VOLU ME 2 1 / IS SUE 2 9 / J ULY 2 0 , 2017
THE DARK SIDE OF THE ECLIPSE
MORE VISITORS = MORE TRAFFICKING PG 07 MEXI-STYLE LAGERS
AN ODE TO SUMMER’S LIGHT BEER EXPLOSION PG 35 PANDORA MOTH
WHY NOT TO BUST OUT THE BUG SPRAY PG 43
DOPE TIMES
Big changes to Oregon’s drug laws are coming GUIDES INSIDE
2017 Deschutes County FAIR
p. 9
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ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR Jared Rasic jared@bendsource.com STAFF REPORTER Magdalena Bokowa magdalena@bendsource.com CALENDAR EDITOR & MUSIC WRITER Anne Pick anne@bendsource.com COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts BEER REVIEWER Kevin Gifford micro@bendsource.com FREELANCERS Josh Jardine, Nick Nayne, Howard Leff, Jim Anderson, Kelly Lawer SYNDICATED CONTENT Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Brendan Emett Quigley, E.J. Pettinger, Pearl Stark, Tom Tomorrow, Shannon Wheeler PRODUCTION MANAGER Wyatt Gaines wyatt@bendsource.com GRAPHIC DESIGNER Esther Gray esther@bendsource.com
Opinion – O, Dam.
p.4
It’s here again! That perennial discussion about what to do with Mirror Pond. We tell you why dredging is the B-grade option.
News – Eclipse Encounters
p.7
Feature – Dope Times
p.9
A bill that would de-felonize many of Oregon’s drug arrests now sits on the governor’s desk. Magdalena Bokowa reports.
Sound – The Avett Brothers
p.15
Let’s face it. When it comes to the Avett Brothers, this crew says they can practically do no wrong. We sit down with the band ahead of their Amphitheater show.
Micro – Mexican-inspired lagers
p.35
Not ready for that heavy IPA? Never fear, Mexican-lager-inspired beers are here! And they’re local. Kevin Gifford has the deets.
Nature – Pandora Moth
p.43
Inundated by the Pandora moth? Jim Anderson tells you why the best approach now is just a little patience.
On the Cover: "Flight 1 & 2" by Nicole Fontana. Look for Fontana's work to appear on the back of the Tower Theatre early August. fontanapainting.com Call for Artists: If you're interested in being a SW featured artist, email: wyatt@bendsource.com.
Opinion 4 Mailbox 5 News 7 Feature 9 Our Picks
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Ahead of the Great American Eclipse, local experts are warning about the dark side of the event: The traffickers who may come with the crowds.
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VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
EDITOR Nicole Vulcan editor@bendsource.com
IN THIS ISSUE
COVER
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OPINION
Oh, Dam. It’s Back.
Deschutes River dredgers want your taxes
L
ike us, you’ve probably grown tired of the endless history lessons surrounding the bend in the Deschutes River affectionately known as “Mirror Pond.” The Pacific Power “dam,” which has created an abnormal and unhealthy part of the river now full of silt, continues to attract the attention of folks who put the idea of a healthy river with recreational benefits below the notion of a shallow bit of water that, if the angle is right, may reflect a mountain. This warm, flat, now obscure part of the river is often touted as “iconic,” because it once graced postcards and ads in the region in the distant past. This kind of sophistry is dangerous and really should stop. Yes, it is fatiguing to hear about this issue once again, but now is not the time for reasonable folks to turn their attention to other matters. Like the torpid flow of the Deschutes running through Drake Park, the flat river supporters are moving forward with the notion that taxpayers should fund the dredging of the river. The unreasonable passion that some in our community have attached to the dredging is now flowing into meetings with public entities including the City of Bend, Bend Park and Recreation District, Visit Bend and private entities such as Pacific Power. The dredging of the river will cost taxpayers millions of dollars, and ultimately, will once again kick the can of restoration down the road for another generation. Make no mistake: dredging is not a fix. No one is proposing that dredging is even a viable solution. And yet, proponents, in the face of this
problem, continue to be motivated by their old-fashioned notions of “iconic” landmarks to support the allocation of millions of tax dollars. We could make a list of the myriad government services and nonprofit agencies that would thrive with the receipt of these monies instead. But we don’t have to. We are sure, gentle reader, that you can, in a short amount of time, think of at least one organization you would rather give these monies to than the dredger man. Thankfully, Bend has changed over the years. We are an active community—socially, environmentally and physically. For this reason, people come to our community in overwhelming numbers. They don’t come to Bend to stand with their hands in their pockets and marvel at man-made grandeur. Instead, they immerse themselves in the natural beauty that remains in the few places we haven’t ruined. But, perhaps we are wrong on this issue. Maybe the idea of a “mirror pond” that requires millions of dollars to sustain is something the community does want. We may never know unless this allocation of funds is put to a vote. While we don’t support dredging, we do support the will of the community, and if Bend wants to allocate hard-earned taxes to dredging, then so be it. Let’s have a ballot measure and really get after this issue once and for all. In this way, we can circumvent the back room deals and political pressure surrounding this important issue and come up with the very solution the community craves. SW
O
OPINION Letters
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LIGHTMETER
5 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Bend’s Approach to Un-checked Growth, Dumb and Dumber I read with interest, The Source’s “Eyes on the Money.” Certain things jumped out. Over the next two years, the City will allocate nearly $60 million for updated/ expanded sewer service to accommodate and enable local development interests, while spending a meager $5.2 million for “street preservation” for its citizens. Now that’s telling. As a resident who lives on an unmaintained, dirt (not even gravel) street, one block from Wall St., the other 11 households and I are wondering when the City is going to take care of people who are already here and quit focusing on the folks they are trying to lure to Bend in the future. Perhaps money could be shifted from Visit Bend and other self-serving, business-booster organizations which consume “transient room tax” revenues to bring the City’s existing infrastructure up to snuff. And besides, don’t we have enough tourists and California emigrants as it is? But back to growth and planning. I’d like to challenge Mayor Roat’s idea of trying to accommodate Bend’s skyrocketing growth, “Because it’s coming and no one can stop it.” Well Mr. Mayor, that’s because a council that’s joined at the hip with the Chamber of Commerce and builders/developers has no desire to control runaway growth, much less stop it. And there appears to be no interest in applying “smart growth” strategies. You know, like incorporating the concepts of “livability”: creating distinctive, attractive communities with a strong sense of place; or making development decisions that are predictable, fair and cost-effective. Why not follow the lead of progressive places like Boulder and Aspen, CO; Brea, CA; Silver Springs, MD who successfully tapped the brakes on growth? Maybe you can’t “stop it” Mr. Mayor, even if you wanted to, but you can do a hell of a better job of planning for and controlling it. But that will take leadership and the guts to take on the very supporters that put you in that chair. Finally, there’s City Manager King’s call for a “gut check,” pondering if Bend’s economy is “sustainable.” One question: Were you here in 2009 Mr. King? That, in itself, is ample reason to take another look at The Source’s Opinion piece on pursuing a City Charter Amendment. This town is in need of some serious reflection and change. And we’re highly unlikely to get that with the same governmental system, the same recycled “leaders” and the good-ole-boy influences that sustain it. — Harry Williamson
IN RESPONSE TO, INTERIOR SECRETARY RYAN ZINK TOURS CASCADE-SISKIYOU NATIONAL MONUMENT WITH REP. WALDEN (7/15) I am in District 2 of Oregon. Please don’t sell off public land. I value being able to hike, camp, fish and explore public lands along with thousands of other Oregonians. Selling it off seems like it would only benefit a handful of companies. — Emily Barnes Zamarripa, via facebook.com
DEAR MIDDLE-AGED MAN DRIVING THE BROWN PORSCHE As I carefully pulled out onto Galveston avenue this lovely Sunday afternoon, imagine my surprise when I glanced in my rearview mirror to see your angry face holding up the F.U. finger at me. I truly did not see you coming down Galveston and you speeding up to ride my bumper could not and would not change that fact. There’s a few things I’ve learned living in Bend for almost 20 years direct from downtown Chicago — and one of them is to be very careful of how we react to one another on the road. This is a small town and I just might be the owner of your favorite restaurant or on the board of your children’s school (or perhaps grandchildren in your case), or we might belong to the same club, etc. You catch my drift? How embarrassing to be caught flicking off one’s own neighbor or dry cleaner?! Believe me, I’ve been there. But I learned fast. Bendites, do not flick people off or honk. Like ever. You might as well wear a sign that says TOURIST or a bumper sticker that says “I just moved here with my big city attitude and I am still adjusting. Forgive me.” We all have those days on the road — and I am guilty of it too — but the biggest difference I have found driving in a small town is that people actually give the other drivers the benefit of the doubt. Meaning, I did look very carefully and I am glad we did not have an accident, but next time you may want to consider that the person did not actually see you, instead of believing the worst: that I pulled out in front of you just to piss you off? Ummm...how likely is that, really? As our town’s infrastructure is stretched to the limit, it’s a great opportunity to remember that we are all just doing our best out there. Thanks “Porsche Man” for inspiring me to speak up! — Tory Junkin
@cookbycolor flexing their creative muscle with this Oregon bounty! 'Tis the season for healthy eating, everyone. Tag @sourceweekly to be featured in Lightmeter!
