GUEST OPINION
CHOW
AN INSIDE PERSPECTIVE
KNOWS YOUR NAME
PG 06
PG 25
DESCHUTES RIVER LOCALS NIGHT DRINK WHERE EVERYONE TRAIL BRIDGE VO LU ME 2 1 / IS SUE 1 7 / A P RI L 2 7 , 2017
COLIN & EMALYN 35 yr & 4 yr
ASHLEE 45 yr
JOSHUA 12 yr
CLINTON 27 yr
KIM 30 yr
COLIN 35 yr
SHEILA 16 yr
IVAN 4 yr
NICK 24 yr
TIEN 4 mo
SCOTT 40 yr
FAITH 40 yr
l a c Lo
NATE 6 yr
ALEX 5 yr
WHO’S
ROBIN 5 yr
ROBERT 6 mo
KARIN 13 yr
JASON 11 mo
A N Y WAY ? pg 8
LAUREN 2 yr
JADEN 4 yr
CAROL 38 yr
RICH 17 yr
KRISTI 8 yr
RICHARD 6 yr
PENNY 19 yr
SUE 9 yr
LEIGH 4 yr
TJ 4 yr
KENNY 6 yr
CHANCE 5 yr
JENNY 11 mo
STAN 9 yr
CHRIS 15 yr
CHADD 25 yr
ARE YOU A LOCAL? TAKE OUR QUIZ AND FIND OUT PG 11
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News – Beyond the Blue Ribbon
COVER
p.8
It’s the ongoing question in Central Oregon, and in Oregon in general: What does it take to earn local status? Christian Trejbal takes a look at the issue and tries to answer that tough question.
BONUS QUIZ – Are you a local?
p.11
Haven’t taken a quiz since you canceled your teenage magazine subscription? Here’s your chance to relive those moments, and to learn, once and for all, if you’re really a local.
Chow – Locals’ Nights
p.25
Want to get those sweet discounts available only to locals? Weeeelll… these ‘locals’ nights won’t ask for your Central Oregon resident card, but they’re still worth checking out for their locals’ night discounts.
Outside – Searching for Treasure on the Owyhee
p.31
K.M. Collins and company go in search of the petroglyphs on the Owyhee River. Did they find them? Find out on page 31.
COLIN & EMALYN 35 yr & 4 yr
ASHLEE 45 yr
JOSHUA 12 yr
CLINTON 27 yr
KIM 30 yr
COLIN 35 yr
SHEILA 16 yr
NICK 24 yr
TIEN 4 mo
SCOTT 40 yr
FAITH 40 yr
NATE 6 yr
IVAN 4 yr
Local
ALEX 5 yr
WHO’S
ROBIN 5 yr
ROBERT 6 mo
KARIN 13 yr
JASON 11 mo
A N Y WAY ? pg 8
LAUREN 2 yr
CAROL 38 yr
TJ 4 yr
JADEN 4 yr
RICH 17 yr
KRISTI 8 yr
RICHARD 6 yr
PENNY 19 yr
SUE 9 yr
LEIGH 4 yr
KENNY 6 yr
CHANCE 5 yr
JENNY 11 mo
STAN 9 yr
CHRIS 15 yr
CHADD 25 yr
ARE YOU A LOCAL? TAKE OUR QUIZ AND FIND OUT PG 11
On the Cover: Congratulations to those that made it onto the cover. You now have proof that you are a local. Art direction and photography by Wyatt Gaines. Call for Artists: If you're interested in being a SW featured artist, email: wyatt@bendsource.com.
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VO LUME 21 / ISSUE 17 / A P RIL 27, 2017
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AN INSIDE PERSPECTIVE PG 06
p.7
As National Child Abuse Prevention Month wraps up, Judy Stiegler takes a look at the local organizations working on prevention, and how state funds play into the effort to stop child abuse in Oregon.
Feature – Who’s Local?
CHOW
DESCHUTES RIVER LOCALS NIGHT DRINK WHERE EVERYONE TRAIL BRIDGE
Smoke Signals Seven tons of usable, used fire equipment arrives in Nicaragua, thanks to the Bend Fire Fighter’s Foundation and the Condega Bomberos Project. Follow @sourceweekly for an inside look at Central Oregon happenings.
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Puzzles 39
3 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
EDITOR Nicole Vulcan editor@bendsource.com
IN THIS ISSUE
GUEST OPINION
ENDORSEMENTS Ted Schoenborn
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / April 27, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Bend Park and Recreation Director Zone 4 The race for Bend Park and Recreation District Director Zone 4 boasts a colorful cast of candidates, including an incumbent board member, a COCC director, a self-professed advocate for the cannabis and homeless communities, and a contender who currently sits in Deschutes County Jail. Incumbent Ted Schoenborn has served on the board for 14 years and brings a wealth of experience to the board. Having seen our area grow immensely since the early 2000s, he acknowledges the pressure the increased population has put on trails, recreational centers and senior services, and supports the idea of expanding the Bend Senior Center/Larkspur Center to serve the wider community. He has overseen the expansion of 20 miles of trails and maintenance of more than 40 parks—all, he claims, within budget. His hope is to see the entire completion of the Deschutes River Trail, where currently, some nearby residents are protesting the inclusion of a footbridge. Schoenborn is emphatic that the trail adds value for both recreation and alternative transport, for both locals and tourists. Justin Gottlieb, who ran for the board in 2013, is less enthusiastic about the trail’s completion and rejects the idea that the trail would be used for transport. The Officemax employee, who does not own a vehicle and is a self-proclaimed advocate for the “low-income, cannabis and homeless communities” knows first-hand the
woes of public transport, and says he would be the “First park director to have actually lived in Bend’s parks.” He advocates for a viable east-west active transport corridor and has some innovative ideas, such as a transportation incentive program which would see those who hold a monthly Cascade East Transit pass able to qualify for discounts at community centers. Laura Boehme is the current Director of Information Technology at COCC and supports the expansion of the Bend Senior Center into the Larkspur Center for a more inclusive community offering. The mother of four’s viewpoint on the Deschutes footbridge isn’t decisive, yet she worries that the residents aren’t being heard and supports their legal actions. “Listening to all” is her key campaign promise and she shares the view that perhaps Schoenborn has staled in his abilities to listen to all of the community’s needs. The fourth candidate, Ronald “Rondo” Boozell, a usually outspoken and eccentric candidate, cannot be earnestly considered as he is currently serving time in the Deschutes County Jail for contempt of court charges. Although we welcome the fresh perspective the other candidates bring to the table, we cannot dispute the value an experienced board member brings in a time that will see increasingly complex problems arising. We commend Boehme’s enthusiasm to be attentive to a widespread demographic. However, that may lend itself to be influenced too easily. Gottlieb’s field of vision is too narrow-sighted, and his distaste for The Pavilion because of his “dislike for ice” doesn’t demonstrate a willingness to serve the desires of the community. Although low-income representation is needed,
Gottlieb sums it up perfectly when he states that he is “more aspirational” while Schoenborn is more “nuts and bolts.” With complex problems, increased population and pressure, we need a director who has a firm grasp and insight of the past, current and future issues the community faces. Vote Ted Schoenborn for Bend Park and Recreation Director Zone 4.
Vote Yes on the Bend-La Pine Schools Bond It’s no secret that Bend (and La Pine, too) is poised for more population growth in the years to come. If the explosive population growth we’ve seen already isn’t enough to convince, then data from Portland State University’s Population Research Center might suffice. According to that data, the Bend-La Pine district is going to need four new elementary schools, one middle school and one new high school by the year 2035, just to manage enrollment at its current levels. But walk into nearly any classroom in the district today and you’ll already see overcrowding. In the case of our high schools, that sometimes means as many as 50+ students in a room at one time, teachers tell us. It doesn’t take a team of population experts to tell you that new schools are necessary, and that they’re going to cost money. In fact, we venture to say the proposed school bond—which we fully support—is not enough to fully fund the necessary facilities the region will need during this time of great population growth. And let’s not get started on where the money for paying staff for that growing student population is coming from. Meanwhile, the schools we already
do have—most notably, some of the older schools in the district—are in need of upgrades to electrical wiring, roofs, plumbing, heating and cooling systems. With upgrades to HVAC and lighting systems, schools may even be able to shave some dollars from their operating budgets. District officials don’t have specific figures, but estimate energy savings in the “tens of thousands”—money saved, which could arrive back in the operational budget. Some of those upgrades may have seemed less acutely important before we saw the roof of the Kenwood School gym collapse, but today, seem to us like absolute musts in the interest of student safety. While we urge the district to be vigilant in its attention to the connection between facility safety and student success, we know they can only do so much within current budgetary constraints. The bond, at $268.3 million, would add .44 cents per $1,000 of taxable value to property tax rates over the life of the bond, amounting to roughly $7 per month for a home valued at $200,000. It’s a big price tag—but one that comes with the promise of auditing along the way. Since Oregon’s school funding model doesn’t offer funds for new construction from the state coffers, it falls upon local people to fund the construction of local schools. In short, this bond is currently the only viable way to ensure our students have the facilities they desperately need. Vote yes for the Bend-La Pine Schools 2017 Bond Measure. SW
O
OPINION Letters
IN RESPONSE TO, WHY DO WE CELEBRATE (4/20)
IN RESPONSE TO, RESPECTING WILDLIFE (4/20) The bovine monoculture strikes again! I don’t understand how cattle ranchers and fur trappers are allowed to torture wildlife and pets indiscriminately with their exploding cyanide and steel traps, and I also don’t understand how these eco-paths can sleep guilt-free. How did the indiscriminate maiming and killing of animals without the slightest remorse become a defining quality of “manhood” in these violent and myopic copyrighted 2017
Mild Abandon
“I was on a date, this one time, and her face was like, only a regular amount symmetrical.”
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E.J. Pettinger’s
subcultures? Was the empathy for animals that comes naturally to children eradicated by fathers who equated empathy with sissiness? “Son, to be a real man you’ve not only got to not show emotion, you’ve got to not feel emotion.” And even worse, how did such indiscriminate slaughter of wildlife and pets become supported by laws codified by our mainstream culture and sometimes paid for with our tax dollars? Wildlife traps demonstrate their viciousness by their indiscriminate choice of victims and the horrifying pain and fear which they cause. We should not consider our society civilized until these despicable devices are outlawed. Our laws and religions try to assure us that such devices are not immoral or evil, but such a cultural mindset is psychological denial on a societal scale because these vicious traps are the very definition of “immoral” and “evil.” If you like wildlife and would rather it not be eliminated, or if you would rather not put your dog at risk by merely hiking in the forest or desert, then please don’t buy animal furs and consider eating a few less burgers.
— Eddie Kinnamon
What is wrong with quiet?
— Bill Wolfe
IN RESPONSE TO, SAYING GOODBYE TO MAZZA BISTRO AND DEVORE’S (4/20) This is just too sad. A viable, beloved small business gets their rent jacked up beyond their profit levels. I’m all for free market, I get it, rents go up as demand goes up, but...... The new tenant better be ready for the same respect, or lack of.
— Karen Kellogg, via facebook.com
This is so sad to see. Why aren’t the city council putting caps on rentals, for businesses and for housing? There is something very wrong about raising rents so high that no one can pay it, forcing out the small on purpose, just for more income. Come on elected officials, this needs to stop!
@harmonyfarmsanctuary shared with us a scene from the farm last week. Hope your open barn event was a success! Tag @sourceweekly and show up here in Lightmeter.
Greed, Oregon strikes again. Just change the city’s name to Greed already and be done with it. Anything for a buck...I miss my hometown. Unfortunately, it’s all but disappeared.
LETTER OF THE WEEK
— J Huskey, via bendsource.com
— Stef Jackson, via facebook.com
NO TO SISTERS AIRPORT EXPANSION Where have all the birds gone? The airport noise has driven them out of the Sisters sky from Indian Ford, Tollgate, Crossroads — the large birds; eagles, falcons, birds of prey. I did not see them in this summer or now. People in the area should not have to listen to this circus every day. Say “No to Airport Expansion.” What is next? Helicopter tours? This airport should be private-use only. Pass an ordinance. Cliff Clemens is rolling over in his grave. The birds are gone.
LIGHTMETER
IN RESPONSE TO, ECO EATS (4/20) Eating vegan does not lower your carbon footprint if you’re not eating locally sourced organic. I find it funny when someone says they are vegan and don’t eat organic. The number of insects that die due to pesticides far exceeds the number of animals I have killed eating a locally sourced organic diet.
Paul – If anything gets a Central Oregonian fired up, it’s talking about vegans! Thanks for your input. Come on down for your gift card to Palate. (Hint: there’s also a vegan food cart, Broken Angel, right behind the coffee bar!) —Nicole Vulcan, Editor
— Paul O’Neill
@sourceweekly Keep in the know of what's going on in Central Oregon, follow us on Instagram and Twitter.
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5 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Dear Josh Jardine, (writer of “Smoke Signals”) Why so angry? Why are you yelling at your readers and cursing and calling them stupid? You need to chill out and smoke some weed, man. Stay heady. — Sam Smith, concerned stoner.
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!
GUEST OPINION By Don Horton
Executive Director, Bend Park and Recreation District
House Bill 2027 impedes public engagement processes on the Deschutes River Trail
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Gather your family for a Mother’s Day celebration at Brasada Ranch. Join us for the day or stay the weekend and make memories to last a lifetime. Enjoy a seasonal ranch inspired Mother’s Day menu highlighting produce from local farmers and foragers, lawn games, and inspiring panoramic views. The BPRD wants to work toward a new pedestrian bridge, (farther upstream from where this photo was taken) with public input.
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bill now before the Oregon House—HB2027—would imperil planned expansion of the Deschutes River Trail by prohibiting the development of a proposed pedestrian and bike bridge across the Deschutes River in this area; more importantly, it would pre-empt public engagement processes. Our community has enjoyed the Deschutes River Trail for decades. On any day, you can find runners, walkers, cyclists, bird watchers, dog walkers, anglers, and water enthusiasts sharing the trail and soaking up the natural experience. Being in nature improves one’s health and feeds the soul. Central Oregon is fortunate to have hundreds of miles of public trails in the area; however, there is something special about local trails in town that connect neighbors and open opportunities for non-motorized transportation. Health, community, and environmental benefits are among the significant public goods of the Deschutes River Trail, but they are in jeopardy if this current state legislation moves forward. Connecting the Deschutes River Trail to the U.S. Forest Service land on the south boundary of Bend has been envisioned by the community for decades. This goal is referenced in several public planning documents, including the Bend Park and Recreation District’s Trails Master Plan, the City of Bend’s Transportation System Plan, the Deschutes River Trail Action Plan, and the Bend Riverway Community Vision. Voters in Bend approved a bond-funded project in 2012 to eventually connect the communities of Tumalo and Sunriver via the Deschutes River Trail, and a 2014 questionnaire of surrounding neighborhoods found that 88 percent of respondents would use the trail and bridge if it were built.
