. SW
ÎÎ Save Room for Beer Week
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What to get? Oregonized Love is their
What to get? Mango Daze is their newest offering in cans, a hoppy pale ale that’s got exactly the citrus kick its name hints at.
THE BEER ISSUE
ARTS & CRAFTS by Howard Leff
Take a good look at your beer bottle. I mean, really get up in there. Now then, what do you see? Yes, we all know about the refreshing goodness inside. So positively rewarding, in fact, that beer has become virtual religion in these parts. We love our ales, pales, wheats, lagers, stouts, bitters, darks, lights, creams, blondes, browns, ambers, pilsners and porters. Just to name 14 or so. Yet there’s something else vying for our attention on that bottle (or can), something a creative individual out there probably poured their heart and soul into making. You can’t drink it, and it doesn’t get the spotlight often enough, but the time has come to take notice. Give up? Why, it’s the label, of course. Did you think there’s a magic beer label elf out there, waving a wand to make a fabulous design appear? For the record, there’s not. At least not yet. Just like the labor-intensive ordeal of brewing, making a thoroughly original label takes a lot of effort. Here’s a peek into the labeling philosophies at three different Bend breweries.
Along with the ubiquitous cross symbol, Crux’s new PCT Porter can features journal writings and drawings bt Pacific Crest Trail hiker Kolby Kirk.
Tyler Rowe
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Brewing Up Beer Labels Takes Some Hard Work Too
Holiday Spirits: Deschutes Brewery
continued on page 15...
2014
13
2015
2016
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Perhaps nowhere locally is the label art pressure higher than at Deschutes, where every holiday season means an all-new design for its signature Jubelale. That translates into some rather high expectations for the artists, since they’re joining an exclusive club. “When we were approached to create the art for the Jubelale label, we were given a tour of the gallery—including the 24 labels that were created prior to ours,” says artist Lisa Lubbesmeyer, who along with her twin sister Lori worked on the 2014 edition. “After the tour, we were told we shouldn’t repeat any element of any piece we saw. Since we’re visually inclined, it was difficult to ‘unsee’ what we had just looked at. We were a little stymied about what to create because we’re known for our landscapes and it was clear we would have to do something different from that.” The sisters eventually found inspiration in their niece’s wedding—specifically, all those Facebook photos of the newly married couple. “They looked like they had so much fun playing in the snow, and we thought, what would be a fun thing that everyone can do in the snow that would end in enjoying some beers together? Instantly we both thought sledding!” Their design resonated with Deschutes Associate Marketing Manager Molly Izo. “Lisa and Lori layered on their love for Jubelale with an amazing creation of fabric and thread that embodied the joy of the season.” The local outdoor scene also influenced the 2015 Jubelale design. “This was completely inspired by my love of winter hiking and fly fishing in Central Oregon,” says artist Taylor Rose. “I wanted to depict a cozy winter scene outdoors and tell a little story about the trio trekking through the forest. The piece is titled, ‘First Tracks, First Cast,’ because working hard—aka getting up early—to be the first one at the river, or the first one on the mountain, presents such a great reward. “Deschutes gave me so much freedom. I just pitched them a concept and they let me run with it which is pretty rare in the illustration world.” Izo, who calls Rose’s work “an enchanted winter adventure,” says all the Jubelale designs highlight the art and the artist. “Each year we look for a local artist who brings something new to the table through their design, their medium or purely the way they approach their work,” she says. “We ask them to create a piece that is an homage to Jubelale—how they think about
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 30, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
14
BEND’S FIRST AND ONLY BREW-IT-YOURSELF (BIY) PUB
ALONG WITH A CRAFT BREWERY AND A MADE-FROM-SCRATCH KITCHEN. Immersion Brewing has a unique lineup of beers that we feel represent our passion for traditional brewing as well as some limited release and seasonal beers that are pushing the boundaries of what is considered possible.
OPEN FOR LUNCH AND DINNER!
550 SW Industrial Way, Ste. 185 Bend, OR 97702 | 541.633.7821 www.imbrewing.com | Find us on social media!
THE BEER ISSUE
ARTS & CRAFTS continued...
“
in all three states. “Crux is a favorite of PCT hikers who come to enjoy the Cascade views and a refreshing beer and to share stories from the trail with newfound friends. The more PCT travelers we’ve met and the more stories we’ve heard, the more we’ve understood the trail’s significance and felt a greater need to support it. It’s an important historic asset to our friends and community.” Getting all the images and words together on a can was another matter entirely. “There is a unique set of challenges when creating designs and art for cans,” they say. “Ink doesn’t like to adhere to aluminum. And inks tend to run together on the slick surface. Printing on cans is extremely limiting— particularly when compared to printing on paper. “But, we relish challenges,” says Paul Evers.
Lunar Labeling: Silver Moon Brewing This Bend brewery, founded in 2000, uses a Seattle-based branding company to handle packaging for both bottles and cans, plus logos and even its tap handle art. However, as is the trend with local brewers, Silver Moon makes sure that Central Oregon plays a crucial role in its designs. “Our packaging is broken up into three themes,” says
Deschutes gave me so much freedom. I just pitched them a concept and they let me run with it, which is pretty rare in the illustration world.”
Message On a Bottle (Or in this case, a can): Crux Fermentation Project The artistic minds at Bend’s Crux Fermentation Project take their labels literally—especially when it comes to their new Pacific Crest Trail (PCT) Porter. The beer’s named after one of America’s most breathtaking hiking trails, covering over 2,600 miles of California, Oregon and Washington, winding through the highest portions of the Sierra Nevada and Cascade Range. In other words, just a simple little stroll from Mexico to Canada. If you’re going to name a beer after this legendary trail, you had best come up with a label to match. (Want to hike it? See this week’s Book Talk on page 35 for some tips.) The tale of this label starts, of course, with the hiker: Bend’s Kolby Kirk. “I was telling a story about the time I spent five months hiking the PCT and how I took my time to write and sketch about the long journey, the natural world and the people I met along the way,” says Kirk. This all took place at a local event where it caught the ear of Bobby Evers, whom Kirk calls a “superstar” graphics designer—and whose father, Paul Evers, happens to be a Crux co-founder. It was destiny, since Paul coincidentally had been doing some research on Kirk the night before. “When Bobby contacted me and told me his idea of incorporating actual journal entries into the design, I knew we were about to create something special,” says Kirk. “Artwork and good beer in one container? For me, that exemplifies the Bend culture. What you see on the cans isn’t inspired by on-trail writings and sketches, they are the actual writings and sketches pulled directly from my journals. “The design on Crux’s PCT Porter can is a mosaic of entries and sketches from a few of the hiking journals I’ve kept over the years, but most are from that life-changing hike on the Pacific Crest Trail in 2011.” (Kirk walked nearly 1,700 miles!) The Evers’ fell in love with Kirk’s verbal and visual stories through the pages of that journal. “PCT Porter was all about celebrating our adjacent natural environment,” says Paul Evers. “The trail provides a vibrant thread for hikers and horseback riders through Washington, Oregon and California. Crux beer is distributed
—TAYLOR ROSE
Marketing Manager Pam Balmuth. “Our ‘Core 4’ yearround lineup is our most detailed, with the landscapes and activities we not only enjoy in Central Oregon, but all over the Pacific Northwest, where our beer is available. Our lifestyle branding on these cans highlight adventures that we think pair well with our beer. The constants here are the iconic mountains of Central Oregon. If you line them up all together, it creates a cohesive scene.” Label designs for Silver Moon’s other products present variations on the theme. “Our Lunar Series are rotating 22-ounce bottles,” says Balmuth. “These are simpler, with basically the same labels; we just switch out the colors. They also have the mountain scene. “Our Alpha Project Series also rotates throughout the year and has our logo as the focal point. These, too, are all the same, with a color swap.” In case you haven’t noticed yet, there’s a new Silver Moon variation on the rise. And with it, you get a glimpse into the thought process behind the labels. “The newest member of our core line-up is Mango Daze Mango Pale Ale,” says Balmuth. “The label has deviated a little from the original ‘Core 3’ with a much brighter background. “That’s because we added real mango from local fruit purveyors, Oregon Fruit Products, which brings the price up a little higher than the original three. We wanted to visually distinguish Mango Daze from the rest of the lineup, so the customer perceives the higher price as equal to the quality of the liquid.” Yes, the liquid. In the end, it’s about the brew. Still, perhaps now you have a new appreciation for the talented people who create the eye-catching artwork that goes onto each bottle and can. Go ahead and judge a beer by its cover. There are plenty of artists out there who wouldn’t have it any other way. SW
Previous page, top to bottom: Lisa and Lori, from left, Lubbesmeyer, stand with their 2014 Jubelale label art; Taylor Rose raises a Jubelale toast to her 2015 label; Karen Ruane signs copies of her 2016 abstract label for Jubelale. Below, the new Mango Pale Ale can incorporates a brighter background to highlight the real mango that goes into the brew.
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the beer and the seasonality the beer represents. It’s up to each artist to interpret exactly what that means to them.” Artist Karen Ruane, who took a turn as the Jubelale artist just last year, felt a sense of winter warmth as she made her design choices. “For me,” she says, “that sense comes on strongest during the first good snow of the season—where all of Bend’s collective excitement is palpable. I wanted to convey that feeling of warm excitement, combined with the colors of the night’s sky and a whole lot of snowfall.” Ruane also had a concern shared by many of the artists: How would a gallery-sized work look when shrunk down to the size of a beer label? Especially since, in her case, she used what’s known as a “marbling” technique – which produces images like the patterns in marble or stone. “It would have been easy to lose much of the expression in the digitizing process,” she says. “I had to be mindful of this as I worked—ensuring that I captured enough detail to do the art form justice, but keeping the design clear enough to translate when reproduced in many different forms and sizes.” “Karen brought new light to an ancient marbling technique which lead to a stunningly abstract representation of the first snow,” Izo says.
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THE BEER ISSUE
INVASION OF THE CALIFORNIANS
Modern Times leads a small march upon Oregon By Kevin Gifford
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 10 / March 9, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Since well before 1971, when Gov. Tom McCall famously told tourists, “For heaven’s sake, don’t move here to live,” Oregon has engaged in the oddly addictive pastime of taking Californians’ money while blaming them for whatever malady currently affects the state. What happens, though, when the march from down south begins to creep onto Oregon’s tap walls? Bend and the rest of Oregon, have enjoyed fine beer from California giants including Stone, Ballast Point and Alesmith for quite a while now. But thanks to new outfits such as Portland’s Day One Distribution—and the ever-curious palates of beer nerds statewide—the selection from some of Southern California’s lesser-known (to us, anyway) locations is starting to trickle its way northward. A few of the highlights:
ÎÎ Modern Times Beer
ÎÎ El Segundo Brewing
SAN DIEGO
EL SEGUNDO
Undoubtedly the most hyped of the Oregon newbies, Modern Times has drawn attention since its 2013 launch for its visually attractive cans, genre-busting beer (and coffee!), and the gigantic portrait of Michael Jackson (with the monkey Bubbles) crafted in Post-it Notes on one wall of their taproom. On tap right now at the Platypus Pub is Orderville, one of the beers Modern Times puts out all year in the bomber format; it’s an aggressively fragrant IPA that uses Mosaic and Simcoe hops to essentially put Southern California in a bottle.
Another LA-area brewery, El Segundo is...well, a bit more single-minded than Smog City. Big hops are the attraction here, and hops are what bottle shops in Portland and Eugene have been getting plenty of, from the Broken Skull IPA (designed by wrestler Stone Cold Steve Austin—no, really) to Bursted, a line of six different IPAs that are each made with a different single hop. Think the SMaSH Beer Fest on steroids.
ÎÎ Smog City TORRANCE
Modern Times, a San Diego brewery, features a wall of Post It note art, with, who else but the King of Pop.
17
Craft beer in greater Los Angeles took forever to take off— the biggest for a long time has been Golden Road Brewing, now part of AB InBev’s craft division—but now there are dozens across the county, of which Smog City is one standout. Unlike a lot of breweries down there, it’s not just about IPAs. A coffee porter is one of their flagships, and The Nothing is a double chocolate imperial stout named after the Neverending Story character that also comes in a bourbon barrel-aged version.
ÎÎ Three Weavers INGLEWOOD
Showing just how quickly the beer scene’s changed down in SoCal, Three Weavers started small-time in mid2014 and has already expanded into a 30-barrel brewing system—one big reason they’re making it up here now. Expatriate, available now at White Water Taphouse, is the IPA in their main lineup. At 6.9%, it’s relatively low on the bitterness in order to give way to some nice citrus hop notes. SW
THE BEER ISSUE
WHAT TO EAT WITH THAT BEER? WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 9, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Turns out, there are certified professionals who can probably help By Nicole Vulcan In honor of the Beer Issue, we’re turning our attention this week to beer pairings. When you’re in a well-heeled restaurant with an abundant wine list, it comes as little surprise to see a sommelier—a wine steward—approach your table to help you pair the perfect combo of food and wine. But think about it: Wine contains basically one ingredient—grapes—while beer, starting with malt, hops and yeast, can contain a lot of additional ingredients, including spices or fruits that can give the beverage more flavor. If a one-ingredient drink can be so varied as to warrant an entire profession devoted to its nuances, wouldn’t it follow that a more-varied beverage—and one that’s so loved by Oregonians from the coast to the desert—would also support a certification aimed at pairing it with foods? Well, it does. In the beer world, the equivalent of the sommelier is the “cicerone,” a graduate of a training program that preps budding beer experts in the nuances of imbibing and serving beer. Ray Daniels, a brewer and author, started the Cicerone Certification Program in 2008 in Chicago. The program offers a number of certification tiers, much like the steps offered by programs such as the Court of Master Sommeliers. “It was high time that somebody created an educa-
tion program, a certification program that paralleled what the wine world has been doing for a century—to have someone knowledgeable at the table selling bottles of beverages,” says Brian Kerr, executive chef at the Deschutes Brewery Bend Public House, who’s gone through two levels of cicerone training.
“
It was high time that somebody created an education program, a certification program that paralleled what the wine world has been doing for a century...” —BRIAN KERR, DESCHUTES PUB EXEC. CHEF
“I am also a wine sommelier,” Kerr remarks, “and people would joke, ‘beer is made, wine happens.’ You could just drop a bunch of grapes in a bucket and come back in a week and you’ll have wine. Beer’s not the same way, beer needs to be crafted—hence the name— and the variety of not only malts and hops and yeast has just exploded over the last five years to really cater to those exploratory brewers who are looking for the latest flavor, the newest thing.”
Level one for Cicerones is the “Certified Beer Server” tier, teaching people, according to the Cicerone Certification Program syllabus, about understanding beer styles, history, characteristics and flavor attributes of styles by region, identifying normal flavors of beer and their source, and pairing beer with food, among other topics. Level two is the “Certified Cicerone” tier, which includes deeper knowledge on designing a meal, cooking with beer and more on successful beer and food pairings. Beyond that are two more levels—hard to achieve. The Cicerone Certification Program lists just 13 Level 4 “Master Cicerones” in its worldwide directory. In terms of Level one, the program lists dozens of certified professionals in the Bend area, at companies including North Rim Brewing, Bend Brewing Co, Deschutes Brewery, Worthy Brewing Company, Crux Fermentation Project, Silver Moon Brewing, Three Creeks Brewing, local distributors and others. At Deschutes, Kerr estimates about 60 percent of the current staff has gone through the cicerone training. So next time you’re at a local brewery that also serves up an extensive menu, ask the staff to put you in touch with their cicerone. While you’re waiting, use this handy guide for some general suggestions about what food goes best with your brew*. SW
Foods to Go with Your Brew
19
India Pale Ale
Amber/Red IPA
Great with a burger or cheese, including English cheeses such as Derby or cheddar. Good with pumpkin flan, bread pudding or bananas Foster.
Delicious with spicy foods, including curries. Great with cheeses such as Gorgonzola, or with sweet, spiced desserts.
Good with seafood, chicken, burgers, tangy cheeses or even spicy food.
BROWN ALE BROWN ALE
PORTER PORTER
OATMEAL OATMEAL
Brown Ale
Porter
Oatmeal Stout
Comfort foods are the name of the game. Try salmon, smoked sausage or roasted pork. Gouda cheese or Cheshire.
Smoked and roasted foods are delicious with this dark beer. Roasted meats, blackened fish, or Gruyere cheese. On the dessert side, cookies!
Spicy, rich foods such as Mexican mole, Szechuan food, or BBQ beef, as well as aged cheddars, and creamy, chocolaty cakes and desserts.
Hefeweizen
American Wheat
Pilsner
Light foods for a light beer. Seafood, salad, sushi, or mozzarella cheese. May be too light to pair with dessert, unless it’s fruit!
Good with lighter foods, such as veggies, salads or sushi. For dessert, pair it with citrus or sorbets.
Bratwurst—it’s German, after all. Also other light foods such as chicken, salmon, salads, or great with Vermont cheddar. Yummy with flan or spice cake.
*Suggestions courtesy: Brewers Association
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 10 / March 9, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Pale Ale
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SQUIRREL BUTTER & THE HORSENECKS
THE WERKS
JAMBAND — Ain’t no foolin’, The Werks are here to rock your face off come April Fool’s Day. With all the unadulterated confidence it takes to name their most recent album, “Magic,” these jam band masters are ready to take you on a rocking trip to a unique and inspiring place where no song is anything like the one that came before it. // 8:30pm. The Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave. Bend. $12. 21+
Saturday 1
THEATRE — Last chance to see this short run, blackbox performance that’s exclusive to Bend! It dares to explore the deep implications of an inappropriate relationship, years after the fact. Delve into the dark and complex world of Blackbird with an intimate cast of expert local performers. // Evenings @ 7:30pm. Matinees @ 2pm. Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. Bend. $13-$20.
BOOTY DANCE—Does the daily onslaught of slights and horrors from the White House have you ready to slam your head against a wall? Don’t hurt your head, (‘Merica needs people with brains!!) move your booty instead! This fun event gives you a chance to twerk out your fury. If that isn’t enough motivation, then know there are also cash prizes. // 10pm. Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend. $5
Thursday 30
Saturday 1
FUNDRAISER—Have a loved one affected by breast cancer? Many of us do—and this fundraiser is aimed at supporting the ones in our community. Featuring live music and a silent auction that helps Central Oregon Pink Sisters assemble care packages and build support for those going through treatment. // 7-9pm. Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar, 1012 SE Cleveland Ave., Bend. Free
COMEDY — You might remember him from his cartoon series “Life with Louie” or as the host of “Family Feud,” but this two-time Emmy award-winning comedian has just gotten better with age and is now acting in the critically acclaimed series, “Baskets.” See him perform outlandish stand-up this Saturday. // 7pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend. $40-51.
Friday 31
Sunday 2
TALK—Now that the Republicans’ health care plan is on the cutting room floor, it’s back to talking about other solutions. Check out this documentary that dives into the single-payer option—something that many Americans (58 percent, according to one poll) support. // 6:30pm. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of C.O., 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd., Bend. Free.