IN RESPONSE TO, UNSOLICITED ACCOLADES (7/5) How do you feel about all of the eyeballs you are giving to Outside Magazine? Seriously — at this point it is best for us as a community to ignore the “best ofs” and the boosters and just get on with trying to solve the problems our addiction to tourism have caused us before we kill the goose that lays the golden egg. Maybe the Source needs to go cold turkey on interviews with Visit Bend. To paraphrase Upton Sinclair — it is difficult to get a man to understand a problem when his salary requires that he not understand it. — John Mundy via facebook.com I’m over it. Can’t even go to my favorite places without 2 hour waits or packed parking lots. Solitude is gone. Cost of living is outpacing the salaries of the people who have made Bend great. — Mike Arrera, via facebook.com
LETTER OF THE WEEK
Laura, We haven’t yet switched to glossy paper, but we do want to be “best” at those things too! Thanks for keeping it real, and come on in for your gift card to Palate. Next up: Bend gets a nod from “Dwell” and/or “Architectural Digest” for best affordable housing solutions! We can do it, Benditos! — Nicole Vulcan, Editor
E.J. Pettinger’s
copyrighted 2017
Mild Abandon
I would so much rather be “best at” things like living wages, affordable housing, infrastructure, and homeless prevention. And I wish that type of thing was lauded in glossy magazines. — Laura Camacho, via facebook.com “At first, we thought he was just a jazz baby, but now they’re saying he might be Trotskyiotic.”
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IN RESPONSE TO EYES ON THE MONEY (6/28)
BREAKFAST | LUNCH | DINNER
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / July 20, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Farm to Table
SIDE NOTES No charges for police in deadly shooting; family seeks damages By Nicole Vulcan The Oregon Department of Justice has cleared the officers involved in a deadly shooting last December. Officers stopped Michael Tyler Jacques in downtown Bend after receiving reports that Jacques was driving erratically. Oregon State Police said officers first used a taser on Jacques before shooting him. Officials placed Scott Schaier and Marc Tisher on administrative leave following the shooting. Schaier is back on duty, Lt. Clint Burleigh of Bend Police told the Source Weekly Tuesday, while Tisher remains on leave. Last week, the Oregon DOJ released a report stating investigators did not have enough evidence to find criminal liability in the shooting. The family now plans to file a civil lawsuit, according to the Jacques family attorney Jennifer Coughlin. “This is not unexpected,” Coughlin said of the DOJ findings. “However, the Department of Justice letter honestly raises more questions than it does answers, and our job is now to pursue vigorously, on behalf of the family, whether or not Mr. Jacques’ constitutional rights were violated.” Coughlin says she plans to obtain the entire file related to the investigation, and also to conduct her own interviews with eyewitnesses before seeking damages.
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Bend Police arrest a California man in connection with sex crimes involving a 14 year old By Magdalena Bokowa
Eastside
541.382.1751 | 1500 NE CUSHING SUITE 100 JACKSONSCORNSERBEND
Bend Police have arrested a California man who they say sexually assaulted a 14-year-old local girl. Officers from the City of Bend Police Department say Patrick Green arrived in Bend on July 10 from Long Beach, Calif., to meet with the girl at the Bend Value Inn. Police say Green knowingly engaged in sexual intercourse with the female inside the motel room and admitted to knowing she was under the age of 18. Green and the female met on social media and had been texting and exchanging picture messages for over a month, police say. The alleged perpetrator told police he came to Bend to visit the girl—and also to sightsee. The girl’s mother notified police about the matter, though police say she stated that she had never seen nor spoken to the man, and did not consent to her daughter being with him. Police arrested Green July 12 and booked him into the Deschutes County Jail. He’s charged with six charges, including rape, sodomy, online sexual corruption of a child, encouraging child sex abuse and various child pornography charges.
Forest Service Moves Forward on Changes to OHV Trails in the Ochocos By Anne Pick The U.S. Forest Service has made a decision on the proposed 137 miles of off-highway vehicle (OHV) trail system in the Ochoco National Forest, an hour’s drive east of Bend. According to the Record of Decision from Forest Supervisor Stacey Forson, “My decision includes adoption of some appropriately and sustainably located user-created trails, establishment of trails on existing road beds and new trail construction for a total of 107 miles of designated trails, plus 30 miles of connecting high-clearance roads for a total of about 137 route miles within the designated trail system and OHV Management Areas.” The Forest Service began developing the project in 2009, with a Final Environmental Impact Statement and a Draft Record of Decision in 2014. Following a forest fire, these documents were withdrawn. Approval of the Summit Trail System doesn’t come as an end to the battle for the Ochocos. In response to the Forest Service’s decision, WildEarth Guardians, Oregon Wild and the Sierra Club have formally filed a complaint. “This is about balancing uses on the forest consistent with America’s bedrock environmental laws,” said Marla Fox, Rewilding Attorney at WildEarth Guardians. “As the Trump Administration ramps up its attack on our public lands, defending wild places like the Ochocos is even more important.” The groups seek a declaration that the Forest Service’s authorization of the Ochoco Summit Trail System violated federal law. SW
NEWS
Eclipse Encounters
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By Nicole Vulcan
A
t a conference room at Bend’s St. Charles Medical Center, the room goes silent as a mother relates a story about her young daughter. “They got her into webcam porn,” the mother says. “She was 18, so by law, it’s legal. She’s in the ‘industry’ now.” That local mother was one of several dozen people attending a panel discussion titled “Eclipsing Human Trafficking” that took place July 17. With tens of thousands of people expected to descend on Central Oregon before and after the Aug. 21 total solar eclipse, local experts say the demand for commercial sex is likely to increase as well. While the focus of Monday’s discussion centered around preparation and awareness amid the eclipse influx, that mother’s admission highlighted the fact that human trafficking needs no special event to flourish. Like other young, vulnerable people who become victims of trafficking, the mother explained how a couple the teen met on Tinder lured her into “the life” with promises of things the teen wanted. “They hooked her with gifts, like lingerie, makeup, anything that an 18… once you’re in your teens… anything that teens go crazy over, they hooked her with that. And there’s nothing I can do,” the mother said. Monday’s panel included a number of local experts on human trafficking, including Nita Belles, organizer of the event and an anti-human trafficking expert who founded the nonprofit, In Our Backyard. Also on the panel were Laurie Bisby of Saving Grace, Paulina Machi of J Bar J Youth Services and Detective Chris Morin of the Bend Police Department. The panelists agreed that luring young people with promises of things the person wants—whether it’s drugs, expensive items or otherwise—is a common tactic among human traffickers. Human Trafficking in Central Oregon If you thought human trafficking—whether it’s commercial sex or forced labor—doesn’t exist in Central Oregon, you’d be wrong. “We’ve been told by survivors of human trafficking that Central Oregon is a sweet spot for recruiting because of its rural setting and the naivety of citizens to the dangers of human trafficking,” Belles wrote in a press release for the event. Det. Morin said a number of years ago, he, too, was unaware of the extent of the commercial sex trade in Central Oregon, until a friend shared a few anecdotes about it. Needing more proof, Morin says he created a “backpage” ad featuring a girl—and got 45 responses to the ad within 24 hours. A brief search on the Bend listings at backpage.com Tuesday
elicited a number of ads, including ones for a “beautiful cougar” and “top quality companionship.” Were those women on backpage.com victims of trafficking? It can be tough to tell—and even the victims of trafficking typically don’t self-identify as victims, experts say. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime defines human trafficking, in part, as “the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation.”