Oregon State Parks regulates “Scenic Waterways” across the state, including a specific segment of the Deschutes River from the Central Oregon Irrigation intake upstream into the Deschutes National Forest. The Bend Parks and Recreation District would like to consider a possible bridge in the reach of the Deschutes River just outside Bend city limits as a key last piece of the Deschutes River Trail. The easy sections of the trail are complete, but the few remaining sections to complete the route from Sunriver to Tumalo are complex. Our community’s use of the Deschutes River Trail reminds me of the situation on the Oregon Coast when, in 1967, Oregonians committed to providing public access along the coast. The same concept of connectivity and public access along the remaining areas of the Deschutes River Trail deserves a conversation with all stakeholders before options are prematurely foreclosed. Now is the time to voice your opinions to our elected officials about the value of the Deschutes River Trail and what preserving public access to it means to the community. The District has a reputation of well-designed and maintained trails throughout the community and is committed to balancing public access and protection of our natural resources. We are dedicated to public engagement and would continue to seek community involvement and address concerns if a project is possible in the future. Our preference is always to negotiate and work together on solutions. Working together to find a way to finish the Deschutes River Trail will bring lasting benefits to our community. SW
NEWS
Beyond the Blue Ribbon
As Child Abuse Prevention Month wraps up, the need for consistent funding for vulnerable populations continues By Judy Stiegler Jefferson Counties) director of the Department of Human Services, there were over 3,600 calls to the child abuse hotline in the tri-counties in 2016. There are 20 Child Protective Service (CPS) workers in the tri-county area charged with investigating these reports. For the same year, there were 307 children in protective care. Currently, Child Welfare is staffed at 82 percent, with 51 percent of caseworkers having less than 18 months’ experience, and supervisory staff averaging three to four years of experience. This places stress on the system in multiple ways. Often, it means relegating casework to crisis management rather than to delivering services. In Central Oregon, a cadre of community partners works on solutions, seeing child abuse and neglect as a community issue, and understanding that prevention can come through intervention. These are organizations—often dependent on volunteer support—that provide services including comprehensive medical and therapeutic evaluations, therapy and counseling services, various services for vulnerable and distressed families, emergency housing and services for victims of domestic violence, advocacy for dependent children in the court system, and community trainings in the area of child abuse and neglect. Organizations include KIDS Center, Mountain Star Relief Nursery, Family Resource Center, Healthy Beginnings, the CASA program, FAN, Saving Grace, Mary’s Place and many more. Recognizing child abuse and neglect
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Blue ribbons adorn a tree in front of the Oregon State Capitol, April 21.
is a crucial part of raising community awareness. The Darkness to Light training offered by KIDS Center is an example of a program aimed at providing training for this very purpose. Shelly Smith, executive director of KIDS Center, says they reached their goal of training 5 percent of the adult population in the tri-counties in Central Oregon at the end of 2016. Utilizing programs such as this go beyond harnessing the good will of a community, and instead engage the community in the nuts and bolts of protecting kids. As Deschutes County District Attorney John Hummel explained when discussing his office’s role in prosecuting such cases, there’s often a tension between the issue of accountability and what is in the best interests
of the child. He went on to express that these are often the most difficult cases his office prosecutes, and can have a lasting impact on prosecutors. Some point to what they refer to as a “failed system,” implying that those involved with trying to protect the community’s vulnerable children have dropped the ball. In reality, those involved say they have not lacked purpose, but rather lacked full capacity and resources to do the job. As Child Abuse Prevention month ends this month, advocates remind you to wear your blue ribbon, but also think about how you can get involved. They recommend volunteering, taking a Darkness to Light training, or participating in a community conversation, such as Spark. SW
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
T
he death of a five-year-old Redmond girl, allegedly due to starvation and withholding of medical care by her parents. The sexual abuse of a 14-year-old girl over the course of several months, allegedly by a family acquaintance. The alleged neglect and drugging of several children, ages six months to four years, by their day care provider. Those are just a few of the recent headlines related to kids in Central Oregon. April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month, with a Blue Ribbon Campaign as part of the effort. Together they endeavor to shine a light on the issue of child abuse and neglect in our communities, and focus community awareness on the effort to protect children. Gov. Kate Brown has indicated that she believes we are approaching a crisis situation in the child welfare arena, and that we need to bring people together to protect children’s safety. She has spoken to the issue of increasing funding for these services—and last week, put a state hiring freeze in effect. During an interview with the Source Weekly last week, she told us the hiring freeze was aimed, at least in part, toward finding the money for critical services for children and families. As it stands, the current budget proposals being floated in Salem include significant cuts to education and health and human services. The sheer numbers of abused and neglected children in the state can be overwhelming. According to Pat Carey, Region 10 (Deschutes, Crook and
Source Staff
7
FEATURE
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / April 27, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
8
s ’ o h W ? l a c Lo
Central Oregon’s summer tourism season is nearly upon us, and with it, the influx of many visitors. Before that happens, we take a look inward, at the local culture and the definition of “local.” BY CHRISTIAN TREJBAL
S
oon, tens of thousands of visitors will begin their summer ramblings in Central Oregon. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of locals will grumble about the traffic, the lines at restaurants and the crowds. They’ll grumble, too, that some of these visitors will like Bend so much that they’ll decide to move here. “Newcomers aren’t real locals,” the “real” locals will say. “They’re transplants who bring foreign ideas that shouldn’t count, at least not as much.” That popular view comes up every time a Bend resident complains about a Californian’s driving or the line at a favorite restaurant. You were born here? You’re a local. Lived here through a recession or two? You’ve earned your local badge. Settled down in just the last couple of years? You’re something else. You’re a resident, but you’re no local. “Too often the term ‘local’ has been put out as an exclusionary term rather than an inclusionary one,” said Bend City Councilor Bruce Abernethy, who moved to town in 1993. Newcomers notice it. Becca Tatum moved to Bend a couple of years ago from the New York City area. She and her husband wanted to move their then one-year-old daughter to the West. When a job aligned, they fell in love with Bend. It wasn’t long before they started to sense the pushback from locals. “I can’t name any particular moment of hostility, but it’s out there,” she said. “It shows up on bumper stickers that say, ‘Bend Sucks, Don’t Move Here.’ ” Like Schrödinger’s Cat that is both alive and dead, Tatum is both local and foreign. “I’m really hesitant to say that (I’m a local) around town. It’s not necessarily respectful to folks who have lived here much longer,” she said. “But if I’m talking to family back east, I’m a local. We live in Bend; this is our home.” Rick Olegario, a candidate for the Bend-La Pine School Board, moved to town in 2014 and his experience has been similar. “You definitely hear
about hostility to newcomers, but I’ve never personally experienced it,” he said.
LOCAL IS PERSONAL The problem with broad characterizations of the zeitgeist is that they often do not reflect what people think individually. Ask one person what it means to be local, and they’re not so harsh. The popular perception is not the personal reality. Kaylin Landry’s family moved to Bend more than 20 years ago. “When I first moved here as a 10-year-old, people were really mean, like bully mean, because I was from California. Kids had already taken on that aggressive behavior toward Californians that their parents had,” she said. Now she’s a third-year student at OSU-Cascades. Her experience as a newcomer and as a social observer led her to look more closely at the question of what it means to be a local for a class project.
respect and meaning back to the people and landscape around you, maybe you become local that way. Like a friendship that evolves over time. Co-dependency on place, in the best possible way,” she explained. That fit with Landry’s perspective after her research. “I’ve lived here, I’ve loved here, I’ve lost here, I’ve hated it here, but I’m still here. I’m still active in the community and want to see it grow in a way that is accepting of people. That’s my definition of being local,” she said. “My life is so much better because I live here. Who am I to take that away from other people? “The thing that scares me is that by defining local in a way that excludes people, we aren’t allowing ourselves to grow with the possibilities we have in our own community.” She added. “I would like to see us move away from that attitude. It’s not a very nice attitude.”
“Whether it’s 75 years or 75 days, if this is the place someone decides to call home, they’re a local.”
—
Alana Hughson “People weren’t as aggressive about their opinions one-on-one as much as they are on the street,” she said. “There was no single definition. I heard date ranges from five to 10 years, to you had to be born here. But other people said that being here and caring about and participating in the community is what defined being a local.” Landry’s instructor, Elizabeth Marino of the OSU-Cascades Social Science and Sustainability programs, said that one way to think about what it means to be a local is as a relationship between a person and a place. “If you feel like the land here and the community here offer you protection, respect and meaning—and you feel committed to give protection,
THE NEW LOCALS More people move to Bend and Central Oregon every day, and they don’t all come from California. The Internal Revenue Service tracks people moving from county to county based on tax returns. While it’s true that more people come to Deschutes County from out of Oregon than within, it’s not by much. From 2010 to 2015 (the most recent tax years available), about 41,000 people moved to Deschutes County. Forty-three percent of them moved from other counties in Oregon; 54 percent came from another state; and 3 percent came from outside the United States. With regard to specific counties
of origin, however, it’s not even close. The top seven are all in Oregon. Multnomah, Lane and Washington counties lead the way, each sending more than 2,000 people to Deschutes County over the five years. U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey found that the most common type of newcomer is a single male, younger than the average Bend resident by about eight years, and more likely to have a college degree or higher. Alana Hughson, Central Oregon Visitors Association (COVA) CEO, believes these qualities are good for Bend. “The people who relocate here are bringing jobs and businesses and adding to the quality of life for everyone in the community,” she said. Meanwhile, Visit Bend, the organization tasked with developing and building Bend’s tourism industry, launched a “Like a Local” campaign last year, encouraging visitors and newcomers to “Visit Bend Like a Local,” by following “leave no trace” ethics, smiling at strangers and picking up litter on trails, to start.
WHAT IT MEANS TO BE A LOCAL City Councilor Abernethy agrees with the idea of localness as a relationship with the community. “A local is someone who has the long-term interest of the community as a whole, not just their own personal needs, in mind,” he said. “It’s someone who is both proud of and a cheerleader for their community. That’s not to say you can’t ever be critical or wish some things were different.” He also differentiates between being “native” and being “local.” The former is by accident of birth. The latter is something anyone can become. Hughson offered a similar view, “Anyone who decides to make this place their home is doing so because they love it, they want to be part of this community. Whether it’s 75 years or 75 days, if this is the place someone decides to call home, they’re a local.” Preston Callicott, CEO of software
WASHINGTON
9
King County 1,096 Clark County 773
NEW LOCALS
IDAHO
Ada County
NEVADA Clark County
CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles County San Diego County Orange County Riverside County Santa Clara County
company Five Talent, even claimed that some longtime residents are less local than newcomers. “It’s not how long you’ve been here but how invested you are in Bend,” he said. “Anyone is local who really cares about Bend. There are plenty of people who have been here a long time but don’t care about Bend.” The local relationship is an active one, he says. “If you hide in your home and no one sees you and you don’t get engaged, if all you do is play golf and go to Tower Theatre events, you’re a recluse, not a local,” Callicott said. “Local is embracing Bend as it is evolving, not setting yourself on the sidelines with the expectations you had 15 or 20 years ago.” Troy Reinhart, candidate for the same school board seat as Olegario, offered a similar assessment, “Being a local is being involved in your community and showing your love for it by working to make it a better place than you found it.” (The third candidate for the open school board seat is Bend native Carrie Douglass.) Olegario suggested that people who move to Bend embrace its culture because that culture is what drew them here in the first place.
THE CLASS OF 1980 Reinhart’s candidate profile notes not just that he is a Bend High School graduate, but also that he is a member of the class of 1980. If you talk to people tracking local politics and events, eventually you’ll hear about the class of 1980. An unusually high number of graduates from Bend and Mountain View high schools that year are among Bend’s movers and shakers today. They’re a group that COVA’s Hughson, herself a member of the class, lovingly calls “The Circle of Trouble.” “We were a tight, connected class, and I admire every one of them,” she said. The class of 1980 includes Hughson; Reinhart; Charley Miller, president
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The top 10 out-of-state counties of origin 2011-2015 tax years
404
445
ARIZONA
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of Miller Lumber; Todd Taylor, CEO of Taylor NW; Peter Carlson, president of Carlson Sign; Scott Wallace, former member of the Bend Park and Recreation District Board; Sean Corrigan, assistant principal at Mountain View; Kyle Frick, candidate for the Central Oregon Community College Board; Scott Steele, president of Steele Associates Architects; and Courtney MacMillan, local philanthropist and nonprofit leader. The early 1980s were a tough time in Bend, a low point for the local economy. Many members of the class of 1980 left town to go to college, but they didn’t stay away. Their returns helped keep Bend from becoming a ghost town. “We were raised to come back to our community and to be leaders,” Reinhart said. Miller said the recession shaped the class. “Those who understand what the other side looks like are committed to helping Bend grown and thrive. It’s in your DNA,” he said. “They’re an example of a group that I was skeptical of when I first was elected,” Councilor Abernethy says, citing issues of growth and development as places where they differ. “I don’t agree with them on everything, but I have come to appreciate the role that they play investing in this community.” The Class of 1980 engages with the community and has a relationship with this place. So do the tens of thousands of people who have moved here in the decades since that group graduated from high school. “What makes living in Central Oregon so doggone special is that this place attracts wonderful people,” Hughson said. “People who are drawn here share a desire to be part of the community, take care of the community and be good stewards of the community.” So who counts as local? That’s not something others decide for you. SW
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Authentic Hand Made Traditional Tacos & Pupusas
Fresh Corn Tortillas Daily
Mon - Fri 11am - 8pm
Sat & Sun 9am - 8pm
304 SE 3rd Street, Bend
221 NW Hill St.
541-318-1111
What’s your favorite local brewery?
A) Deschutes Brewery – I used to buy it all the time where I lived before B) Bend Brewing Company – Only locals know it’s hidden down that alley C) Crux Fermentation Project – I don’t mind sharing the view with tourists D) 10 Barrel – I loved going to their Portland tasting room E) Worthy – It’s the last good beer before Idaho
2
St. Charles Hospital wasn’t always on the East Side. It used to be at… ?
A) Redmond B) Hospital Hill C) Where the Phoenix Inn is now D) Pill Hill
5 6
Did you graduate from Bend or Mountain View High School in 1980? Who is Bend’s mayor?
A) Donald Trump B) Jim Clinton C) Casey Roats D) John Costa
7
What direction does the Deschutes River flow?
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In 1972, the first building in Deschutes County was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. It was …
A) The Pilot Butte Drive In B) The Brooks-Scanlon crane shed, torn down under cover of darkness in 2004 C) The Pilot Butte Inn, demolished in 1973 D) The Tower Theatre
A) North B) South C) East D) West
8 9
R.E. Isaac
Where is the Breezeway?
Bend local
Have you ever seen Pilot Butte catch on fire during Fourth of July fireworks?
10
A) Yes, I love hunting B) No, every wild creature deserves to live in peace C) Enh, not really my thing D) My father dragged me out to the forest when I was 12. We spent 10 hours tramping around and found neither deer nor elk. At least I got my fi rst beer.
Namas Taylor Bend local
11
A) Accelerate into the turn B) Come to a complete stop and admire the art in the center before proceeding C) Yield to traffi c already in the roundabout
What used to be on the vacant lot at NW Olney Avenue and NW Wall Street?
A) Bend City Hall B) Bend Bulletin newspaper C) Central Oregon Mental Hospital D) The hop farm that started it all
Brosef Stalling
How many days of sunshine does Bend have in a year?
Bend local
A) 300 B) 158 C) 105 D) 263 E) 365
Do you know how to drive to Prineville without going through Redmond? What’s your favorite summer activity?
A) Hiking B) Biking C) Golfi ng D) Complaining about tourists
28+ 18-27 11-17 6-10 0-5
Class of 1980! Bend Local
Newcomer
“Go back to Portland”
“Go back to California” Cartoons courtesy of Teafly
A. 0 points, B. 3, C. 1, D. 0 E. 2 A. 0, B. 2, C. 1, D. 3 A. 0, B. 2, C. 1, D. 0 A. 3, B. 1, C. 1, D. 2, E. 0 Yes - 5 points, No - 0
Scoring
4
When approaching a roundabout, you …
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1 2 3 4 5
3
Have you ever gone hunting in Central Oregon?
VOLUME 21 21 ISSUE 16 17 // April 20, 27, 2017 2017 // THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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Are you a local?
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6 A. 0, B. 1, C. 3, D. 0 7 A. 2, B. 0, C. 0, D. 0 8 Between Brooks and Wall streets downtown at Minnesota Avenue, 2 points. Yes – 2 points, No – 0.
10 11 12 13 14
A. 1, B. 1, C. 0, D. 3. A. 1, B. 0, C. 3 A. 0, B. 1, C. 3, D. 0 Yes – 2 points, No – 0. A. 1, B. 1, C. 1, D. 3.
May Special
10% off Heartworm Tests, Heartworm preventions, and flea/tick products.
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A free lecture on Saturday May 13th, 4:30 to 5:30
Fear and Aggression at the Vet Clinic: What we can do to make our pets more comfortable.
Mon - Fri 8-6
Open Saturdays Saturdays 9 - 3
19550 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 100 in SW Bend’s Brookswood Meadow Plaza
Dr. Ruth Loomis
Dr. Ashley Portmann
541.306.6991
Dr. Kara Erickson
www.brookswoodanimalclinic.com
Saturday 29
SOUL — Singer/songwriter Gyasi (Jahsee) Ross blends hip-hop lyrics and R&B/soul vocals with acoustic guitar, delivering a truly unique sound. Ross’ smooth vocals blend with the acoustic flow to create an easy to listen to, easy to sway and dance to beat. Ross has opened for nationally touring acts Method Man and Brett Dennen, showcasing his broad range. Don’t miss out! // 6pm. Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend.
PARTY — DJ Esus rocks everything from grunge to hip-hop from this classic generation. Dig up your favorite flannel and Pearl Jam t-shirt, throw on your baggiest pants and get down to your favorite ‘90s jams. Taps flowing with the finest array of ciders including the Dragonfruit Seasonal and local beer. BONUS: Wear a flannel and get $1 off cider/beer pints. // 8 pm. ATLAS Cider Co. Taproom, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 190, Bend. Free.
Thursday 27 – Saturday 29
Saturday 29
THEATER — More than 20 actors entertain you with seven one-act plays and seven world premieres. Featuring the works of Larry Anderson, Cricket Daniel, Jim Gordon, Albi Gorn and Scott Mullen. This is the perfect event to start checking out Sisters’ burgeoning theater scene. // Thurs.-Sat. at 7:30-9:30 pm; matinee Sat. at 3pm. The Belfry, 302 Main St., Sisters. $10-$15.
FOOD — Join Central Oregon Locavore for a night of Bollywood eats and sultry beats to benefit the local nonprofit. Chef Runi of Mantra Indian Kitchen (formerly The Curry Shack) pairs alluring flavors of authentic Indian food with an array of exotic elixirs. After dinner, dance to beats designed to uplift and transcend your spirit. // 6 pm. Mantra Indian Kitchen, 744 NW Bond St., Bend. $40/Locavore members, $45/non-members. $5/dance party, Locavore members free.
Friday 28
Saturday 29
FINE WINE & EATS — What better way to go on an adventure than one filled with exquisite wine paired with a delicious five-course meal? As you munch and sip delicious fare, you’ll learn the ins and outs behind the crafting of Ponzi wines — a second-generation Oregon vineyard. Delve into the rich history and inspirations behind their pinot noirs and chardonnays. // 6:30-8:30 pm. Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Dr., Sunriver. $90.
BOOKS — Ever had a novel whisk you way away to a distant land or make your sides ache from laughter? Then pay homage to the power of literature by supporting your independent bookstore owners! Roundabout Books features storytime, face-painting, poetry, a pet-hour & author book launches, Redmond’s Herringbone Books has limited edition literature merch & free giveaways, and Dudley’s is hosting local author talks. // All day. Various locations. Free.