FIDDLE — A unique fusion of R&B, hiphop & pop with a bit of classical fiddle and bluegrass thrown in. Black Violin is breaking molds in all the right ways with their genre bending music that is sure to enthrall and entertain the entire family. They’ve performed everywhere from festivals to SXSW to President Obama’s inauguration. // 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend. $22-47.
Saturday 1
Tuesday 4
BLACKBIRD
C.O. PINK SISTERS FUNDRAISER
HEALTHCARE FOR EVERYBODY
HOT TEA COLD SOULFUNK — Straight out of Portland, this band just can’t decide between hot funk or cool groove? If you’re in an eclectic, dreamy, soulful and ultimately funkadelic mood, let Hot Tea Cold take you away. With a smoothly blended mix of original jams and creative covers, this groovy powerhouse brand promises danceable rhythms throughout the night. // 8pm. The Old Stone, 157 NW Franklin Ave. Bend. $20-$25
TWERK AGAINST TRUMP
LOUIE ANDERSON
BLACK VIOLIN
INFAMOUS STRINGDUSTERS BLUEGRASS — If you’re ready to defy gravity, along with every other physical law of music, prepare to push the limits with the Infamous Stringdusters’ “Laws Of Gravity” tour. Turn heads, push the envelope and ring in spring with their toe-tapping, heel-clicking brand of bluegrass joy. // 7pm. The Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave. Bend. $20. 21+
MARCH 30 - APRIL 5
Thursday 30- Saturday 1
21
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
SQUARE DANCE — Featuring two folk bands in a night of string music, square dancing and fun for the whole family. Hailing from jolly good ol’ England, the Horsenecks bring high-energy roots music while Portlanders Squirrel Butter fuse traditional bluegrass & blues with a bit of Cajun thrown in. It’s a bluegrass jamboree! // 8pm. The Old Stone, 157 NW Franklin Ave, Bend. $10. All ages.
Saturday 1
OUR PICKS
Thursday 30
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S
Boom SOUND Classical Black Violin may just turn the Tower on its ear
GUNG HO FOR SHOWS By Magdalena Bokowa
By Richard Sitts 23
Colin Brennan
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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backbone for their stringed strokes. For a good taste, go to blackviolin.net and check out some of their videos. It’s original, infectious music that’s appealing and just fun to listen to. On a recent morning, the soft-spoken, articulate Baptiste phoned in from his home in south Florida. “Our show is high energy and dynamic,” he says. “It’s just a fun show. Our live show is always very different. If you love music and you love strings, this is a show that you can bring your kids to, your grandparents. It’s a show that everyone can share and enjoy.” Baptiste says they play about an 80/20 mix of original material to cover songs. Baptiste told me his personal influences range from Curtis Mayfield (1942-1999) to Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975), both examples of what he calls, “music I can visualize.” The name Black Violin comes from another influence, a 1967 album of the same name released by violinist Stuff Smith. The duo often works with local students between shows, whether it’s visiting schools or having students come to the venue to observe the sound check. “We try to do as much as we can.” When working with students, Baptiste said their goal is to entice and inspire the kids to seek their own muse. “We want them to love themselves, love each other and to love others.” Black Violin is not out to make students pick up a violin or viola, but to discover their own voices. “This is our voice, our vehicle, and we want them to use their own voice and their own vehicle.”
Book these shows now so you don’t miss out. April 8
Will Baptiste, left, and Kev Marcus bring their high-energy show to the Tower Theatre Sunday night.
ith a definite departure from only classical or bluegrass music, these guys are not your grandparents’ string players. Heck, they’re not even your parents’ string players. The duo Black Violin whips up a high-energy hybrid of classical, hiphop, rock and other musical genres that reaches out and grabs the listener by the ears. Head-bobbing is a natural reaction while soaking in this addicting vibe played out by Wil Baptiste on his viola and Kev Marcus on violin. The two met as high school students in a Fort Lauderdale performing arts program, later teaming up to form Black Violin after studying at separate universities. They’ve been performing as a duo for about the past 14 years, according to Baptiste. Their music has been described as “classical boom,” and they’ve shared stages with Kanye West, Aerosmith and Tom Petty, while collaborating with the likes of Wu-Tang Clan, Wyclef Jean and Alicia Keys. They won the “Showtime at the Apollo” talent show in 2005, performed at President Obama’s 2013 inauguration, and have averaged more than 150 shows per year. But Baptiste says the group tries not to tour as much these days, now that they both have wives and kids at home. This will be Black Violin’s first time playing Bend, with a Sunday night gig at the Tower Theatre that falls in the middle of a three-night run between Spokane and Portland. Joining them on stage will be DJ SPS and drummer Nat Stokes, who provide a tight
Watch Gene Ween get his “O”face on 7/1.
One mission for the group seems to be defying stereotypes—which is also the name of their third and most recent album, released in September 2015. In a 2015 interview with the PBS NewsHour, violinist Marcus said, “I would hear the hip-hop beat and pick up my violin and play to it. We studied classical, but we lived rap music.” Marcus also admits that he looks more like he should be a linebacker, rather than a classical musician. The two musicians took unlikely paths to their passions. Baptiste explained that he wanted to play the saxophone, but was placed in the wrong class. “Right before I picked up the viola, I was a 12-year-old kid in the hood.” Meanwhile, in a video on the group’s website, Marcus explains that his mom put him into a music class when he was nine years old after he was caught stealing some candy. “The only thing left was a violin, and I did not want to play that instrument.” Fast forward to today, when inaugurations and national tours are their reality. The Fret Drifters from Medford will open for Black Violin at their Bend show. SW
Black Violin
Tower Theatre Sunday, April 2, 7 pm 835 NW Wall St., Bend $25-$50 towertheatre.org
SURVIVORMAN LES STROUD MUSICAL STORYTELLING — What do you do when you’re sitting in sub zero temps, alone in the woods, escaping bears? Why, you learn harmonica of course! Known for his “Survivorman” documentary series, which was the only internationally broadcast series entirely written, videotaped and hosted alone, Stroud is not only an accomplished outdoorsman, but a storytelling genius. The show will feature stunning video imagery, personal tales and original music, so prepare to be transported far, far into the Canadian wilderness in this unusual performance. // 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St, Bend. $20-40. towertheatre.org
May 5
SON VOLT ALT COUNTRY— Touring in support of their latest album, “Notes Of Blue,” this legendary alternative country band is stirring things up with a gritty yet lyrical sound that pushes the boundaries of country music. Band leader Jay Farrar has been creating music since the 80s and helped incorporate a new blues sound into this latest record. Fans can expect to hear new songs blended into their well-known country soul and roots rock sound. // 8pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend. $25. All Ages. Bendticket.com
July 1 WEEN
ALT PUNK ROCK — The misfits are blowing into town — be prepared! Icons for outliers everywhere, Ween has a cult-like following and is set to bring its blend of progressive-funk-soulcountry-punk to the stage this summer. Early Ween singles like “Bananas and Blow,” “Piss Up a Rope” and “Baby Bitch” were designed to be obnoxious, but that’s what makes Ween (a combination of the words wuss and penis) standout individualists who intrigue the nonconformists. Having recently reunited, the band will play a mix of songs ranging from psychedelic drawnout guitar riffs to aggressive, fast-moving punk. Plus, it’s worth going just to see Gene Ween’s “O” face. A serious treat. // 7pm. Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend. $43. Bendconcerts.com SW
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Reppin’ Woodstock
Longtime NYC musician brings tunes from the Woodstock Sessions and more to his show at the Capitol
© 2016 PUNKLE
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 30, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
by Trevor Helmy
And now, for something completely different and dynamic at the Capitol, 4/11.
LADIES’ NIGHT
TUESDAYS FROM 6-8PM. Lingerie & toy discounts.
LINGERIE, SEXTOYS PARTY SUPPLIES COSTUME & WIGS, VAPORIZERS & E-CIGS LOCAL HAND BLOWN, GLASS PIPES 1341 NE 3rd Street | 541.317.3566 www.prettypussycat.com YOUR ONE STOP ADULT FUN SHOP
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or nearly 20 years, Marco Benevento has been a key figure in the shaping of the New York music scene. His diligence has let him amass an arsenal of fantastic music that can only come from self-made artists. Last year, Benevento released the concept album, “The Story of Fred Short,” under his own label. His work was chosen to be featured in the Woodstock Sessions, a series of live recordings by standout artists. In front of a sold-out crowd, Benevento performed and recorded the entire Fred Short suite in one take. Recently, he has also been performing various Bowie covers. Stylistically, Marco’s music is eclectic and distinct. His tracks don’t clearly fit into the confines of any established genre, but he clearly takes
inspiration from psychedelic, rock, and pop tunes. He has a tendency to electronically alter the raw sounds of his instruments, resulting in a sound that is hard to believe comes from a three-man band. “The Story of Fred Short” is easy to listen to without feeling ordinary, a combo that makes for some great live performances. Marco and company will be at The Capitol on Tuesday, April 11. The show will consist of tracks from the recent Woodstock album and several of Benevento’s best songs. He will be accompanied by Andy Borger on drums and Karina Rykman on bass. Borger has worked alongside Benevento since 2012. Benevento’s reputation as a topnotch live performer makes this one of spring’s most exciting shows. SW
Marco Benevento
Tuesday, April 11, 9pm The Capitol 190 NW Oregon Ave., Bend $12-15 bendticket.com
CLUBS
CALENDAR 29 Wednesday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. M&J Tavern Open Mic 6:30 pm. Maverick's Country Bar & Grill Karaoke 7 pm.
Northside Bar & Grill Open Mic 6-9 pm. The Lot Open Mic 6 pm.
30 Thursday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Kelly D's Banquet Room Nonprofit Tunes
NPT introduces C.O. Pink Sistas for their invaluable focus on breast cancer support. Jeff Leslie, Erin Wiley, Janelle Muson and Palo Soprano will trade songs and tales. 7-9 pm. No cover.
Maverick's Country Bar & Grill Free
Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover.
Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic 6 pm.
The Summit Saloon & Stage 97 Comedy
Presents A night of stand up comedy with Trixie Jesus (Jake Woodmansee.) Featuring Katy Ipock and Terence Hartnett. Some of the best comics from around the US to the Summit Saloon and Stage. Comics as seen on Comedy Central, TBS, NBC and more. Last Thursday of every month, 8-11 pm. $12.
The Capitol Tiger Fresh, Šuma, Signal Bath
A finely curated night of bass music, 808 booty bass, hip hop and club music and trap with Tiger Fresh, Suma and Signal Bath. 9 pm-midnight. $5.
The Old Stone Squirrel Butter
& The Horsenecks Two folk bands are coming together to perform a bluegrass jamboree! Join for a night of string music, square dancing, and musical performance for the whole family to enjoy! 7:30-10 pm. $10 adv., $15 door.
Velvet Emily Afton: Indie-Pop-Folk-Electronica Smokey, powerful, and emotive, Come witness a combination of indie, fold, pop, and electronic. 8-10 pm. No Cover.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Moondog Matinee Authentic rock and roll with a charming chaos you'll never forget. 9 pm. $8.
31 Friday
Tickets Available on BendTicket.com
Hub City Bar & Grill Live music with The
Jackson's Corner Eastside Coyote Willow Cello-fired Americana. 6-8 pm. No cover. Kelly D's Irish Sports Bar Bobby Lindstrom Experience Bobby's unique sound of the blues, old school rock 'n' roll, some amazing guitar pickin' and a little whistling. CDs for sale. 7:30 pm. No cover. Maverick's Country Bar & Grill Free Friday Dance Lessons 21+. 8 pm. No cover.
The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele
21+. 9 pm. No cover.
The Capitol Harley Burbon & The John
Doughboys With the outlaw country spirit of story telling and old time memory, steeped in whiskey and blended with punk rock. The four members, emerged from the different corners of Arizona, Oregon, Washington and California, and were fated to find each other in Bend to create something completely original 10 pm-midnight. $5.
1 Saturday Astro Lounge Twerk Against Trump Come celebrate the art of twerking. Twerk against Trump and dare to topple the system by celebrating our existence in a night of twerk! There are $200 in cash prizes and more. 10 pm-2 am. $5. Bend Brewing Company Allan Byer Proj-
ect Allan shares his all original Americana music with his all-star band featuring banjo, vocals, percussion, bass and rocking lead guitar. 7-9:30 pm. No cover.
Broken Top Bottle Shop Tara Velarde Indie Folk Songstress Velarde combines class and sass in her live performances with a focus on vocal power and poetic lyrics. Think Regina Spektor meets Brandi Carlile, with some Janice Joplin moments for an extra 7-9 pm. No cover. Checker's Pub The Edge Let's dance with this classic rock and variety. 8-11:30 pm. No cover.
Domino Room The Werks "Magic" tour On their forthcoming LP Magic, witness unique melodies and a different sound for each track. 8:30 pm. $12.; On their new LP "Magic", jamband visionaries The Werks have crafted a record where melodies take flight, dancing and twisting around the sonorous main of the tune itself. 8:30-11 pm. $12 adv., $15 door. Hardtails Bar & Grill HWY 97 Classic high energy rock and roll. 9:30 pm-1:30 am. No Cover. Hub City Bar & Grill Live Music with Matt
Borden Country rock featuring non-stop dancing and featuring special guests. 9 pm-1 am. $5.
Kelly D's Irish Sports Bar Karaoke 8 pm. M&J Tavern Vital Rythym With covers from
Don't, Redwood Son Come for a night of dancing with three of the Pacific West best country bands. Don't forget your cowboy boots! 8-11:30 pm. $10.
'Collie Budz', 'Stick Figure' and other great reggae bands; These boys are sure to strike a chord in your soul! There is no foolin' about this evenings amazing vibe and spirit! 9 pm-1 am. Donations suggested.
Checker's Pub The Edge Let's dance with
Maverick's Country Bar & Grill Free
The Belfry Miss Lonely Hearts, Honey
this classic rock and variety. 8-11:30 pm. No cover.
First United Methodist Church Robert Thies The return of award-winning pianist Robert Thies, the only American pianist to win the Gold Medal in a Russian piano competition since Van Cliburn's famed triumph in 1958. Thies will take you on a voyage through the world's musical capitals. 7:30-9 pm. $40 general / $10 student
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Reputations A northwest premiere dance band. 9 pm-1 am. $5.
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Checker's Pub Talent/Open Mic 6-8 pm.
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Dance Lessons Come learn the popular line dances to your favorite country songs every Saturday! 9 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Victory Swig If you are ready to get down, the Northside will be the place. Feel good music for your body, mind, and soul. 8:30 pm-midnight. $3. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Katie Pinto Would you like some Ukulele with your
Get loud! Gritty rockers In the Whale open for That 1 Guy at the Volcanic Theatre Pub, 3/31.
Coffee? Local singer/songwriter, Katie Pinto, returns to Strictly Organic a selection of original music and unique covers. 3-5 pm.
2 Sunday
The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm.
The Capitol Spring Breaks w/ Dot Diggler
Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Locals Night— DJDMP & Friends A night of soul, hip-hop and electronica with DJDMP and friends, plus 25% off everything on the menu all night long (with local id). 9 pm. No cover.
The Old Stone Hot Tea Cold Hot Tea Cold is a Portland based Groove, Funk & Soul powerhouse. Their tight instrumentation & soulful grooves supply a Hot Tea Cold energy, perfect for the music listener, lover & dancer. 8 pm. $20 adv., $25 door.
Juniper Golf Course and The View Tap and Grill Band Jam/Open Mic A family friend
21+. 9 pm. No cover.
& Omar Show Slip Matt Sciences presents an evening of break, drum and bass and wonky bass music. Local support from Praject and Lyfe. 10 pm-midnight. $5.
Tower Theatre Louie Anderson Take
a night off with two-time Emmy award winner, Louie Anderson. Dubbed one of the 100 greatest standup comedians of all time by Comedy Central, his career has spanned more than 30 years and delivers to fans an inimitable brand of humor and warmth. 7 pm. $40-$51.50.
Velvet DJ Tailspin After several years of exploring the musical scene at Black Rock City experience a unique blend of hip/hop and electronic bass goodness. First Saturday of every month, 10 pm-1 am. No cover. velvetbend.com. Volcanic Theatre Pub Peelander-Z High energy, human bowling, over all insanity. Join the many colors of Peelander-Z and the rare occasion for the whole family to rock out. 8 pm. $8.
event, bring the kids so they can even join in with seasoned and novice musicians. First Sunday of every month, 4-7 pm. No cover.
Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill Paul Eddy Grab an afternoon cup with Northwest troubadour Paul Eddy. Originals and forgotten gems, every other Sunday. Every other Sunday, 3-5 pm. No cover. Tower Theatre Black Violin Named one of the hottest groups of SXSW, experience what happens when you mix classically trained viola and violin players who love Bach and hiphop, a drum set, and a turn table. Presenting a high energy fusion of classical, hip-hop, rock, R&B, and bluegrass. 7 pm. $25-50.
3 Monday Astro Lounge Open Mic 8 pm. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm.
CLUBS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Jersey Boys Pizzeria Kinzel and Hyde Award winning Cascade Blues Association Hall of Fame Inductees Kinzel and Hyde will take listeners on a tour of blues and roots music that will blow you away! First Wednesday of every month, 5:30-8:30 pm. No cover.
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M&J Tavern Open Mic 6:30 pm. Maverick's Country Bar & Grill Karaoke 7 pm.
Northside Bar & Grill Open Mic 6-9 pm. The Capitol Bend Pirate Punx: Pacifico Bend Pirate Punx Presents Pacifico. Punk rock and Heavy rock music. . No cover.
The Lot Open Mic 6 pm. Country comes a knockin’ with a trio of bands such as The Lonely Hearts at The Belfry, 3/31.
Northside Bar & Grill New Wave Mariachi A musical form of Mad Libs is entertaining, engaging, and hilarious. Give them three random topics, and they will give you a song. 2 Drink Min. $5 Cover
4 Tuesday Astro Lounge Trivia Tuesdays Bring your
team or join one! Usually six categories of various themes. 8 pm. No cover.
Crow's Feet Commons Open Mic for
Storytellers Come one, come all....each Tuesday night Crow's Feet Commons will be hosting an open mic night. Cozy up next to the fire, bring your courage or your encouraging ear. All levels welcome and storytellers too. Evening beer and wine specials. Sign up begins at 5pm. 6-8 pm.
Domino Room The Infamous String-
dusters Spring fever will likely be in high effect come April so Parallel 44 Presents is going to heal your cabin frenzy with some soothing bluegrass medicine thanks to The Infamous Stringdusters: The Laws of Gravity Tour with special guests The Ghost of Paul Revere. 7 pm.
$20 adv., $25 door.
Kelly D's Irish Sports Bar Ukulele Jam
All ages. 6:30 pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern Nogueras and Sworob Tavern
live music regulars bring it together to perform everything from Beatles to Zappa inspired covers of classic favorites. 9 pm-1 am. Free.
The Capitol Bend Producer's Social Hosted
by Signal Bath and Beat Lab Radio. Come listen to your new projects in the club and get feedback from a supportive community of local producers, musicians and beat makers. All styles and skill levels welcome. Bring flash drive with your finished tracks. 7-10 pm. Free.