"I have witnessed firsthand how traffickers drew unsuspecting party-goers into a life of unimaginable control, abuse and trauma — they are manipulators for sheer profit." — NITA BELLES Morin said, “They don’t refer themselves as being trafficked, or, oh, that was my trafficker, it’s not that language and I had to learn that relatively quickly. It’s ‘my boyfriend.’” Indeed, many “Romeo” pimps lure girls into the life by first making the victim believe the two are developing a romantic relationship. Later, the pimp may ask for “help” to pay rent or get out of other financial straits by convincing the victim to engage in commercial sex. With that muddy territory, Det. Morin says it can be tough for law enforcement officers to determine who to arrest and who to protect. Often, suspected human trafficking can require extensive investigations. “It’s a slow developing investigation. These aren’t easy investigations to work—the provability, they anonymize their numbers, they use a lot of social media apps,” Det. Morin said. Knowledge is key; Bend Police are now beginning to engage in more training around how to spot human trafficking and its victims, Det.e Morin says. Human Trafficking and the Eclipse During the August eclipse, Belles advises people to watch out for signs of trafficking, and also recruit-
ing. In a party atmosphere such as the one the eclipse will bring, recruiting could be a big thing, she says. “I have witnessed firsthand how traffickers drew unsuspecting party-goers into a life of unimaginable control, abuse and trauma—they are manipulators for sheer profit,” Belles wrote. So what to look for during the eclipse? The same clues that someone is being trafficked that one might look for day to day. Commercial sex activity often takes place at or near hotels and motels, Morin said—though the panel was also quick to point out that the eclipse may spread that activity elsewhere, since hotel rooms will be in shorter supply. Panelist Machi from J Bar J said behaviors such as carrying multiple phones, having anxiety around missed phone calls, a lack of personal documentation, or someone who seems unwilling or unable to speak when another individual is nearby may be signs of trafficking. Also, someone who has no access to a bank account or any personal items may be in a situation of control. Bisby of Saving Grace also advises people to look out for victims of forced labor, which may manifest as someone who’s working at a restaurant or other facility at all hours with little time off, someone who never seems to come out of their home, or someone who avoids eye contact. Those are all fairly vague activities that could be attributed to other causes, but when in doubt, or when something “just doesn’t feel right,” call local law enforcement, Det. Morin advises, where officers will sort out an unwarranted call from a legitimate one. “If it’s nothing, it’s nothing,” he said, “but we’ll sort that out.” SW Interested in combatting human trafficking in Central Oregon? In Our Backyard is hosting several Freedom Sticker Volunteer Days, visiting local businesses to ask them to place the organization’s “Freedom Stickers” in the business restrooms. Path of Freedom Community Outreach Days Fri., July 28, 1:30-4:30pm Starts at Hayden Homes, 2464 SW Glacier Pl., Redmond Sat., July 29, 9am-Noon Starts at Foundry Church, 60 NW Oregon Ave., Bend Later events also in Madras.
Email info@InOurBackyard.org or call 541-639-5008 for more information.
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
With an increase in population numbers for the Great American Eclipse, local advocates warn about an increase in human trafficking cases, too.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / July 20, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 8
DOPE TIMES
9 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Oregon moves to de-felonize hard drugs in hopes of eradicating racial profiling and beating the opioid crisis By Magdalena Bokowa
t’s Friday and you’re speeding 5 miles over, anxious to get to your favorite brewery. A glimmer of light flashes across your rearview mirror: those familiar blue and red lights of your local police officer, doing his routine gig. The officer notices you’re tight lipped and testy — or maybe too smiley and sweaty — and decides to search your car. He finds three Adderall pills and a 1/2-gram baggie of cocaine. You’re now a convicted felon, facing up to 20 years in prison, lumped in with those serving life sentences for murder and armed robberies. Is this a film? No. Is this over-exaggerated? It depends.
Every 25 seconds. That’s how often an American is arrested for drug possession — usually for small “user” quantities — with police making these arrests more often than any other crime. In Oregon, African Americans make up only 2 percent of the total population, but they account for 9 percent of all inmates in state prison. The Oregon Criminal Justice Commission found that the current rate of incarceration for black people is 5.6 times higher than that of white people. Equally staggering are the numbers for Native Americans — convicted of drug possession at five times the rate of people of European descent. Unequal conviction and incarceration rates for minorities in Oregon are the fallout of the “War on Drugs” propaganda peddled throughout the past few decades. Drug laws are often touted by officials to suppress illegal drug trafficking, but a 2016 report by the American Civil Liberties Union noted that the rate of people arrested for possessing drugs is substantially higher than those caught selling them — four times higher. Human Rights Watch and the ACLU, in their joint 196-page report, “Every 25 Seconds: The Human Toll of Criminalizing Drug Use in the United States,” showcase that small quantity drug possession amounts to 1.2 million arrests annually, resulting in 137,000 men and women currently behind bars. As most face stiff felony sentences — a felony carries a penalty of up to 20 years — each day, tens of thousands are convicted for crimes not unlike what a largescale drug trafficker would face, but for much smaller crimes. Many convicted of minor crimes will cycle through prisons and spend their lives on probation and/or parole, often burdened with crippling debt, all the while still struggling, in many
cases, with a drug addiction. Stifled with stigma and discrimination, entire communities and taxpayers suffer the impacts. THE WAR ON DRUGS ISN’T WORKING On July 6, Oregon joined 16 other states in reclassifying the possession of six “hard” drugs. The State Senate passed HB 2355, effectively “de-felonizing” those caught with small amounts of heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine and other Schedule I and II drugs. Offenders found with these small user-amounts will now face lessened fines and reduced incarceration time—provided they have had no more than two previous drug convictions. Currently, possession of the “harder” drugs is a Class B or Class C felony — depending on the drug — punishable by up to either 10 or 20 years in prison and up to $250,000 or $375,000 in fines. The bill — now awaiting a signature from Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, who has indicated her support— will reclassify the offenses to a Class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in jail and a $6,250 fine. People caught with “substantial quantities” of illicit drugs would still face felony possession charges. Reducing mass incarceration, expanding access to drug treatment and eradicating racial profiling are the primary goals of the bill. Oregon lawmakers said they hope to encourage medical help rather than filling up state prisons as the opioid epidemic grows to the second highest rate of addiction in the country, according to The Oregon Medical Association. Presently, those caught with even trace amounts of illegal drugs — such as the residue left on a pipe —can theoretically be convicted of felony drug possession. According to the ACLU, as many as 1,500 Oregonians are saddled with their first drug conviction each year, continued on page 11...
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / July 20, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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BEST OF CENTRAL OREGON WITH ECLIPSE SURVIVAL FEATURE The 2017 Best of Central Oregon issue of the Source is sure to be a phenomenal event for local business owners, out-of-towners, eclipse chasers, and all Central Oregonians. The votes will be counted and we will make the big reveal in this rare collectors issue. Find out which awe-inspiring businesses are eclipsing all others on Aug. 17th. Don’t miss the chance to advertise in our biggest issue of all time because when the sun and moon align, it’s time for your business to shine!
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SO GO OUT AND TOKE, RIGHT? “To be clear, we are not encouraging people to go out and use drugs,” wrote Tess Borden, 20152017 Aryeh Neier Fellow at ACLU and HRW, and the primary author of the published report. “What we are saying is that people shouldn’t be arrested, prosecuted and potentially incarcerated — and saddled with all the consequences of a criminal record — for personal drug use, i.e. decisions about what they put in their own bodies.” Borden used countless examples to illustrate the disconnect between local and state governments in dealing with small-use possession. In one case, a man faced 20 years for being in the backseat of a truck that had a 1/2-gram quantity of a controlled substance. The man received a three-year sentence. Borden emphasized that felons often spend time socializing with criminals who are in prison for more serious charges and that, in fact, many criminals charged with homicide get out in less than 20 years. Cases such as these are countless across the state and the report says they have “yielded few, if any, benefits…. Criminalizing drugs is not an effective public safety policy. We are aware of no empirical evidence that low-level drug possession defendants would otherwise go on to commit violent crimes.” If defendants do commit additional crimes, advocates such as the ACLU and Borden say those charges should be prosecuted in the same way as if they were done while intoxicated with
alcohol—another substance that at one time was prohibited. Borden also noted the financial implications. “The enormous resources spent to identify, arrest, prosecute, sentence, incarcerate and supervise people whose only offense has been possession of drugs is hardly money well spent…and it has caused far more harm than good.” OREGON PROGRESSING FORWARD TO ELIMINATE PROFILING “Our Legislature’s decision to decriminalize small amounts of drugs and expand access to treatment is an important step forward in ending the disastrous drug war,” said former prosecutor and Law Enforcement Action Partnership board member Inge Fryklund. “The harm reduction approach can help address the underlying problems that lead to addiction and keep people who pose little public safety threat out of the justice system.” LEAP is a nonprofit group that advocates for criminal justice reforms and drug policies, made up of police, prosecutors, judges and other criminal justice professionals. They were staunch supporters of the bill that was chaired by Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum.