Friday 28
Saturday 29
ELECTRONICA — Local electronic music producer, multi-instrumentalist, DJ and founder of Beat Lab Radio, Signal Bath celebrates the release of his first studio album “Queen of the Night.” Signal Bath performs a unique live interpretation of the electronic album. Support from Hakuu and Lazouli. Read this week’s Sound feature for a deeper look. // 10pm. The Capitol, 190 NW Oregon Ave., Bend. $5.
COMMUNITY COMEDY — A night of comedy starring local civic, business, education and media personalities performing sketches and singing parodies. Benefiting the nonprofit Tower Theatre Foundation. This is always one of the funniest and most biting evenings of the year. 7:30 pm. Tower Theatre 835 NW Wall St. Bend $18-$48.
Saturday 29
Thursday 4
ACTIVISM — Rise, build and resist in the largest climate change action event to take place in recent history. If you’re worried about the future of the EPA, the Paris Climate Agreement, the fate of clean energy and funding for science, then take a stand and come march in this family-friendly event. Featuring a Climate Action Fair, theater performances & live music by Chiringa — grab the fam and show your solidarity. // Noon-3 pm. Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend. Free.
FUNDRAISER— Join Naomi Wachira, Jon Bullock and Ken Streater for an evening of music and conversation focused on enriching our community. This event is a fundraiser for Treehouse Therapies, a local nonprofit pediatric therapy clinic. // 7pm. RPA Performing Arts Center, 640 SW Evergreen Avenue, Redmond. $40/pp, $75/couple.
‘90S FLANNEL PARTY
GYASI ROSS
BEND FOLLIES 2017
SIGNAL BATH EP RELEASE PARTY
PEOPLE’S CLIMATE MARCH
C=EMC2: COMMUNITY= EDUCATION, MUSIC, COMMERCE AND CULTURE
BEND FOLLIES
THE BOBS
April 29
May 26
BROADWAY IN CONCERT June 2-4
APRIL 27 - MARCH 3
INDEPENDENT BOOKSTORE DAY
SUNRIVER TASTING DINNER
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VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
PURNIMA
NOW YOU’RE TALKING: SISTERS ONE-ACTS 2017
Jay Tablet
OUR PICKS
Thursday 27
AUDITION WORKSHOP July 10-14
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S
SOUND Where Folk, Blues and Country Converge Son Volt’s latest album pays tribute to American roots music By Anne Pick southern and eastern legs of their tour and is now headed west. An extensive touring schedule allows them to work on their craft and continue the evolution of their songs. “The essence of the craft is when you’re on stage and you have to produce,” Farrar says. “There is that element to (playing live.) Another element that I think is great about taking songs out on the road is that you can change things from the way they are on the recording. The songs tend to evolve over time and playing them on the road is a healthy endeavor.” With a wide-ranging and extensive catalog of music, what can concertgoers expect to hear during this leg of Son Volt’s tour? “The set list is comprised of a handful of, or almost half of the songs off of ‘Notes of Blue,’” Farrar says. “From there it’s fairly representative of the whole catalog, maybe not every record is represented by a song, but we tried to pull a song from each time period going all the way back to Uncle Tupelo.” During the course of his lengthy career, Farrar and Son Volt have made Bend a regular stop on their
15 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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n its latest album, “Notes of Blue,” Son Volt lead singer Jay Farrar gives a big nod to the heroes and icons of American blues music. “It’s aiming for where folk and blues and county converge,” Farrar says. “There was the realization that blues were such an important part of early country music. Guys like Hank Williams and Jimmy Rogers, they were very much steeped in American blues music.” Where Son Volt’s previous albums had a more alt-country focus, that recognition served as a sort of catalyst for Farrar to dig a bit deeper and learn some blues tunings by musicians he estimates to be the figures of American blues—guys such as Mississippi Fred McDowell and Skip James. He’s created blues-influenced songs over the years, but this gave Farrar the chance to focus a bit more on classic styles. “You know, one of the aspects of recording ‘Notes of Blue’ (what) I wanted to focus on was playing more electric guitar. That meant pulling out an old amplifier that I used on the very first Son Volt album, ‘Trace,’” Farrar says. Son Volt recently wrapped up the
Son Volt brings its extensive catalog back to Bend at VTP, 5/4.
tour schedule. “(Bend) is a great stop in between San Francisco and Portland. It’s convenient and the air is clean. I remember talking a lot of walks around town. It’s a good place to put on the schedule.” SW
Son Volt
Thursday May 4, 9pm Volcanic Theatre Pub 70 SW Century Dr., Bend $25/adv; $28/door bendticket.com
Desire for Beauty
S
Signal Bath releases debut E.P. with a party at The Capitol By Anne Pick
I
f the name Signal Bath doesn’t ring a bell, then maybe you’ve heard of Shane Thomas—who’s made a name for himself as part of Bend’s gone-but-not-forgotten experimental, instrumental rock band Empty Space Orchestra. Now, Thomas, the brains behind Beat Lab Radio, debuts his electronic solo E.P. “Queen of the Night,” under the Signal Bath moniker. Signal Bath worked on the album for the past year and a half and shows no signs of slowing down
Jay Tablet
after the release. Born from the desire to create something that was just his own, “Queen of the Night” combines both analog and digital techniques to create a lush soundscape. “For the most part, everything starts out just messing around on guitar and then I loop a lot of things and I’ll use a lot of delay and reverb effects,” Thomas says. “Eventually I’ll have this mishmash, wall-ofsound kind of loop going on and I’ll record that
into Ableton. That’s where the digital meets analog.” Ableton, a digital music production software, allows Thomas to do whatever he wants as far as composition and manipulation go. He starts with an easy guitar or synth loop that may be taken out of the song later. Next, he taps out a drum beat and bass line around it. The songs evolve from there. Sometime he’ll hate it for a week and then listen to it more and begin to fall in love with it again, he says. Signal Bath’s album name has an interesting backstory. After quitting his job at a local dispensary, Thomas trimmed weed at a “reefer camp.” While he was there, he listened to an audio book called “The Botany of Desire” a number of times. The book discusses different plants that have made a co-evolutionary bond with humanity in order to help themselves survive. The Queen of the Night was the name 17th century France gave to the black tulip, as it was a very
sought-after, valuable item of affection. While most flowers grow bright to attract pollination, the black flower survived because it appealed to a certain human desire—a desire for beauty. “That’s kind of what I see in my music sometimes,” Thomas says. “A lot of the things that spark what I feel like is going to be a good song is just a little anomaly in a loop that I didn’t really intend to be there and it excites me. I feel like it’s a little bit of a parallel there, the way the flower is a mistake and the way the music is a mistake, but it appeals to the human desire of beauty.” “Queen of the Night” will be available on iTunes, Spotify, Bandcamp and Soundcloud May 2. SW Signal Bath E.P. Release Party Support from Hakuu and Lazouli Friday April 28, 10pm The Capitol 190 NW Oregon Ave., Bend $5
The New
FOOD BEER WINE WEED
Experience
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Tours
Wake n Bake | Eat, Drink & Be Merry | Bend Bowl Stroll Women, Wine & Weed | Solar Eclipse Tour
Opening May 2017 541.678.2675
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Spring Tent Sale! everything under $49
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CLUBS
CALENDAR
>
Tickets Available on BendTicket.com
17 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Put on your finest faux-fur and shake a tail feather to Futurebirds at Volcanic Theatre Pub on Thursday 4/27.
26 Wednesday Checker’s Pub Talent/Open Mic Bring your talent to this weekly open mic night. 6-8 pm. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Sing your heart out every week. 9 pm.
Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Your weekly
karaoke destination in Sisters. 9 pm.
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you
narrowed it down to what songs you’ll sing this week? Embrace your inner rock star. 9 pm..
Level 2 Allan Byer Americana. 21+. Fourth Wednesday of every month, 5:30 pm. No cover. M&J Tavern Open Mic Show Bend your talent at this weekly open mic. 6:30 pm.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke
Brush up on your karaoke skills. 7 pm.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Amber Sweeney Performer and songwriter often compared to the likes of Allen Stone, Bonnie Raitt, and Sheryl Crow. All ages. 7-10 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic Derek Michael Marc hosts. 6 pm. The Lot Open Mic Showcase your talent or watch as locals brave the stage for open mic. 6 pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub Hot Buttered Rum Rooted in the trajectory of west coast bluegrass, Hot Buttered Rum plays what has been described as California’s own acoustic music. 8 pm. $15/adv.
27 Thursday Astro Lounge Gyasi Ross Singer/song-
writer blends hip-hop lyrics and R&B/Soul vocals with acoustic guitar, delivering a truly unique
sound. 6-11 pm.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Sing your favorite songs at this weekly karaoke night. 9 pm.
Double J Saloon Bend Comedy in Redmond The Double J Saloon hosts Central Oregon’s best comedy lounge. 8-10 pm. No cover. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you
narrowed it down to what songs you’ll sing this week? Embrace your inner rock star. 9 pm.
Kelly D’s Banquet Room NPT Benefit Concert for “Mustangs to the Rescue” In support of a group of equine lovers dedicated to the preservation of our national heritage, the American Mustang. Mike Viles, Frank Borowinski and Hal Worcester perform. Families welcome. 7-9 pm. No Cover. Donations welcomed. 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 The Wild Jumps Garage rock with punk-influenced originals. 7:30 pm. No cover. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open
Mic Perform live at this weekly open mic. 6 pm.
The Summit Saloon & Stage 97 Comedy Presents Some of the best comics from around the US. Comics as seen on Comedy Central, TBS, NBC and more. Last Thursday of every month, 8-11 pm. $12. The Capitol Pablo Moses & Lambsbread To
this date, Pablo Moses remains one of the most original, outspoken roots reggae artists to be found. 21+. 8 pm-1 am. $20/$25.
The Lot Doc Ryan & EVE Music that comes from the soul of Western America. With shades of blues, country and Americana. 6-8 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Futurebirds
w/ Gold Connections Known for their high-en-
ergy shows and country rock-infused sound. Reverb-soaked four-part harmonies supported by pedal steel guitar, rhythmic percussion, banjo, mandolin, and acoustic and electric guitars with heavy feedback. 9 pm. $8.
28 Friday Astro Lounge Casey Capps Prepare to dance your buns off to this awesome local DJ. 10 pm-1 am.
Checker’s Pub The Substitutes Classic rock & variety. 8-11:30 pm. Free. Chops ( formerly Latigo ) Melanie Rose Dyer and Daniel Cooper All original folk rock, Americana and blues. 6-8 pm. Free.
Domino Room The Expendables Blending reggae, punk rock and ‘80s-style dueling guitar solos, The Expendables have made heads turn and floors shake for years. With special guests RGDLDGRN and Tribal Theory. All ages. 8 pm. $20/adv, $25/door. Hub City Bar & Grill HWY97 Don’t miss one of the hottest rock bands in Central Oregon. 9 pm-1 am. No Cover.
Juniper Golf Course and The View Tap and Grill Friday Evening Music on the Patio
Enjoy live music on our patio overlooking the 9th green and the Cascade mountains. All ages welcome. Food and beverage available. 5-8 pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern Bryan McPherson & Riot On A
Sunday Performing his own brand of energetic folk/punk. Locals Riot On A Sunday warm up the crowd. 9 pm-12am. No cover..
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Friday Dance Lessons 21+. 8 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Bobby Lindstrom and Friends Fresh back from Nashville, experience Bobby and the Band’s unique sound of the blues & old school rock ‘n’ roll. 8:30 pm. $3.
Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy Presents
Derek Sheen, Jim Allen, & Dana Buckendahl Popular Northwest comedians Derek Sheen and Jim Allen, along with local fav Dana Buckendahl take the stage. 8-10 pm. $8/adv, $10/door.
The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele
21+. 9 pm. No cover.
The Blacksmith Restaurant She Said, He
Said Jazz Duo Stunning vocals and stellar guitar come together to make jazz fun again and entertain your ears with music. 7-9 pm. No cover.
The Capitol Signal Bath EP Release Party Local electronic music producer, multi-instrumentalist, DJ and founder of Beat Lab Radio, Signal Bath celebrates the release of his first studio album “Queen of the Night”. Support from Hakuu and Lazouli. 10 pm-12 am. $5. The Old Stone Head for the Hills with Honey Don’t Foot-stomping NewGrass string band sounds of Head for the Hills. Local favorites Honey Don’t open the show. All ages. 9 pm. $12/ adv, $15/door. The Pickled Pig RExDOn Playing the classics - folk, country, rock and blues tunes that inspire you to sing along. Music that appeals and inspires all generations. 6-9 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Sneaky Pete & The Secret Weapons With a diverse web of musical inspiration, The Weapons have absorbed sounds from all over: smokey downtown jazz clubs, raucous New Orleans street parades, exotic Latin ballrooms, late-night laser-filled clubs, intergalactic spaceship stages, festivals of love and roses and so many more. Sol Seed opens. 9 pm. $8/$10.
29 Saturday Astro Lounge Harlo One of the first DJ’s to
bring turntables & electronic music to the mainstream of Bend’s music scene. 9-11 pm.
CLUBS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
Checker’s Pub The Substitutes Classic rock & variety. 8-11:30 pm. No cover. Chops Sugar Mountain Guitar and fiddle Americana from the heart of the Oregon Cascades. 6-8 pm. No cover.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / April 27, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
18
Crooked River Brewing Company Allan Byer Project Allan shares his all original Americana music with his all-star band featuring Rosemarie Witnaur on banjo & vocals, Jimmy Jo McKue on lead guitar, Steve Moroukian on percussion and Jamie Morris on bass. 7-9 pm. Free. Domino Room Separating The Seas, Foes, &
More A local showcase of some of the best metal Central Oregon has to offer. All ages. 7-11:45 pm. $10-12.
Hub City Bar & Grill HWY 97 Join us for a
night of dancing to experience classic high energy rock and roll. 9 pm-1 am. No Cover.
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Karaoke Get in touch with your inner crooner at this weekly karaoke night. 8 pm. M&J Tavern MudBugs Down home blues
rock-n-roll. Come enjoy the mix of memorable classics and muddy ‘B’ sides you may have never heard, but are sure to make you move. 9 pm. No cover.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Dance Lessons Come learn the popular line dances to your favorite country songs every Saturday! 9 pm. No cover. Niblick and Greenes at Eagle Crest
Lindy Gravelle Singer-songwriter-pianist performs originals and popular covers with a country and blues flavor. 7-10 pm.
Northside Bar & Grill Just Us Classic rock
n’ roll. 8:30 pm. $3.
Pour House Grill Last Saturday with Six
Pack Bringing unique interpretations of classic rock, blues and soul covers to the High Desert. 8 pm-12am. No cover.
The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele
21+. 9 pm. No cover.
The Capitol Electro Kid- Theclectik PDX
Basscult member mixes breaks, house jams and glitch hop. 10 pm-2 am. No cover.
The Workhouse Bony Chanterelle An original folk-rock artist from the beautiful state of Oregon. 6:30-9:30 pm. No cover.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Portland’s
TEASE Burlesque Revue The #1 touring burlesque show in the Pacific Northwest returns to Central Oregon. Two shows. 7 & 9:30 pm. $15/$20.
30 Sunday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Singing on a Sunday at Corey’s. 9 pm.
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.
Northside Bar & Grill Shannon and Charissa Acoustic soft rock, pop and Americana. 5-7 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, 3-5 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Drag Bingo “This is NOT your Grandma’s Bingo” hosted by Mizz Ecstacy Inferno! Tickets include a game pack with five games. Each additional game pack will be $2. You can purchase as many as you would like at the door! 12 pm. $10.
An all Ned Flanders metal band? Yes, that’s a real thing. Check out Okilly Dokilly at Volcanic Theatre Pub on 5/2.
1 Monday Astro Lounge Open Mic Hop on stage and show off your talent at this weekly open mic night. 8 pm.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke What will you sing this week? 9 pm.
Open Door Wine Bar Coyote Willow Cello-fired Americana. 6-8 pm.
2 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 All levels welcome and storytellers, too. Evening beer and wine specials. Sign up begins at 5pm. 6-8 pm.
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Ukulele Jam All
ages. 6:30 pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern RubbaTree Local musicians bring jams of all ages. 9 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Jon Bourke Quartet
Melodic sounds of jazz. 6 pm. No cover.
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. No cover.
Velvet Bobby Lindstrom Bluesday Tuesday!
Fresh energy blues, rock and original songs. Killer guitar and vocals, a show not to miss. 8 pm. No cover.
3 Wednesday Checker’s Pub Talent/Open Mic Bring your talent to this weekly open mic night. 6-8 pm. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke What will you sing this week? 9 pm.
Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Your weekly karaoke destination in Sisters. 9 pm. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you
narrowed it down to what songs you’ll sing this week? Embrace your inner rock star. 9 pm. f
Jersey Boys Pizzeria Kinzel and Hyde Three-time winners of the Best Traditional Act, Kinzel and Hyde take listeners on a tour of blues and roots music. First Wednesday of every month, 5:30-8:30 pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern Open Mic Take to the stage at this weekly open mic. 6:30 pm.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke Work on your country-twang at this karaoke night. 7 pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Juju Eyeball From “She Loves You” to “She’s So Heavy”, JuJu Eyeball takes an exciting and exacting look at The Beatles catalog. 7-10 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic Local artists perform. 6-9 pm. The Lot Open Mic Showcase your talent or watch as locals brave the stage for open mic. 6 pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub Magic Beans & Bazooka Picnic Going coast-to-coast to bring spacefunk to your front door. 9 pm. $10/$12.