The Lot Trivia at The Lot Bring your team or join one. Enjoy the heated seats, brews, and tasty eats while rubbing elbows with Bend's smartest smartipants who love trivia. A rotating host comes up with six questions in six different categories. 6-8 pm. Free.
5 Wednesday Checker's Pub Talent/Open Mic 6-8 pm.
Japanese Action Comic Band Peelander headline the Volcanic Theatre Pub’s April Fool’s Day, 4/1.
6 Thursday 3 Goats Coffee Co. Banjo Jam An evening of live music, award-winning coffee, food, and fun for the whole family. First Thursday of every month, 5:30-7:30 pm. Free. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Maverick's Country Bar & Grill Free
Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Downhill Ryder Downhill Ryder serves up honest roots-rock originals in a down-home venue with the friendliest Bend folks around! 7:30-10 pm. No cover. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic 6 pm.
The Capitol Moonhooch & The Lucy Ring If any band is a poster child for turning the power of positive thoughts and intention into reality, it’s the explosive horn-and-percussion trio Moon Hooch. 10 pm-midnight. $12 adv., /$15 door. The Lot Two Dollar Bill Lyrical folk with bright two part harmonies 6-8 pm. No cover.
EVENTS
CALENDAR MUSIC Bella Acappella Harmony Chorus
Medal-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 and ages 15 and above. Tuesdays, 6:30-9:30pm. LDS Church, 450 SW Rimrock. 541-460-3474. $30 month.
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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 who are interested in taking up piping or drumming and would like to find out what it would take to learn and eventually join our group. Mondays, 5:30-7pm. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St. 541-633-3225. Free.
Community Orchestra of Central Oregon A community orchestra that welcomes all players. We are serious musicians who want to have a lot of fun. Wednesdays, 6:30-9pm. Through May 31. Cascade Middle School, 19619 SW Mountaineer Way. 541-306-6768.
Coyote Willow Progressive acoustic Ameri-
cana. April 1, 1-3pm. Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill, 450 SW Powerhouse Dr. Suite 400. 541-6471402. No cover.
The Deschutes Caledonian Pipe Band Practice Looking for experienced players to join and perform with the group. We are a volunteer not-for-profit society dedicated to the preservation, performance, and enjoyment of Scottish style bagpipes and drums in Central Oregon. If you are interested in joining please contact us. Mondays-Sundays, 6-8pm. Through Nov. 1. Abilitree, 2680 Twin Knolls Dr. Free.
DANCE Adult Intermediate Level Dance Class
Drop-in class. Styles include contemporary, modern, jazz, and ballet. Teachers rotate monthly. Friendly, supportive atmosphere! Performing opportunities available. Fridays. Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave. 541321-4321. $5.
Argentine Tango Class & Práctica
Beginning lessons every first Wednesday of the month, 6:30-7:30pm. Followed by practica every week, from 7:30-9:30pm. Wednesdays, 6:309:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. $5.
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, 7pm. Bend Masonic Center, 1036 NE 8th St. 360-870-6093. $10-$20. Contact Improv Dancing A free-form class that welcomes all styles and varieties of movement, from ballet to karate, from meditation to hip-hop. April 1, 7:30-9pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $10.
Learn the basics of the violin/fiddle in the Intro to Fiddle class, Tuesdays at 10am, at the Cascade School of Music.
Group Class & Ballroom Dance Get your dance on at our Friday night group class and dance! Class topic changes weekly. No experience or partner necessary. Ages 16-plus. All proceeds donated to Bend’s Community Center. Fridays, 7pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-314-4398. $5 per person includes the class & dance. The Notables Swing Dance Join us for the Sunday Afternoon Dance with The Notables Swing Band. Dance from 2-4pm. Light refreshments served. First Sunday of every month, 2pm. Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Rd. 541-388-1133. $5 per person. Salsa Footwork & Partnerwork Patterns Learn a series of fun footwork
combinations followed by partner work patterns. No experience required, but the class is still challenging for experienced dancers. Tuesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. (541) 325 - 6676. $10.
Scottish Country Dance Weekly Class No experience or Scottish heritage necessary. Weekly classes include beginner & advanced dances. Mondays, 7-9pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. First class is free, future classes are $5.
West African Dance Class Cultural dance experience to live drumming by Bend’s Fe Fanyi West African Drum & Dance Troupe! Learn traditional rhythms of the Western region of Africa. Taught by Shannon Abero and live music led by David Visiko. Mondays, 7:15-8:15pm. Cascade Indoor Sports: Skating Rink Side, 20775 NE High Desert Ln. 818-636-2465. $10.
FILM EVENTS THE GREAT ALONE From BendFilm, a story about dogs, love, rebellion, obsession, and the cinematically stunning Iditarod dog sled race. Also screening will be SLED DOG FAMILY. April 6, 6-8:30pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. 541-388-3378. $12. Fade In: A Tinseltown Thriller Two
estranged sisters, a screenwriter and a clinical psychologist, are forced to resolve their sibling rivalry, their horrific past, and a deranged shared love. March 30, 7:30pm. 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave. $18.
Healthcare for Everybody Polls
show 58% of Americans favor a national publicly funded healthcare program. So why has the U.S. Congress not yet passed- or even consideredsuch a plan? This documentary delves into what single payer healthcare is, how it saves money, and what we can do to make it happen. March 31, 6:30-9pm. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd. 507573-2851. free.
LOCAL ARTS “Relics & Ruins” Artist Books Exhibition Altered books, sculptural books, outward
folding books, and tunnel books challenge our notions of what a book really is. Featuring book artists from across the U.S. and Europe. Saturdays, 10am-6pm, Sundays, noon-5pm and Mondays-Fridays, 10am-7pm. Through April 2. A6, 550 SW Industrial Way Suite 180. 541-3308769. Free.
MAR 30 The Old Stone Presents SQUIRREL BUTTER & THE HORSENECKS MAR 31 The Domino Room Presents CARNIFEX, DESPISED ICON, FALLUJAH, RINGS OF SATURN, LORNA SHORE PRESENTED BY Red
Light Produtions
Artist Reception Local artist featured for a full month in the Humm brewery. Artist receptions the first Thursday of each month are held with local music and snacks from Agricultural Connections and Locavore. Guests receive a complimentary glass of kombucha! First Thursday of every month, 4-6pm. Humm Kombucha, 1125 NE 2nd St. 541-306-6329. Free. Artventure with Judy Artist-led painting
event! No experience necessary! Fee includes supplies. Pre-register and see upcoming images at artventurewithjudy.com. Tuesdays, 6-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 541410-3267. $25 pre-paid.
Bend Comedy at the Double J Saloon
Bend Comedy returns to present another great standup comedy show at the Double J Saloon, in downtown Redmond! March 30, 8-10pm. Double J Saloon, 528 SW Sixth St., Redmond. 541-4190111. No cover.
Call for Art for The Novel Idea The
Deschutes downtown Library invites artists to submit artwork inspired by the novel “Homegoing” to it’s spring exhibit (4/12 to 7/11). Artists may submit work on April 12th, 4-5:30pm, 1-2 pieces, all media, 16” by 20” or larger, framed, and ready to hang. Wednesdays. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.
Call for Artists: Anything Spring Juried
exhibition featuring spring themed art in any media. Submit artwork anything spring themed. More info online http://www.circleoffriendsart. com/events. Through April 5, midnight. Circle of Friends Art Association, 19889 8th St.,. 541-7069025. $15.
MAR 30 The Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents MOONDOG MATINEE MAR 31 The Volcanic Theatre Pub THAT 1 GUY W/ IN THE WHALE
EVENTS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
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Local favorites Larry and his Flask (perhaps you’ve heard of them) rip up VTP, 4/4.
Drawing Class: 3-Part Series Drawing classes first three Saturdays in April. Instructor Jerry Werner’s can teach you something new about the craft of drawing. Each class will include a positive critique of your work and an in-class demonstrations, especially still-life. Saturdays, 12:30-3:30pm. Through April 15. Circle of Friends Art Association, 19889 8th St.,. 541-706-9025. $95. Art & Wine, Oh My! Local artists will guide
you through replicating the night’s featured image. Food and beverage available for purchase. Register online. Tuesdays, 6pm. Level 2, 360 SW Powerhouse Dr. Suite 210. 541-213-8083. $35-$45.
TMP 2017 Season Auditions Thoroughly Modern Productions is hosting auditions for their 2017 Season including “Guys and Dolls,” “Willy Wonka,” and “Rock of Ages,” April 1st-2nd, at Terpsichorean Dance Studio. April 1, 10am-8pm and April 2, 10am-10pm. Terpsichorean Dance Studio, 1601 NW Newport Ave. 541-678-0313. Free. Used Books, Art and a Website! Raising funds through the support of literacy and art for the benefit of the community of Redmond. Visit reBOOKS used store and our website at: www. friendsofredmond.org. Through May 30, 10am6pm. reBOOKS Used Bookstore, 531 NW Elm Street. 541.238.2181. Free. A Women’s Creative Circle A six part workshop for all women who want to experience insight and empowerment through creativity and connection with other women. All levels welcome. Mondays, 6-8:15pm. Through April 24. Willow Lane Artist’s Creative Space, 400 SE Second St. Suite 2. 541-390-3174. $120 with materials.
PRESENTATIONS A Pollinator’s Plight Join Rich Hatfield,
conservation biologist for the Xerces Society, and LeeAnn Kriegh, author of The Nature of Bend, will discuss the importance of native bee species. See the documentary A Ghost in the Making: Searching for the Rusty-patched Bumble Bee. April 6, 6pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Members $3, non-members $7.
Encouraging Mason Bees in Your Backyard Rich Little, Entomologist, will talk
on how to encourage and create a habitat for Mason Bees in your backyard. The Mason bee is a solitary native bee and very productive pollinator for spring flowers. March 30, 6-8pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. 541-480-5550. Free.
THEATER Blackbird Una, a 27-year old woman tracks
down her abuser, Ray, fifteen years after his arrest for statutory rape. Their long, difficult confrontation delves into Una’s confusion as she struggles to come to terms and understand the ordeal. Thursdays-Saturdays, 7:30-9:30pm. Through April 1. Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. 541-389-0803. $13-$20.
Fade In An original psychological thriller/
black comedy by local playwright Patricia WestDel Ruth. This special event invites patrons to the last dress rehearsal of the play. March 30, 7:30-9:30pm. 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave. 541-338-3378. $18.
Free Improv Jam Love improv or want to see what it’s all about? Jams are a great way to experience our tried and true methods. No experience necessary, all levels welcome. Last Thursday of every month, 7-8:30pm. Through May 25. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-771-3189. Free. Nana’s Naughty Knickers This play is a farce about 82 year old “Nana,” who is secretly designing and making sexy lingerie and selling her creations to her senior citizen neighbors. Throw in a grumpy landlord, a concerned granddaughter, a half deaf partner, and a love struck local cop for a hilarious performance. Fri, March 31, 7-8:30pm and Sat, April 1, 7-8:30pm. The Door, 56870 Venture Ln. Suite 4, Sunriver. 541-480-7483. $10-15.
WORDS Let’s Fool Around! (Using humor in your writing) We’ll explore the benefits of
using humor, satire, exaggeration, misdirection, cliché, and slapstick to elicit emotion from our reader. We’ll talk about the benefits and
drawbacks of inserting comedy into our fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. April 1, 6-8pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 541-6336839. $25.
Writing to Share All-level writing class
inspired by the teachings of Natalie Goldberg (“Writing Down the Bones”). Over the course of six weeks, you’ll be guided through the process of writing a personal essay from conception stage to final product. Begins 1/11 and continues each Wednesday till 2/15. Wednesdays, 10-11:30am. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-480-7732. $150.
VOLUNTEERS 350Deschutes Climate Advocacy & Education Use your special talents to en-
courage awareness of the need for meaningful climate action. Speak or organize educational events, attend rallies, write or do art about the climate. Thursdays. Bend, RSVP for address. 206-498-5887.
After School Mentoring—Teens/College Students/Adults Needed Female
mentors are needed to serve 4th-5th or 6th-8th grade girls in weekly after school programs in Bend. Mentors must be 14 or older. Female adults and college students are encouraged to volunteer to change the lives of young girls. Afterschoolbuddies.org. Tuesdays, 3-5:30pm. Through May 25. After School Buddies, 62595 Hamby Rd. 541-390-3046.
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. Mondays-Sundays. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon - Redmond, 412 SW Eighth St., Redmond. 541-617-4788.
Fences For Fido Help free dogs from chains! We are seeking volunteers 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. Mondays. Bend, RSVP for address.
EVENTS Go Big, Bend Big Brothers Big Sisters works
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! Ongoing. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon, 2125 NE Daggett Ln. 541-3126047.
incredible team, whether you volunteer in the clinic, festivals, or helping with our community cat population. Ongoing. Bend Spay+Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. Suite B1. 541-617-1010.
Mentor Heart of Oregon Corps is a nonprofit
Buddhist Mantras Chanting Explore
the spiritual insights and learn how to correctly chant mantras in Japanese. Reservations required. Mondays-Tuesdays-Thursdays-Fridays, 10:30am-4pm. Custom Built Computers Of Redmond, 439 SW 6th St. 541-848-1255. $10.
Business Start-Up Do you have a great idea
that you think could be a successful business, but just don’t know how to get started? Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you. April 5, 11am-1pm. COCC Chandler Lab (off-campus), 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541-383-7290. $29.
that inspires and empowers positive change in youth through education, jobs, and stewardship. For more information or to become a mentor, contact Amanda at 541-526-1380. Mondays-Fridays. Heart of Oregon YouthBuild, 68797 George Cyrus Rd.
Capoeira Experience this exciting martial art form of Afro Brazilian origins which incorporates music and acrobatic movements. For adults and teens. Mondays, 6:50-8:15pm and Thursdays, 6:50-8:15pm. Sortor Karate, 63056 Lower Meadow Dr. $30, two week intro.
Tiny Explorers Meetup The Children’s For-
Cascade Pops Orchestra Preregistration
est is seeking committed volunteers to host Tiny Explorers Meetups in the outdoors. Serve as the point person and distribute free baby carriers. Monthly meetups. Ongoing, 10-11am. Deschutes National Forest, Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District, 63095 Deschutes Market Rd. 541-383-5592.
Volunteer The Salvation Army has a wide variety 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. If interested, please contact us. First Monday-Friday of every month. Bend, RSVP for address. 541-389-8888. Volunteer—BCC Bend’s Community Center
has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for individuals over age 6. If interested in volunteering go to bendscommunitycenter.org or call 541312-2069 for more information. Wednesdays. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St.
Volunteer Drivers Needed Volunteer driv-
required. Perform intermediate level string ensemble music with an emphasis on blending together and having fun. Spring term will feature “Pops” material. Participants should be able to read music. Thursdays, 7-9pm. Through April 20. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-382-6866. $90.
Cello Ensemble Preregistration is required. Skill Level: Intermediate. Join our group cello class to share harmony, passing of melodies, and a relaxed atmosphere to just play and have some fun. Thursdays, 9:30-10:30am. Through April 20. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. $90. DIY Soldering Sterling Silver Rings
Sign up and visit us on our webpage. Fri, March 31, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-3882283. $60.
DIY TIG Welding Sign up and find out more
on our webpage. March 30, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $70.
ers needed 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 541-6472363 for more details. Mondays-Fridays.
DIY Welding Sign up and learn more at DIY-
Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond
DIY Welding Workshop Sign up and learn
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. Mondays-Sundays. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St. 541-504-0101.
CLASSES AcroYoga Join Deven Sisler to experience how
the power of acrobatics, wisdom of yoga and sensitivity of thai yoga intertwine. No partner necessary! Wednesdays, 7pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $7-$15.
African Dance Classes are taught in a friendly, welcoming, and fun environment, and you will leave every class with a smile on your face and joy in your heart! Wednesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. Gotta Dance Studio, 917 NE Eighth St. 541-3220807. $12.
Beginning Songwriter Preregistration is required. Students will gain an understanding of song structure, writing in different styles and learning techniques designed to open the doors of creative songwriting. Thursdays, 7-8pm. Through April 20. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-382-6866. $90. Beyond Notes Preregistration is required.
Beyond Notes is a class designed to provide you with a lifetime of tools to overcome plateaus in your playing and to give you a new perspective on music. Tuesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. Through April 18.
cave.com Wed, March 29, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $50.
more at DIYcave.com Wed, April 5, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $50.
DIY Wood Bandsaw Sign up and learn more at DIYcave.com April 2, 11am. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $30.
Drum Rudiments with Meshem Jackson Preregistration required. Skill level:
Intermediate. Mastering a handful of the more essential drum rudiments and unlock your creativity. Covering basics in reading drum notation, improving your weaker hand and new techniques. Wednesdays, 7-8pm. Through May 24. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-382-6866. $115.
Essential Tibetan Buddhism Michael Stevens, director of the Natural Mind Dharma Center, offers an introduction to Buddha’s teachings and how they are expressed through the Vajrayana tradition. The event includes lecture, discussion, chanting and meditation. naturalminddharma.org. First Monday of every month, 7-8:30pm. Natural Mind Dharma Center, 345 SW Century Dr. Suite 2. 541-388-3352. $10 donation. German Conversation Group With a tutor to learn conversational German. Mondays, 7-8pm. In Sisters, various locations. 541-5950318. Cost is variable depending upon number of students.
29 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Make Your Mark at Bend Spay+Neuter! Compassionate, awesome people to join an
Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-382-6866. $90.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 30, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 30
EVENTS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
31
Good Grief Guidance Classes Class
meeting once a week for 16 weeks. Using Peer to Peer sharing, journaling, creativity and gentle inner exploration. Thursdays, 3-5pm. Through June 30. Rosie Bareis Campus, 1010 NW 14th St. 541-647-7915. $30- $300 for 16 week class.
Online Chair Tai Chi Classes Designed for people who have limited mobility and cannot stand for long periods of time. From a seated position soft movements are used to help increase energy, improve blood circulation. Fridays, 2-3pm. Grandmaster Franklin, 51875 Hollinshead Pl. 623-203-4883. $40. Introduction to Finding Funders Discover what funders are looking for in nonprofits seeking grants and get an introduction to Foundation Directory Online. Registration is required. April 6, 3:30-5pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Free. Introduction to Guitar Preregistration
required. Introduction to guitar is designed for the beginner looking to learn the basics of music notation, chords, picking and strumming technique. Build basic guitar skills and learn songs in a fun group setting. Tuesdays, 6:15-7:15pm. Through April 18. Preregistration required. Introduction to guitar is designed for the beginner looking to learn the basics of music notation, chords, picking and strumming technique. Build basic guitar skills and learn songs in a fun group setting. Fridays, 1-2pm. Through April 21. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-382-6866. $90.
Introduction to Violin/Fiddle Preregis-
tration is required. This is a beginning class for those who have never played before, and a great starting point to get you playing violin! During the class, you will learn the basics of proper violin and bow technique. Tuesdays, 10-11am. Through April 18. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-382-6866. $90.