“
WE’VE GOT TO TREAT PEOPLE, NOT PUT THEM IN PRISON. IT WOULD BE LIKE PUTTING THEM IN THE STATE PENITENTIARY FOR HAVING DIABETES... THIS IS A CHRONIC BRAIN DISORDER AND IT NEEDS TO BE TREATED THIS WAY.” —Sen. Mitch Greenlick “Our Task Force traveled throughout the state listening to Oregonians sharing their experiences with profiling,” said Rosenblum. “The stories we heard were profoundly important and deeply impactful.” House members heard testimonies from community members about their racial profiling experiences. Linda Hamilton was one such case, who retold being pulled over in a traffic stop allegedly because she’s black. Hamilton is a Lane County parole and probation officer. The Hispanic community also came forward with accounts of profiling, with University of Oregon student Maria Gallego testifying that her partner now has Post Traumatic Stress Disorder from an encounter with law enforcement. Testimonies like these were what Democrats said would help be the building blocks to form a bridge between police and communities of color. Although strongly favored by most Democrats, some Republicans, such as Rep. Andy Olson voted against the bill, saying “I fully support the collection of data to monitor racial profiling, but I am opposed to reducing drug classification.” Sen. Betsy Johnson, a Democrat, also voted against it in the Senate, arguing that it was a “hug-a-thug” policy. Both local House members, Rep. Knute Buehler and Rep. Gene
Whisnant, voted no. Sen. Tim Knopp abstained from the vote in the Senate. Sen. Jackie Winters — the longest serving African-American woman in the Oregon Senate, and a Republican — was a strong advocate for the bill and pushed back on Johnson’s stance, noting in the Ways and Mean Committee that, “There is empirical evidence that there are certain things that follow race. … We don’t like to look at the disparity in our prison system,” Winters said. “It is institutional racism. … We can pretend it doesn’t exist, but it does.” Democrat Mitch Greenlick said, “We’ve got to treat people, not put them in prison. It would be like putting them in the state penitentiary for having diabetes... This is a chronic brain disorder and it needs to be treated this way.” The Oregon Association Chiefs of Police also wrote a letter in support of the bill. “Too often, individuals with addiction issues find their way to the doorstep of the criminal justice system when they are arrested for possession of a controlled substance,” wrote Kevin Campbell, the executive director. “Unfortunately, felony convictions in these cases also include unintended and collateral consequences including barriers to housing and employment and a disparate impact on minority communities.” The bill is seen as an addition to the 2015 law that made Oregon the 31st state to prohibit racial profiling. However, it did not provide guidance for dealing with the issue. Recording mandatory data is seen as a progressive step in implementing this law. WHAT NOW? Officer training to prevent unlawful police profiling and overcoming any biases is the first step police departments will undertake with this new legislation. It will also protect lawful immigrants from facing mandatory deportation for low level, nonviolent offenses and advocate for treatment rather than prison time. In an interview with the Washington Post, Winters said, “We can’t continue on the path of building more prisons when often the underlying root cause of the crime is substance use.” With the opioid crisis in effect, states are changing tactics from one of criminality to a public health concern. “We are trying to move policy towards treatment rather than prison beds.” With many Oregon counties in support — Deschutes County was in favor of the bill — of already implementing drug diversion programs, the hope is to expand programs to rural and lower-income countries that generally don’t have the beds available for treatment. The state will provide local jurisdictions with $7 million to implement drug diversion programs. As the bill awaits Gov. Brown’s signature, she released a statement indicating her support. “HB 2355 represents an important step towards creating a more equitable justice system to better serve all Oregonians...Addressing disparities that too often fall along racial and socioeconomic lines should not be political issues. Here in Oregon, we’re demonstrating that we can make meaningful progress to improve the lives of Oregonians by working together around our shared values.” SW
11 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
amounting to a felony, with 500 of these new felons never having any prior criminal record. Felonies are often deemed the most violent and serious of crimes and include offenses such as murder, arson, fraud, and armed robbery, and are therefore permanently on a person’s record. This greatly reduces chances of finding stable housing or employment. “This is an incredibly, incredibly important bill,” said Democratic House Speaker Tina Kotek. “It represents the next step of Oregon’s surety to making sure individuals and communities across the state, including Oregonians of color, feel fairly represented and have good interactions with law enforcement.” Kotek spoke about the importance of coupling an anti-profiling law with official data, so “that officials know what to do with the results.” In an effort to understand racial disparity within Oregon, the bill makes data collection mandatory from all traffic and pedestrian stops officers make. Demographics collected will include age, race and gender. The Oregon Criminal Justice Commission will use the data to analyze the demographic data police departments collect and will notify them of any disparities, so that departments can make adjustments to their current practices. In the past, minorities have been recorded as facing criminal charges for minor infractions such as jay-walking or littering. “The war on drugs has failed,” said David Rogers, executive director of the ACLU of Oregon. “It has damaged families and cost taxpayers billions of dollars. A felony conviction for small-scale drug use is too harsh because it ruins people’s lives. Oregonians are ready for a smarter approach.”
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UNDER ARMOUR MOUNTAIN RUNNING SERIES
CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC
CYCLING — Certain events scream summer in Bend and the Cascade Cycling Classic is one of them — mainly due to the screaming, cow bells and straightup energy at the downtown crits. More than just the exciting downtown races, catch the top cyclists from all over North America competing throughout the week. The Downtown Twilight Criterium starts at 5:10pm Saturday! // Various locations throughout Bend. Free to watch.
OUR PICKS
Saturday 22
Wednesday 19 - Sunday 23
MOUNTAIN RUNNING — There are runners. And then there are MOUNTAIN runners. That’s right, people actually choose to run up the side of mountains, gaining up to thousands of feet of elevation. Conquer Mt. Bachelor in various race lengths (5K all the way up to 50K). The night before, attend the Q&A with Under Armour trail running athletes to get inspired. // 7:30am. Mt. Bachelor. 13000 Century Dr., Bend.
Saturday 22
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Thursday 20
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SHOW US YOUR SPOKES CORNER GOSPEL EXPLOSION W/ COSMONAUTICAL
JACK JOHNSON SINGER/SONGWRITER — Bendites get stoked when mellow surfer folk singer/ songwriter Jack Johnson comes to town. Maybe we REALLY like “Banana Pancakes” or maybe we’re moved by his commitment to sustainability. Either way, the singer has Bend on the hook and we’re more than happy to welcome back his message of positivity. // 6:30pm. Les Schwab Amphitheater. 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr., Bend. SOLD OUT.
INDIE ROCK — One of our favorite annual music series returns to Parrilla Grill on Bend’s west side. The event encourages attendees to ride, walk or carpool down, with plenty of bike parking. This week’s event showcases the indie rock stylings of Bend locals Corner Gospel Explosion and Cosmonautical. The event benefits local music festival Bend Roots Revival. // 6-9pm. Parrilla Grill Westside. 635 NW 14th St., Bend.
Thursday 20 - Saturday 22
Saturday 22
CHARLIE PARR BLUES — After cheering on the cyclists at the Downtown Crit, head over to Crow’s Feet Commons to hear the blues from Charlie Parr. The musician lives simply, but creates music far from that. Enjoy awesome sunsets, great brews and family tunes. Expect blistering, finger-picking, foot-stomping blues and finely crafted songs. // 7pm. Crow’s Feet Commons. 875 NW Brooks St., Bend. No cover.
WINE — Despite our reputation as Beer Town, Bendites love wine, too! Cork & Barrel brings “A Taste of the PNW” to Bend with 17 guest wineries, and is a fundraiser for KIDS Center, Central Oregon’s only child abuse intervention center. Taste great wines and enjoy meals prepared by local and regional chefs. // 6pm Thursday, 5pm Friday, 4:30pm Saturday. Broken Top Club. 62000 Broken Top Dr., Bend. $100+.
Friday 21
Sunday 23
AVETT BROTHERS
FOXTAILS BRIGADE AND THIS ISLAND EARTH
FOLK ROCK — YESSSSS!!! The day has finally come! OK, sorry for the total fangirl moment. The Avett Brothers bring their catchy folk-rock melodies to the Amphitheater for their only Oregon show. Don’t miss current hits, including “Ain’t No Man,” “True Sadness” and classics such as “I and Love and You” live in our own backyard. // 5pm. Les Schwab Amphitheater. 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr., Bend. $43.
EXPERIMENTAL POP — Check out this week’s interview with Foxtails Brigade lead singer Laura Weinbach. She fronts the hard-to-classify experimental pop band, which features performing members of Bright Eyes. Not only does their style remind us of Melanie Martinez, they recently started a hilarious Podcast called “Totally Tell Me,” which features talk of movies, pop culture and more. // 9pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub. 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $5.
Friday 21 - Saturday 22
Tuesday 25
BEER — Summer must be a great time to open a brewery, as this isn’t the first and it won’t be the last anniversary party in the Central Oregon beer scene. We’re not complaining! Head to Sisters for cake and beer pairings Friday and raffles and giveaways Saturday. Photo contest winner announced Sunday. // Friday 6-9pm, Saturday 11:30am-9pm. Three Creeks Brewing Co. 721 Desperado Ct., Sisters. Free.
JAZZ — While it doesn’t seem like the Amphitheater books many jazz shows, an exception can always be made for the incomparable Diana Krall. The Canadian jazz pianist and singer has gained international and crossover success, selling over 15 million albums worldwide and winning three Grammys. Sit back, relax and enjoy Krall’s contralto vocals. // 7pm. Les Schwab Amphitheater. 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr., Bend. $52-$93.