4 Thursday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Embrace your inner Madonna. 9 pm.
Domino Room James Otto Unplugged with Matt Borden An unplugged and acoustic set. 9 pm-1 am. $20-40.
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you
narrowed it down to what songs you’ll sing this week? Embrace your inner rock star. 9 pm.
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. McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Honey Don’t Acoustic music based in the folk tradition, but also injected with some country, blues and a little swing. 7-10 pm. No cover.
Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open
Mic Show off your talent at this weekly open mic. 6 pm.
The Lot Paul Eddy Pacific Northwest native and Bedell artist Paul Eddy performs solo, with the The Beatles cover band Juju Eyeball and with the retro C&W band Long Tall Eddy. You’ll always get his best. 6-8 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Son Volt Mixed country and blues with elliptical lyrics and plentiful hooks. All ages. 9 pm. $25/adv, $28/door. SW
EVENTS
CALENDAR MUSIC Bella Acappella Harmony Chorus Seeking women and girls who love to sing and harmonize. . Tuesdays, 6:30-9:30pm. LDS Church, 450 SW Rimrock. 541-460-3474. $30/month. the Cole family to purchase a wheelchair accessible van for their daughter, Anna, who has spina bifida. April 28, 6:30pm. Bend Church United Methodist, 680 NW Bond St. 541-382-1672. Donations accepted.
Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice A traditional bagpipe and drum band. Mon-
No experience or Scottish heritage necessary. 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
to live drumming. Mondays, 7:15-8:15pm. Cascade Indoor Sports, 20775 NE High Desert Ln. 818-636-2465. $10.
WWII Era Dinner & Dance: Swingin’ On The Runway Unique dinner & dance in
the historic Red Hangar. April 28, 5:30-10:30pm. Bend Airport, 63132 Powell Butte Rd. 541-3061500. $25/dinner & dance. $10/dance only.
Timothy Jones developed a wanderlust for epic adventures amongst the trees and sparked his passion for art. 10am-8pm. Townshend’s Bend Teahouse, 835 NW Bond St. 541-312-2001.
4th Friday Art Stroll Sisters Demonstrations, live music and refreshments. April 28, 4-7pm. Hood Avenue Art, 357 W Hood Ave., Sisters. 541-719-1800. Art & Wine, Oh My! Local artists guide you
through replicating the night’s featured image. Tuesdays, 6pm. Level 2, 360 SW Powerhouse Dr. Suite 210. 541-213-8083. $35-$45.
days, 5:30-7pm. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St. 541-633-3225. Free.
FILM EVENTS
Plein Air Painters of Oregon A plein air exhibit of 70 works at the Rotunda Gallery. Through May 4. Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way. 541-383-7564. Free.
Celtic Harps, Rare Instruments with Lisa Lynne & Aryeh Frankfurter Two
A Novel Idea: Screen “Birth of a Movement” The story of William M. Trotter,
Red Chair Gallery’s Third Annual Studio Sale Discounts on everything from
Celtic harps, the rare Swedish Nyckelharpa, Ukranian Bandura, Cittern and more. May 2, 7-9pm. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd. 541385-3908. $15.
The Deschutes Caledonian Pipe Band Practice Looking for experienced players to join and perform with the group. Mondays-Sundays, 6-8pm. Through Nov. 1.
An Evening of Indian Classical Music: Sarod & Tabla A night of classical Indian
Boston-based African American newspaper editor and activist. May 3, 4-6pm. COCC Campus Center - Wille Hall, 2600 College Way. 541-3121032. Free.
LOCAL ARTS “Printing the Gamut” Exhibit Five local A6
artists, each using a different process, show the breadth of printmaking. Through April 30. A6, 550 SW Industrial Way Suite 180. 541-330-8759. Free.
Adult Open Studio Your community art
music. April 29, 7:30-9pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-285-4972. $10-$15 sliding scale.
studio is ready for you to begin your journey. Tuesdays, 5:30-7pm. Through June 1. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd. $10/class, drop-in.
Free Concert with Aaron Meyer A free
Artist Reception Held with local music
concert with rock violinist Aaron Meyer and his band. April 27, 6pm. Cascades Academy, 19860 Tumalo Reservoir Rd. Free.
The Rocky Road to Dublin Bend Camerata
performs an Irish program with guests. April 29, 7-9pm. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd. 440409-9079. $15. April 30, 3-5pm. Sisters Episcopal Church, 68825 Brooks Camp Rd. 404-409-9079. $15.
and snacks from Agricultural Connections and Locavore. First Thursday of every month, 4-6pm. Humm Kombucha, 1125 NE 2nd St. 541-3066329. Free.
Artventure with Judy Artist-led painting
event! artventurewithjudy.com. Tuesdays, 6-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 541410-3267. $25 pre-paid.
The Circle of Life Two-woman exhibition.
DANCE
Mondays-Fridays, 9am-4pm. Through May 31. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave. 541-548-6325. Free.
Adult Intermediate Level Dance Class
Cliff Fragua, Native American Sculptor
Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave. 541-321-4321. $5.
Argentine Tango Class & Práctica
Beginners lesson, 6:30-7:30pm. intermediate lesson, 7:30-8:15pm. Followed by practica, until 10pm. Wednesdays. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. $5/beginners, $10/adv.
Bend Ecstatic Dance Dance your own
dance. Tuesdays, 7pm. Bend Masonic Center, 1036 NE 8th St. 360-870-6093. $10-$20.
Group Class and Ballroom Dance 4th
Friday of each month. Ages 16+. Fri, April 28, 7-9pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-314-4398. $10/includes class & dance.
Salsa Footwork & Partnerwork Patterns Tuesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. (541) 325 - 6676.
$10.
Exquisite bronzes and sculptures. Come meet and share ideas with this celebrated sculptor. April 28-30, 4pm. Raven Makes Gallery, 182 E. Hood Ave., Sisters.
The Collector Exhibit The character is placed in various staged scenes representing the internal anguish over environmental degradation. Through May 4, 7am-5pm. Lone Pine Coffee Roasters, 845 Tin Pan Alley. Free. Creative Feasts Enjoy a lush fusion of art, poetry, music and fine cuisine in one unforgettable evening! April 29, 6-8pm. A6, 550 SW Industrial Way Suite 180. 541-330-8759. $65. Gemstone-Beads, Mineral, Fossil & Meteorite Show View minerals, fossils, beads and gemstones. April 27-May 5, 10am-7pm. Springhill Suites, 551 SW Industrial Way. Free.
Imagination Jones: May Exhibition
fiber arts, paintings, pottery, jewelry and more available. April 28 and 29, 10am-6pm. Red Chair Gallery, 103 NW Oregon Ave.
Temporal Beauty and Eternal Light: A Last Saturday Exhibition by Mark Goheen Accomplished sculptor, painter and
draftsman. April 29, 6-10pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 541-241-2754. Free.
Used Books, Art and a Website! Raising
funds through the support of literacy and art for the benefit of the community of Redmond. Through May 30, 10am-6pm. reBOOKS Used Bookstore, 531 NW Elm Street. 541.238.2181. Free.
THEATER Free Improv Jam Jams are a great way to experience our tried and true methods. Last Thursday, 7-8:30pm. Through May 25. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-7713189. Free. Now You’re Talking: Sisters One-Acts 2017 More than 20 actors entertain
you with one act plays. Thurs, April 27, 7:309:30pm, Fri, April 28, 7:30-9:30pm and Sat, April 29, 3-5 and 7:30-9:30pm. The Belfry, 302 Main St., Sisters. 541-719-8779. $10-$15, door cash only.
Once on This Island A peasant girl on a tropical island uses the power of love to bring together people of different social classes. May 1, 7pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. $8/adult, $6/children (plus $3 preservation fee). Tantalus Resentment. Greed. Seduction.
Maneuvering. Discover the hidden truth. Thursdays-Saturdays 2-4:30pm and 7:30-9:45pm. Through May 6. Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. 541-389-0803. $13-$20.
WORDS Author Book Talk on “Becoming Leonardo” COCC writing instructor Mike Lankford talks about his new book, “An Exploded View of the Life of Leonardo Da Vinci.” May 4, 4-5pm. COCC Barber Library, 2600 NW College Way. 541-383-7523. Free.
C=EMC2: Community=Education, Music, Commerce and Culture May 4,
Independent Bookstore Day Author appearances ,limited edition bookish items, store-wide book sales, raffles, and more. April 29, 9am-6pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-749-2010. April 29, 10am7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 Northwest Mount Washington Drive, #110. April 29, 9:30am-6pm. Herringbone Books, 422 SW Sixth St. 541-5261491.
Central Oregon PubTalk April 27, 5-7:30pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. 541-388-3236. $25-$35.
Meet the Author--Dave Edlund Signing
PRESENTATIONS 7-9pm. RPA Performing Arts Center, 640 SW Evergreen Avenue. 541-325-2027. $40/person, $75/two.
Know Your Neighbor - The Warm Springs Reservation Presentation on the
culture and heritage of the Warm Springs Tribe. April 27, 6-8pm. St. Helen’s Hall - Trinity Episcopal, 231 NW Idaho St. 541-318-3782. Free.
his current novel, “Hunting Savage.” April 29, 6-7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 Northwest Mount Washington Drive, #110. 541-306-6564. Free.
Nandia’s Copper by Ned Wolf Author
shares his book. April 30, 11am. Roundabout Books, 900 Northwest Mount Washington Drive, #110. Free.
A Novel Idea: Oregon’s Only Slavery Trial R. Gregory Nokes shares the story of
Appropriation vs. Appreciation Sisters
Missouri slaves Robin and Polly Holmes. April 26, 12-1pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1032. Free.
Join Jason Graham in conversation about cultural appropriation. April 27, noon-1pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-3121032. Free.
Our Public Land Heritage: BLM History The history of this federal agency and its role
Special Story Time: Phoebe Sounds It Out A book release party. April 29, 10:30am.
in public land management. April 27, 6pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Members $3, non-members $7.
Roundabout Books, 900 Northwest Mount Washington Drive, #110. Free.
The Transatlantic Slave Trade Dr. Car-
The latest edition of “100 Hikes in Southern Oregon and Northern California,” and his new mystery novel. April 27, 6-7pm. Herringbone Books, 422 SW Sixth St., Redmond. 541-5261491. Free.
men Thompson discusses how the exploitation of African labor through Transatlantic and internal slave trading. April 29, 3-4pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1032. April 30, 1-2pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-312-1032. Free.
William Sullivan Author Presentation
APR 27 - 29 The Belfry Presents NOW YOU’RE TALKING - ONE ACTS 2017
APR 27 The Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents FUTUREBIRDS W GOLD CONNECTIONS
APR 28 The Domino Room Presents THE EXPENDABLES W RGDLDGRN & TRIBAL THEORY
APR 28 The Old Stone Presents HEAD FOR THE HILLS W HONEY DON’T
19 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Care-Aoke for a Cause Raise money for
Scottish Country Dance Weekly Class
Locally Owned
By Working
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / April 27, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
20
& 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
EVENTS
VOLUNTEERS 350Deschutes Climate Advocacy & Education Thursdays. Bend, RSVP for address. 206-498-5887.
After School Mentoring Female mentors needed. Tuesdays, 3-5:30pm. Through May 25. After School Buddies, 62595 Hamby Rd. 541-3903046. Become a Big Brother or Big Sister in Redmond Looking for caring adult mentors. Big
Brothers Big Sisters - Redmond. 541-617-4788.
Fences For Fido Volunteers needed to help
build fences for dogs who live on chains. fencesforfido.org. RSVP for address.
Go Big, Bend We need caring volunteers to Ask about our layaway plan. 200 NE Greenwood Ave
541-382-3245
musicmakersofbend.com
help children reach their full potential! 541-3126047.
4pm. Custom Built Computers Of Redmond, 439 SW 6th St. 541-848-1255. $10.
Business Start-Up class Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you. May 3, 6-8pm. COCC Chandler Lab (off-campus), 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541-383-7290. $29.
Capoeira Mondays, 6:50-8:15pm and Thurs-
days, 6:50-8:15pm. Sortor Karate, 63056 Lower Meadow Dr. $30, two week intro.
Creative Movement Ages 7-9. Fridays, 4-5pm. Through June 1. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd. $10/class. DIY Fused Glass GIANT Garden Stakes DIYcave.com. May 2, 5:30pm and May 3, 10:30am. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $75.
DIY Intro to TIG DIYcave.com. April 27,
5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $70.
Happy Hour in the Garden Join us in the garden every Tuesday. Tuesdays, 4-6pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. 541385-6908 x14. Free.
DIY Silver Rings DIYcave.com. April 28, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $60.
Make Your Mark at Bend Spay+Neuter! Compassionate people needed to join an
DIY Sterling Silver Drop Earrings DIY-
incredible team. Bend Spay+Neuter Project. 541-617-1010.
Mentor Empowers positive change in youth
through education, jobs, and stewardship. Contact Amanda at 541-526-1380.
Tiny Explorers Meetup The Children’s
Forest seeks committed volunteers to host Tiny Explorers Meetups in the outdoors.
Volunteer The Salvation Army has a wide
variety of volunteer opportunities for almost every age. If interested, please contact us. 541389-8888.
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 541-312-2069. Wednesdays. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St.
Volunteer Drivers Needed Volunteer
drivers 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 541-647-2363.
Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond
Looking for volunteers to receive donations, sort, and price items. Mondays-Sundays. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St. 541-504-0101.
CLASSES ‘Painting with a Purpose’ Fundraiser
Join VegNet Bend & ‘It’s Just Paint’ for a energetic night of painting fun. All supplies provided. Helps fund education regarding the benefits of a plant-based lifestyle. April 29, 5-7pm. Laughing Planet, 913 NE Third St. 858-837-1057. $45.
AcroYoga Experience how the power of acrobatics, wisdom of yoga and sensitivity of Thai yoga intertwine. Wednesdays, 7pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-5508550. $7-$15. Adult Movement Improvisation Come experience the fun and fresh perspective that movement improvisation offers! Fridays, 6-8pm. Through June 1. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd. $15. African Dance Classes taught in a friendly,
welcoming and fun environment. Wednesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. Gotta Dance Studio, 917 NE Eighth St. 541-322-0807. $12.
Buddhist Mantras Chanting Learn how to correctly chant mantras in Japanese. Mondays-Tuesdays-Thursdays-Fridays, 10:30am-
cave.com. Wed, April 26, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $50.
DIY Welding DIYcave.com. Tues, May 2,
5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $50.
DIY Welding Techniques Course DIYcave. com. May 4, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $199.
DIY Welding Workshop DIYcave.com Wed, April 26, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541388-2283. $50.
DIY Wood Router Class Sign up and learn
more at DIYcave.com April 30, 11am. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $40.
Ductless Heat Pumps April 27, 8:30-10am. May 3, 5:30-6:30pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. 541-385-6908. Free.
Electric Vehicle Workshop: Get Plugged In Come get all your EV questions
answered. Thurs, April 27, 5:30-6:30pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. 541385-6908.
Essential Tibetan Buddhism Michael Stevens offers an introduction to Buddha’s teachings through the Vajrayana tradition. naturalminddharma.org. First Monday, 7-8:30pm. Natural Mind Dharma Center, 345 SW Century Dr. Suite 2. 541-388-3352. $10 donation. Fused Glass Photo Stands Each student makes two 3”x8” fused glass stands that neatly hold a piece of paper or photo, up to 7” wide. Sign up online or in store. April 27, 6:30-8:30pm. Junque in Bloom, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 19. 541728-3036. $55. German Conversation Group With a tutor to learn conversational German. Mondays, 7-8pm. In Sisters, various locations. 541-5950318. Cost variable. Get Your Gear! What to wear and what to pack for outdoor adventures. May 3, 6-7:30pm. Peanut’s Gallery, 615 SE Glenwood Dr., Suite 107. 503-446-0803. $15. Good Grief Guidance Classes 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 Fridays, 2-3pm. Grandmaster Franklin, 51875 Hollinshead Pl. 623-203-4883. $40. Intro Jewelry Making – Earrings All materials provided. April 26, 6-8pm. Junque in Bloom, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 19. 541-728-3036. 50.
EVENTS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
Japanese Group Lesson Group lessons for both beginners and intermediate students. Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. 541-633-7205. $10 plus material fees. Monday Positive Relaxation Mon, May
1, 10-10:30am and 12-12:30pm. Bend Golf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Dr. 971-2176576. $8.
A Novel Idea: Pendant Making Craft your
Oregon Hunter Education Classes The
readings, energetic healing and bodywork in exchange for canned and dry foods First Thursday of every month, 5-7pm. The Old Stone, 157 NW Franklin Ave. 541-389-1159.
Drawing Under the Influence Bring
paper, pen, creativity and draw under the influence! Sundays, 6-9pm. JC’s Bar & Grill, 642 NW Franklin Ave.
Franklin’s Corner Community Garden Sign Ups Signups for plots for the 2017
growing season at 9th Street and Larch Drive. franklinscorner.org. April 29, 11am.
next available classes start May 1 in both Bend and LaPine.
Girls Night Out! May 3, 6:30pm. FootZone,
Oriental Palm Reading Wednesdays,
Grantmakers Panel Registration required.