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. 541-6337205. $10 plus material fees. Ladies Introduction to Singing Prereg-
istration is required. Ladies, come explore ways to experience greater ease and freedom in your singing. The class will cover posture, breath control, tone production, and diction. This friendly atmosphere is just for ladies and includes both group and individual singing. Tuesdays, 9:3010:30am. Through April 18. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-382-6866. $90.
Mason Bees 101 Did you know there was
an emo bee? Find out about the “Shy Bee” and how they can help your garden! Learn all you need to know about rearing and caring for Mason Bees - one of nature’s most unique pollinators. Registration not required but space is limited! March 30, 6-8pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. 0.
Music for Film Preregistration is required.
Learn about music in the movies. No music experience needed, this class will be a fun intro into the history of cinematic soundtracks. We’ll start from the beginnings of Silent Era music and hear the progression of film music until present day. Tuesdays, 6:30-7:30pm. Through April 18. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-382-6866. $90.
Oriental Palm Reading Discover how the
brain, nerves, and lines connect in palmistry. Wednesdays, 6-7pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. 541-848-1255. $10.
Restorative and Nidra Yoga Join Abby for a night of relaxation and tranquility. The evening will begin with gentle restorative yoga postures and the second portion of class will be Yoga Nidra. Just 30 minutes of Yoga Nidra is equivalent to 4 hours of sleep! March 31, 6-7:30pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. Prepay: $20, Door: $25. Tai Chi A free Tai Chi class open to the Bend
Community centered on a gentle and basic form for Arthritis and Fall Prevention, but will introduce more aspects of Tai Chi as the class progresses. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:30-11am. Brooks Hall at Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 Wall St. 541-548-1086. Free.
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, 5:30-6:30pm. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. 541-760-3204. $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, 7-8:30pm. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. 541-760-3204. $15.
EVENTS Beatles Cartoon Pop Art Show Ron
Campbell, Beatles Yellow Submarine animator will showcase his original Beatles cartoon paintings and other artwork based on his 50-year career in cartoons including Scooby Doo, Rugrats, Smurfs, Flintstones, Jetsons and more. March
29, noon-7pm. Peterson Roth Gallery, 206 NW Oregon Ave, Ste 1. 541-688-7148. No cover.
Brasada Ranch Job Fair Want to join the premier hospitality staff at Brasada Ranch? Condé Nast Traveler’s “#1 Resort in the Pacific NW” for three consecutive years is hosting a job fair at The Barn. April 6, noon-3pm. Brasada Ranch, 16986 SW Brasada Ranch Rd. 541-3236006. Free. Central Oregon Pink Sistas Live music
and silent auction. A fundraiser to provide chemo care packages and no-cost retreats to women with breast cancer in our community. March 30, 7-9pm. Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar, 1012 SE Cleveland Ave. 541-480-2333. Free.
Community Healing Night Intuitive
readings, energetic healing, and bodywork in exchange for canned and dry foods in support of Neighbor Impact food bank. First Thursday of every month, 5-7pm. The Old Stone, 157 NW Franklin Ave. 541-389-1159.
Disney Trivia hosted by Bend Comedy
This event is all ages! Bring the kids! Assemble a team or go at it alone, test your knowledge against our fun and entertaining rounds. We will have a variety of media rounds with videos, music, audio, etc. Free to play and prizes to win! April 2, 7-9pm. Looking Glass Imports & Cafe, 150 NE Bend River Mall Dr. Suite 260. 541-4190111. 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 on a Sunday. Sundays, 6-9pm. JC’s Bar & Grill, 642 NW Franklin Ave.
Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers welcome. For info contact Sue at 541-382-6281. Mondays, 6-9pm. Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. $1 to $13. Grief Relief with EFT “Tapping” Join us for an informative and healing program on EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques) — addressing issues of grief and negative core beliefs which keep us in emotional bondage. We welcome EFT practitioners, John Steinke and Judy Cameron. April 6, 6-8pm. Rosie Bareis Campus, 1010 NW 14th St. 541-647-7915. Free. Heartsongs Song Circle Heartsongs is a
celebration of sacred sound and song that encourages self discovery. All are welcome to share songs! Bring any acoustic instrument. First Sunday of every month, 7-9pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-285-4972. $5-15.
HOPE Food Bank Distribution Free food for up to three pets for one month. Must be on
government assistance or show proof of low income to qualify. Call The Bend Spay + Neuter Project for more information. Food is distributed on the first Saturday of each month. First Saturday of every month, 10am. Bend Pet Express Westside, 133 SW Century Dr. 541-617-1010.
March Green Drinks Join us at Bend Electric Bikes, your go-to resource for e-bikes in Bend for the March edition of Green Drinks. Come check out the shop, meet the team, and demo an e-bike around the neighborhood while you meet other enviro-conscious folks. March 30, 5-7pm. Bend Electric Bikes, 223 NW Hill St. 541-385-6908. Free, RSVP. Pizza Fundraiser Join us for a Base Camp Pizza Fundraiser supporting Mustangs to the Rescue. Visit our website: MustangsToTheRescue.org to download and print the required flyer, give it to Base Camp Pizza when you order, and 50% of your food order purchase will benefit Mustangs to the Rescue! Important—Be sure to download and print the flyer so that the money is donated to Mustangs to the Rescue. First Sunday of every month. Base Camp Pizza, 8060 11th St. 541-330-8943. Pool Tournament Cash Cup Anyone can
join in, regardless of experience! APA rules, winnings based on number of participants. Tuesdays, 8pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-760-9412. $5.
Positive Relaxation Enhance relaxation,
positive focus, and inner awareness. For those choosing positive living. Mon, April 3, 1010:30am and 12-12:30pm. Bend Golf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Dr. 971-217-6576. $8 Donation.
Preventative Walk-in Pet Wellness Clinic First come, first served. Vaccines, micro-
chips, toenail trims, and de-worming available. Service fees can be found at bendsnip.org. Saturdays, 10am. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. A-1.
Public (Rock) Choir Come sing in a fun, non-threatening environment for people of all skill levels. Rock and pop favorites—no hymns. First time free. Mondays, 5:45-8pm. Various Locations - Bend, Bend. 541-728-3798. $0-16. Public Lands Summit As Central Orego-
nians, we are fortunate to enjoy public lands like the Deschutes River and the Badlands every day. Join local organizations for a fun and interactive presentation and training on the history of public lands, the values at risk, and how to advocate for OUR land. April 1, 3-6pm. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd. 541-3302638. $10 donation.
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Soon the bees will be a buzzin’ and you too can learn how to manage them with a Mason Bees 101 workshop hosted by the Environmental Center, 3/30.
EVENTS Pulmonary Hypertension Support Group A supportive group of individuals and
caregivers affected by Pulmonary Hypertension. Social, educational and includes lunch. Topics include: new treatments, traveling with PH, insurance, tai chi, anxiety & depression. First Saturday of the Month. First Saturday of every month, 1-3pm. Deschutes East Bend Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-408-4943. Free.
32 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 30, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
SHARC Teen Swim Pool Party wa-
ter-themed games and contests, access to the hot tub and more! March 29, 8-10pm. SHARC, 57250 Overlook Rd. 541-585-3147. $10.00.
Snowshoe Nature Hike with a Ranger
Snowshoe Nature tours on Mt. Bachelor with a Forest Service Naturalist Ranger. All interpretive programs focus on the ecology, geology and wildlife of the Cascades. Through March 31, 10-11:30am and 1:30-3pm. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Dr. 541-383-5530. Free.
Sunriver Summer Jobs Meet with hiring managers from SHARC and other Sunriver area businesses seeking summer help. Bring your resume, references and be prepared for on-site interviews. March 29, 9-11am. SHARC, 57250 Overlook Rd. 541-585-5000. No cover.
SENIOR EVENTS Senior Social Program Monday, Wednesday and Friday senior brunch will be served from 10-11am for $2. Social hour Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday social hours 10-1pm. Closed Thursdays. Mondays-Wednesdays-Fridays, 10am-1pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-312-2069. Free to attend. Pilates & Physical Therapy for Parkinson’s, MS and Stroke A five-session class for individuals with Stroke, Parkinson’s and MS. You receive the exponential benefits of improved flexibility, strength, muscle coordination and control, better posture and the end result is increased body awareness, independence and confidence. Thursdays, 2-3pm. Through June 16. True Pilates NW, 243 Southwest Scalehouse Lp. 541-241-6837. $75.
Tai Chi for Diabetes This ongoing, very
gentle class is starting over! Can be done seated, come join! Tuesdays-Thursdays, 8:45-9:45am. OREGON TAI CHI - TaiChi for Health, 1350 SE Reed Mkt Rd Ste 102. 541-639-9963. $55 per month.
Locally Owned
By Working
& Operated
Musicians
AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR Taylor Guitars Eastman Guitars & Mandolins Roland Amplifiers, Boss Pedals Yamaha Portable Digital Pianos Gold Tone Banjos Amahi & Kanaloa Ukuleles Accessories & Print Music Open Mon-Fri 10-6; Sat 10-5
Ask about our layaway plan. 200 NE Greenwood Ave
541-382-3245
musicmakersofbend.com
Cool Cars and Coffee All makes, models
welcome. Saturdays, 8am. C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Dr.
ECOCHAMPIONS Volunteers from 350deschutes are presenting small group discussions about our personal carbon footprints and what we can do to decrease it’s size to benefit the climate. Group size limited, with required RSVP. Thurs, April 6, 4:30-5:45pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-213-7405. No cover. Epilepsy Support Group Families and individuals struggling with a new epilepsy diagnosis or a life long experience with a seizure disorder. Every third Saturday, 4-5pm. Through May 20. St. Charles Heart & Lung Center Conference Room, 2500 NE Neff Rd. 503-360-6452. Free. Evolutionary SELF-Healing Through guided imagery, you’ll learn how to tap into your internal power. Thursdays, 6:30-8pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-3908534. Free. French Conversation Table Every first and third Monday of the month. All are welcome! First Monday of every month, 10:30am-12:30pm. Barnes and Noble, 2690 NE Hwy 20. 541-3898656. Free. Information Night Online education for students grades K-12. Our Early College programs allows high school students to attend classes at COCC, earning high school and college credits. April 6, 6-7pm. Baker Charter Schools, 1352 NE Second St. 541-519-5483. Free. Marijuana Anonymous Meeting Know
you need to quit, but can’t? Help is here. Share experience, strength, and hope with each other. Thursdays, 4:45-5:45pm. Serenity Lane, 601 NW Harmon Blvd. 503-567-9892. Free.
Stress & Performance Men’s Group
Understand the causes and effects of stress, build resilience, share challenges, help others, realize relationship stressors and gain performance improvement. Let go of anger and gain control over anxiety by developing mindfulness skills. Group facilitated by Dan Anderson, M.A. 541-390-3133/dan@anderson-counseling.com Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. Old Mill District, Upper Terrace Drive. 541-390-3133. $25/week.
NAMI Depression & Bipolar Disorder Support Group Mondays, 7-9pm. First United
MEETINGS
Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-4808269. Free.
Adelines’ Showcase Chorus Practice
Overeaters Anonymous Meeting
For more information call Diane at 541-447-4756 or showcasechorus.org. Mondays, 6:30-9pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave.
Al-Anon Family Groups 12-step group for
Mondays-noon-Saturdays, 9:30am and Thursdays-noon. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-306-6844. Free. Wednesdays, 4pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave. 541-306-6844. Free.
Alcoholics Anonymous If you want to
Spanish Club Spanish language study and conversation group. All levels welcome. Thursdays, 3:30-5pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-749-2010. Free.
Annual Meeting for Friends of the Central Cascades Wilderness Join us to
Wednesday Night Kirtan Bring your voice and your heart and join the Sol Alchemy community for an evening of Bhakti and Sacred Song. Wednesdays, 7-9pm. Through June 14. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-2854972. Sliding Scale: $10-$20.
friends and families of alcoholics. Check afginfo. org or call 541-728-3707 for times and locations. Ongoing.
drink, that’s your business. If you want to stop, we can help. Call Alcoholics Anonymous. Hotline: 541-548-0440. Ongoing. Brooks Hall at Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 Wall St. 541-548-0440.
help the Forest Service preserve and protect our local Wilderness areas. Learn about our summer program of Wilderness Stewardship hikes. April 4 and 6pm. Bend Public Library- Brooks Room, 601 NW Wall St. 248-330-5654. Free.
Bend Chamber Toastmasters Develop and grow your public speaking and leadership skills, whether you’re an executive, stay-at-home parent, college student or retiree. Wednesdays, noon-1pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. Free.
Women’s Cancer Support Group For the newly diagnosed and survivors of cancer. For information call: Judy, 541-728-0767. Candy, 907-209-8181. Thursdays, 1-3pm. Looking Glass Imports & Cafe, 150 NE Bend River Mall Dr. Suite 260. Free. Zen Discussion & Meditation A weekly lay-led Dharma discussion and meditation (zazen). Open to all. Discussion 6pm, sitting/walking meditation 7-8:30pm. Mondays, 6-8:30pm. St. Helen’s Hall - Trinity Episcopal, 231 NW Idaho St. 541-390-1220. Free.
KIDS' EVENTS 33
Backpack Explorers Preschoolers ages
3-5 go on an adventure created just for them and an adult chaperone. Go on a backpack journey through the Museum, observe nature, animals, science, and create art. Wednesdays-Thursdays, 10-11am. Through March 30. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. $10-15.
Big Kids Yoga This class is for older kids who want to learn more of the fundamentals of yoga through more technical yoga games and a deeper exploration of postures and flow sequences. Wednesdays, 4-5:30pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $5-$6. Children’s Yoga: Movement & Music
Designed for children aged 4-8, this class is a playful way of introducing children to the miracles of movement, yoga and music. Mondays, 4-5pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. 541-322-9642. $10.
Family Fun Story Time Age 0-5 years. Interactive story time with songs, rhymes, crafts. Thurs, March 30, 10:30am. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. 541-312-1090. Free. Family LEGO Block Party Kids + 1 gazil-
lion LEGOs = fun! Sat, April 1, 1-2pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-6177050. Free.
KPOV Youth Radio Camp Learn how to create a radio show and have fun making it happen! Make up announcements, create skits, do interviews, and talk live on the radio. Bring your music and produce a radio show that will be broadcast on KPOV and put on a CD. Ages 10-14. Through March 31, 9am-noon. KPOV, 501 NW Bond Street. 541-322-0863. $105-$126. LEGO Family Block Party Kids + 1 gazil-
lion LEGOs = fun! March 31, 10-11am. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-3121070. Free.
Nature Break Kids Camp An exciting
week-long camp in the heart of Sunriver. Explore water creatures, birds of prey up close and personal, and track the wild beasts that roam our grounds. Sign up for all five days or pick and choose! Ages 4 - 10. Through March 31, 10amnoon. Sunriver Nature Center, P.O. Box 3533. 541-593-4394. $20 day/$90 5 days.
Nature Journaling Kids Workshop
Explore nature through a creative lens! Students will participate in field based explorations of nature while recording their observations through writing and art. Age 7 - 11; All supplies included. Wed, March 29, 9-10:30am and Fri, March 31, 9-10:30am. Sunriver Nature Center, P.O. Box 3533. 541-593-4394. $55.
Homeschool Tracker’s Club Learn new
Read with a Ranger The Cascade Lakes Welcome Station will be hosting a celebration of “International Children’s Book Day.” Reading sessions 10am, 1 p.m. Families can stop by anytime between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. to make forest crafts. April 2, 9am-3pm. Cascade Lakes Welcome Station, 18390 Century Drive. Free.
Kids Camp: STEAM Age 6-8 years. Explore
Spring Break Camp Spring Break is for parents too! Drop your kids (ages 3.5-6 years old) off for a day or week of fun with us! Monday: Ocean Adventures, Tuesday: Diggin’ on Dinosaurs, Wednesday: Lets Go Camping, Thursday: Jungle Safari, Friday: Bug Off! Register for each day on website. Wed, March 29, 10am-2pm, Thurs, March 30, 10am-2pm and Fri, March 31, 10am2pm. Bouncing off the Walls, 1134 Centennial Ct. 541-306-6587. $30/day.
skills and activities including fire starting, camouflage, survival, field guilds, ecology, treasure hunting and more. Tuesdays, 10am-3pm. Through May 16. Skyliners Lodge, 16125 Skyliners Rd. 503-680-9831. $444 through January 30th / $467 Regular.
science and technology through experiments and projects. Wed, April 5, 2:30-3:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-6177050. Free.
Kids Day: Monsters of the Deep Explore the prehistoric and current inhabitants of our seas and rivers. Participate in a bean bag toss, make a shark and learn what makes a sturgeon’s jaw unique with crafts, painting and games. March 29, 10am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Free with Museum admission. Kids Make a Sign Class Create a Simple Sign for a Favorite Sport or First/Last Name or Other Simple Word(s). March 30, 10-11:30am. Junque in Bloom, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 19. 541728-3036. $20. Kids Rock Choir Kids ages 12 and under with only one goal: to have a great time singing their faces off! No training, experience, or long term commitment is required to join in. See website for locations: singbend.com/kids-rock-choir. Mondays, 4:30-5:30pm. Various Locations Bend, Bend. 541-728-3798. $10.
Teen Advisory Board Age 12-17 years. Decide programs, public services, activities; lend your voice to projects. Wed, April 5, 1:30pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free. Wildheart Nature Camp Each day of camp will be an adventure as we uncover a new story that will teach us about the earth and about ourselves. Sign up by the day! Through March 31, 9am-3:30pm. Tumalo Ranch, 65620 Twin Bridges Rd. 503-680-9831. $57/Day through January 31st $62/Day. Youth Track & Field Camp For kids aged 7-14. A 3 day camp with focused training. Wednesdays-Fridays, noon-3pm. Through March 31. Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St. 541-3503938. 75.
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Learn how to host a radio program with the KPOV Youth Radio Camp, through 3/31.
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Passes must be purchased in person or over the phone by April 23.