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SOUND A Musical Journey, With a Pitstop in Bend The Avett Brothers continue to expand their style, while also maintaining that signature sound
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By Alan Sculley
Cracker Farm
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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he Avett Brothers have been on quite a musical journey of evolving their sound over the past decade, going from a trio playing acoustic guitar, banjo and stand-up bass to what is now a seven-member lineup that can build considerably on the group’s scrappy, stripped-back acoustic beginnings. The big shift came with the 2009 album, “I and Love and You.” Produced by Rick Rubin, it found the Avett Brothers retaining their acoustic foundation, but broadened their instrumental and stylistic reach to the point that the group could no longer be considered simply folk nor acoustic. The next two albums, 2012’s “The Carpenter” and 2014’s “Magpie and the Dandelion,” continued down that path. And now, Seth Avett, who started the group with his older brother, Scott, in 2000, feels the latest Avett Brothers album, “True Sadness,” represents another leap forward for the group. “This one’s a major one in terms of me reframing what I think the Avett Brothers sound like,” Seth Avett said of “True Sadness” in a recent phone interview. “I hope, what I feel like is happening is we are opening ourselves up further, further and further in the aesthetics, to have no boundaries while hopefully staying heavily rooted in what makes us, us, which is by and large some version of storytelling, I think.” “True Sadness,” released last June, is the most sonically adventurous, most instrumentally diverse— and arguably the most stylistically varied—album yet from the group. Recorded with the current seven-member touring band (bassist/fiddle player Bob Crawford, drummer Mike Marsh, keyboardist Paul Defiglia, cellist Joe Kwon and fiddle player Tania Elizabeth), the songs touch on a myriad of styles. There’s stomping pop delivered with bass, drum and a ragged choir on the first single, “Ain’t No Man.” “You Are Mine” takes jangly folk-rock and gives it a jolt with a big, fuzzed up bass line and sprinkles of keyboard. “Fisher Road” is a gentle and pretty finger-picked acoustic ballad. “There Is A Sea” sounds like it was written for an epic western or sea-faring movie soundtrack with its lush, swelling strings and expansive melody. Even with that variety, “True Sadness” sounds very much like an Avett Brothers album, mainly because many of the songs (“Roof Over My Past,” “Mama,” “Smithsonian” and “No Hard Feelings”) still have the acoustic folk and rough-hewn rock foundation that defined the early music of the group. Seth agreed with that assessment. “You can’t change your beginning. You can’t go back and change where you’re from. It just is what it is,” he said. “Our skeleton is the acoustic guitar (played by Seth Avett) and the banjo (Scott Avett) and the stand-up bass (Crawford, who joined the Avetts in 2002), and our stories and our romanticism and me and Scott’s voices. That’s what we are at our core. So I think as long as we don’t disgrace that or completely turn our backs on that, I think it will come through.” The two Avett brothers remained the songwriters on “True Sadness,” but Avett said the other band members, more than ever, brought their influences and ideas to the table and had a big hand in how the songs grew from their bare bones beginnings to the versions heard on the album. For the most part, he said, the songs developed organically as the other
From left, Seth Avett, Joe Kwon, Scott Avett and Bob Crawford, along with three other band members, play LSA this Friday.
musicians got involved. “We have, I think, a very good, very natural sort of rhythm within our communication, where Scott and I are able to present our visions for a song,” Avett said. “You just have faith in the players and you don’t have to micro-manage everything…I think we all have enough experience where we can come to a great agreement, normally without saying anything at all.” That sort of musical chemistry and communication has been developed through four-plus years of touring. And while shows of recent vintage demonstrate that the seven-member lineup is plenty potent live (a recently released concert disc, “Live, Vol. Four,” offers a good example of the group’s live sound), Seth Avett feels the group has plenty of room to grow as a live unit. “We have not really fully embraced what is possible here with this band. I mean, seven people with more than a few that are multi-instrumentalists, there’s a lot that can be done,” he said. “I know we’ve embraced it a little. But over the last couple of years, we’ve worked up kind of outlaw country songs, a Harry Belafonte song, we did a Beyonce song for a little while. “Sometimes it starts feeling like we really could be presenting something with a lot more breadth than we have so far,” Avett said. “Now, we’re a little bit, we’re committed to our original material. That in and of itself is going to be kind of a stew of a lot of things. But man, it’s so fun to dig into something that seems really out of our comfort zone and then realizing we can actually present it because of this band. So I think we’re just beginning to get a handle on what we might be able to do.” SW
"We have not really fully embraced what is possible here with this band. I mean, seven people with more than a few that are multi-instrumentalists, there's a lot that can be done." — SETH AVETT
The Avett Brothers
Fri., July 21 7pm Les Schwab Amphitheater 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr., Bend $43+
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / July 20, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Constantly Creative
Oakland’s Foxtails Brigade dips into all kinds of media, from film-style music videos to podcasts, and of course, experimental pop music By Anne Pick
Laura Weinbach and Foxtails Brigade create experimental pop music, as well as artistic music videos and hilarious podcasts.
for a music video?’ He chose that one because it had the strongest inspiration and a really clear vision for the fact that he wanted it to be a narrative. He had all of the elements picked out for the storyline of that.” After Mercurio got the ball rolling, Weinbach acted as art director for the video, designing the sets and costumes. She says her house allows her to do whatever she wants creatively—which results in many of their videos being shot there. “We shoot a lot of videos here at the house and we kind of transform it every time we make a new video,” Weinbach says. “We moved everything out of the living room and kitchen and I had this idea that I wanted to make themes for each room, which would
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coincide with sections of the video.” In addition to collaborating on Foxtails Brigade’s music and videos, Weinbach and Mercurio have started their own podcast called “Totally Tell Me.” The weekly entertainment podcast features the two musicians chatting about movies, music, food and pop culture. Each episode features guests, which often includes Patzner. The group begins with a “week in review” which spans the conversational gamut — one week included how to respond to someone knocking on a public bathroom door. “I love recording the episodes because it guarantees we get to hang out at least once a week,” Weinbach says. “Dominic usually comes over the night before and brings his PlayStation
4 and we play games and get pizza and hang out and eat a lot of junk food. He’ll sleep over in the living room.” The next day, Weinbach and Mercurio go to a theater to watch the movie they’ve chosen to discuss as the main topic for the week’s podcast. Before leaving the house, they set up all their gear so they can come straight home and immediately start talking about the movie. “We specifically don’t relay any of our thoughts on the movie that we watched until we press record. Even if we really have a strong opinion about what we just saw, we’re like, ‘Don’t say anything. Save it for the podcast!’” On the music front, Foxtails Brigade has about three-quarters of a new album written and foresees releasing new music within the next 12 months. In the meantime, Weinbach and Patzner have a collaborative tie to Bend. “One of the bands that’s on the show [in Bend], This Island Earth, is awesome,” Weinbach says. “I just collaborated with him on his new album he’s been recording. He had me track some vocals for it a couple weeks ago. He came out here and he recorded a bunch of stuff. He got Anton doing some strings and I did vocals and it was sounding pretty fun.” SW Foxtails Brigade, This Island Earth Sunday, July 23. 9pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $5.
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VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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he song “We Are Not Ourselves” by Oakland’s Foxtails Brigade sounds like former American Idol contestant turned experimental, art pop singer, Melanie Martinez. Digging in deeper, Foxtails Brigade also brings on comparisons to The Ditty Bops and St. Vincent. While the band doesn’t fall into a specific genre, the similarity they share with these other musicians comes in their storytelling. Trained in classical guitar, Laura Weinbach fronts Foxtails Brigade alongside Anton Patzner, Joe Lewis, Josh Pollock and Dominic Mercurio. You may recognize Patzner from his work with indie rock darling, Bright Eyes. The A-list ensemble works together creatively, both onstage and off. One of the most intriguing things about Foxtails Brigade is its use of media. They’re constantly creative — utilizing video, podcasts, and of course, music. Watching the music videos for “We Are Not Ourselves” and “Far Away and Long Ago,” the band keeps you hooked with stunning set design, creative storytelling and a certain darkness reflected both in the lyrics and the visuals themselves. When talking with Weinbach about the “We Are Not Ourselves” video, she confesses that the vision can be attributed to Mercurio. “He gets really excited about making music videos, and luckily we’re able to provide him with a basis for doing that,” Weinbach says. “I gave him a couple of choices for songs, and I said, ‘Do you want to work on one of these
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This Island Earth preps for three concept albums that follow a distinct narrative By Anne Pick
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Emotional Payoff
Elijah Goodall uses his background in writing to create three heavy concept albums for his latest project, This Island Earth.
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ou may recognize Elijah Goodall from his previous work in the Bend-based band, Isles. Goodall, who started playing music after high school, now holds the reins on a new band called This Island Earth. He started creating the music for This Island Earth just over a year ago and does all of the composition himself. This Island Earth plays art pop and experimental rock that incorporates electronic elements. The soulful music evokes emotion through strong storytelling and writing. Prior to becoming a stay-at-home dad, Goodall taught writing classes at the Nature of Words. With a strong writing background, it’s no surprise he’s developing three concept albums with a distinct narrative. “Wounded Tropic” centers around an island hit by a tropical storm, wiping out the population. Goodall plans to release the albums over the next year and a half, the first dropping in October. “When I write narratives and short stories and things behind songs, or in this case albums, it’s really more for me,” Goodall says. “It’s to give me a sense of, if I’m writing about a heavy concept, I want to have a story to that concept instead of just an idea.” The first album takes place before the storm hits, the second during the storm and the third takes place after the storm passes. Each album comprises four different voices — the native people on the island, the island itself, the storm and the ocean. “Writing the narrative, a lot of it
has been for me to get into the space of whatever voice it is that I’m writing,” Goodall says. “There’s a lot of really elemental imagery in most of these voices, whether it’s water or kind of air and chaos and death is really the storm. The earth tends to be the most nurturing. The island itself is a lot more matriarchal than anything else. But a lot of those songs that are written from that, the lyrics were written in the first year and a half of having a kid.” Goodall’s writing background shines through in creating these three concept albums with a strong narrative. Not only does he tackle heavy subject matter, but he challenges himself to write in three distinctly different voices. While he still has over a year before releasing the final chapter, he doesn’t see the completion as the payoff. “The emotional payoff with writing sometimes comes when you’re nearing the end of a book. And then it can be really overwhelming, whether it was a novel or a graphic novel or even with a film, a lot of times the emotional payoff comes when you complete it,” Goodall says. “With music it feels more like now. It’s just happening.” SW Foxtails Brigade, This Island Earth Sunday, July 23. 9pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $5.