842 NW Wall St. $10.
6-7pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. 541-8481255. $10.
May 4, 11am-12:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7092. Free.
QuickBooks Pro 2015 — Beginners
Grassroots Cribbage Club Mondays,
May 2 & 4, 6-9pm. COCC Chandler Lab), 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541-383-7290. $99.
Storytelling for Leaders Mondays, 4-6pm.
Through May 22. Agency Revolution, 63026 Lower Meadow Dr #100. 541-617-0340. $350.
Tai Chi Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:30-11am.
Brooks Hall at Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 Wall St. 541-548-1086. Free.
West African Drumming Level 1 Mon-
days, 5:30-6:30pm. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. 541-760-3204. $15.
West African Drumming Level 3
Thursdays, 7-8:30pm. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. 541-760-3204. $15.
EVENTS
6-9pm. Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. $1 to $13.
Greg Tamblyn Songwriter and humorist
brings his irreverent humor and sideways view of life to town. April 30, 7-8:30pm. The Old Stone, 157 NW Franklin Ave. Suggested love offering of $15.
Join the Flight Relive a historic flight aboard
the EAA’s beautifully restored B-17 Flying Fortress. April 30, 10am. Bend Airport, 63132 Powell Butte Rd.
Opening Day at Hollinshead Community Garden April 29, 9am-12pm. Hollinshead
Community Garden, 1235 NE Jones Rd. 541-5486088. $30-$40 season.
Oregon State University State of the University Address May 3, 6-8:30pm.
7th Annual Ponderosa Elementary School Auction April 28, 5:30-8:30pm.
Riverhouse on the Deschutes, 3075 N Hwy 97. 877-678-2837. $20.
Ponderosa Elementary School, 3790 NE Purcell Blvd. Free.
Bend Follies 2017 A night of comedy starring local civic, business, education and media personalities performing sketches and singing parodies. April 29, 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. Reserved $18, $33, $48 VIP. Bend Snip Bingo D&D Bar and Grill hosts bingo on the first and third Tuesday of the month through May! Tues, May 2, 7-9pm. D&D Bar & Grill, 927 NW Bond St. $1 per card.
ARTWATCH
Theater, Chants, Music by Chiringa. April 29, 123pm. Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd. Free.
Pool Tournament Cash Cup Anyone can
Tai Chi for Parkinson’s & MS Thursdays, 1-2pm. Grandmaster Franklin, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd. 623-203-4883. $50/mo.
join in, regardless of experience! Tuesdays, 8pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-7609412. $5.
Walk with Ease Program Classes run M-W-F, 10:30am-12pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave. 541-548-1086.
Preventative Walk-in Pet Wellness Clinic Service fees can be found at bendsnip.
MEETINGS
org. Saturdays, 10am. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. A-1.
Pronghorn Resort Spring Job Fair April
30, 11am-2pm. Deschutes Brewery & Mountain Room, 901 SW Simpson Ave.
Redmond Community Prayer Breakfast May 4, 6:15-8:30am. Redmond Community
Church, 237 NW Ninth St. $6.
The Abraham Inspiration Group: April
29, 5-9pm. Rosie Bareis Campus, 1010 NW 14th St. 541-389-4523. Donations.
Adelines’ Showcase Chorus Practice Mondays, 6:30-9pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave.
Al-Anon Family Groups Call 541-728-3707 for times and locations.
Redmond-Bend Family History Discovery Day Free workshops. April 29, 8:30am-
Alcoholics Anonymous Brooks Hall at
Sign for Your Lane #1 Join Bend Bikes to
Bend Chamber Toastmasters Wednesdays, 12-1pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. Free.
2pm. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Redmond, 450 Southwest Rimrock Way.
sign a petition urging City Council to include active transportation in their 2-year budget. April 27, 6-8pm. Whole Foods Market, 2610 Highway 20. 541-241-6077. Free.
Tank Day April 29, 10am-4pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754 ext. 241. Yoga Schools Training April 28, 6pm.
Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $365.
Young Professionals Network April 26, 5-7pm. EarthCruiser USA, 61510 American Lane #140. 541-382-3221. $5 Chamber Member, $10/ non..
SENIOR EVENTS
Out of the Darkness Walk April 29,
Pilates & Physical Therapy for Parkinson’s, MS and Stroke Thursdays, 2-3pm.
9-11am. Bend Church United Methodist, 680 NW Bond St. 503-519-5051. Free.
Through June 16. True Pilates NW, 243 Southwest Scalehouse Lp. 541-241-6837. $75.
Pappy’s Pizzeria Fundraiser Pappy’s
Senior Social Program Monday, Tuesday
donates 50% of all funds collected to Battle Buddies when people bring in Flyer. May 1, 11-midnight. Pappy’s Pizzeria, 1655 North Highway 97. 541-548-1118.
and Friday social hour. Wednesday soup/salad $2 from 11-12pm. Closed Thursday. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St.
People’s Climate March Come be a part of the largest Climate Change Action event in history! Climate Change Action Fair, Street
come join! Tuesdays-Thursdays, 8:45-9:45am. OREGON TAI CHI, 1350 SE Reed Mkt Rd Ste 102. 541-639-9963. $55/mo.
Tai Chi for Diabetes Can be done seated,
Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 Wall St. 541-5480440.
Cool Cars and Coffee Saturdays, 8am. C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Dr.
Emotions Anonymous Wednesdays, 9:30am and Thursdays, 10:30am. Bend Church United Methodist, 680 NW Bond St. Evolutionary SELF-Healing Thursdays, 6:30-8pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-390-8534. Free. French Conversation Table Every first and third Monday of the month. 10:30am-12:30pm. Barnes and Noble, 2690 NE Hwy 20. 541-3898656. Free. Landscape and Stormwater-HOA Best Practices April 27, 11:30am-1pm. The Oxford
Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-719-8224. 25$ Members, $35 Nonmembers.
Marijuana Anonymous Meeting Know
you need to quit, but can’t? Help is here. Thursdays, 7-8pm. Serenity Lane, 601 NW Harmon Blvd. 503-567-9892. Free.
NAMI Depression & Bipolar Disorder Support Group Mondays, 7-9pm. First United
Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-4808269. Free.
By Howard Leff
A Month to Remember
Charlie Rucker
Deschutes County History on Display in May Seems like we’re always looking ahead in Central Oregon. The next festival. The next brewery. The next town hall even. But our focus is about to change. Time to look back, at least for a month. In May, several local groups, including the Deschutes County Historical Society, will mark National Historic Preservation Month by celebrating all that came before. The theme is “This Place Matters.” “Historic preservation provides a foundation for our shared heritage,” says Deschutes Historical Museum Director Kelly Cannon-Miller. “There’s an authenticity of place in communities that value their heritage and historic properties. That authenticity is the legacy we leave for the
next generation.” And speaking of history, kudos to the Deschutes Public Library and the Deschutes Historical Museum, for their 2017 Oregon Heritage Excellence Award for the preservation of 40 interviews with early Central Oregon pioneers—recorded in 1953. Check them out by searching “15 minute history” at deschuteslibrary.org. Retro Redmond Among the events in Redmond is a photo contest. Specifically, the city’s Historic Landmarks Commission is seeking pictures of Redmond bungalows which are more than 50 years old. Styles include Craftsman, Mission, Tudor, Cape Cod and Moderne architecture. Winners will be announced during a Preservation Month celebration in Centennial Park. Why bungalows? “They represent a
significant period in local history,” says Redmond Historic Landmarks Commissioner Shannon Farnsworth Rose. “It’s when the first settlers were actually moving out of their canvas tent homes to newly built permanent housing. These homes were built despite the struggles of the times, including World Wars and the Depression.” Rose finds an inherent value in preserving the character of a city. “This is a chance to save our neighborhoods’ aesthetic and enhance the value of the community,” she says. “Our historic buildings and homes give us sense of connection. “We continue to learn from past generations.” SW Celebrate Historic Preservation Month Centennial Park 725 SW Evergreen Ave., Redmond Sat., May 13 10am – 2pm
21 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
own pendant. Registration required. April 28, noon-1pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-312-1032. Free.
Community Healing Night Intuitive
EVENTS Overeaters Anonymous Meeting Bring in this Coupon for 20% Off
TopShelfMedicine.com
22 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / April 27, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
815 NE Greenwood Ave. Bend
541.389.1043
Mondays-noon-Saturdays, 9:30am and Thursdays-noon. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-306-6844. Wednesdays, 4pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave. 541-306-6844.
541-749-2010. Free.
Transitions Open to pregnant women and
moms with babies up to on-years-old. Every other Wednesday, 5:30-6:30pm. Mandala Midwifery, 19800 Village Office Court, Suite 105. Free.
Sign for Your Lane #2 Sign a petition urging City Council to include active transportation in their 2-year budget. May 4, 3-6pm. Primal Cuts Market, 1244 NW Galveston Ave. 541-241-6077.
Wednesday Night Kirtan Wednesdays, 7-9pm. Through June 14. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-285-4972. Sliding Scale: $10-$20.
Socrates Cafe Group Fourth Thursday, 6-8pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-749-2010. Free.
Women’s Cancer Support Group Thursdays, 1-3pm. Looking Glass Imports & Cafe, 150 NE Bend River Mall Dr. Suite 260. .
Spanish Club Spanish language study and conversation group. Thursdays, 3:30-5pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave.
Zen Discussion & MeditationMondays, 6-8:30pm. St. Helen’s Hall - Trinity Episcopal, 231 NW Idaho St. 541-390-1220.
KIDS' EVENTS Animal Adventures Age 3+ years. Live an-
imals, stories, crafts with High Desert Museum staff. Mon, May 1, 10:15am. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541312-1050. Tues, May 2, 9:30am. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-330-3760. Tues, May 2, 11:30am. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-312-1070. Wed, April 26, 1pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7050.
Big Kids Yoga This class is for older kids who
want to learn more of the fundamentals of yoga. 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.
Cosmic Bouncing Get your glow on at
Bouncing Off the Wall! Join us for Glow in the Dark Family Fun Night! Advanced registration required via website. Fri, April 28, 6-9pm. Bouncing off the Walls, 1134 Centennial Ct. 541-306-6587. $20.
Creative Movement for Kids Encourage
movement exploration and imaginary play, developmental milestones for this age range, while discovering inherent coordination, flexibility and fun! Fridays, 10:30-11:30am. Through June 1. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd. $10 class drop.
Early Learners Creativity Lab Bring the kids for a fun-filled hour of open-ended art activities designed specifically for the early learner. Ages 0-5. Mondays-Wednesdays, 11am-noon Through June 1. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd. No phone yet. $10. Family LEGO Block Party Kids + 1
gazillion LEGOs = fun! Wed, April 26, 2:30-4pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-330-3760. Free.
Kids Camp: STEAM Age 6-8 years. Explore
science and technology through experiments and projects. Wed, April 26, 2:30-3:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-6177050. Free.
Kids ROCK(!) Choir Kids ages 12 and under
can come and sing their faces off with only one goal: to have a great time! Mondays, 4:305:30pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 541-728-3798. $10.
Make Age 12-17 years. Slime, oobleck, gack,
and Newtonian fluids. April 26, 2pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free.
May The 4th Be With You Age 9-17 years. Star Wars-themed activities - come in costume if you want to. May 4, 3:30pm. Redmond Public
Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541312-1050. May 4, 4-5pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7050.
Mini-Movers Simple movement games and explorations that help children discover inherent coordination, flexibility, musicality and fun! Ages 1-3. Fridays, 9:15-10:15am. Through June 1. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd. $10 class. Mommy / Daddy & Me Mommy/Daddy &
Me classes incorporate art, storytelling, animal demonstrations, games, movement, music, and literature into an enjoyable class for both children and adults! Mondays, 10:30am-noon Through May 15. Eastside Farm, 22135 Erickson Rd. 503-680-9831. $44 (covers all three classes).
Museum & Me A time for children and adults
with physical, cognitive, and/or social disabilities to enjoy the High Desert Museum after hours. April 29, 4-7pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Free.
Music, Movement & Stories Age 3-5
years. Movement and stories to develop skills. Thurs, April 27, 10:30am. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. 541-312-1090. Free.
Preschool Creativity Lab Children
introduced to a variety of media and techniques through process oriented exploration and investigation. Ages 3-5. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 10:3011:30am. Through June 1. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd. $10.
Public (Rock) Choir Sing in a fun, non-threatening environment for people of all skill levels. First time FREE. Mondays, 5:45-8pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 541728-3798. $0-$16. Saturday Stories Age 0-5 years. A fun early literacy story time. Sat, April 29, 9:30am. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541330-3760. Free. School Story Time and Lunch Get ready
for kindergarten with stories and fun; with Deschutes Public Library. Stories at 11:30, lunch at 12:00. Thurs, May 4, 11:30am. Juniper Elementary School, 1300 NE Norton Ave. 541-617-7050. Free.
Teen Advisory Board Age 12-17 years.
Decide programs, public services, activities; lend your voice to projects. Wed, May 3, 1:30pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free.
Toddler Creativity Lab Specifically
designed for toddlers to engage in age-appropriate open-ended activities. Ages 1-3. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:15-10:15am. Through June 1. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd. $10.
Tween Writing Camp II Age 9-12 years.
Registration required. Tues, May 2, 4-5pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7050. Free.
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
S O U R C E
S P O
T
L
I G H T
Nancy Blankenship, Deschutes County Clerk A job title that means serving locals, all day, every day
— Nancy Blankenship rd
Si tts
By Richard Sitts
ch Ri
A
t some time or another, most people in Deschutes County end up going to the County Clerk’s office to take care of official business. And of course, doing that “official” business in the county may just qualify you for that coveted “local” status. Regardless of your place of origin, Deschutes County Clerk Nancy Blankenship will welcome you like a local when you find your way to her second story office that looks out over the Parkway. The duties of a county clerk include maintaining county records such as marriage licenses and deeds, and overseeing elections. “I get to work with some wonderful people in this office,” Blankenship says. “They do great work. They are very dedicated and focused on customer service, which is one of our primary goals. The workers out on the front desks love to help people.” The office is small enough that she can still be a “working clerk,” she says, splitting up duties with Elections Supervisor Barb Hagen. Blankenship says the job of overseeing elections takes up the biggest chunk of her time, “because we’re always preparing,” she says. That task
includes voter registration and creating ballots and voter pamphlets. Deschutes County is one of the few counties in the state that puts out a voter pamphlet for every election, says Blankenship. The office also just purchased a new ballot tabulation system to replace the old optical scanning method with digital scanning. Oregon began testing vote by mail in the early 1980s, and in 2000 became the first state in the nation to go to complete voting by mail, according to Blankenship. “We’ve had very good success with vote by mail. It’s cut down on our expenses, and we’re always in the top three to four states in voter turnout,” she says. Also, Deschutes County became the first county in the state, in the late 1990s, to offer free access to real property records online. This helps reduce foot traffic into the office and lets people do their own records research online. Blankenship is a third generation Oregonian and grew up in Central Oregon. Before being elected county clerk in 2003, she worked for the city of Redmond for 16 years as the city recorder. Her husband of 37 years,
SOURCE SUGGESTS THIS BOOK Before you stroll the streets on First Fridays in downtown Bend, check out this monthly review featuring reading recommendations courtesy of the Source and Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe. Then head down to the shop for a discount! For the Locals Issue, we asked one Oregon author, Ruth Tenzer Feldman (“Blue Thread,” “The Ninth Day,” and “Seven Stitches”), to review the latest work from another local author, Amber J. Keyser (“The Way Back From Broken,” “The V-Word”).
“Pointe, Claw”
by Amber J. Keyser Amber J. Keyser’s latest novel for older teens and adults turns the pas de deux of classical ballet inside out with a ferocity that demands focus on every step—and every misstep—in this compelling story. By turns fierce and bold, brave and tender, “Pointe, Claw” introduces us to two childhood friends who were wrenched apart years earlier and are now re-entering each other’s lives. Jessie, who tortures her body with the demands of ballet, is caught up in
a
Mike, grew up in Bend, and the two live in Redmond with their Yorkshire terrier, Casey. Blankenship first took office in January 2003, following longtime County Clerk Susie Penhollow. “Luckily, no one ran against me,” she quips. Since then, she has been re-elected three times. Her current term expires in January 2019. Blankenship says she still loves the job and plans to run again when the time comes. “The hard part about this job is that you have to run for office. That’s probably my least favorite part of the job,” Blankenship says. “The great thing about it, it’s always ever-changing and keeps you on your toes.” This is because the laws always change, she says. “That’s the fun part, always trying to make improvements to benefit the office and the public.” Blankenship has even made house calls to help make sure people get registered to vote. She recalls going to an address in a new apartment complex on the east side of town to make sure the resident was able to vote. “People really appreciate that help. I just wanted to help the voter. That’s
when you get the joy out of the job, when you get to help the people. That just brings a lot of joy and satisfaction.” Since August 2016, Blankenship has also been the president of the Oregon Association of County Clerks. She worked herself up through the organization as secretary, treasurer and vice president. “You learn a lot. There’s just the extra work to perform those duties,” she says, adding that the responsibility brings more work, which she welcomes. Blankenship says all county residents, no matter how long they’ve lived here, have a standing invitation to stop in at the clerk’s office and observe its workings, especially the closer we get to election time. “I really think it’s important for people to come in and observe,” Blankenship says. Various school groups come into the office, “and we encourage them to participate and show them the process. That’s the fun thing, to share what we’re doing so that people feel comfortable with elections in Deschutes County.” SW
By Ruth Tenzer Feldman an animalistic production that shatters her self-image and threatens to unravel her dreams to become a professional ballerina. Dawn, a gifted student in science, faces unexplained episodes of “going dark” as her mind and body progressively blur the line between human and beast. Neither girl finds safety in our domesticated, body-conscious culture. What does it take for Jessie and Dawn to heal what’s fractured? Does either of them have the courage to craft, in the words of poet Mary Oliver, her “one wild and precious life?” Will they go it alone or together? And at what cost? Keyser’s choreography will keep you swirling until the last satisfying paragraph.