541-822-3799 Snow Phone 541-822-3337
C
CULTURE
Baskets of Laughs
Comedian Louie Anderson is still a stand-up at heart. By Isaac Kozell
of friends. She could hold court, not in the way of somebody telling jokes, but in the way of entertaining. She was a giant personality and a really unique human being. She loved people and knew how hard their lives could be. She had a light about her that shined brightly.” One of the perks of the success of “Baskets” is it is broadening Anderson’s fan base. “Here, there, and everywhere people are watching ‘Baskets,’ Anderson said. “When I do a show I see new people and new faces in the audience. I have such a wide range of demographics from the cartoon, ‘Family Feud,’ all that stuff.” Anderson says that he's “really, really enjoying” his life right now and that he's “having a blast doing standup.” But in his 30-plus-year career, there were times when he didn't feel that way. “I didn't want to do it for a while. There were a couple of years there that I really didn't want to do it,” he said. “But like every stand-up, there's a curse that we live with that you have to do it. You don't think you're going to do it and then you'll go, 'This could be a good routine. Maybe I'll work on that a little bit.' The last 11 years I've been doing stand-up pretty steady. I'm a stand-up first and everything else is second. I did get tired of it for a while, but I'm not sure it had anything to do with the stand-up, maybe just more me.” Like all good artists, Anderson, 64, is also evolving as a performer, becoming more interested in the darker material he did early on in his
BOOK TALK
career. In a recent interview on NPR's “Fresh Air,” Anderson said, “I'm at this precipice right now that I feel like I'll be changing myself on stage,” but wondered, “Am I going to betray my audience?” “I think there's a lot more in standup that I haven't done and would like to explore,” Anderson said. “Maybe my fans would bristle at some of the material. It certainly isn't where I'm going to become Dirty Louie. When I started out I did a lot more of the darker stuff. I got away from it because of TV and because I wanted to make money. I wanted to be an opening act for all of these people that were asking me to open their shows, like Smokey Robinson, The Pointer Sisters, Glen Campbell, Ray Charles. In those days you couldn't do that kind of stuff in front of them. “I'm raising the register of my stuff, trying to take it here and there,” he said. “I don't know where it's going to take me, but I think my stand-up is better. Sometimes people just want one thing, so we'll see. I'm funnier than I've ever been. That's how I grade myself. If I'm really funny and people are dying out there in the audience and standing up at the end, then I'm doing my job.” He also offered some free advice to comedians and writers. “You have to have a routine with writing,” he said. “Writing is work. Writing is rewriting. I always tell comics, 'The best joke you have is underneath the joke you're already telling. Don't quit at the first joke. There's a better joke underneath there.’” Anderson knows that his comedy
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n the world of comedy it takes a lot to stay relevant, especially if your career spans over three decades. But Louie Anderson has figured out a way to stay on the radar, transcending generations of fans with his work on the stage, screen, and in print. He's a respected comedian, Emmy Award-winning actor, and best-selling author. Whether you know him from his stand-up specials, movie and TV roles, or poignant and hilarious books, Anderson boldly puts everything he's got into his art. Recently he has garnered critical acclaim for his role on the FX series, “Baskets,” in which he plays the matriarchal role of Christine Baskets. He won a 2016 Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series for this role. “It's a wonderful third act,” Anderson says. “I think it was something that I was meant to do. I'm having the most fun time doing it. It's meant everything to me. It's definitely been a gift. It's hard to explain. Even when I see the pictures of myself, I go, 'Wow, is this me?' I really disconnect Louie Anderson from the part in that sense. It's kind of a surreal event, to be honest with you. I kind of become the character. I don't know how much I have to do with it or how much it just happens. I try not to analyze it because I think that's the worst thing to do to something you're doing so well.” A major influence on the character of Christine is Anderson’s own mother, who he always felt belonged in show business. “She was smart, interesting and funny,” Anderson said. “She had a lot
Louie Anderson will bring the laughter, 4/1.
has made an impact. He says his biggest contribution has been “making people feel less alone and feel better. Those are the things I know I've given to people.” And since comedy is a twoway street, his fans return the favor. “I feel very loved by my fans,” he said. “My heart is wide open. I think to be a great stand-up, your heart has to be wide open.” No matter where he performs, no matter what the material, Anderson aims to leave an impression. “Good stand-up is like a good song,” he said. “It stays with you a while.” SW Louie Anderson
Sat. April 1, 7pm Tower Theatre 835 NW Wall St., Bend towertheatre.org $40-51.25
By Nicole Vulcan
Hiking the Pacific Crest Trail: Oregon
Source Weekly: We’ve had a lot of snow this year. What’s the hiking season looking like?
Last week, the author of the recently-released book, “Hiking the Pacific Crest Trail: Oregon,” Eli Boschetto, rolled into Bend for a talk at Roundabout Books. The book is one of several installments broken down by location (Oregon, Washington, etc.), with book sections further broken into “manageable sections” that people can do in a few days or a week. We sat down with Boschetto during his recent visit.
Eli Boschetto: July is notoriously horrible for bugs, but usually, things melt out June, you can hit the trail July, fight off a few bugs… by August it’s gorgeous. Prior to this year, the summers we’ve had were all heat wave and drought years, so we were hitting the trail as early as May. It’s been really weird the last several years, and it’s definitely not keeping with the norm. SW: Let’s talk about the approach and the audience for this book. EB: I’ve made a trail across the state completely doable for a typical hiker. And I think
one of the things people don’t realize is that you think about the PCT and its high elevation trail that traverses the spine of the Cascades… but almost entirely through the state of Oregon you can access the PCT by major highways that traverse east/west over the Cascades. SW: People around here talk a lot about trail overuse—and with books like “Wild” out there, it seems to be on people’s minds even more. What do you say to them? EB: Even here in Oregon, the PCT is 455 miles long, and so that’s a long stretch. Based on a statistic that we did when I was back at WTA (Washington Trails Association) the majority of hikers by like 85 or so percent are just day trippers, and they’re going from a trailhead to a lake, meadow, viewpoint, whatever, and then they’re going back. If you get out past that popular destination, then
the crowds just fade away and all of a sudden you’re like, oh, I have this all to myself. When I came down here, a lot of people were telling me just how crowded the trails are getting around here, and I was like, yeah, go south, go hike in the Diamond Peak area, because I was down there twice for doing the book, and for the most part I was all by myself down there. SW
Hiking the Pacific Crest Trail: Oregon Section Hiking from Donomore Pass to Bridge of the Gods By Eli Boschetto $24.95 Available in bookstores everywhere Also check out Boschetto’s continually-updated website on PCT trail conditions and advice at PCTOregon.com.
2017
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April 9
Half Marathon • 10k • 5K —the 29th annual Salmon Run. Traverse beautiful dirt and paved trails along the Deschutes River in Bend; the race winds through some of the most scenic trails in town.
DONNER
BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY
2016
FLOWER SHOP
Racers 2-10 can participate in The Little Fry Run! Three distances for each fry to choose from.
FLOWERS - HOME DECOR - OUTDOOR 541.382.3791
www.donnerflower.com
605 N.W. Newport Ave. Bend
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“COLD BEER FOR SALE 363 DAYS A YEAR!” RACE DETAILS AND REGISTRATION INFORMATION
runsalmonrun.com
220 NW HIGHWAY 20 541.318.2977
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
Chelsea Woodmansee By Richard Sitts
S
he is the Beer Goddess. It says so right there on her business card. Chelsea Woodmansee has earned that title, as this summer will be her seventh year of wrangling that keg rodeo better known as Bend Brewfest. As if that year-round gig is not enough, the second hat she wears is sponsorship and events coordinator for the Old Mill District. Woodmansee started out working for the Old Mill District as a receptionist, in a three-month temp gig filling in for a staffer on maternity leave. Before her time was up, her boss, Marney Smith, director of the Les Schwab Amphitheater, informed her, “We’re going to steal you,” Woodmansee recalls. “I fell in love with it. It was fastpaced. I fell in love with the people, the brewers, all the volunteers, giving out hugs and handshakes. It just kind of changed my life; it was really cool. And even after seven years, I still get excited about it,” Woodmansee says. “It’s just three days of chaos. It’s learning all about beer. It took two years
ARTWATCH
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“The best thing about beer is that it creates such a cool community and I don’t see that going away any time. I feel honored to be a part of it.” — CHELSEA WOODMANSEE
of immersion to get a lot of it figured out. It’s a really consuming event, but I love it. I’ve been able to grow and it’s grown with me.” Over the past seven years, Woodmansee says she’s seen it all at Brewfest: weddings, anniversaries, family reunions, bachelor and bachelorette parties and even a marriage proposal. “They’re having their first kid right now,” she says. “I’m a really hard worker and I’m not afraid of hard work. We work 18-22-hour days and then get up and do it all over again. Once the Brewfest is over, we jump in and start working on the next one.” During one Brewfest she logged about 15 miles in a single day, according to her pedometer. Brewfest this year will be Aug. 10-12, a week earlier than usual, due to the solar eclipse happening Aug 21. Woodmansee has lived in Bend for 28 years, minus two years living in San Francisco. She and her family moved to Bend in 1991, and she is a proud alumni of Bend High School. For much of the year, Woodmansee lives beer. She breathes it, drinks it,
talks it, loves it and knows it well. It inspired her enough to have her first tattoo be a hop flower on the inside of her wrist. “I like a good stout. It doesn’t matter what time of year it is, and I like sours a lot. The best thing about beer is that it creates such a cool community and I don’t see that going away any time. I feel honored to be a part of it. It’s more than just beer, it’s really changed my life.” Is the craft beer scene at its crest? She poo-poos that suggestion. “If it is cresting, I don’t want to know about it. I’m in denial,” she laughs. Asked if she had any beer philosophy to impart, Woodmansee mentions a monologue from the classic TV sitcom, “Cheers,” in which postman Cliff Clavin explains the virtues of drinking beer. Any self-respecting beer drinker above a certain age should recall this. If not, just Google ‘Cliff ’s Beer Theory.’ During the past seven years Woodmansee has also been practicing standup comedy at local clubs while emceeing various events such as the A Cappella Festival and the annual Bend
Follies. For the past two months she also has been teaching comedy improvisation. On a long-overdue vacation to New Zealand last fall, she and her two travel mates checked out the local craft beer scene. She said New Zealanders they talked to knew all about Oregon beers and were somewhat intimidated to have the Oregonians taste their local brews. She said they still found some good ones, mostly reds, IPAs and pale ales, but not many stouts or other dark beers. “They have really delicious hops,” Woodmansee says. She related a story about how the Goodlife brewers visited New Zealand years ago and the resulting collaboration that became Sweet As Pacific Ale. As she and her friends learned last fall, the phrase, “Sweet as,” is New Zealand slang for “right on.” One time, as they were leaving a grocery store, the clerk cheerfully remarked, “Sweet As!” Woodmansee says, “We asked each other, ‘Did he say, ‘Sweet Ass’?!’ But they eventually figured it out… SW
By Howard Leff
Canada to Cascadia
Fashion designer taps into roots for inspiration Alicia Renner started bonding with her natural surroundings almost immediately, by planting trees as a teenager in northern Alberta and British Columbia—generally known to the rest of us as the Canadian wilderness. As the trees grew, so did her dedication to creating fashion in the form of handmade clothes and accessories. Renner moved to Bend eight years ago and quickly found support from the city’s art community. “People are just so awesome, supportive and excited for you to be doing anything.” She later started her own company called Howl Attire and works out of her studio in the Old Iron Works
Arts District. Her design choices typically combine past and present. “I bring inspiration from being in Canada,” she says. “And also from around here with the desert and mountains. I like the whole Western vibe a lot. Cowboy desert stuff is fun to play with.” After experimenting for a couple of years, Renner locked in on a few ingredients that she tries to use in her work, including wool, leather, brass and fur. She has also embraced the Cascadia separation movement, which, as you can imagine, paid off mightily during the 2016 election season. Orders for her Cascadia flags “just blew up…so that was pretty cool,” she says. What’s next? Well, get set, Cascadia Nation. Renner’s at work on new 100 percent wool button-up shirts and
Duffle bags. All materials sourced from the U.S.A., of course…if not (one day anyway) Cascadia itself… SW Howl Attire
50 SE Scott St., Suite 5, Bend howlattire.com howlattire@gmail.com Daily, 10am – 5pm
Art fans: The Source is having its very own art show! Check out JuxtSource, a show featuring Source art covers juxtaposed with the original works of art. JuxtSource First Friday Reception
Fri. April 7, 5-9pm Crow’s Feet Commons 875 NW Brooks St., Bend Artwork displayed throughout the month of April.
37 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Cheers! Brewfest boss thrives on the community of beer
S O U R C E
FOOD & BEER EVENTS
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 30, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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100% Vegan Friendly
Catering Available!
541.382.2929 * 1326 NE 3rd St. Bend PhoVietAndCafe.com
It’s Whiskey Wednesday, every week at the Barrel Thief Lounge.
FOOD Enjoy A Sandwich To Support FAN!
Best Venue for live music, dancing, food and libations
Live Music 5 Days a Week Thu 3/30
The Insinuators 7:30 to 10:30 Fri 3/31
Ju Ju Eyeball 8:30 to 12 Sat 4/1
Victory Swig 8:30 to 12 Tue 4/4
Groove Merchants w/ Michelle Van Handel
6 to 9
Wed 4/5
Acoustic Open Mic w/ Derek Michael Marc
6 to 9
62860 Boyd Acres Rd in Bend
(541) 383-0889
Facebook.com/NorthsideBarAndGrill northsidebarfun.com
firkin pints until it’s gone. Fridays, 4pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr. 541-639-4776.
Day of Giving — ALL proceeds from both Bend locations will benefit the Family Access Network (FAN)! The funds raised will support vital FAN services that connect disadvantaged children to food, shelter, clothing, and more. March 29, 11am-9pm. Jersey Mike’s, 143 SW Century Dr.
Food Truck Fridays Flights, pints, fine
Prime Rib Dinner Night Sundays, 5-9pm. Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 541-693-5300. $35.
Geeks Who Drink Trivia Eight rounds of
BEER AND DRINK ATLAS Cider Tasting Series Come expe-
bratwurst, Belgian frites and European food truck cuisine provided by We’re The Wurst in a cozy and funky industrial brewery setting. Fridays, noon-7pm. Monkless Belgian Ales, 20750 High Desert Ln. Suite 107. 541-610-5098.
eight questions each, including a music round, an audio round, and a picture round. with gift certificates for the winning team and five bonus questions per night for additional prizes. Six person teams max. Tuesdays, 8-10pm. The Platypus Pub, 1203 NE Third St. 541-323-3282. Free.
rience a variety of ciders from around the world! With a new theme every week, each tasting is sure to be an adventure. Berry? Poire? Dry? Sign up now as seats are limited. Tuesdays, 6-7pm. Through April 26. ATLAS Cider Co. Taproom, 550 SW Industrial Way Suite 190. 541-633-7757. $15.
Industry Night We, the service industry, work
Wine Tastings Join us every Friday and
RExDOn Classics, folk, country, rock, and blues tunes that will inspire you to sing along. Music that appeals and inspires all generations. March 31, 5-8pm. The Pickled Pig, 63136 Powell Butte Rd. 541-797-6136. No cover.
Beer Tastings Don’t miss out! Join us every Friday afternoon for delicious beer tastings. Fridays, 3:30-5:30pm. Through Dec. 29. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave. 541-3823940. Free.
Trivia Thursdays Featuring craft cocktails,
Beer Tasting Celebrate Spring Break at
Mt. Bachelor’s Pine Martin Lodge and get a taste of Victory Swig. Great turns, beer, food, staff and really groovy music. Celebrate Spring with Victory Swig! March 31, 1-3pm. Mt. Bachelor - Pine Martin Lodge, 13000 SW Century Dr. Free.
Saturday for tasty wine tastings. Fridays, 3:305:30pm and Saturdays, 3:30-5:30pm. Through Dec. 31. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave. 541-382-3940. Free.
Pronghorn with a complimentary beer tasting with Crux Fermentation Project! Although this is a free tasting, please RSVP on eventbrite so we know you are coming! March 29, 6-7:30pm. Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 541-693-5300. Free.
Craft Cocktail Tasting Join us for a com-
Saturday and Sunday Breakfast
Firkin Friday A different firkin each week. $3
plimentary craft cocktail tasting at Pronghorn Resort! This month we are featuring rum. Immediately after the tasting, join us for a specialty dinner that pairs wonderfully with the tasting. RSVP on eventbrite.com. March 31, 6-7:30pm. Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 541-693-5300. Free Tasting, $65 dinner.
too hard! Come celebrate your weekend every Monday night with half off pool and $1 off all your favorite drinks! Mondays, 5pm-midnight. Duda’s Billiard’s Bar, 1020 NW Wall St. Suite B.
amazing food and trivia prizes. Thursdays, 7-9pm. The Barrel Thief Lounge at Oregon Spirit Distillers, 740 NE First St. 541-550-4747. Free.
Victory Swig at Mt Bachelor Come out to
Whiskey Wednesday Featuring drink specials, whiskey samples, delicious food, and a raffle with prizes! Wednesdays, 4-9pm. The Barrel Thief Lounge at Oregon Spirit Distillers, 740 NE First St. 541-550-4747. No charge.
CH
CHOW
Get your garden on Spring is here, time to prep by Nicole Vulcan
• Learn about Growing Vegetables in Central Oregon and Spring Gardening at events offered by the Oregon State University Extension Service-Deschutes County and/or the Central Oregon Master Gardeners.
• Want a space to garden? The Central Oregon chapter of the OSU Master Gardeners program is holding a lottery for the open raised bed garden spaces in the NorthWest Crossing Community Garden. The garden offers raised bed plots of 4 feet by 12 feet. To take part in the lottery, email tinaburnside@ bendcable.com or sandislawosky@yahoo.com by April 15—and be sure to include your phone number. The group will draw names for the available beds on April 15. The cost of renting a bed is $30 or $25 for seniors. • Opening day at the NWX Garden Sat. April 29 at 9:30 am. NW Crossing Drive and NW Discovery Park Drive extension.oregonstate.edu/deschutes
• Growing Vegetables in Central Oregon – free! −− Sat. April 1, 1:30-3:30pm Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend −− Sat. April 1, 10am-noon - Free class taught in Spanish St. Thomas Catholic Church, 1720 NW 19th St., Redmond Call 541-548-6088 to register, or visit extension.oregonstate.edu/deschutes • COMGA Spring Gardening Seminar Sat. April 15, 8am-4:30pm Redmond-Deschutes Fair & Expo Center 3800 SE Airport Way, Redmond Call 541-548-6088, or visit gocomga.com $10/ $15 on event day • Want more classes? Check out extension.oregonstate.edu/deschutes
If you can’t wait for the farmer’s markets to get going, head over to the 2nd Annual Farm & Food Spring Faire at Central Oregon Community College on April 15. “The fair provides a place for local farmers and ranchers to connect with community members well before seasonal farmers markets start up in June,” says event coordinator Owen Murphy. In attendance will be farmers, including Prineville’s Cada Dia Cheese and Bend’s Fields Farm—where this year, they’ve increased their Community Supported Agriculture, or CSA, shares from 47 last year to 100, allowing more local people to receive a weekly delivery of locally-grown produce. • COCC Farm & Food Spring Faire Sat. April 15, 11am-3pm COCC Coats Campus Center NW College Way, Bend Matt Davis
Mosaic Medical Pediatric Department
We grow with your child Quality Care For All
NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS PROVIDER ON-CALL 24 HOURS SAME DAY AVAILABILITY FLEXIBLE HOURS
541-383-3005 mosaicmedical.org
2084 NE Professional Court, Bend OR (Off Neff across from The Center and St. Charles)
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There may be the occasional flake flying, but still, the time for prepping the garden is upon us. For those with established gardens, you may even be seeing the first tendrils of life springing up from the soil. For the rest of you, there’s plenty of help out there to get your garden growing—or to help fill your pantry with lots of local food. Here are a few options.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 30, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 40
SC
SCREEN
Lightning Bottles
“Beauty and the Beast” can’t help being magical By Jared Rasic 41
Walt Disney Pictures
‘Twas Beast that dipped the Beauty. Maybe even a little macarena.
lovingly re-created that the film looks like the most immersive amusement park ever created. This might be the biggest problem of the entire film: They haven’t created a world here. Instead, as entertaining and gorgeously crafted as the film is, it all still plays more like a Broadway production than it does a living, breathing world. Emma Watson was born to play Belle just as rising movie star Dan (Downton Abbey) Stevens fits flawlessly into the beast’s hairy hide. Ian McKellen as Cogsworth, Stanley Tucci as Cadenza, Ewan McGregor as Lumiere and Emma Thompson as Mrs. Potts are such flawless bits of casting that even as I complain about how manufactured the magic feels throughout,
I still feel like a bit of a jerk. It’s too much fun to deal with at some points. For me, the real catch was Broadway legend Audra McDonald as Madame de Garderobe, whose full soprano voice absolutely crushes anyone she comes in contact with. The “gay controversy” is negligible and given barely any screen time, so for parents worried about having to explain to their little monsters what homosexuality is, you’ll probably be safe for at least a few more days. Or use it as a teachable moment instead of letting the Internet do it. Either way. It’s hard to find much fault in “Beauty and the Beast.” Every single frame of the film seems like a painting come to life. The problem is, we’ve
seen it before. For these live-action remakes of Disney animated classics to work, there needs to be a reason for them to exist. Give Spike Jonze “The Great Mouse Detective” or David Lynch “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.” Can you imagine Peter Weir’s “The Little Mermaid” or David Cronenberg’s “A Bug’s Life?!” Let’s take some chances and see what happens. SW
B+
Beauty and the Beast
Dir. Bill Condon Grade: B+ Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema
(TEL) The Difference: Outage-Free Fiber Internet
Cable
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very single Disney movie I review seems to come to the same basic conclusion: Disney done did it again. Their new releases could play more like victory laps than anything and still make billions, yet the movies continue to be entertaining and artful almost across the board. Last year’s live-action remake of “The Jungle Book” was pure magic and better than most every children’s release of the last five years. Following in the same footsteps as “The Jungle Book,” this year’s “Beauty and the Beast” is a state-of-the-art remake of the 1991 classic animated film from what’s considered to be Disney’s renaissance period. The biggest difference between “The Jungle Book” and “Beauty and the Beast is that “The Jungle Book” played more like an original vision taking on the classic story, whereas Beauty and the Beast feels like a too-faithful adaptation. Don’t get me wrong, if this version of “Beauty and the Beast” had come out in 1991, it would be considered a game changer and one of the most triumphant children’s films of all time, but this feels like a funhouse facsimile of the animated version. The differences are so minor as to be negligible, which is fine, but it leaves the live action version looking like a brilliant painting that exists only to stare at and not be moved by. The film is almost too beautiful to look at, with director Bill Condon flinging his camera through Rococo-era France like he’s gliding through history. The village of Villeneuve and The Beast’s Gothic castle are so
DO WHAT MAKES YOU HAPPY!