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Tickets Available on BendTicket.com
19 Wednesday American Legion Park Music in the Canyon - Cindy Lou Banks Best known for fronting the alt-country band No Way Home as the lead singer and songwriter. Hooky, heart-forward Americana. 5:30-8 pm. No cover. Astro Lounge The Cutmen An eight-piece
soul jazz and funk band from right here in Bend. 8-11 pm.
Checker’s Pub Talent/Open Mic Bring your
talent to this weekly open mic night. 6-8 pm.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Embrace your
inner rockstar at this weekly karaoke night. 9pm.
Pronghorn Resort Bobby Lindstrom Bob-
by’s on fire this summer, playing your favorite old blues, some serious rock ‘n roll and his own list of original songs. Played with those smokin’ guitar skills, vocals and even some whistling! 6 pm. No cover.
The Lot Open Mic Showcase your talent or
watch as locals brave the stage for open mic. 6 pm.
Third Street Pub Vanessa Silberman &
Carissa Johnson Enjoy the music of Vanessa Silberman, an LA-based singer/guitarist, and Boston rock artist Carissa Johnson. 9 pm.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Alarm 58 Come
Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Sing your favorite songs every week. 9 pm.
check out Alarm 58’s alternative rock with special guests Jim Goodwin and Tom Ferrier of The Call. 7 pm.
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you
Worthy Brewing Mexican Gunfight - Worthy
narrowed it down to what songs you’ll sing this week? Embrace your inner rock star. 9 pm.
M&J Tavern Open Mic Bring your talent or
an encouraging ear to this weekly open mic for musicians. All musicians welcome! 6:30 pm.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke Blake? Shania? Get in touch with your inner country star. 7 pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School
The Good Time Travelers A high voice, smoky and soulful; a low voice, rich with bravado. Pete Kartsounes and Michael Kirkpatrick come together as The Good Time Travelers. United by a passion for performing, this songwriting and pickin’ duo presents original songs about the journey. 7-10 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Open Mic Local
20 Thursday
Cabin 22 Ultimate Knowledge Trivia Great
jects; Black Karma Social Club Rock and punk rock music with a twist. 8-11 pm. $5.
Chops Bistro Melanie Rose Dyer and Daniel
The Lot Eric Leadbetter Traveling from Southern Oregon to play an array of classic rock, Americana, folk and blues. 6-8 pm. No cover.
prizes! 7-9 pm.
Cooper All original acoustic folk-rock, Americana and blues. 6-8 pm. No cover.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Embrace your
Tin Pan Theater Alicia Viani and Mark Kar-
Drake Park Munch and Music - Ozomatli Six-
wan with Shannon Smith Local original songwriting and beautiful voices are showcased in a special night. Duo Alicia and Mark weave jazz, funk and Americana influences with personal and provocative lyrics. Solo artist Shannon Smith opens the evening. Tickets available at Tinpantheater.com. 7-9 pm. $15.
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you
Volcanic Theatre Pub Patrice Pike & Wayne Sutton Touring this summer bringing their new collaboration of arrangements of songs from Sister 7 and all their catalog of solo projects over the years. 9 pm. $10/adv, $12/door.
inner rockstar at this weekly karaoke night. 9pm.
Domino Room Get Scared, Famous Last
Words, World War Me Post-hardcore band from Layton, Utah. 8-11 pm. $10.
piece band playing primarily Latin, hip hop and rock music, formed in 1995 in Los Angeles. With special guest Possessed by Paul James. 5:30 pm. No cover. narrowed it down to what songs you’ll sing this week? Embrace your inner rock star. 9 pm.
Astro Lounge John Statz “John Statz writes
songs you can’t shake. They follow you around all day and run through your head at 3 am.” - Jeffrey Foucault. 8-11 pm.
Les Schwab Amphitheater Jack Johnson It’s official – Hawaiian singer songwriter Jack Johnson is coming back to Bend on his 2017 Summer Tour. Adored for his cool, mellow style, folk singer Johnson has sold millions of records since his 2001 debut, platinum release, ‘Brushfire Fairytales.’ 6:30 pm. Sold out.
Brasada’s Range Restaurant & Bar
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free
Feast from the Fire - Justin Lavik Come out to Brasada Ranch for the summer music series featuring ranch-raised meat courtesy of Angels Rest, local brews from Three Creeks Brewing and live music by Justin Lavik. 6-8 pm. $39/ adults, $23/children.
The Capitol U.S. Wage Slaves; Unusual Sub-
21 Friday 3 Goats Coffee Co. Friday Morning Free Music Friday Morning Music featuring our guest, Jamie Morris, instrumental electric guitar jams. 8-11 am. No cover. Astro Lounge Chuck Boogie Soul jazz. 10 pm-midnight.
Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover.
Checker’s Pub A.M. Interstate Classic rock/ blues/soul. 8-11:30 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Scott Wyatt Live
Crux Fermentation Project The Hot Club
music. 7:30 pm. No cover.
of Bend Gypsy jazz. 4:30-7:30 pm.
submitted
artists perform. 6-9 pm.
Wednesday’s While definitely a rock band, the band’s stylistic influences abound: blues grit, country lyricism, the soulfulness of gospel, a rare jam thrown in. 6 pm. No cover.
Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic Fresh talent and fresh coffee every week. 6 pm.
Feeling nostalgic for the good ol' days of rock 'n'roll? Check out Shoot to Thrill, an AC/DC tribute band at Hardtails in Sisters on 7/22.
19 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market
Beer & Wine Garden with Live Music Join C.E. Lovejoy’s Market for their outdoor Summer Beer & Wine Gardens. Bring your friends and neighbors to enjoy cool beverages, food and live music by local bands. New this year: wine and family seating. Every other Thursday, 5-8 pm. No cover.
Sons of Beer Allan Byer Project Allan shares his all original Americana music from three released CDs and new songs with his All-Star band featuring banjo, guitar, bass and percussion. 6-9 pm. No cover.
CLUBS Locally Owned
By Working
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / July 20, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
20
& Operated
Musicians
21 Friday DiamondStone Guest Lodges Newberry
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
Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Audio Odyssey + Rich Hunter Live electro-soul trio Audio Odyssey featuring DJDMP (turntables), Vinnie Bargas (percussion) & Sedell Jones (keys & talk box) + special guest Rich Hunter. 10 pm. No cover.
Open Mon-Fri 10-6; Sat 10-5
Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe Celtic Jam Bring
Ask about our layaway plan. 200 NE Greenwood Ave
541-382-3245
musicmakersofbend.com
COMAG Central Oregon Metal Arts Guild
Event Music & Arts Festival Three-day outdoor music and arts festival featuring local artists and raising money and awareness for Multiple Sclerosis. No pets, bottles or outside alcohol. $50/ single day, $75/3-day, kids under 13 no cover.
your guitar, fiddle or whatever you have and join in for an open jam of Celtic music. All musicians welcome. And if you’re not a musician, come down, tap your feet and enjoy what’s always a fun evening. 6:30-8:30 pm. No cover.
Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues The Bad Cats A MEOWsical Mardi Gras in July? Sure! Blues, soul and rock n’ roll. 7:30-10:30 pm. No cover. Hola! Downtown Latin Dance Social Come
out and dance the night away to latin beats from Andres ‘Andy’ Garcia playing a mix of salsa, bachata, merengue, cumbia and more. All ages. 9 pm-midnight. No cover.
Jackson’s Corner Eastside Coyote Willow Cello-fired Americana. 6-8 pm.
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. 5 pm. No cover.
Les Schwab Amphitheater The Avett Brothers Just chords with real voices singing real melodies. But, the heart and the energy with which they are sung, is really why people are talking and why so many sing along. 5 pm. $43. M&J Tavern Jambroni, You Jabronies A
farewell like no other. Bring your instruments or just your ears for a party to remember for local jabroni Aaron Rohrbacher. 8 pm.
Market of Choice Karyn Ann Neo-acoustic
soul troubadour traveling the pathways of the heart. Free food and beverage tastings throughout the store from 5-7pm. 6-8 pm. No cover.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free
Friday Dance Lessons 21+. 8 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill The Substitutes
Classic rock and pop. 8:30 pm. $3.
Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy Presents:
LIBERTY BLD. 849 N.W. WALL STREET
wild and partying like animals! Come dressed up in your fiercest costume you’ve got! 10 pm.