About the author: In addition to “Pointe, Claw,” Amber J. Keyser is the author of “The Way Back” from Broken (Carolrhoda Lab 2015), a heart-wrenching novel of loss and survival, and “The V-Word” (Beyond Words/Simon Pulse, 2016), an anthology of personal essays by women about first-time sexual experiences, among numerous other titles. Find out more at www.amberjkeyser.com. About the reviewer: Ruth Tenzer Feldman is the author of three young adult novels, “Blue Thread,” “The Ninth Day,” and “Seven Stitches,” as well as many works of history for teens. She lives and writes in Oregon. More at www.ruthtenzerfeldman.com. SW
23 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
“That’s when you get the joy out of the job, when you get to help the people. That just brings a lot of joy and satisfaction.”
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / April 27, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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CH
CHOW
Locals’ Nights
Want to go where everyone knows your name? Start with these spots.
LITTLE BITES
By Lisa Sipe
25
By Caitlin Richmond
MONDAY
TUESDAY
If the start of the week was unkind to you, there are two options to help you recover.
Double dip at Bend Brewing Company and hit their happy hour for your meal and get a cheap beer at the same time. Happy hour runs from 4 pm to 6 pm, and all appetizers are half off. Beers are $3 from 4 pm to close. Meanwhile, Immersion Brewing offers $1 off all pints all day.
• Deschutes Brewery, the oldest brewery in Bend, offers a discount on their beers and select burgers. • At Silver Moon Brewing, get $1.50 off pints and you can order “two beefy, hearty tacos for six bucks,” bartender Nick Shealy says. “Locals night is absolutely one of the most fun nights,” Shealy said. “People are very responsive and they really enjoy it.” Even though it’s still called locals’ night, these specials actually run all day long.
WEDNESDAY Sunriver Brewing Company at the Galveston pub has a special locals’ night dinner option, and $1 dollar off draft beer and wine all day. Past food specials have included a pork belly bahn mi sandwich and marinated portobello mushrooms. Craft Kitchen & Brewery will treat you well if you like smoked meat and beer. The brewery offers a smoked meat sandwich, side, and a beer for $10.
If drinking at home is more your speed, check out the tasting room at Boneyard Beer, where you can get $2 off a 64 oz growler fill or $2 off a 3-pack of their growler cans. The regulars are always on tap—Hop Venom, Diablo Rojo and RPM, as well as six other rotating taps Three Creeks Brewing in Sisters offers a $10 steak dinner on their Locals Appreciation Wednesdays. In Redmond, Wild Ride Brew is where you want to be on Hump day so you can get a discount on select pints. THURSDAY At Goodlife Brewery, Descender IPA and Sweet As pale ale, their two mainstays, are always $3 on Thursdays, and usually one other seasonal beer will be discounted. Growler fills are $7. SW
Top, Nordic-inspired pan-fried filet of black codfish with fricassee of mussels, carrots, celery root and parsnips. Bottom, a main dish features poached and fried king crab with butter poached romaine salad and classic Hollandaise sauce is Nordic-inspired, using local Oregon ingredients.
Nordic Cuisine, Oregon Ingredients
6-Course Scandinavian Dinner Sends CCI Students Abroad Food allows us to travel to other countries without leaving home—and for us here in Central Oregon, right now that means an opportunity to discover Scandinavia through a traditional Nordic dinner. In May, 25 culinary students from Tekniske Skole in Silkeborg, Denmark are visiting through Cascade Culinary Institute’s International Exchange Program. The students will spend two weeks exploring Oregon wine country, visiting farms, foraging and sharing their culture and cooking techniques with CCI students. The culmination of their visit: a six-course Nordic dinner featuring seasonally available ingredients from the Pacific Northwest. Thor Erickson, the chef instructor and department chair at CCI, describes Nordic cuisine as, “seasonal, uses fresh local flavors with a delicate touch that pays homage to the earth.” Watched “Tasting Table” on Netflix? Then think of the cuisine of Magnus Nilsson. (Never watched it? Add it to your queue now, foodie friends.) One of the items on the menu is poached and fried king crab with butter poached romaine salad and classic Hollandaise. The dinner, which includes wine pairings, is happening one night only. The proceeds help make it possible for local students to have culinary experiences in Denmark and Bend’s sister city, Belluno, Italy. SW Authentic Nordic Cuisine Dinner Thurs., May 25 6pm $150 per person; includes wine pairings with each course Elevation 2555 NW Campus Village Way, Bend RSVP to Deena Cook at 541-318-3738 or dcook1@cocc.edu
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
W
hen you live in a town where the economy benefits from other people visiting, it’s easy to feel overlooked as a local. Downtown can be packed with weekend visitors, and 20 minutes of looking for parking just so you can grab a pint at your favorite watering hole can make any Bendite feel like staying home is the better option. People at those breweries feel your pain and they want to make it up to those of us to have chosen to stick around for the long haul. “We started locals’ night because we wanted to show our appreciation to the locals,” Dewi Stanczak, tasting room manager at Goodlife Brewing, explained. “Most breweries have some way of doing that.” He’s right. Almost every brewery in town has a locals’ night. These are nights when breweries offer discounted beer (and sometimes food), either all day or during certain hours. Despite the fact that they’re called “locals’ nights,” the discounts are available to anyone who walks in the door.
FOOD & BEER EVENTS FOOD Kilns College Banquet Featuring a Farm
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / April 27, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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to Table Dining Experience. April 29, 6-10pm. Brasada Ranch House, 16986 SW Brasada Ranch Rd. 541-639-8945. $65.
Prime Rib Dinner Night Sundays, 5-9pm.
Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 541-693-5300. $35.
Purnima A night of Bollywood eats and beats to support Central Oregon Locavore. Belly dancers, Henna painting are just a few of the things you can expect. April 29, 6pm. Mantra Indian Kitchen, 744 NW Bond St. $40/Locavore members, $45/non-members, $5/dance party. Sunriver Tasting Dinner Featuring Ponzi Vineyards, at this tasting dinner, you will have the unique opportunity to learn about these wines and enjoy a five-course dinner. April 28, 6:30-8:30pm. Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Dr. 541-593-3740. $90. Winderlea Winemaker Dinner Come
enjoy a spectacular dinner with wine pairings featuring Winderlea Winery. Reservations required. April 28, 6:30-9pm. Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 541-693-5300. $85.
BEER AND DRINK ’90s Flannel Party DJ Esus rocks everything from grunge to hip-hop from this classic generation. Taps flowing the finest array of ciders including our Dragonfruit Seasonal and local beer. BONUS: Wear a flannel and get $1 off cider/beer pints. April 29, 8pm-12am. ATLAS Cider Co. Taproom, 550 SW Industrial Way Suite 190. Free. April Showers Bring May Sours A week-
Food Truck Fridays Flights, pints, fine
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.
Geeks Who Drink Trivia Eight rounds of
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.
In the Pocket Beer Release In The Pocket
is a groovy blend of two imperial saisons Crux releases on the 27th. Come down to give this rustic saison a try and if you like it, pick up a bottle or two to take home. We’ll even have The Hot Club of Bend laying down the beat for us that night. April 27, 11:30am-10pm. Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St.
Industry Night We, the service industry, work
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.
Meet the Brewer 21+. Last Saturday of every month, 6pm. Currents at the Riverhouse, 3075 N Hwy 97. Free.
Sno’d In OAS Check Presentation & Kascade Kolsch Release Party Join BBC
and SnoPlanks for the formal check presentation to Oregon Adaptive Sports for the proceeds raised from the Sno’d In Winter Ale campaign. We’ll also be releasing our new spring beer, Kascade Kolsch, where $1 of every pint sold goes to OAS. Live music by Juniper & Gin starting at 6:30pm! April 28, 5:30-10pm. Bend Brewing Company, 1019 NW Brooks St.
end-long extravaganza! Half the taps will make you pucker up! Sours from The Bruery, Firestone Walker Brewing Co., pFriem Family Brewers, Logsdon Farmhouse Ales, LLC., and more. April 28-30, 5pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln.
Trivia Night At Spoken Moto End your weekend on a high note and come down to Spoken Moto to test your knowledge against other teams to win prizes! Sundays, 6-8pm. Spoken Moto, 310 SW Industrial Way. Free to Play.
Wine Tastings Join us every Friday and
Trivia Thursdays Featuring craft cocktails,
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.
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.
Create Your Own Sweet As GoodLife
Brewing joins forces with Broken Top Bottle Shop and is brewing a one of a kind batch of Sweet As created by YOU exclusively for 2017 Central Oregon Beer Week. We are giving one lucky person the creative freedom to create their own version of Sweet As. May 3, 5-7pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln.
amazing food and trivia prizes. Thursdays, 7-9pm. The Barrel Thief Lounge at Oregon Spirit Distillers, 740 NE First St. 541-550-4747. Free.
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. Wild Wednesday Share tales of epic back
country adventures told by members of our local community. Local climber Tiffany Larsen will share her story on receiving an American Alpine Club grant, and spent two weeks alpine climbing in northern Patagonia. April 26, 5:30-7pm. Patagonia@Bend, 1000 Wall St. Suite 140. 541-3822616. Free.
Firkin Friday A different firkin each week. $3 firkin pints until it’s gone. Fridays, 4pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr. 541-639-4776.
Gemstone-Beads & Mineral Show April 27th - May 5th 10-7 daily Springhill Suites 551 SW Industrial Way, Bend Old Mill District
MICRO
Get Sour for May A small flood kicks off the heart of spring
27
by Kevin Gifford
Kevin Gifford
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Things turn decidedly sour at Broken Top this weekend—in a good way, of course.
T
en years ago, when craft beer was just beginning to explode across Bend, the average beer drinker in the region could be asked about their favorite “sour” beer and left wondering what the heck that meant. Now, there are legit efforts to make springtime into a sort of invented “season” for everything sour, tart, Brett-infused, and just plain un-bitter. Tavour, the mail-order service that sends craft beer to your door in Oregon and 11 other states, is currently offering a “Sweet Sour Box”—$95 for eight different bottles, shipping included. To the rather hardcore, these include both the light and refreshing, such as Funkwerks’ Raspberry Provincial and a blueberry-infused Berliner weisse from Chicago’s Lake Effect Brewing. Topping the list: Saint Dekkera: Sour Zure Dubbele from Destihl, a 9.9 percent stout that’s bursting with chocolate and dark cherries someone’s dipped in hard liquor. It goes to the show that the adjective “sour” can be as versatile—meaningless, to be pessimistic about it—as “hoppy” when describing a beer. (The heavier ones have a tendency to wreck one’s palate, too, propagating their flavors over to whatever’s tried next.) Looking to get into the genre? There are few better chances locally each year than stopping in Broken Top Bottle Shop, which is holding its fifth annual April Showers Bring May Sours event from April 28 to May 1. Starting Friday, the team will put six sour/tart ales on tap and keep six on until the
following Monday—a fine chance to sample a few at once without breaking the bank. A few of the highlights: • Pfriem Flanders Style Red Ale: A year and a half spent in an oak barrel has done nothing to dull the ebullience that wafts from this red ale, one that will give wine a fans a sense of déjà vu with its Pinot-like flavor. • Firestone Walker Agrestic: A mixture of the California brewery’s DBA pale ale, blended together with different vintages and choice of barrel-aging. Up to two years of aging took place on the ingredients that make up this crisp ale, booming with toasted oak, lemon and spice. • Cascade Sang du Chêne: The first release from Cascade to feature the new labels and logo the Portland barrel-meisters introduced in February, Sang du Chêne (or “blood of the oak”) is a blend of strong, sour blond and triple ales aged in three different types of large oak vessels, balancing out the acidic sourness with toasted sugar and vanilla. SW
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FILM SHORTS By Jared Rasic
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BEAUTY AND THE BEAST: Disney is on a
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. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema
BORN IN CHINA: Disney takes a look at the
wildlife of China in this adorable documentary. Everyone likes baby pandas, of which this movie is bound to have several. It’s like a big budget, 90-minute Youtube video. Perfect. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
EMILY: Filmed in Portland, this drama takes a look at a disintegrating marriage after the husband suffers a crisis of faith. See full review on p29. Tin Pan Theater. FREE FIRE: Ben Wheatley is one of Britain’s
most brilliant directors with his film, “A Field in England,” being one of this decade’s biggest highlights. “Free Fire” is Wheatley taking his bizarre and brilliant sense of humor and paying homage to the ‘90s, Tarantino-esque shootouts. Apparently, the entire film is an extended, non-stop shoot-out. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
GHOST IN THE SHELL: Scarlett Johansson
stars as a robot soldier lady who doesn’t really want to be a robot anymore. The film has come under fire for whitewashing what should have been a leading role for an Asian woman, but luckily the film has flopped and we can forget all of this even happened. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
GIFTED: Chris Evans finally has a chance to take a step outside of the Captain America uniform to play a single father raising a child prodigy. He struggles to decide whether to give her a normal life or send her to a school for gifted children. Looks like a fairly typical tearjerker. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters’ Movie House GOING IN STYLE: A comedy/heist movie
starring Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman and Alan Arkin sounds like a great time at the movies, that’s no mystery. What is a mystery, however, is why Zach Braff from “Scrubs” is directing this? The real question is whether he will bring his trademark quirkiness to the project. See full review on p29. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema
KEDI: A touching and fascinating portrait of several of the thousands of stray cats that populate the Turkish city of Istanbul. Tin Pan Theater
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 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 X as they attempt to protect one of the final living mutants. Should be even better than advertised. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
PERSONAL SHOPPER: Kristen Stewart gives one of the finest performances of her career in this powerful drama/ghost story. Stewart plays
a personal shopper for a celebrity who is also reeling from the death of her twin brother. As she searched for signs of an afterlife, complications arise with her demanding boss. Tin Pan Theater
SMURFS: THE LOST VILLAGE: Kids are
probably very excited to see this next installment in the “Smurfs” franchise, but this looks pretty terrible. A bunch of poop jokes surround a story about a lost tribe of Smurfs. Parents will probably have to suffer through this one. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema
SPAGHETTI WESTERN WEDNESDAY: $8 gets you an All-U-Can-eat spaghetti dinner and a hootin’ and hollerin’ good time watching old Western classics. Tin Pan Theater
T2: TRAINSPOTTING: With director Danny
Boyle and the entire cast returning, this should be a sequel of genuine power and purpose. Heroin is far back in Renton’s (Ewan McGregor) history, but when Begbie gets out of prison looking for revenge, his past and present will violently collide. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters’ Movie House
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
THE BOSS BABY: Here’s your chance to enjoy Alec Baldwin making fart jokes as a cute little animated baby. No, this isn’t him doing 90 minutes of his Trump impression. Instead, it’s a children’s story of a baby with the brain of a businessman. This one could go either way. Old Mill Stadium & IMAX, Redmond Cinema, Sisters Movie House THE CASE FOR CHRIST: Based on a true story, “The Case for Christ” tells a story of an award-winning journalist who attempts to disprove the Christian faith of his wife. Without having seen the movie, we can only assume he ends up finding Jesus. Behind the sofa. Or maybe at the pawn shop. Somewhere unexpected, anyway. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX THE FATE OF THE FURIOUS: I unapolo-
getically love these movies, and if you’re basing any sort of negative opinion just on the first few of the franchise, then watch numbers five through seven and be amazed. The action set pieces keep escalating with each film, so much that by the next film, don’t be surprised if our crew of badasses ends up in space. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema
THE LOST CITY OF Z: If you haven’t already
read the book, this is one of the most exciting true-life adventures in history. Charlie Hunnam plays Percy Fawcett, who headed down the Amazon searching for a fabled lost city and disappeared forever. Not to be missed. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
UNFORGETTABLE: Katherine Heigl plays an
unhinged woman who absolutely loses her mind after meeting her ex-husband’s new fiancee. This looks and sounds pretty bad, but Rosario Dawson is one of the finest actresses currently working, so it might be worth it just to watch her beat the hell out of Heigl. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE: Jessica Chastain plays the loving wife of a zookeeper as the Nazis overtake Poland. She and her husband help hide fleeing Jews throughout their zoo. This one looks like a tearjerker. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX.
SC
SCREEN
Grumpy Old Men with Guns Freeman, Arkin and Caine are going in style By Jared Rasic
SC
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Warner Bros.