FILM SHORTS By Jared Rasic
BEND
“Power Rangers”
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ANTARCTICA: ICE AND SKY: This was the
closing film of the 2015 Cannes Film Festival and deservedly so. This gorgeously shot documentary explores how ice cores tell the messages. While there is plenty of jaw-dropping nature photography, it’s also a chilling (pun very much intended) look at climate change. Tin Pan Theater
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST: Disney is on a
PRESENTED BY
bit of a roll lately with remaking their classic animated films as big budget live action spectacles. This one stars Emma Watson as Belle and the smashingly handsome Dan Stevens (from “Downton Abbey”) as the Beast, while also featuring all of the same beloved songs from the original. If this is half as good as last year’s remake of “The Jungle Book” then it should be highly worth your time. See full review on p41. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema, Sisters Movie House
CHIPS: As fun as the original series could be and as fun as Dax Shepard and Michael Pena look together, the trailer for this is filled with jokes centered around gay panic. The characters make so many different jokes based on being afraid of being viewed as gay, it’s a wonder whether that’s the entire focus in a movie that should be about crazy vehicular stunts and good-natured buddy cop humor. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
S AT U R D AY M AY 2 7 T H 5K Run, 10K Run & Half Marathon Great post-race festivities & fabulous goody bags
BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY Racers 2-10 can participate in the HAPPY LITTLE KIDS RUN! Choose from Three distances.
MY SCIENTOLOGY MOVIE: An irreverent,
hilarious, disturbing and upsetting documentary focusing on Louis Theroux’s investigation into what goes on inside the Church of Scientology. He has a very different take on the Church than any documentary so far, so the film ends up being a fascinating look at some very insidious practices. Sisters Movie House
POWER RANGERS: The reviews for this are surprisingly positive even with the trailers looking impressively goofy and nonsensical. This is the movie 90’s kids have been waiting half their lives for, so for their sake I hope the film is delightful. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema SPAGHETTI WESTERN WEDNESDAY: $8
HIDDEN FIGURES: Taraji P. Henson stars as Katherine Johnson, one of the key mathematical minds that helped put John Glenn into orbit during the Space Race. Watching Henson, Octavia Spencer and Janelle Monae take on a sexist and racist NASA while doing twice the work as everyone else is inspiring, but also infuriating. Old Mill Stadium 16
THE BELKO EXPERIMENT: This new horror comedy runs with the wonderful idea of “what if everyone from ‘Office Space’ were forced to try and kill one another.” With a script co-written by James (“Guardians of the Galaxy”) Gunn and directed by Greg (“Wolf Creek”) Mclean, this should be one bloody and intense good time. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
I AM NOT YOUR NEGRO: This incendiary documentary uses the words of queer black intellectual James Baldwin to draw parallels between the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and modern race relations. While this movie might just be preaching to the choir, it’s something that every American should see. Prepare to be angry. Tin Pan Theater
THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE: There's no reason why "The Lego Movie" should have worked as well as it did, but somehow it did and Batman was one of the breakout characters. The hilarious Will Arnett made Batman a sad, lonely, egotistical jerk while mining the pathos for laughs around every turn. Spinoffs shouldn't work, but this one sorta did. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema
LIFE: This is not a re-release of the classic 1999
W W W. H A P P Y G I R L S R U N . C O M
MY LIFE AS A ZUCCHINI: Don’t judge a stop-motion animated film by its title. “My Life as a Zucchini” is a moving story about a young boy who heads to a foster home after the disappearance of his mother. As he struggles to feel safe and make friends, the story becomes a dark yet heartwarming masterwork. Tin Pan Theater.
GET OUT: A thriller about a biracial couple navigating the thinly-veiled racism of their community, with many psychologically-thrilling twists. Old Mill Stadium 16
KONG: SKULL ISLAND: This new King Kong movie takes all the fun from Peter Jackson’s version and builds an entire film around it. The film is also part of the shared monster universe connecting it with the Godzilla movie from a few years ago. Expect to see these versions of the classic giant monsters fighting each other sometime in 2019. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema, Sisters Movie House
R E G I S T E R AT
X as they attempt to protect one of the final living mutants. Should be even better than advertised. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema, Sisters Movie House
comedy-drama with Eddie Murphy and Martin Lawrence. Instead, this is a sci-fi horror flick along the lines of “Alien” about a team of scientists who discover new life and will do whatever it takes to protect it. This looks like a fun throwback to ‘70s creature features. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
LOGAN: Hugh Jackman reprises his role as
Wolverine one final time in what is being hailed as the greatest X-Men film of all time. Set in the near future, “Logan” follows Wolverine and Professor
gets you an All-U-Can eat spaghetti dinner and a hootin’ and hollerin’ good time watching old Western classics. Tin Pan Theater
THE SHACK: Based on the religious book that
even your non-religious friends read. “The Shack” is about a grieving father who has a conversation with God. At times bouncing between serious exploration of faith and a wacky thriller, “The Shack” is either exactly the kind of movie you're looking for or something to drunkenly make fun of with friends. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
KEDI: A touching and fascinating portrait of several of the thousands of stray cats that populate the Turkish city of Istanbul. Tin Pan Theater
WILSON: A new underdog story from Daniel Clowes, the brilliant mind behind the criminally under-seen “Ghost World.” This film follows Woody Harrelson as Wilson, a neurotic and bitter man who meets his teenage daughter for the first time. Expect a film both unpredictable and heartwarming. Sisters Movie House
SC
Lovesong In A Minor Key
Expert Compassionate Health Care for the whole family.
Poetry is alive in cinema By Jared Rasic
43 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Healthy AdventureS await! Open 7 Days • Urgent Care Doctors Byron Maas, Lauren Stayer, Erin Miller & Marie Stanley
Riley Keough and Jena Malone are beautiful together in “Lovesong.”
T
here’s something perfect about a film like this being called “Lovesong.” Every moment of the movie feels lyrical, like the beginning lines of a poem before we can see its form or understand its content. The movie will be categorized as an LGBTQ romance, but it’s also filled with sweeping moments of breathtaking sadness that define the most profoundly incisive independent dramas out there. Riley Keough (“Mad Max: Fury Road”) plays Sarah, a young mother struggling to raise a three-year-old daughter while her husband is away working for months at a time. Her Skype conversations with her husband are distant, concealing any basic emotion and avoiding all questions about the future. She wakes up from nightmares and is being medicated for some unnamed anxiety or depression. Sarah’s daughter is adorable and their relationship is filled with countless small, beautiful moments, but something is missing from her life. Enter Mindy, played by Jena Malone (“Neon Demon”). Mindy and Sarah have been best friends for most of their lives and have a relationship built upon the opposing natures of their personalities. Riley is quiet, thoughtful and demure, while Mindy drinks more, screws more and treats life like a one night stand she is getting ready to bail on. When Mindy comes to visit Sarah during one of her husband’s long work trips, the two friends find there might be much more to their relationship than they can even recognize. “Lovesong” is played in a very minor key. The physical aspect of the romance between Mindy and Riley is almost completely played offscreen, leaving most of the fireworks to be played through stolen glances and unspoken promises. If director So Yong Kim hadn’t chosen the name “Lovesong” for this lovely little indie, “Restraint” would have also worked perfectly. Minor Spoilers: The film is told in two parts. The first involves Sarah and
bendveterinaryclinic.com • 382-0741
Mindy’s short visitation that leads to their newfound intimacy. The second part takes place three years later at Mindy’s wedding to a man Sarah has never met. It’s obvious the two friends didn’t stay in contact over the years and that quite a bit relies on this ticking time bomb of reconnection. The two women still obviously care for each other, but now all of their earlier simplicity is replaced by impossible choices. What makes “Lovesong” such a remarkable work is the lack of answers. We don’t know if Sarah and Mindy would be better off together. We don’t even know if they would have been happier. All we are allowed to see are the tiny breathless moments between these two women that suggest a future that would perhaps be not brighter, but at least unpredictable and exciting. Keough and Malone have an effortless chemistry that keeps their relationship feeling authentic and genuine. The moments So Yong Kim chooses to leave unspoken and un-dramatized between these two women allows “Lovesong” to feel much larger than it actually is. We get to imagine Sarah and Mindy as they head into the future. There are no periods to their relationship, only commas and an eventual ellipses. Just like the greatest poems, “Lovesong” takes time to process. Sarah and Mindy hesitate to truly love each other not out of fear, but from a deeply sad uncertainty. What if it doesn’t work out? Could their friendship survive it? All they can do is love each other in the moments they have instead of the ones they want. Again, like the greatest poems (and films), “Lovesong” doesn’t need our understanding, or necessarily even want it. All the film needs to do is mirror our humanity and allow us time to look. SW Lovesong
Dir. So Yong Kim Grade: ASisters Movie House
A-
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OUTSIDE
Getting that Spring in Your Step The weather’s a-changing… time to start running By Magdalena Bokowa 45
FootZone
Running with others can be beneficial. Starting out slowly is the key to success in the long run.
Dust off those kicks
that. If you’re keen on racing, most runs such as the Salmon Run or Happy Girls (on May 27) offer 5k and 10k options to their half-marathon.
“What we’re seeing is that finally, after this crazy winter, people are starting to get back to it,” says Poirot. “There’s a lot of sentiment from runners that they are months behind on their training.” If you’ve found it difficult to stay motivated when thawed trails turn into slush after this soggy start to spring, keep the momentum flowing by erring on paved roads or going indoors on the treadmill. Diehards may bristle at the idea of forgoing the oneness with nature for a stale gym, but what treadmill training lacks in variability, it does make up for in precision and control — important if you are practicing a goal pace before an upcoming run. If you’ve been slow to the start, don’t overdo it. Poirot cautions, “It’s wise to race at where you’re at. It’s hard to gain a bunch of mileage in a short amount of time without getting hurt. Maybe you’re not quite there yet to run a half marathon.” She recommends adding 10 percent a week of extra length for your long run. So if you’re comfortable running three miles, add only 0.3 miles a week to
“If you’re having doubts or you’re struggling, it is definitely helpful to have a group to run with,” adds Poirot. Getting out with friends makes you not only accountable, but has been a proven method in reaching those goals faster. Plus, there’s a little phenomena that occurs when you run with spectators. It’s called social facilitation — and it’s science! Numerous studies stemming all the way back to 1897 have concluded that we generally perform better when we are in the presence of others and have an audience. A bit of ego perhaps? Probably. But group runs will push you to set a quicker pace, and give the added bonus of encouragement—very handy when you’re slogging up a steep incline. If the thought of being the last one in the group unnerves you, test the route ahead of time by making a few solo runs — but know that there’s no gain if there isn’t a bit of pain… even the anxiety-driven mental kind, which is arguably the biggest hurdle in starting any new endeavor.
Find a group run
If your friends are too busy indulging in the 101 other outdoor recreational activities Bend has to offer, or they prefer napping on the couch (hey, it’s an activity!) then sign up for an intro 5k, 10k or half-marathon training group. FootZone, Fleet Feet and our Outdoor and Athletic section ion page 46 offer plenty of options. Other great resources? Central Oregon Running Klub, Bend Area Running Fraternity and Bend Babes Brews and Running Crew… yes, that really is a thing. Embrace (figurative) stumbling Every pro had to start somewhere, so don’t be dissuaded if you’ve run a quarter mile and your lungs feel like they’re on fire, or you gave up after a few sessions. “The biggest stumbling block for new runners,” Poirot says “is that they go out way too fast! So within a quarter mile they are ready to die and they don’t think they are runners.” She advocates starting off with a run-walk ratio, slowly building to 5k. “Everybody assumes that in order to show up for even a 5k running group you have to be a runner. That’s not the case.” You can get off the couch and run a 5k in as little as six weeks, which is where a structured running group can come in handy. A coached group provides
structure with someone asking you what you’ve had trouble with or has the expertise to pinpoint issues you’re having, whether it’s your knees, joints or breathing issues. Invest in a decent pair of running shoes that are lightweight and both support and cushion your soles. And remember, running, apart from being one of the best and lowest-cost ways of getting into shape and living a healthy life, also carves out time for yourself. “It clears my head,” says Poirot, “and that time to think and connect with nature is my motivator.” SW
For your own motivation, check out: Footzonebend.com Fleetfeetbend.com centraloregonrunningklub.org
Upcoming Races
Salmon Run April 9 Half marathon, 10k, 5k and Little Fry Kids Run Runsalmonrun.com Happy Girls Women’s Run May 27 Half-marathon, 10k and 5k happygirlsrun.com
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VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
M
aybe it’s the hot neon lycra, the tiny water-bottle waistbands or the sultry sweatiness a runner exudes while hammering the trail, but there’s just something about that slender yet strong physique that makes one long to be a runner. With all that talk about that mythical “runner’s high,” there’s something to say about striving for health, cardio fitness and an all-natural, altered state of elated consciousness. So can anyone be a runner? “Heck yeah!” exclaims Michelle Poirot, FootZone marketing and events coordinator. “It’s amazing to move your body through this stunning landscape that we live in, and running is a great method to really experience and see all that we have here in Central Oregon.” So, we hope we don’t jinx it when we say, the trails are finally thawing out and it’s time to go running! With the Salmon Run on April 9 kickstarting this race season, it’s time to get into gear.
OUTSIDE EVENTS
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In search of our night time dwellers with the Owl Prowl, 3/29 at the Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory.
ATHLETIC Aerial Silks Fun Every thursday, 4pm kids, 5:30pm adults. Thursdays, 4-5:15pm. Through May 25. Silks Rising, 1560 NE 1st Street #10. 541-633-5160.
BEND’S LOCAL INDEPENDENT OUTDOOR
OUTDOOR RESEARCH PATAGONIA PETZL PRANA RAB SALEWA SCARPA SIERRA DESIGNS SEA TO SUMMIT SMARTWOOL THERMAREST MOUNTAIN HARDWEAR ZEAL MONTRAIL ARC’TERYX FIVETEN HYDRO FLASK GARMONT KEEN LA SPORTIVA MAMMUT MERRELL OSPREY CHACO SMITH DARN TOUGH DRAGON RETAILER METOLIUS MONTRAIL OBOZ BLACK DIAMOND BOREAS
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PITCHIN! 100% of your donations will help local families manage day-to-day non-medical expenses, including fuel, travel and food costs, while receiving cancer treatment. Our communities have raised $279,400 and helped over 1,000 local patients across Central Oregon.
Brace & Roll Kayaking Class Whether it is your first time in a whitewater kayak, or you need a thorough refresher after years out of your boat, Tumalo Creek’s Brace & Roll (winter) classes are a great place to start. Offering two and three-hour sessions, see website for details. Sundays, 3-6pm. Through April 30. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541-317-9407. $25/$35 plus a pool reservation. CORK Monthly Run Bring your friends to our
monthly run starting and ending at Crow’s Feet Commons. We will run a 3-5 mile out and back route (you can choose your distance). All running abilities, strollers and friendly dogs are welcome! First Monday of every month, 5:30pm. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. Free.
Cycling Kick-Off Meeting Bend Bella Cyclists, open to women of all ages & ability levels have road and mountain bike opportunities and club activities. Enjoy free refreshments as you mingle with sponsors and other cycling enthusiasts. April 6, 6-7:30pm. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd. 360-7989030. Free. Lava City vs. Snake Pit Derby Dames
LCRD’s Spit Fires take on Coeur D’Alene ID’s Snake Pit Derby Dames. And our Juniors, the Cinder Kittens vs. Rogue Skate Cartel from Medford, OR. Join us for hard-hitting derby action from Bend’s only all-female flat track derby league! April 1, 4:30-8:30pm. Cascade Indoor Sports: Skating Rink Side, 20775 NE High Desert Ln. $5-10.
Steel Road Bike Group Ride Leaves from
Jackson’s Corner Eastside location. 30 Eastward route, moderate pace with friendly folks who share a love of steel bikes. Hang out to enjoy a drink and share stories. Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Jackson’s Corner Eastside, 1500 NE Cushing Dr. Suite 100. 541-382-2453. Free.
Tuesday Performance Group Maximize
your time with focused, intense efforts. All ages and ability levels welcome. Sessions led by Max King, one of the most accomplished trail runners in the country. Weekly details and locations: max@ footzonebend.com. Tuesdays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. Free.
OUTDOORS Basic Skills Kayaking Class A great
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launching point for the aspiring life-long kayaker, this class will prepare participants to confidently explore our region’s flat and swift waterways. Participants will learn comprehensive safety and basic paddle stroke techniques while enjoying the company of other novice course mates. April
1, 10am-2pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541.317.9407. $75.