Checker’s Pub A.M. Interstate Classic rock/ blues/soul. 8-11:30 pm. No cover. Crow’s Feet Commons Charlie Parr Charlie’s live show highlights his blistering, finger-picking, foot-stomping blues and finely crafted songs. 7 pm. No cover.
Event Music & Arts Festival Three-day outdoor music and arts festival featuring local artists and raising money and awareness for Multiple Sclerosis. No pets, bottles or outside alcohol. $50/ single day, $75/3-day, kids under 13 no cover.
Lindstrom The best blues, killer rock n’ roll and original songs, add some slide and harp and you’ve got a show not to miss. 6 pm. No cover.
AUGUST 4-5, 2017
Astro Lounge Jungle Party We are getting
Eurosports Sisters Food Cart Garden
NTT (kev&deb&chris) Playing re-interpretations of all your favorite music, outside at Eurosports in Sisters. Come dance! 5-7 pm. No cover.
Jackson’s Corner Westside Bobby
FRIDAY ‘ART WALK’ DOORS OPEN 1:00 TO 9:00 SATURDAY 10:00 TO 6:00
Anker Farm Keale Brothers Be spirited away to the islands by the exquisite voices of Mike Keale and his brother Bill Keale. 5:30 pm. $20.
Crux Fermentation Project Thomas T &
sic rock. 9 pm-1 am. No cover.
CRAFT & FINE JEWELRY, HAND FORGED STEEL, SCULPTURE 31 LOCAL ARTISTS
22 Saturday
Eagle Crest Resort Kinzel & Hyde Roots and blues weekend with Stu Kinzel & LynnAnn Hyde. Two masters of American music and musicology, they will take you on a tour of trad music that will blow you away. 7-10 pm. No cover.
Hub City Bar & Grill Friends of Lenny Clas-
COMAG-LIBERTY METAL ARTS SHOW
The Pickled Pig Paul Eddy Leaving on a jet plane? Come to the Pickled Pig and hear Paul Eddy sing it! 6:30-8:30 pm. No cover.
Emma Arnold & Sophie Hughes Emma Arnold is a comedian, author and beekeeper. The charm of Sophie Hughes has taken her all the way to performing at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC. 8-10 pm. $8/adv, $10/door.
The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele
21+. 9 pm. No cover.
The Acorn House Concert and Circlesing with Hannah Mayree and Shireen Amini Interactive vocal experience combined with an intimate live performance by two talented female singer-songwriters, Sacramento-based Hannah Mayree and local Shireen Amini. Potluck meal, bring something to share. 6 pm. $10 suggested donation.
The Blue Chips Blues, Chicago and Texas-style and funky. 5:30-8:30 pm.
DiamondStone Guest Lodges Newberry
Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Audio Odyssey + Rich Hunter Live electro-soul trio Audio Odyssey featuring DJDMP (turntables), Vinnie Bargas (percussion) & Sedell Jones (keys & talk box) + special guest Rich Hunter. 10 pm. No cover. Eagle Crest Resort Kinzel & Hyde Roots and blues weekend with Stu Kinzel & LynnAnn Hyde. 7-10 pm. No cover. Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues The Bad Cats Blues, soul and rock n’ roll. 7:30-10:30 pm. No cover. Hardtails Bar & Grill Shoot to Thrill AC/DC Tribute with The Blues Brothers Review For those about to rock… Shoot to Thrill brings all the bombast and sonic excitement of one of the most iconic bands of all-time, AC/DC. 9 pm. $10/adv. Hub City Bar & Grill Friends of Lenny Classic rock. 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 The MudBugs Come on down and enjoy some rockin’ music, cold drinks and good times. Donations appreciated. 9 pm.
Madras Saturday Market Allan Byer
Project Byer comes to the Madras Market with Americana tunes and an all-star band. 10 am-2 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. Northside Bar & Grill The Substitutes Classic rock and pop. 8:30 pm. $3. Parrilla Grill Westside Show Us Your Spokes Corner Gospel Explosion w/ Cosmonautical Ride or walk, drive, fly... come down and enjoy the scene at Parrilla Grill’s Westside! A benefit for Bend Roots Revival. 6-9 pm. Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill Coyote
Willow Cello-fired Americana. 1-3 pm.
Strictly Organic Coffee Company
Canaan Canaan with Matt Humiston Japanese singer/songwriter Canaan Canaan sings in both Japanese and English and plays guitar accompanied by a drummer, Matt Humiston. 3-5 pm. No cover.
The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele
21+. 9 pm. No cover.
The Drum and Guitar Shop Saturday Blues Jam This weekly jam meets every
CLUBS Saturday. If planning to play, please bring your Instrument, two blues songs and some friends. See ya Saturday! Call Kevin at 541-382-2884 with any questions. Noon-4 pm. No cover.
Vic’s Bar & Grill HWY 97 Hot classic rock. 8-11 pm.
Volcanic Theatre Pub The Hooten
Hallers Blues/soul/rock n’ roll trio. 8 pm. $8/ adv, $10/door.
CHOW Coyote Willow Cello-fired Americana. 10 am-1 pm. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Embrace your
inner rockstar at this weekly karaoke night. 9pm.
Di Pizza Fairhaven, Cell Rot and Techie Blood Ska, pop-punk, reggae. All ages. 9 pm. $6.
DiamondStone Guest Lodges Newberry
Event Music & Arts Festival Three-day outdoor music and arts festival featuring local artists and raising money and awareness for Multiple Sclerosis. No pets, bottles or outside alcohol. $50/ single day, $75/3-day, kids under 13 no cover.
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 Dark and Grey Live
music. 6-8 pm.
SHARC Turf Tunes Join us all summer for free Sunday shows at SHARC’s John Gray Amphitheater. Music and fun for the whole family. 5:307:30 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.
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Ukulele Jam All
ages. 6:30 pm. No cover.
Les Schwab Amphitheater Diana Krall A Canadian jazz musician who achieved crossover success with her sultry, understated vocals and her bop piano playing. 7 pm. $52-$93. M&J Tavern SEEDling Local duo brings heartbreaking vocals and luscious drums to center stage with indie pop roots laced with electronic soul. 9 pm.
Northside Bar & Grill Big Blues Jam hosted by Derek Michael Marc Blues jam featuring local musicians. 6-9 pm. No cover. Redmond Farmers Market Allan Byer &
Jamie Morris Duo Allan shares his all original music with bandmate Jamie Morris. 3-6 pm. No cover.
The Blacksmith Restaurant NTT
(deb&kev) Playing re-interpretations of all your favorite songs at the Blacksmith. Come early for the best seats! 7-9 pm. No cover.
The Lot Trivia at The Lot Bring your team or join one. Enjoy 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. Volcanic Theatre Pub Wood & Wire In
the often tightly defined genre of bluegrass music, Wood & Wire’s “band-style” ethos are not unheard of. Nor are the elements of song crafting, so often associated with their Texas home, that permeate their sound. 8 pm. $8/adv, $10/door.
Worthy Brewing Brewer’s Grade - Twilight
Tunes Northwest country music. Benefiting Habitat for Humanity. 6-9 pm.
26 Wednesday
Volcanic Theatre Pub Foxtails Brigade and This Island Earth A clockwork of junkyard beats, warped orchestral sonics and Laura’s trademark voice and classical guitar intricacies with an A-List ensemble featuring performing members of Bright Eyes, Van Dyke Parks and John Kale. 9 pm. $5.
Checker’s Pub Talent/Open Mic Bring your talent to this weekly open mic night. 6-8 pm.
Worthy Brewing Juju Eyeball Baby you can ride my bike! Beatles cover band Juju Eyeball performs for the Cascade Cycling Classic party on Worthy’s new outdoor stage. 6:30 pm. No cover.
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you
24 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 Embrace your
inner rockstar at this weekly karaoke night. 9pm.
25 Tuesday
27 Thursday Astro Lounge Heartbreak Bandits Country. 9 pm. Brasada’s Range Restaurant & Bar
Feast from the Fire - Featuring Casey Parnell Come out to Brasada Ranch for the summer music series featuring ranch-raised meat, produce courtesy of Dancing Cow, local brews from Wild Ride Brewing and live music by Casey Parnell. 6-8 pm. $39/adults, $23/children.
Cabin 22 Ultimate Knowledge Trivia Great prizes! 7-9 pm. Chops Bistro Melanie Rose Dyer and Daniel Cooper All original acoustic folk-rock, Americana and blues. 6-8 pm. No cover.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Embrace your
inner rockstar at this weekly karaoke night. 9pm.
Double J Saloon Bend Comedy at the Double J Saloon - Redmond Bend Comedy returns to Redmond to present another great standup comedy show. Central Oregon’s best comedy lounge. 8-10 pm. No cover. Drake Park Munch and Music - The Brothers Comatose Five-piece bluegrass band based out of San Francisco. Honey Don’t opens. 5:30 pm. No cover.
Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Jim Roy and Steve Beaudry Acoustic finger style blues guitar, mandolin and vocals by Jim Roy, accompanied by Steve Beaudry on acoustic and amplified harmonica. Songs from the Delta to Chicago. 7-9 pm. No cover. Fir Street Park The Barefoot Movement -
Tennessee Bluegrass Heartfelt, energetic, and down home. Heralded by CMT Edge as “one of the most promising bands on the bluegrass scene.” 6:30 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.