He’s an interesting choice to direct “Going in Style,” because his trademark flourishes are absent here. Braff does a good job keeping everything moving quickly, but there’s nothing personal on display. In fact, the film is so colorful and briskly paced, it seems Braff is auditioning to make the next Marvel movie more than making something meaningful for himself. This is actually a remake of a heist movie of the same name from 1979, directed by Martin (“Midnight Run”) Brest and starring George Burns, Art Carney and Lee Strasberg. The original was much darker, with the bank robbery taking up only the beginning of the film and the final two acts focusing on the very serious consequences of their actions. It’s really fascinating to look at the times these two movies were made in and how different they are because of it. The modern “Going in Style” is light as air and even though we care about all three old fellas, we’re never worried for their safety. Audiences in 2017 are flocking to movies that are heartwarming or escapist, not dark and depressing. If the film was made now with the original’s ending, people would hate it or at the very least it wouldn’t be a
These three will power walk their way into your heart.
financial success. This version of “Going in Style” is a hug from your grandpa. It truly is the cinematic equivalent of a stoned Morgan Freeman playing with puppies—nothing more and nothing less. That doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s a good movie, but it’s not really a bad one, either. SW
Going in Style
B
Dir. Zach Braff Grade: B Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema.
Scenes From a Marriage “Emily” deconstructs faith and love
“W
ill you still like me?” “You’re my husband.” There’s a moment early on in “Emily” in which an argument that could have been mostly philosophical turns into a deconstruction of an entire marriage. It’s harrowing to watch, because it’s like witnessing a massive boulder rolling down a hill toward something precious and irreplaceable. The boulder starts off so slowly it’s hard to imagine no one stopping it from causing all of the destruction before it happens but before you know it it’s far too late. Emily and Nathan have been married for three years. They’re both Christians who even host a weekly Bible study in their living room— except that now, Nathan no longer feels connected to God. He even says that when he prays he feels like he’s speaking to a brick wall. That massive difference between them is part of the thematic shading of the entire film. Nathan now feels bad because Emily married a Christian man, which he
no longer identifies as, so he thinks she’ll be miserable continuing on in their marriage. He feels like he maybe never even was as Christian as he was supposed to be, pretending to be much more devoted than he really was. Emily wants Nathan to search for God in his life again, but that’s the last thing he wants to do. “Emily” is a compelling look at a marriage falling apart under the weight of expectation. In some ways, the film could have played like Christian propaganda or as an agnostic reaction to the glut of Christian films such as “The Case for Christ” and “God’s Not Dead,” released by major studios. Instead, “Emily” seems more interested in how we communicate with those we love than with passing judgment on organized religion. The performances from Rachael Perrell Fosket as Emily and Michael Draper as Nathan are strong, giving the film less of a theatrical feel and something closer to a chamber piece. It’s always easy to follow their train
Ryan Graves
By Jared Rasic
Rachael Perrell Fosket considers her marriage in the Portland indie film, “Emily.”
of thought because they play so much emotion in their eyes. Writer/director Ryan Graves has created a powerful film of ideas that feels designed to raise some fascinating arguments among couples. Men and women are both going to find different meanings with the film. Some will be completely behind Nathan as he burns down his life in his self-imposed identity crisis, while others will find comfort in Emily’s faith... not just in God but also in her marriage.
It’s remarkable that a micro-budget indie out of Portland can inspire such insight, but Graves and company have crafted something much bigger than its modest beginnings would suggest. SW Emily
Dir. Ryan Graves Grade: B+ Tin Pan Theater
B+
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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n “Going in Style,” Morgan Freeman smokes a joint, gets stoned out of his gourd and plays with puppies while giggling. Sometimes that’s really all we need from our movies: A safe and entertaining 90 minutes away from the real world, with recognizable celebrities making us smile. While “Going in Style” isn’t by any stretch of the imagination a memorable motion picture, it’s still a perfectly affable and comforting way to spend an hour and a half smiling. Michael Caine plays Joe, a pensioner who’s losing his home to the bank due to ridiculously high interest rates on a mortgage, which tripled overnight. While he’s at the bank, he witnesses an armed robbery that gives him an idea. A few days later, the company where Joe and his best friends Willie and Albert (a perfectly cast Morgan Freeman and Alan Arkin) used to work is bought out and the three of them lose their pensions. Luckily, Joe just witnessed the perfect way to rob a bank. Director Zach Braff is probably most well known for playing J.D. on “Scrubs,” but is also the writer/director/star of the indie quirk-fests “Garden State” and “Wish I Was Here.”
OUTSIDE EVENTS
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.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / April 27, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Brace & Roll Kayaking Class 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. Cascade Chainbreaker 2017 Race Series Join us for two Wednesday-night short-
track mountain bike races that lead up to the main XC event on May 13th. Wed, April 26 and Wed, May 3.
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). First Monday of every month, 5:30pm. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. Free.
Fat Bike Freeride Rally 2017 With spring Come Watch the Airplanes/Helicopters and Enjoy Award Winning BBQ
Award Winning BBQ at the Bend Airport
Now Open for Dinner
Every Friday Prime Rib & Live Music
Open for Breakfast & Lunch Tuesday - Sunday
BBQ & Cafe
63136 Powell Butte Hwy 2nd Floor 541.797.6136 ThePickledPig.com
40 DAYS TO PERSONAL REVOLUTION BEGINS MAY 2ND AT 7PM
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REGISTER TODAY www.namaspa.com/workshops---events/bend-workshops.html www.namaspa.com/workshops---events/redmond-workshops.html
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in full swing we wanted to get all the fat bike lovers together for a fun morning of lift served riding! Bring your own bike or come demo one for free. Registration is free, however a Sunshine lift ticket or Season Pass is required. April 29, 9am. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Dr.
9K for K9 A 9K & 5K fun run to help the Redmond Friends of K9. Help raise support for new and current K9’s. A 1 mile walk is also available. April 29, 9am-noon. Dry Canyon Trail, Weigand Family Dog Park. 541-279-1704. $15-35. Sisters ‘Better Half’ Marathon Kick off
Learn about local tree varieties during the Arbor Day Heritage Tree Walk in downtown Bend on Friday, 4/28.
Cantastic Summer Series Barrel Race
OBRA co-sanctioned barrel racing. April 27, 6pm. Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond.
Cloudchaser BBQ Lift BBQ’s are back! With all this snow and beautiful weather we are stoked to bring back the fun! Join us at the base of Cloudchaser for a BBQ, beer and fun in the sun. April 30, 11am. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Dr. FootZone Noon Run Lunch hour 3 to 5 mile run. Wednesdays-noon. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free.
Spring with this laid back, family-friendly event. Choose to run or walk a half or quarter marathon on your own or grab a ‘better half’ and complete a half marathon as a relay. Proceeds benefit the Sisters High School Swim Team. April 29, 9am. Sisters, Sisters.
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.
Steel Road Bike Group Ride No-drop
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.
group road bike 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 after to enjoy a drink and share stories. Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Through Aug. 30. Jackson’s Corner Eastside, 1500 NE Cushing Dr. Suite 100. 541-382-2453. Free.
Whitewater Kayaking Clinic Work with a casual feel, if the group wants to work a certain skill that is not already the subject of that particular clinic, our instructors will be happy to accommodate. Alternating weeks we’ll concentrate on specific topics and skills. April 27, 6-8pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541.317.9407. $25.
OUTDOORS 10 Barrel Snow Beach Mike Ryan Band
takes the stage from 12 - 2 pm. Join in on the fun, grab some brews and enjoy the live music outside. The 10 Barrel Snow Beach brings all your favorite beach games to the snow. Giant cornhole, giant croquet, a dunk tank, BBQ and more! West Village base. April 29, noon. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Dr.
Arbor Day Heritage Tree Walk Celebrate
Arbor Day with a Heritage Tree walk around downtown Bend. Begins at the Deschutes Historical Museum. April 28, 5pm. Deschutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave. Free.
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 looking to improve their health. Tuesdays, 7-7:30am. Through Oct. 31. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St. Free.
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.
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 experience welcome. Wednesdays, 6-8pm and Saturdays, 8-10am. Through May 27. 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. WalkStrong 5k and 10k These programs are 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. Through May 29. Synergy Health & Wellness, 361 NE Franklin Ave. Building C. 541323-3488. $125. 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
Hidden Treasure on the Owyhee OUTSIDE Finding In the contentious area in far southeast Oregon, riches of the mineral, agricultural and cultural persuasions abound. By: K.M. Collins and Topher Robertson
Cool runnings on the Owyhee River.
and outside, a mysteriously functional antique gas pump. With such a small customer base, the food and retail selection was impressive, although, word to the wise: Don’t ask for decaf, you will only receive a confused look in return. Joel, the establishment owner, told us he’d been a local for many decades, since his retirement from the army. Chatting over breakfast, topics included the death of Jean Baptiste Charbonneau—son of Sacajawea, the secret to the cafe’s success, locally sourced Basque-style chorizo sausage, news of how the winter’s snow accumulation had driven the river flow up, and of course, its effects on the region’s longtime cattle industry. As outdoor enthusiasts, it didn’t automatically occur to us that the high water flows rafters pray for on the seasonally-navigable Owyhee are also an indicator that ranchers had endured a rough winter. The diversity of perspectives between recreationalist and rural locals became more clear at the float registry, when I noticed a pamphlet reading “Our Land Our Voice, No Owyhee Canyonlands Monument without a vote from Congress,” a campaign created by The Owyhee Basin Stewardship Coalition. Admittedly, by the time we launched and three days and nights slipped by, I surprised myself and altogether forgot about Joel, Rome Station and our treasure hunt. Floating through narrow passages with millions of years of interlaced lava flow
and lakebed sediment, alternating river deposits and eruptions, distractions were aplenty. If the rocks weren’t engrossing enough, tallying birds was. Calls bounced from canyon wall to wall, drawing our attention skyward, to Harris and Red-tailed Hawk, swallows, Sandhill cranes, chukars, owls, and perhaps the most charming, the Canyon wren. Most ashamedly, I confess to being led astray by the cold, with the gasket in the neck of my dry suit torn all the way through. In retrospect, over the winter’s perils, I am certain the farmers and cows had more to complain about, but alas, we are victims of our own reality. I was no longer looking for the artifacts, until the fourth day when Robinson reminded me that now was the time to keep an eye out. We stopped twice for a binocular scout from the shoreline. On the third try, Robinson found the booty: drawing after drawing, cast upon a coat of rusty patina. Enormous basalt talus, angular boulders coaxed downhill from their rimrock terrace by a persuasive eroding river. These surfaces made for practical canvases when hunting parties paused for a drink and waited for prey to do the same. Immersed in the Owyhee Canyonlands for five days, we saw just a small sampling of the riches the region has to offer. As Oregon State University natural resources graduate student Alex Scagliotti pointed out for us, the Owyhee region contains a vast assortment of valued resources for many
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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hough we spent hours speculating as to the whereabouts of the rock art, in my wildest dreams I didn’t hope to find it. The previous spring, my raft guide Topher Robertson had rowed the same 65-mile stretch of the Owyhee River, from Rome to Birch Creek, and hadn’t found the cache. This time, we pored over maps, library books and Oregon Field Guide clips, accruing lists of potentially relevant landmarks that would lead us to the petroglyphs— like pirates in preparation for a treasure hunt. The morning of our put-in, we ventured into Rome Station, the only diner in the sparsely populated “onehorse town.” Sensibly located down the road from the boat ramp, the outpost offered more than just a hot meal and caffeine. Shelves sported a selection of gold pans, fishing tackle, milk, bread and convenience accoutrements,
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Elusive petroglyphs reward those who make the journey to find them.
different and often competing stakeholders, including those concerned with heritage, game, grazing, mineral extraction and petroleum. As an ill-equipped stowaway on the rafting trip of a lifetime, I feel lucky we found the rock art while it was still there to be found. Robinson, also a recreation resource management graduate, captured a potential bridge between divisions over the Canyon, saying, “All parties can agree the Owyhee contains many extraordinary resources and the region’s many treasures deserve careful consideration regarding their future and sustainability.” SW
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FIND YOUR PLACE IN BEND
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$189,000
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Skjersaa Group | Duke Warner Realty 1033 NW Newport Ave. Bend, OR 97703
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650 Sylvan Loop, Bend, OR 97701
while using reclaimed timber for architectural focal points. Mixed Use, Zoned DC (Downtown Commercial District) 1,869 sqft residential and almost 1,500 sqft in commercial. This is the opportunity you've been
Boonesborough Location! This well maintained 2-story log home sits on 2.4 acres of low maintenance property, which backs up to public lands for additional privacy. The home features master on main floor, open loft style 2nd floor w/oversized windows that look out to stunning views of the Cascade Mt range. Updated with a mini split ductless heating system, the front deck & stairs are made of Trex Decking. A must see for anyone looking for that Central Oregon lifestyle, while just minutes from all that Bend has to offer!
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TAKE ME HOME
By Nick Nayne Principal Broker, The Broker Network, LLC
The Struggle With Low Housing Inventory
A
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
on the market because of the uncertainty of being able to find a replacement home. • Mortgage rates — as mortgage rates rise, people are less likely to move and prefer to keep their lower interest rate. • Home Prices — although home prices are rising, for those who bought at pre-meltdown levels, the prices are not quite yet high enough to pay off what they owe. • Housing Starts — Freddie Mac states that the projected 1.26 million starts nationwide will not be sufficient to meet the 1.7 million projected need. The good news for April is that mortgage rates have been decreasing, but the lower inventory is pushing up prices not just here in Bend, but almost all across the nation. I do agree with the report that 2016 will go down as housing’s best year in the past decade.
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 info@shevlinlanding.com / www.shevlinlanding.com 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
Pioneer Park Condimium 1565 NW Wall Street #104 $199,000 1st floor studio, completely remodeled, move-in ready. Fully furnished. Near park, river and downtown. Has an active vacation rental license. Maria Halsey, Broker 541.788.0876 Listed by My Lucky House
HOME PRICE ROUND-UP
Pioneer Park Condimium
Photos and listing info from Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service
1565 NW Wall Street #118 $243,000 Beautiful condo next to Pioneer Park is close to the river and downtown Bend. Comes fully furnished with an active vacation rental license. Maria Halsey, Broker 541.788.0876 Listed by My Lucky House
LOW
MID
HIGH
60982 Honkers Ln., Bend, OR 97702 3 beds, 2 baths, 1,032 square feet, .15 acre lot Built in 2003 $249,900
63325 Boyd Acres Rd., Bend, OR 97701 3 beds, 2.5 baths, 1,901 square feet, .14 acre lot Built in 2015 $359,900
3492 N.W. Braid Dr., Bend, OR 97703 3 beds, 3 baths, 3,418 square feet, .52 acre lot Built in 2004 $1,079,000
Listed by The Associates Realty Group
Listed by Homesmart Central Realty
Listed by John L. Scott Central Or Bend
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
Lot Listing $64,500 2648 NE 6th Dr, Redmond, OR Residential building lot located in a quiet Northeast Redmond neighborhood. Diamond Bar Ranch. Tony Levison, Broker 541.977.1852 Listed by Windermere Real Estate
33 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
ccording to the April 18 financial release by Freddie Mac, the low inventory levels are continuing to push prices up and there’s concern because the rise is outpacing job income growth. They reported that for the month of March, higher home prices combined with higher interest rates decreased affordability. Many statistical reports, including our local reports, are showing a particularly dramatic decrease in the inventory of starter homes. According to the report, the number of starter homes for sale is at the lowest level in over 10 years. While it’s good news that building permits are increasing, they are not expected to keep up with demand. This is true of our local market as well, where new building permits are not sufficient to keep up with the demand. The report explains the reasons for the low inventory level by citing four different factors: • Fear of moving — people are afraid to move and put their homes
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SCIENCE ADVICE GODDESS Caveheart
I’m a woman in my 30s. I love parties and talking to people, and thank God, because I attend networking events for work. My boyfriend, on the other hand, is an introvert, hates talking to strangers, and loathes “shindigs.” How do we balance my longing to go to parties with his desire to stay home? —Party Girl Taking an introvert to a party can be a challenge. On the other hand, if it’s a Fourth of July party, you know where to find him: hiding in the bathtub with the dogs. I actually have personal experience in this area. Like you, I’m an extrovert — which is to say, a party host’s worry isn’t that I won’t have anyone to talk to: it’s that I’ll tackle three people and waterboard them with sangria till they tell me their life story. Also like you, I have a boyfriend who’s an introvert. For him, attending a party is like being shoved into an open grave teeming with live cockroaches — though, compassionately, it also includes an open bar. This isn’t to say introverts are dysfunctional. They’re not. They’re differently functional. Brain imaging research by cognitive scientist Debra L. Johnson and her colleagues found that in introverts, sensory input from experience led to more blood flow in the brain (amounting to more
stimulation). The path it took was longer and twistier than in extroverts and had a different destination: frontal areas we use for inward thinking like planning, remembering, and problem-solving. So, introverts live it up, too; they just do it on the inside. Extroverts’ brain scans revealed a more direct path for stimuli — with blood flowing straight to rear areas of the brain used for sensory processing, like listening and touching. They also have less overall blood flow — translating (in combination with a different neurochemical response) to a need for more social hoo-ha to feel “fed.” Sometimes, you’ll really want your boyfriend there with you at a party — for support, because you enjoy his company, or maybe just to show him off (kind of like a Louis Amy Alkon Vuitton handbag with a penis). But understanding that “shindigs” give his brain a beating, consider whether you could sometimes take a friend. When he accompanies you, maybe set a time limit and be understanding if he and the dog retreat to the den. Sure, mingling makes you feel better, but pushing an introvert to do it is akin to forcing an extrovert to spend an entire week with only the cat and a fern. Before long, they’re on with the cable company. Tech support: “What seems to be the problem?” Extrovert: “I’m lonely! Talk to me! Have you ever been arrested? And do you think I should go gluten-free?”