BMC Walk With a Doc Take a STEP to Better Health. Walking for as little as 30 minutes a day can reduce your risk of certain diseases. Join a BMC provider and other people in the community. Tuesdays, 7-7:30am. Through Oct. 31. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St. Free. FootZone Noon Run Lunch hour 3 to 5 mile run. Wednesdays-noon. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free.
Moms Running Group All moms welcome with or without strollers. 3-4.5 mile run at 8-12 minute mile paces. This is a fun and encouraging group for moms of all running levels. Runs occur rain or shine. Thursdays, 9:30am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Move it Mondays We occasionally carpool for a trail run, light-permitting. Runs are between 3-5 miles, paces between 7 and 12-minute miles can be accommodated. Mondays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Turkey Hunting Banquet Support the
National Wild Turkey Fund’s mission to “Save the Habitat. Save the Hunt.” Statewide deer tag auction at 8pm. April 1, 5:15-10pm. Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. 541-490-8348. $65-85.
Owl Prowl Venture into the night in search of
nocturnal creatures! Meet a live owl and discover Sunriver’s night time dwellers. March 29, 6-7pm. Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Rd., Sunriver. 541-593-5394. $6 adults, $4 kids.
Sky Hunters Raptors take flight in this inti-
mate demonstration. Experience these powerful predators as our wildlife specialists showcase the birds’ agility and grace. Wed, March 29, 11am and 1:30pm, Thurs, March 30, 11am and 1:30pm, Fri, March 31, 11am and 1:30pm and Sat, April 1, 11am and 1:30pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. $3-$5.
Spring Half Marathon Training Ready to
run your first 1/2 marathon or just ready to get back into the swing of running 1/2’s? All paces, ages, and experiences. Wednesdays, 6-8pm and Saturdays, 8-10am. Fleet Feet Sports Bend, 11320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601. $145.
Walk Up Pilot Butte Join JessBFit for this breathtaking walk up Pilot Butte. Stick around after the walk to learn how to use the pull-up bar station at the trail head for strength training and stretching. Tuesdays, 8-9am. Pilot Butte State Park, Pilot Butte State Park. 503-446-0803. Free. Wednesday Night Group Runs Join us
Wednesday nights for our 3-5 mile group runs, all paces welcome! This is a great way to get exercise, fresh air, and meet fellow fitnatics! Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601. Free.
O
Natural World
It can be tough to spot a pygmy owl, but sighting one is well worth the effort By Jim Anderson
GLORY & GOLD
47
Ken Hashagen
all—by the time I got my camera he’d made it to the other side of the road, into a thicket, vanishing in the underbrush. A pygmy owl is noted for its pugnacious attitude and the ability to kill and devour birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians way bigger than it is. Being aware of silhouettes in the tops of trees along the roadway can help you spot a pygmy owl. If you see one and want to get a closeup photo like Ken’s, all you have to do is become a pygmy owl. That’s done by staying in your car, opening the window and whistling in short bursts with a trill at the end. The owl— especially if it’s a male—will quickly react to the territorial sound and usually come looking for it, thinking it’s a possible intruder. (This website has the call: allaboutbirds.org/guide/Northern_Pygmy-Owl/sounds) The owl has no idea it’s you making the fake call, but concentrates all its searching abilities trying to see that other owl calling. If you keep it up and get the little guy to fly, he’ll be in your car, or on the top of your head if you let him. A pygmy owl in the top of a tree alongside the road is really a common sight throughout Central Oregon in winter. Not so during nesting season, but around November they begin showing up, peaking in December and January. The big thrill comes when the owl turns its head, which they can do in the blink of an eye. The feather pattern on the back of the owl’s head resembles two eyes looking right at you! Both male and female have “eyes” in the backs of their heads, which is no surprise. Both my mom and dad had similar physical
The robin with no tail; an adult Northern Pygmy Owl.
features, as do most parents. While cutting wood a couple of years back my sons and I were in a location that had a resident pygmy owl. Obviously, we had no idea it was there. After about 10 minutes of cutting wood, I shut it down to refuel and we heard the sharp whistle of a pygmy yelling at us: “Shut that stupid thing off and get out of here! This my home!” So we did, but not before I put up a small owl nesting box on the north side of a tree, something I always carry with me when out woodcutting. I know someone reading this column will see one next winter, so please give me a call (541-480-3728). I’ll make an effort to live-catch the little guy and band him with a USGS bird band. This will give us the opportunity to keep
By Rex Shepard
Hella Big Air offers a hella big party and more
Rex Shepard
HELLA — (adverb) very; extremely BIG — (adjective) large, as in size, height or width AIR — (noun) a jump or airborne stunt
There was hella big air this past weekend at Mt. Bachelor.
Snowboard Results: 1st Justin Morgan (West Mountain, NY) 2nd Ryan Linnert (Bend, OR) 3rd Dru Brownrigg (Bend, OR)
track of him or her as it travels about the Northwest, and learn how long it may live, or when it dies. We’ll learn why, how and when. I make it a habit to stop for all birds I see lying on the shoulder or in the roadway. Very few are banded, but when I find one that is it’s always a thrill. As soon as I get back home I go to my ancient computer, open the Bird Banding Lab website (pwrc.usgs.gov/ bbl/) and follow the links to reporting a banded bird. Have fun, and please keep off that cell phone when you’re driving; you can’t see pygmy owls when you’re talking on your cell phone. SW
Ski Results: 1st Nick Keefer (Salt Lake City, UT) 2nd Jake Mageau (Bend, OR) 3rd Jonah Elston (Bend, OR)
For a full recap of the event go to: 10barrel.com/2017/03/27/hella-big-air-2017/
The stakes high, risks consequential, speeds unnerving, airtime maximized. What is it about a big jump that brings people together? Is it for the glory, the gold or both? An 82-foot-gap jump taunted riders at the 2nd Annual 10 Barrel Brewing Hella Big Air, held at Mt. Bachelor on March 25. Professional skiers and snowboarders from around the country trucked from halfway up the mountain, reaching speeds of 53-67 miles, to gap the largest jump built all season. Competitors performed aerial tricks,
such as off-axis spins and flips and were judged on their style, amplitude, technicality, grabs and clean landings. The winner of each discipline would take home the $10,000 prize purse. Justin Morgan took first in the snowboarding division, consistently boosting higher than the competition and flawlessly executing freestyle tricks such as a backside rodeo 540, frontside 900 and switch backside 540 melon. Nick Keefer earned a first place finish in the ski by stomping a double bio 1260 and two impressive flatspin 900s. Local Ari Delashmutt was the obvious crowd favorite by throwing a huge superman front flip and hucking the biggest back flip at Mt. Bachelor in years. SW
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
K
en Hashagen, president of East Cascades Audubon Society of Bend, and I often get together to discuss bluebirds, kestrels, Great Gray Owls, eagles and other boring topics. “Boring!?” I should say not. After just a few minutes we’re waving our arms about and I can feel my blood pressure building up as we get into it about the latest sighting we’ve had on this or that raptor. We both band birds. Ken’s now a master bander, but was under my permit for a while, and I have been at it for over 60 years. Like me and many, many birders, he too drives with one eye on the road ahead and the other scanning the tops of the trees, looking for raptors and pygmy owls. You just have to get your foot off the gas pedal to do that, especially if one of your kids shouts, “Dad! Look! There’s a robin with no tail in the top of that tree!” If you’re going like blue-bloodyblazes down the road at 65 mph, concentrating on not hitting a bicyclist, pedestrian, mule deer or 18-wheeler, it’s difficult to spot a pygmy owl in the top of a juniper. Still, the rewards for suddenly coming upon one, and having the time and intelligence to pull over slowly and safely, are well worth it. I was going over the McKenzie Pass to Springfield one day not too many summers ago and had to dodge a pygmy owl dragging a fresh-dead pine squirrel across the road. As I came to a stop a few feet beyond the little owl and started scrambling for my camera, I could hear him already scolding me, and—drat it
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Deborah Posso
Sisters, Oregon. This inviting 3,352 Sq Ft, 3 bdrm/2.5
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bath property blends distinctive modern features
Principal Broker, RENE
20441 Brentwood Ave. Bend, OR 97702
while using reclaimed timber for architectural focal points. Mixed Use, Zoned DC (Downtown Commercial District) 1,869 sqft residential and almost 1,500 sqft
Pahlisch townhome in desirable neighborhood next to Silver Rail Elemetary school. Boasts harrwood floors, with built-ins, large hallways, and AC. This townhome lives large featuring open kitchen with stainless steel appliances and tile counter tops. Amazingly spacious master suite w/ walk-in closet. HOA covers front yard maintenance year round! This low maintance home is only minutes to Downtown, Old Mill & River trails.
in commercial. This is the opportunity you've been waiting for, lease now!
REAL ESTATE * PROPERTY * MANAGEMENT VACATION RENTALS
Specializing in NW Bend: Listings • Sales • Rentals
541-388-9973
stay@desertpineproperties.com Bend, OR
$295,000
BED: 3*
BATHS: 2.50
SQ FT: 1769*
1357 NE 5th St. Redmond, OR 97756 Well maintained home features, open floor plan, spacious kitchen with Island and pantry area. Bonus and office space on main level, gas fireplace in living room. Oversized master bedroom with double sinks in master bathroom. Nicely landscaped front yard, fenced back yard with patio, also includes newer storage building. BED: 3* BATHS: 2.50
Get Noticed in our Real Estate Section contact
AREA: REDMOND/TERREBONNE
SQ FT: 2010*
LOT SZ: 0.1400*
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TAKE ME HOME
By Nick Nayne Principal Broker, The Broker Network, LLC
The “Red Carpet” of a Home
S
Lot Listing $64,500 2648 NE 6th Dr, Redmond, OR
Now is the time to remove dead plants, shrubs, leaves, weeds, pinecones and pine needles from your lawn, driveway and walkways. Power washing or hosing down your porch, exterior walls and windows, under eaves to remove cobwebs, and patio furniture and ornaments will make things sparkling clean. Don’t forget to do the windows. Cleaning up the front door and garage door and repainting these doors is also important. If repainting is needed, consider adding a splash of color. Just like getting a car detailed before putting it up for sale, detailing a home’s first impressions will make buyers want to come in and see the home rather than passing it up for another.
Residential building lot located in a quiet Northeast Redmond neighborhood. Diamond Bar Ranch. Tony Levison, Broker 541.977.1852 Listed by Windermere Real Estate
49 Shevlin Landing MLS#201610740 - $764,990 • Address: 62700 NW Imbler Ct. – Lot 18 • 4 beds, 3 baths, on one level with 2 ensuites info@shevlinlanding.com / www.shevlinlanding.com Listed by Shevlin Landing
Shevlin Landing MLS#201610639 - $688,990 • Address: 62704 NW Imbler Ct. – Lot 19 • 3 beds, 3 baths, on a single level with a modern look info@shevlinlanding.com / www.shevlinlanding.com Listed by Shevlin Landing
Shevlin Landing MLS#201610740 - $764,990 • Address: 62700 NW Imbler Ct. – Lot 18 • 4 beds, 3 baths, on one level with 2 ensuites
HOME PRICE ROUND-UP
info@shevlinlanding.com / www.shevlinlanding.com
Photos and listing info from Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service
« LOW
1655 N.E. Diablo Way, Bend, OR 97702 3 beds, 2 baths, 1216 square feet, .18 acre lot Built in 1978 $239,000 Listed by Gould & Associates Realty
MID »
60897 S.E. Sweet Pea Dr., Bend, OR 97702 3 beds, 2.5 baths, 1,743 square feet, .11 acre lot Built in 2017 $359,416 Listed by New Home Star Oregon, LLC
« HIGH
2615 N.W. Champion Circle, Bend, OR 97703 3 beds, 3.5 baths, 3,522 square feet, .59 acre lot Built in 2003 $940,000 Listed by Premiere Property Group, LLC
REAL ESTATE LISTINGS Bungalows at NWX $199,000 - $499,000 24 unit condominium development comprised of 4 individual phases. Condos range from 400-1401 sq. ft. Call for more information. 541.383.1426 Listed by The Skjersaa Group
Lot Listing $85,000 55300 Huntington Road, Bend, OR 97707 Hard to find 2.09 ACRES build-able bare lot located across the street from the Little Deschutes River. Tony Levison, Broker 541.977.1852 Listed by Windermere Real Estate
Lot Listing $75,000 56067 Marsh Hawk Road, Bend, OR 97707 Excellent build-able lot located in OWW2. Close to Mt. Bachelor, Deschutes River and Sunriver. Tony Levison, Broker 541.977.1852 Listed by Windermere Real Estate
Listed by Shevlin Landing
Shevlin Landing MLS#201609716 - $824,990 • Address: 62709 NW Imbler Ct. – Lot 11 • 4 beds, 3 baths, modern design with a 3-car garage info@shevlinlanding.com / www.shevlinlanding.com Listed by Shevlin Landing
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
pring is the time of year when homeowners think about putting their homes on the market. Aside from the usual advice of decluttering and cleaning up the inside of your home, it’s important to remember that the exterior of your home is the first impression buyers get. Now that the snow has melted, it is important not to overlook the role of curb appeal. You may have an immaculate and beautiful home, but before buyers see the inside treasures, they see the exterior and landscape. A home’s exterior is sometimes referred to as the “red carpet” of the home. The items that stand out are the landscaping, porch, front door and windows. This is often overlooked by sellers, but a simple thing to do yourself or to inexpensively hire out.
REAL ESTATE LISTINGS CONT…
ADVICE GODDESS Hello Hath No Fury Though my boyfriend is loving and attentive, he’s bad at responding to my texts. He’s especially bad while traveling, which he does often for his work. Granted, half my texts are silly memes. I know these things aren’t important, so why do I feel so hurt when he doesn’t reply? —Waiting
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You’d just like your boyfriend to be more responsive than a gigantic hole. (Yell into the Grand Canyon and you’ll get a reply. And it isn’t even having sex with you.) What’s getting lost here is the purpose of the GIF of parakeets re-enacting the Ali/ Frazier fight or the cat flying through space on the burrito. Consider that, in the chase phase, some men text like crazy, hoping to banter a woman into bed. But once there’s a relationship, men (disproportionately) use texting as a logistical tool — “b there in 5” — while women continue using it as a tool for emotional connection. That’s probably why you feel so bad. Feeling ignored is also not ideal for a relationship. In research psychologist John Gottman did on newly married couples, the newlyweds who were still together six years down the line were those who were responsive toward their partner’s “bids for connection” — consistently meeting them with love, encouragement, support, or just attention. Explain this “bids for connection” thing to your boyfriend. (That mongoose in a dress is just meme-ese for “Yoo-hoo! You still there?”) However, especially when he’s traveling, a little reasonableness from you in what counts as a reply should go a long way. Maybe tell him you’d be happy with “Ha!”, “LOL,” or an emoji. You’d just like to see more than your own blinking cursor — looking like Morse code for “If he loved you, he’d at least text you that smiling swirl of poo.”
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Nobody expects a free meal from a restaurant. So what’s with wedding guests who think it’s acceptable to give no gift or just $100 from two people? My understanding is that you are supposed to “cover your plate” — the cost of your meal (at least $100 per person). If you can’t, you shouldn’t attend. I’m planning my wedding and considering not inviting four couples who gave no gift at my two siblings’ weddings. Upsettingly, most are family members (and aren’t poor). I’d hate to cut out family, but if they won’t
contribute, what else can I do? —Angry Bride If gift price is tied to meal price, it seems there should be a sliding scale. Uncle Bob, who’ll singlehandedly suck down 16 trays of canapes and drain the open bar, should pony up for that Hermès toaster oven. But then there’s Leslie, that raw vegan who only drinks by licking dew off leaves. Whaddya think…can she get by with a garlic press and a handmade hemp card? The truth is, this “cover your plate” thing is not a rule. It’s just an ugly idea that’s gained traction in parts of the country — those where bridezillas have transformed getting married into a fierce social deathmatch, the Amy Alkon wedding spendathalon. What gets lost in this struggle to out-lavish the competition is the point of the wedding — publicly joining two people in marriage, not separating their friends and relatives from as much cash as possible. And though it’s customary for guests to give gifts, The Oxford English Dictionary defines “gift” as “a thing given willingly” — as opposed to “a mandatory cover charge to help fund the rented chocolate waterfall, complete with white mocha rapids and four-story slide manned by Mick Jagger and Jon Bon Jovi.” But because you — incorrectly — believe that guests owe you (more than their company), you’ve awakened your ancient inner accountant, the human cheater-detection system. Evolutionary psychologists Leda Cosmides and John Tooby describe this as a specialized module the human brain evolved for detecting cheaters — “people who have intentionally taken the benefit specified in a social exchange rule without satisfying the requirement.” Identifying and punishing freeloading slackers was especially vital in an ancestral environment, where there weren’t always enough grubs to go around. These days, however, maybe you have the luxury to do as I advise in “Good Manners for Nice People Who Sometimes Say F*ck”: refuse to let a few (apparent) Stingy McMingies shape “who you are — which is created through … how you behave.” Instead of grinding down into tit for tat, you can decide to be generous. It’s a thematically nice way to start a marriage — in which 50/50 can sometimes be 95/“Hey, don’t I at least get your 5 percent?” It also makes for a far less cluttered invitation than “RSVP…with the price of the gift you’re getting us — so we know whether to serve you the Cornish game hen at the table or the bowl of water on the floor. Thanks!”
(c) 2017, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave. Suite 280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (advicegoddess.com).
ASTROLOGY
TAURUS (April 20May 20): According to legend, Buddha had to face daunting tests to achieve enlightenment. A diabolical adversary tempted him with sensual excesses and assailed him with vortexes of blistering mud, flaming ice, and howling rocks. Happily, Buddha glided into a state of wise calm and triumphed over the mayhem. He converted his nemesis’s vortexes into bouquets of flowers and celestial ointments. What does this have to do with you? In accordance with current astrological omens, I hope you will emulate Buddha as you deal with your own initiatory tests. APRIL FOOL! I wasn’t completely honest. It’s true you’ll face initiatory tests that could prod you to a higher level of wisdom. But they’ll most likely come from allies and inner prompts rather than a diabolical adversary.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Since I expect you’ll soon be tempted to indulge in too much debauched fun and riotous release, I’ll offer you a good hangover remedy. Throw these ingredients into a blender, then drink up: a thousand-year-old quail egg from China, seaweed from Antarctica, milk from an Iraqi donkey, lemon juice imported from Kazakhstan, and a dab of Argentinian toothpaste on which the moon has shone for an hour. APRIL FOOL! I deceived you. You won’t have to get crazy drunk or stoned to enjoy extreme pleasure and cathartic abandon. It will come to you quite naturally — especially if you expand your mind through travel, big ideas, or healthy experiments.
FOOL! I lied. A ten-percent increase isn’t nearly enough. Given the current astrological indicators, you must seek out longer and deeper exchanges with the people you love. Can you manage 20 minutes per day?
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): In a way, it’s too bad you’re about to lose your mind. The chaos that ensues will be a big chore to clean up. But in another sense, losing your mind may be a lucky development. The process of reassembling it will be entertaining and informative. And as a result, your problems will become more fascinating than usual, and your sins will be especially original. APRIL FOOL! I lied, sort of. You won’t really lose your mind. But this much *is* true: Your problems will be more fascinating than usual, and your sins will be especially original. That’s a good thing! It may even help you recover a rogue part of your mind that you lost a while back.
content including EPA and Oregon DEQ updates and changing legislation, a roundup of
Earth Day
events, where to eat
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work on a book with one of the following titles, and you should finish writing it no later than April 28: “The Totally Intense Four Weeks of My Life When I Came All the Way Home” . . . “The Wildly Productive Four Weeks of My Life when I Discovered the Ultimate Secrets of Domestic Bliss” . . . “The Crazily Meaningful Four Weeks When I Permanently Anchored Myself in the Nourishing Depths.” APRIL FOOL! I lied. There’s no need to actually write a book like that. But I do hope you seek out and generate experiences that would enable you to write books with those titles.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Endangered species: black rhino, Bornean orangutan, hawksbill turtle, South China tiger, Sumatran elephant, and the Leo messiah complex. You may not be able to do much to preserve the first five on that list, but PLEASE get to work on saving the last. It’s time for a massive eruption of your megalomania. APRIL FOOL! I was exaggerating for effect. There’s no need to go overboard in reclaiming your messiah complex. But please do take strong action to stoke your self-respect, self-esteem, and confidence.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You now have an el-
a typical working couple devotes an average of four minutes per day in meaningful conversations. I suggest you boost that output by at least ten percent. Try to engage your best companion in four minutes and 24 seconds of intimate talk per day. APRIL
This eco-friendly issue will be packed with
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You should begin
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): If you were a pas-
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Research shows that
is back and just in time for Earth Day 2017!
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You say that some of the healthiest foods don’t taste good? And that some of your pleasurable diversions seem to bother people you care about? You say it’s too much hassle to arrange for a certain adventure that you know would be exciting and meaningful? Here’s what I have to say about all that: Stop whining. APRIL FOOL! I lied. The truth is, there will soon be far fewer reasons for you to whine. The discrepancies between what you have to do and what you want to do will at least partially dissolve. So will the gaps between what’s good for you and what feels good, and between what pleases others and what pleases you.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Hire a promoter to create gold plaques listing your accomplishments and hang them up in public places. Or pay someone to make a thousand bobble-head dolls in your likeness, each wearing a royal crown, and give them away to everyone you know. Or enlist a pilot to fly a small plane over a sporting event while trailing a banner that reads, “[Your name] is a gorgeous genius worthy of worshipful reverence.” APRIL FOOL! What I just advised was a distorted interpretation of the cosmic omens. Here’s the truth: The best way to celebrate your surging power is not by reveling in frivolous displays of pride, but rather by making a bold move that will render a fantastic dream ten percent more possible for you to accomplish.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Race through your yoga routine so you have more time to surf the Internet. Inhale doughnuts and vodka in the car as you race to the health food store. Get into a screaming fight with a loved one about how you desperately need more peace and tenderness. APRIL FOOL! A little bit of self-contradiction would be cute, but not THAT much. And yet I do worry that you are close to expressing THAT much. The problem may be that you haven’t been giving your inner rebel any high-quality mischief to attend to. As a result, it’s bogged down in trivial insurrections. So please give your inner rebel more important work to do.
GREEN ISSUE
senger on a plane full of your favorite celebrities, and the pilot had to make an emergency landing on a remote snowbound mountain, and you had to eat one of the celebrities in order to stay alive until rescuers found you, which celebrity would you want to eat first? APRIL FOOL! That was a really stupid and pointless question. I can’t believe I asked it. I hope you didn’t waste a nanosecond thinking about what your reply might be. Here’s the truth, Aquarius: You’re in a phase of your astrological cycle when the single most important thing you can do is ask and answer really good questions.
evated chance of finding a crumpled one-dollar bill on a sidewalk. There’s also an increased likelihood you’ll get a coupon for a five-percent discount from a carpet shampoo company, or win enough money in the lottery to buy a new sweatshirt. To enhance these possibilities, all you have to do is sit on your ass and wish really hard that good economic luck will come your way. APRIL FOOL! What I just said was kind of true, but also useless. Here’s more interesting news: The odds are better than average that you’ll score tips on how to improve your finances. You may also be invited to collaborate on a potentially lucrative project, or receive an offer of practical help for a bread-and-butter dilemma. To encourage these outcomes, all you have to do is develop a long-term plan for improved money management.
Homework: Carry out a prank that makes someone feel good. Report results at Truthrooster@gmail.com. © Copyright 2017 Rob Brezsny
OUR ANNUAL PALATE PLEASER RETURNS FOR 2017, AND THIS YEAR WE’LL BE DISHING UP THE MOST SAVORY RESTAURANT REVIEWS IN TOWN. / THE GUIDE WILL BE BRIMMING FULL OF FOODIE FEATURES AND HELPFUL HINTS FROM OVER 65 RESTAURANTS ALL OVER CENTRAL OREGON. WE’LL ALSO REVEAL OUR PICK FOR ROOKIE RESTAURANT OF THE YEAR, OUR COVETED RESTAURANT OF THE YEAR, AND THE READERS CHOICE! / ADVERTISING IN THE SOURCE WEEKLY’S RESTAURANT GUIDE IS ALWAYS A RECIPE FOR SUCCESS! / DON’T MISS OUT ON THIS OPPORTUNITY AND RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY.
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51 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
ARIES (March 21-April 19): The dragon that stole your treasure will return it. Tulips and snapdragons will blossom in a field you thought was a wasteland. Gargoyles from the abyss will crawl into view, but then meekly lick your hand and reveal secrets you can really use. The dour troll that guards the bridge to the Next Big Thing will let you pass even though you don’t have the password. APRIL FOOL! Everything I just described is only metaphorically true, not literally.
The Source Weekly’s
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WELLNESS EVENTS 15 Dimensional Chakra Exploration Class In this 15 week course. Learn about
gifts and potentials of each chakra and heal any distortions we may find. We will explore how to turn each chakra into a ‘color ray’ and become its embodiment. Tuesdays, 6:30-8:30pm. Through June 20. Gayle Zeigler, Pilot Butte Area. 925-3663091. $225 or can pay weekly.
Clear Mind, Clear Results Learn practical,
Kundalini Yoga Rebirthing Workshop
Communicating for Life For anyone
Practice Groups (Compassionate Communication/NVC) Through practicing
who wants to learn and practice the basics, as well as for those who want to re-charge their compassionate/nonviolent communication (NVC) consciousness. Mondays, 6-7:45pm. Through April 24. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way Suite 200. 541-350-6517. $65.
Communicating with Cyrstal This fun
afternoon workshop will bridge the gap between our world and the mineral kingdom. Join her as she promotes health, views the future and gives you a global message. Bring your own crystals or gems. April 2, 1-5pm. Gayle Zeigler, Pilot Butte Area. 925-366-3091. $50.
Community Healing Flow A gentle flow class by donation with all proceeds will benefit the Humane Society of Central Oregon. Fridays, 5-6:15pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. 541-322-9642. Diabetes Prevention Program Make
with others, we learn to become more compassinate. Some NVC experience necessary. Tuesdays, 6-7:30pm and Wednesdays, 4-5:30 and 6-7:30pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way Suite 200. 541-350-6517. Free.
Recovery Yoga Wherever you are on the road of recovery, this yoga class offers a safe and confidential place to explore how meditation, pranayama (breath work), journaling, and yoga can aid in your recovery and enhance your life. Not limited to drug and alcohol dependence. Thursdays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. By donation. Saturday Morning Group Runs Join
us Saturday mornings for our group runs, all paces welcome! We meet at the store and run a combination of road and trail routes. Saturdays, 8-9:30am. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601.
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qualified Compassionate/ Nonviolent Communication course shows participants how to build trust, safety, and connection in the workplace. Thursdays, 6-8pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way. 530-867-3198. $80.
Women’s Full Moon Lodge A sacred space
for women to circle and to experience, celebrate and harness the creative power we hold. Wednesdays, 7-9pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-285-4972. $10.
Healer’s Fair 2 Receive Massage, Sound Healing, Bodywork, Reiki, Acupressure, Astrology, 9 Star Ki readings & more. Sessions cost $10-20. April 1, 10am-2pm. Looking Glass Imports & Cafe, 150 NE Bend River Mall Dr. 206-794-3118. Free. Healing the Loss Paradigm In this 9 week
series, we will explore how The Loss Paradigm is manifesting in our lives. If we are not experiencing perfect happiness what happens if we change our minds about how we think about Loss. Thursdays, 6:30-8:30pm. Gayle Zeigler, Pilot Butte Area. 925366-3091. $10 per week.
Mary Shrauger
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The idea of rebirthing is to release the subconscious, the storehouse of misery. We will work with the body, breath and voice to release the past and cultivate presence and radiance. Sat, April 1, 10am-noon. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. $25 for one, $40 if you attend both.
lifestyle changes which include healthy eating and physical activity. The group setting provides support with people who are trying to make the same changes. Tuesdays, 1-2pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave. 541-322-7446. Free. Thursdays, 1-2pm. Mike Maier Building, 1130 NW Harriman. 541-322-7446. Free.
and well. Tuesdays-Thursdays-Saturdays, 7:458:30am. Plantae, 2115 NE Hwy 20 Ste 107. 541640-8295. Free.
Happy at Home Pet Sitting
classes in posture and flexibility, reduce pain in back, neck, shoulder, knees, hips, bunions. Mondays-Thursdays, noon-2pm and Mondays-Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Through April 27. EastSide Home Studio, 21173 Sunburst Ct. 541330-9070. $180, 12 classes.
of experience, practice and knowledge. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:45-10:45am. Grandmaster Franklin, 1601NW Newport Ave. 623-203-4883. $50. With Grandmaster Franklin. Tuesdays, 1-2pm. La Pine Parks & Recreation, 16406 First St. 541-536-2223. $30.
WalkStrong 5k and 10k Suited for all abilities of walkers in all shapes of bodies. Gain strength, endurance, and friendship. Tuesdays, 6-7pm and Saturdays, 8:30-9:30am. Synergy Health & Wellness, 361 NE Franklin Ave. Building C. 541-323-3488. $125. 5 Week Intro Yoga Course You will
never feel lost in the crowd at Iyengar Yoga of Bend. Learn poses safely and with attention in alignment=maximum benefit. www.yogaofbend. com Thursdays, 5:30-6:45pm. Through April 20. Iyengar Yoga of Bend, 660 NE Third St. Suite 5. 541-318-1186. $55 or $15 drop-in.
Young Breast Cancer Survivor Network This network is designed for breast cancer survivors diagnosed in their 40s or younger, regardless of current age. Whether you have just been diagnosed, are still undergoing treatment or are several years out, join us to connect with others. First Sunday of every month, 10am-noon. Locavore, 1841 NE Third St. Free.
MOVING SALE!
53 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Health. Walking for as little as 30 minutes a day can reduce your risk of certain diseases. Join a BMC provider and other people in the community looking to improve their health. Event departs from the Old Mill District Dog Park. First Thursday of every month, 5:30-6pm. Through Oct. 5. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St.
reliable skills to design bigger than your imagination, and to bring your plans into reality. Taught over three sessions, Tuesday evenings 7-9:30pm, 4/4, 4/11, 4/18. Includes a free 5:30pm yoga class each meeting. April 4, 7-9:30pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $79 adv., $99 door.
The Bomb Squad
Healing Vibrations Meditation Group
Learn tools to transform old, limiting beliefs into life-affirming patterns. Tune into your heart and tap into your highest good. No experience required. Sundays, 6:15-7:15pm. Through May 28. Yogalab - Justyn Livingston, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 170. 541-731-3780. $8-20.
How to Clear Your Chakras Would you like to learn more about your chakras? Dive deep inside your energy field to explore, clear and strengthen your chakras and entire aura. Using movement, sitting meditation, sacred breath and visualization, we will journey into each individual chakra and apply energy Lightbody techniques! April 2, 10am-12:30pm. Sol Alchemy Yoga, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 808-887-0830. $20.
BMC Walk With a Doc Take a STEP to Better
SERVICES
smokesignals@bendsource.com
SMOKE SIGNALS
By Josh Jardine
Touting Cannabis at the State Legislature
Flickr
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / March 30, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
54
When the going gets legislative, the high should get motivated.
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L
ast week, I got up at 4:30 am, to leave at 6:30 am, to arrive in Salem by 8 am. Was I super eager to get to Salem for, uh, whatever it is Salem is so well known to offer? No, friends. I was dressed in my finery to lobby my gubbermint elected officials on the dangers of balloon animals and children. (Wait, no... that wasn't me. I was there to lobby for cannabis.) This is a challenging time for Oregon. We are staring down a $1.6 billion budget short fall and any potential solutions to that are going to cause some real pain and suffering. And at the time of my visit, the Legislature was wrestling with nearly 3,000 House and Senate bills, so I wasn't exactly expecting a laser-like focus on my concerns. That said, I was pleasantly surprised at the number of meetings I took with representatives and their staff, and the genuine interest and thoughtful questions each get-together produced. There are numerous bills relating to the Jazz Tobacco, but I was there to advocate for/against three of them. If you can stay awake through the rest of this wonkfest of a column, here are the positions I took in relation to each of them: HB 2204: What the bill does: Upon passage, local governments would have the authority to create a tax on marijuana retail items at a rate of up to 8 percent. Much like venereal diseases, new taxes are rarely a thing anyone is seeking, or enjoys once they get them. And that aforementioned budget shortfall means municipalities are going to seek to fill in gaps left after that budget is balanced. As of now, the state collects 17 percent tax, and local governments can opt to add up to 3 percent more. That 20 percent is already a hefty surcharge. It’s far better than our neighbors to the north in Washington, who are dropping 37 percent on their purchases. (And moving a large number of Vancouver area residents to make a quick zip across the river to stock up.) But the tax rate on non-regulated cannabis, i.e. what you get from your “guy,” is 0 percent. The industry already pays more than its fair share in permits, licenses and other fees NOT
placed upon the alcohol industry. The industry needs to stabilize and grow before more taxes are piled on. SB 307: aka the Social Consumption bill. In brief, this bill would allow for consumption and sale of cannabis items at temporary events, establishment of cannabis lounges and some other good ideas. (Full disclosure: I signed on as a supporter of this bill, which should shock absolutely no one.) I’ve said before how absurd it is to promote the sale of cannabis to residents and tourists, charge them 20 percent tax, and them make them criminals for consuming it anywhere but in a private home. I’ve worked with numerous low income Oregon Medical Marijuana Program (OMMP) patients who are seniors in Section 8 housing, where consuming in their residence can mean eviction. So, yeah, I’m in favor of not criminalizing cannabis consumers, nor putting pain-ridden poor seniors on the streets. This is a no-brainer. HB 2198 - aka the Consolidation bill. This would move the OMMP from the control of the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) to the Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC). While I know every Oregonian loves the OLCC, and changing its name to the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission would be kind of cool, this one gets a thumbs down. First, things are precarious for Oregon’s cannabis industry, and stopping to take a breath until licenses are fully issued before taking any more giant steps is our wisest move. Since recreational programs are under scrutiny by Jeff “Drugs are bad, mmmkay?” Sessions, putting all cannabis access into one basket is a risky bet. Maintaining a separate medical program protects producers and consumers. Let’s see what Attorney General Barney Fife has planned before we toss out the OMMP. As always, you can do your part by contacting your elected representative to share your feelings (about pending legislation, not how your Dad didn't show you enough affection.) A quick call or email can make a difference. Get involved.
THE REC ROOM Crossword “It Takes Guts”-- from parts unknown.
By Matt Jones
Pearl’s Puzzle
Difficulty Level
★★★★
©2017 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com)
55 Questions, comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark at pearl@bendsource.com © Pearl Stark mathpuzzlesgames.com/quodoku
Fill in every row, column, and 3x3 box with each of the letters exactly once.
A N K L E
M I S T
The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote:
“My favorite _______” — Fran Lebowitz
ANSWER TO LAST WEEKS PUZZLES
ACROSS 1 Super Mario ___ 5 30-ton computer introduced in 1946 10 Gets hazy, with “up” 14 Au ___ 15 ___ precedent 16 Film director Wertmuller 17 Obama education secretary Duncan 18 Exterminator’s targets 19 Reunion invitee 20 Harden, like adobe 23 Neutral area between N. and S. Korea 24 Brockovich played by Julia Roberts 25 Battleship initials 28 ___ Lambert (recent viral answer to the pub quiz question “Who played Skyler White?” where the cheating team misread Anna Gunn’s Wikipedia entry) 31 Hog, wild? 33 “No you didn’t!” 35 Guns N’ Roses frontman Rose 36 Hypnotized or anesthetized 38 Actress Taylor of “High Fidelity” 39 Highest-ranked tournament player 41 Facepalmworthy 44 ___-TASS (Russian press agency) 45 “The Five People You Meet in Heaven” author Mitch 47 Plumb of “The Brady Bunch” 48 Drops in on 51 Mr. Hoggett’s wife, in “Babe” 52 ___ es Salaam, Tanzania 53 Italian writer Umberto 54 “Top ___ mornin’ to you!” 56 “___ the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” 58 Historical medical book, or literally what’s happening in this grid? 63 Johnson of TV’s “Laugh-In” 66 Watch brand that means “exquisite” or “success” in Japanese 67 Norwegian royal name 68 Spinnaker or jib 69 ___ Rock Pete (Diesel Sweeties character) 70 Sushi ingredient 71 Coop denizens 72 “Carnival of the Animals” composer Camille Saint-___ 73 Eponymous developer of a mineral scale
DOWN 1 Tattle 2 ___ avis (uncommon find) 3 Pig noise 4 Fine equine 5 Sports-channel-themed restaurant 6 Nair rival, once 7 “My package has arrived!” 8 September flower 9 Lieutenant killed by Iago in “Othello” 10 Taqueria dessert, maybe 11 Cruet contents 12 Wildebeest 13 “Stay With Me” Grammy-winner Smith 21 Infuse (with) 22 Sch. that’s home to the Wildcats in Durham 25 American competitor 26 Trap liquid? 27 Sean played by Melissa McCarthy 28 Local 29 Far from drab 30 Texas city across the border from Ciudad Juarez 32 “___ pinch of salt ...” 34 Traffic sign warning 37 BBQ entree 40 ___ Lanka 42 They fall in line 43 “... ___ man with seven wives” 46 Area sheltered from the wind 49 “High ___” (Maxwell Anderson play) 50 Period of inactivity 55 “The Lion King” meanie 57 Typhoon, e.g. 58 Toothpaste types 59 Analogous (to) 60 A little bit of everything 61 Sound-barrier word 62 “Z” actor Montand 63 Pikachu’s friend 64 Charlotte of “The Facts of Life” 65 Sn, in chemistry
“Spring when the world is puddle-wonderful” — e.e. cummings
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 13 / March 30, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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