(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).
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ASTROLOGY
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): According to my reading of the astrological omens, it’s time for you to take a break from the magic you have been weaving since your birthday in 2016. That’s why I’m suggesting that you go on a brief sabbatical. Allow your deep mind to fully integrate the lessons you’ve been learning and the transformations you have undergone over the past eleven months. In a few weeks, you’ll be ready to resume where you left off. For now, though, you require breathing room. Your spiritual batteries need time to recharge. The hard work you’ve done should be balanced by an extended regimen of relaxed playtime.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Apparently, a lot of kids in the UK don’t like to eat vegetables. In response, food researchers in that country marketed a variety of exotic variations designed to appeal to their palate. The new dishes included chocolate-flavored carrots, pizza-flavored corn, and cheese-and-onion-flavored cauliflower. I don’t recommend that you get quite so extreme in trying to broaden your own appeal, Cancerian. But see if you can at least reach out to your potential constituency with a new wrinkle or fresh twist. Be imaginative as you expand the range of what your colleagues and clientele have to choose from. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In speaking about the arduous quest to become one’s authentic self, writer Thomas Merton used the example of poets who aspire to be original but end up being imitative. “Many poets never succeed in being themselves,” he said. “They never get around to being the particular poet they are intended to be by God. They never become the person or artist who is called for by all of the circumstances of their individual lives. They waste their years in vain efforts to be some other poet. They wear out their minds and bodies in a hopeless endeavor to have somebody else’s experiences or write somebody else’s poems.” I happen to believe that this is a problem for non-poets, as well. Many of us never succeed in becoming ourselves. Luckily for you, Leo, in the coming weeks and months you will have an unprecedented chance to become more of who you really are. To expedite the process, work on dissolving any attraction you might have to acting like someone other than yourself.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): On numerous occasions, French acrobat Charles Blondin walked across a tightrope that spanned the gorge near Niagara Falls. His cable was three and a quarter inches in diameter, 1,100 feet long, and 160 feet above the Niagara River. Once he made the entire crossing by doing back flips and somersaults. Another time he carried a small stove on his back, stopped midway to cook an omelet, and ate the meal before finishing. Now would be an excellent time for you to carry out your personal equivalent of his feats, Virgo. What daring actions have you never tried before even though you’ve been sufficiently trained or educated to perform them well? LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Ready for some subterranean journeys? They may not involve literal explorations of deep caverns and ancient tunnels and underground streams. You may not stumbleupon lost treasure and forgotten artifacts and valuable ruins. But then again, you might. At the very least, you will encounter metaphorical versions of some of the above. What mysteries would you love to solve? What secrets would be fun to uncover? What shadows would you be excited to illuminate?
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Why would you guzzle mind-clouding moonshine when you will eventually get a chance to sip a heart-reviving tonic? Why spoil your appetite by loading up on non-nu-
tritious hors d’oeuvres when a healthy feast will be available sooner than you imagine? I advise you to suppress your compulsion for immediate gratification. It may seem impossible for you to summon such heroic patience, but I know you can. And in the long run, you’ll be happy if you do.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “You’ll always be my favorite what-if.” Many years ago, I heard that phrase whispered in my ear. It came from the mouth of a wonder ful-but-impossible woman. We had just decided that it was not a good plan, as we had previously fantasized, to run away and get married at Angkor Wat in Cambodia and then spend the next decade being tour guides who led travelers on exotic getaways to the world’s sacred sites. “You’ll always be my favorite what-if” was a poignant but liberating moment. It allowed us to move on with our lives and pursue other dreams that were more realistic and productive. I invite you to consider triggering a liberation like that sometime soon.
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CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): I’d love to see you increase the number of people, places, and experiences you love, as well as the wise intensity with which you love them. From an astrological perspective, now is an excellent time to upgrade your appreciation and adoration for the whole world and everything in it. To get you in the mood, I’ll call your attention to some unfamiliar forms of ardor you may want to pursue: eraunophilia, an attraction to thunder and lightning; cymophilia, a fascination with waves and waviness; chorophilia, a passion for dancing; asymmetriphobia, a zeal for asymmetrical things; sapiophilia, an erotic enchantment with intelligence.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You could go online and buy an antique Gothic throne or a psychedelic hippie couch to spruce up your living room. For your bathroom, you could get a Japanese “wonder toilet,” complete with a heated seat, automated bidet, and white noise generator. Here’s another good idea: You could build a sacred crazy altar in your bedroom where you will conduct rituals of playful liberation. Or how about this? Acquire a kit that enables you to create spontaneous poetry on your refrigerator door using tiny magnets with evocative words written on them. Can you think of other ideas to revitalize your home environment? It’s high time you did so. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Among America’s 50 states, Texas has the third-highest rate of teenage pregnancies. Uncoincidentally, sex education in Texas is steeped in ignorance. Most of its high schools offer no teaching about contraception other than to advise students to avoid sex. In the coming weeks, Pisces, you can’t afford to be as deprived of the truth as those kids. Even more than usual, you need accurate information that’s tailored to your precise needs, not fake news or ideological delusions or self-serving propaganda. Make sure you gather insight and wisdom from the very best sources. That’s how you’ll avoid behavior that’s irrelevant to your life goals. That’s how you’ll attract experiences that serve your highest good. ARIES (March 21-April 19): I have misgivings when I witness bears riding bicycles or tigers dancing on their hind legs or Aries people wielding diplomatic phrases and making careful compromises at committee meetings. While I am impressed by the disciplined expression of primal power, I worry for the soul of the creature that is behaving with such civilized restraint. So here’s my advice for you in the coming weeks: Take advantage of opportunities to make deals and forge win-win situations. But also keep a part of your fiery heart untamed. Don’t let people think they’ve got you all figured out.
Homework: What’s the most beautiful thing you’ve ever done? Testify! Go to Realastrology.com and click on “Email Rob.” © Copyright 2017 Rob Brezsny
550 NW Franklin Ave. Suite #328 (in the Franklin Crossing building)
benddac.com 541-323-2322
35 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “One of the advantages of being disorderly,” said author A. A. Milne, “is that one is constantly making exciting discoveries.” I wouldn’t normally offer this idea as advice to a methodical dynamo like you. But my interpretation of the astrological omens compels me to override my personal theories about what you need. I must suggest that you consider experimenting with jaunty, rambunctious behavior in the coming days, even if it generates some disorder. The potential reward? Exciting discoveries, of course.
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BARTER BELIEVER
WELLNESS EVENTS 15 Dimensional Chakra Exploration Class Explore how to turn each chakra into a
‘color ray’ and become the embodiment of each ray. Tuesdays, 6:30-8:30pm. Gayle Zeigler, Pilot Butte Area. 925-366-3091. $225 or can pay weekly.
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.
Complete Relaxation Empowers Everyday Life Join us to learn about a simple
practice, which guarantees complete relaxation, mental and emotional stability, harmony in your relationships and much more. April 27, 6:458pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. $10-$20.
Diabetes Prevention Program The goal is to make lifestyle changes which include healthy eating and physical activity. Tuesdays, 1-2pm. Through June 6. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave. 541-322-7446. Thursdays, 1-2pm. Through June 8. Mike Maier Building, 1130 NW Harriman. 541-322-7446. Free.
Embody Love Movement Weekend For
young women (age 12-17). Saturday’s 3-hour transformational workshop is a journey inward towards more self acceptance and love. Sunday, Dr. Melody Moore shares her experiences as a Clinical Psychologist, yoga instructor, author, social entrepreneur, and founder of Embody Love Movement. April 29, 1-4pm and April 30, 11:30am-1pm. Groove Yoga, 1740 NW Pence Ln.
Fearless Living: Tools For A Joyous Life Gain control over your energy levels, wor-
ries, anxiety, improve sleep, refine and update thought patterns, and grow your confidence in new situations. Wednesdays, 6:30-8pm and Wednesdays, 10:30am-noon Through May 24. Riverside Wellness, 2955 NW HWY 97 #200. 360607-7226. $169 6-week series, $39 Supply Fee, Drop-in avail.
Free Yoga Keep your body and mind healthy
and well. Tuesdays-Thursdays-Saturdays, 7:45-8:30am. Plantae, 2115 NE Hwy 20 Ste 107. 541-640-8295. Free.
From Conflict to Connection This CEU
qualified Compassionate/ Nonviolent Communication course shows participants how to build trust, safety, and connection in the workplace. Thursdays, 6-8pm. Through May 4. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way Suite 200. 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.
Healing Clinic II - Meditation Work with the four principles of spontaneous healing. April 29, 1-5pm. Justyn Livingston | Madeleine Simmons, 1012 SW Emkay Drive. 541.731.3780. $85- $100. Healing the Loss Paradigm In this 9 week
series, we explore how The Loss Paradigm is manifesting in our lives. Thursdays, 6:30-8:30pm. Through May 4. Gayle Zeigler, Pilot Butte Area. 925-366-3091. $10 per week.
Healing Vibrations Meditation Group
Learn tools to transform old, limiting beliefs into life-affirming patterns. Sundays, 6:15-7:15pm. Through May 28. Yogalab - Justyn Livingston, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 170. 541-731-3780. Sliding scale $8-20.
Men & Stress Performance Learn the causes of stress and reduce the negative effects of stress. Let go of anger, manage anxiety and improve relationships. Call Dan Anderson, M.A. to reserve your place 541-390-3133.. Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. Old Mill District, Upper Terrace Drive. 541-390-3133. $25/week. Practice Groups (Compassionate Communication/NVC) Through practicing
with others, we can learn and grow using real life experiences to become more compassionate with ourselves and others. Some NVC experience necessary. Tuesdays, 6-7:30pm and Wednesdays, 4-5:30 and 6-7:30pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way Suite 200. 541-3506517. 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. Thursdays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. By donation. Relaxation/Qigong Class - 4 weeks
Learn meditation not movement, energy work and visualization and contract/relax techniques. Improves sleep and decreases pain. Pre-registration required. Mondays-Sundays, 5:306:30pm. Through May 9. Blissful Heart, 29 NW Greeley St. 541-420-5875. $48; $15 CD optional.
The Vance Stance Tired of being in pain? Get to the root of why you are tight, crooked, suffering. In this series of 2-hour 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. 541-330-9070. $180, 12 classes. Tai Chi Grandmaster Franklin has 50+ years
of experience, practice and knowledge. The focus of his teaching is on the individual. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:45-10:45am. Grandmaster Franklin, 1601NW Newport Ave. 623-203-4883. $50. Tuesdays, 1-2pm. La Pine Parks & Recreation, 16406 First St. 541-536-2223. $30.
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. Email Max for weekly details and locations: max@footzonebend.com. Tuesdays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. Free. Wade Into Water-Based Exercise Learn the basics of aquatic exercise and discover this great option for improving your general health and optimizing your rehabilitation. Taught on land, but feel free to bring your swimwear for the possibility of trying the exercises in the pool. May 1, 6:15-7:15pm. Peak Performance Physical Therapy - Redmond, 450 NW Greenwood Ave. 541-923-0410. Free.
Yoga 5 Week Intro Course Learn poses
safely and with attention to correct alignment for maximum benefit. Balance, strength, flexibility and mindfulness. yogaofbend.com. Thursdays, 6-7:15pm. Through May 25. Iyengar Yoga of Bend, 660 NE Third St. Suite 5. 541-318-1186. $55 or $15 drop-in.
Yoga for 50+ Life is already fast paced. Yoga
doesn’t need to be! Learn to practice safely and still engage in poses vigorously. Detailed instruction and attention to alignment bring one into the present moment in mind, body and spirit. yogaofbend.com Mondays, 11am-12:15pm. Iyengar Yoga of Bend, 660 NE Third St. Suite 5. 541-318-1186.
37 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
BMC Walk With a Doc 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. Free.
Laughter Yoga Proven to reduce stress and increase health, it’s a great team-building activity leaving your group energized and relaxed. Fourth Wednesday of every month, 8-9am. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541330-004. Free.
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SMOKE SIGNALS
By Josh Jardine
Cannabis and the Resistance
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ince November, I’ve had some issues getting this column turned in. It’s not writer’s block, nor is it because there isn’t anything happening in the world of cannabis. In fact, I get more press releases and updates about new cannabis products, events, legislative activity and research than I can keep track of most weeks. No, it’s based more on feelings that many of you may share—that things in this country are on a very bad path for many of our neighbors and friends, and it makes writing about cannabis feel somewhat… futile. Example? Reading about heartbreaking ICE raids and subsequent deportation of “Dreamers,” and then trying to muster excitement over reviewing a new strain. Which has led me to think about the role cannabis has played in “the resistance,” and what it may be able to do as we move forward. (Let’s establish that while consuming cannabis has been an anti-establishment action for years, it needs to be paired with action. So doing dab hits while pontificating over “how things need to change, man, like, seriously” while not taking any action other than prepping another dab is about as radical and revolutionary as stuffing your face with fast food. And no, taking action does not include posting “sign this petition” on FB, or commenting with a frowny emoji face over something upsetting you read there.) With some exceptions, conservatives have always hated cannabis. You can trace it back to Harry Anslinger, who made the use of cannabis by minorities his rallying cry to move the U.S. to criminalize it, hysterically insisting it would lead to rape and worse. Once those seeds of fear were sown, they grew up big and strong, which moved Nixon years later to state in 1971 recordings that, “On the marijuana thing, I have very strong convictions. … because of the people that are, frankly, promoting it but they’re not good people.” This wasn’t a one-off comment; Nixon Domestic Policy chief John Ehrlichman said: “The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people, You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin. And then criminalizing both
heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.” Flash forward through the “Just Say No” years and legislation introduced that could land a cannabis grower/ dealer life in prison without parole, to April 2016, when our future Attorney General Jeff Sessions stated, “Knowledge that this drug is dangerous, you cannot play with it, it is not funny, it’s not something to laugh about . . . and to send that message with clarity that good people don’t smoke marijuana.” Except they do, and that’s where we need to step up. Grow your own? Give your extra to processors who turn it into cannabis oil for the sick and dying. Replacing expensive and harmful pharmaceuticals with a plant you grew enrages the detractors. If you don’t grow your own, buy through the dispensary system. The taxes help our neighbors, and establish a measurable baseline of users and potential revenue. Demonstrating that cannabis consumers are an economic force could help us stave off changes in recreational cannabis laws. Sell cannabis or in the cannabis industry? Support a local nonprofit and make it clear than the money came from cannabis.
THE REC ROOM Crossword “Mic Drop”-- [silence!]
By Matt Jones
Pearl’s Puzzle
Difficulty Level
★★★★
©2017 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com)
39 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.
U N I T E D
A S H
The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote:
“Spring… when it is summer ______ and winter ______.” —Charles Dickens
ANSWER TO LAST WEEKS PUZZLES
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Alarm clock button
1 Hit with force
6 Last name of a trio of singing brothers
2 Flight stat
11 1040 preparer
3 Greet someone
14 “It is ___ told by an idiot”: Macbeth
4 “Death of a Salesman” director Kazan
15 Dizzying images 16 Set your sights 17 Bialik of “The Big Bang Theory” 18 Highly important cloak? 20 Goes on 22 Lightning McQueen’s pal
5 Paint in a kindergarten classroom 6 Ledger role, with “The” 7 Unwrap 8 Bill-killing votes 9 Biceps site 10 Durability 11 Stampede members
23 ___ kwon do
12 Load up with
25 “To ___ is human ...”
13 Punish by fine
26 Freezer bag brand
19 Crash for a few
27 Draw
21 Beforehand, for short
29 Novelist Turgenev
23 “Forbidden” fragrance brand name
31 180∞ from WSW
24 “QI” regular Davies
32 Salad dressing with a light, woody taste?
26 Unpredictable move
35 Singles, in Spain
28 “Back in the ___” (Beatles song)
36 Shirt that’s seen better days 37 “My Way” lyricist Paul 41 Business course that draws heavily on Julius Caesar? 46 “Ha! I kill me!” alien 49 Batman foe
29 Foolheaded 30 “Luka” singer Suzanne 33 Neighbor of Azerbaijan 34 Skatepark fixture 38 Sensory system for some primitive invertebrates 39 Have down pat
50 Comedy style based on “yes, and”
40 Dirt bikes’ relatives, briefly
51 Highest point
42 First American college to go co-ed
53 Show that bronies are fans of, for short
43 Farmer Yasgur of Woodstock
54 Bugs and Rabbits, e.g.
44 Country singer Vince
55 “That was ___-death experience”
45 Akihito, e.g.
56 Having sides of different lengths, as triangles go
46 Makes use (of)
59 Rip on one type of lettuce?
48 Largest inland city in California
61 Samurai without a master
52 Either T in “Aristotle”
64 Chaney of “The Wolf Man”
53 Sail poles
65 “That ain’t gonna work” 66 “Einstein on the Beach,” for one 67 ___-Caps (theater candy) 68 Representative Devin in 2017 news 69 Fix a friend’s listing in a Facebook photo, e.g.
47 Thomas of “Reno 911!”
56 Read a QR code, e.g. 57 Road work marker 58 “That ain’t gonna work” 60 Ft. Worth campus 62 Glass on NPR 63 Badger repeatedly
“Think of bicycles as rideable art that can just about save the world. —Grant Petersen
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 17 / April 27, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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