21 Kelly D’s Banquet Room NPT Benefit Concert for Brightside Animal Center The NPT July benefit concert sponsors the Brightside Animal Center in Redmond. Dirk Van Houwelling, Appaloosa and David Skelton bring us another song in the round evening of unexpected artistic collaboration. 7-9 pm. No cover. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover. Northside Bar & Grill Bobby Lindstrom and Friends Blues and rock. 7:30-10 pm. No cover. Oregon Spirit Distillers KSJJ 35th Anniversary Party featuring Russell Dickerson Country music to celebrate the anniversary of local country radio station KSJJ. 6:30 pm. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic Fresh talent and fresh coffee every week. 6 pm. The Summit Saloon & Stage 97 Comedy Presents Some of the best comics from around the US to the Summit Saloon and Stage. 8-11 pm. $12. The Lot Jess Ryan Jess Ryan and James Hutchens play all original songs. Jazzy blues folk soul rock. 6-8 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Absinthe Rose, Dogtooth & Nail and Guardian Of The Underdog Politically charged lyrical and personal songwriter that grounds herself in the depths of punk while keeping the roots of folk and blues with personal experiences. 9 pm. $8/adv, $10/door.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Embrace your
inner rockstar at this weekly karaoke night. 9pm.
Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Sing your favorite songs every week. 9 pm. narrowed it down to what songs you’ll sing this week? Embrace your inner rock star. 9 pm.
Level 2 Allan Byer Americana. 21+. 5:30 pm.
No cover.
M&J Tavern Open Mic Bring your talent or
an encouraging ear to this weekly open mic for musicians. All musicians welcome! 6:30 pm.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke Blake? Shania? Get in touch with your inner country star. 7 pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Ragged Union Combines traditional bluegrass drive with a modern songwriting style. 7 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Open Mic Local
artists perform. 6-9 pm.
Astro Lounge Trivia Tuesdays Bring your
team or join one! Usually six categories of various themes. 8 pm. No cover.
Crow’s Feet Commons Story Tellers Open Mic Night Come one, come all! Each Tuesday night, Crow’s Feet Commons hosts an open mic night. Bring your courage or your encouraging ear. Signup begins at 6. Happy hour all night. 7-10 pm.
Pronghorn Resort Lino Pronghorn’s Music on the Patio series brings you live music with Lino. 6-8:30 pm. No cover.
Sam Johnson Park Music on the Green
- The Notables Swing Band Big band. Family friendly music series with food an craft vendors. 6-7:30 pm. No cover.
The Lot Open Mic Showcase your talent or watch as locals brave the stage for open mic. 6 pm.
Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Early Bird Karaoke & Open Mic with A Fine Note Karaoke Too! Bring your voice, bring your guitar and bring your friends. All musicians welcome. Great stage. Great venue. 7:30 pm. No cover.
Volcanic Theatre Pub The Harmed Brothers, WARTOOTH, Onward, Etc. Americana, folkrock. 9 pm. $8/adv, $10/door.
GoodLife Brewing Simone & Leo A mix of folk and blue-eyed soul with lyrical storytelling and bright harmonies. 6-8 pm. No cover.
Worthy Brewing KC Flynn - Worthy Wednesday’s Acoustic rock and country on the patio. 6-9 pm.
She will rock you. Absinthe Rose mixes punk, folk and blues at Volcanic Theatre Pub on 7/27.
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
23 Sunday
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
Come Watch the Airplanes/Helicopters and Enjoy Award Winning BBQ
Award Winning BBQ at the Bend Airport
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / July 20, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
22
Now Open for Dinner
Every Friday Prime Rib & Live Music
CANNABIS IS GOOD MEDICINE
Open for Breakfast & Lunch Tuesday - Sunday
Empower Clinics are dedicated to empowering individuals to improve and protect their health. Since 2003, we’ve helped thousands of patients in multiple states. All of our physicians are fully licensed, experienced, well informed and compassionate.
63136 Powell Butte Hwy 2nd Floor 541.797.6136
Now Accepting New Patients / (541) 550-5354 / (888) EMPOWER (367-6937) 1351 NE 3rd St. #100, Bend / www.empowerclinics.com
BBQ & Cafe
ThePickledPig.com
EVENTS
CALENDAR MUSIC Bella Acappella Harmony Chorus
Medal-winning Bella Acappella seeks women and girls who love to sing and harmonize. Bella teaches and performs four-part acappella harmony and welcomes singers with high and low voices, all levels and ages 15 and above. Tuesdays, 6:30-9:30pm. LDS Church, 450 SW Rimrock. 541-460-3474. $30 month.
23 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice A traditional bagpipe and drum band
with members from the Central Oregon area. Experienced pipers and drummers are welcome to attend, along with those who are interested in taking up piping or drumming and would like to find out what it would take to learn and eventually join our group. Mondays, 5:30-7pm. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St. 541-633-3225. Free.
The Deschutes Caledonian Pipe Band Practice Looking for experienced players to join and perform with the group. We are a volunteer not-for-profit society dedicated to the preservation, performance and enjoyment of Scottish-style bagpipes and drums in Central Oregon. If you are interested in joining please contact us. Mondays-Sundays, 6-8pm. Through Nov. 1. Abilitree, 2680 Twin Knolls Dr. Free.
Public (Rock) Choir Sing in a fun, non-threatening environment for people of all skill levels. Rock and pop favorites—no hymns. First time FREE. Saturdays, 10am-noon Through Sept. 2. 9th Street Village, 909 SE Armour Rd. 541-728-3798. Mondays, 5:45-8pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 541-728-3798. $0-$16.
DANCE Adult Intermediate Level Dance Class
Argentine Tango Class & Práctica No partner needed, join us for a beginners lesson, 6:30-7:30pm. Or intermediate lesson, 7:308:15pm. Followed by practica, until 10pm. 1st class free. Wednesdays. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. $5 beginners, $10 adv. Argentine Tango Milonga Tango dancing
every 4th Saturday. For all levels of dancers. No partner needed! Saturday, July 22, 7:30-10:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. $5.
Bend Ecstatic Dance Dance your own dance in your own way in a supportive community of kindred spirits. Come explore free form movement, connection and self-expression, guided by rich, diverse soundscapes. Visit: BendEcstaticDance.com or FB Bend Ecstatic Dance. Tuesdays, 7pm. Bend Masonic Center, 1036 NE 8th St. 360-870-6093. $10-$20. Dances of Universal Peace Joyous and
meditative, the Dances of Universal Peace celebrate insights and ideals from various spiritual traditions. Each dance combines a sacred
Zoe Gilbert
Drop-in class. Styles include contemporary, modern, jazz and ballet. Teachers rotate monthly. Friendly, supportive atmosphere! Performing opportunities available. Fridays. Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave. 541321-4321. $5.
Oregon High Desert Classics, the annual fundraiser for J Bar J Youth Programs, returns 7/18-7/30.
phrase, melody and unison movements, and is fully taught. No experience necessary. Beginners welcome! Fourth Tuesday of every month, 7-8:30pm. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd. 541385-3908. Free - donations accepted.
Lucid Dance A once-per-month, live DJ,
festival-style dance floor with fantastic beats in a high-vibration atmosphere. All ages. Alcohol free. July 21, 8-11pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100. 541-639-9695. $10-15 sliding scale.
Salsa Footwork & Partnerwork Patterns Learn a series of fun footwork
combinations followed by partner work patterns. No experience required, but the class is still challenging for experienced dancers. Tuesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. 541-325-6676. $10.
Scottish Country Dance Weekly Class No experience or Scottish heritage necessary. Weekly classes include beginner & advanced dances. Mondays, 7-9pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. First class is free, future classes are $5.
Sleeping Beauty Presented by Central Oregon School of Ballet. July 22, 3 and 7pm. Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St. $15. West African Dance Class Cultural dance experience to live drumming by Bend’s Fe Fanyi West African Drum & Dance Troupe! Learn movement to traditional rhythms of the Western region of Africa. Taught by Shannon Abero and live music led by David Visiko. Mondays, 6:307:30pm. Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd. 818-636-2465. $10.
FILM EVENTS Bend Bicycle Film Festival Launched
in May 2009 with two purposes in mind: to showcase local short films featuring our unique cycling culture here in Central Oregon and to create a social gathering where we can all reunite every spring to get excited about riding bikes. July 26, 7-10pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. 541.335.1346. $20.
COTA Movie Night: A Ride With George Hincapie Documentary about the second most
controversial American road cyclist. "A Ride With George Hincapie" brings you inside the fascinating story of the man who followed Lance. July 20, 8-9:30pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. $5/cash.
JULY 20 Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents
JULY 22
Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents
JULY 22 Hardtails Bar & Grill
JULY 25
The Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents
PATRICE PIKE & WAYNE SUTTON Presents
SHOOT TO THRILL (AC/DC TRIBUTE)
THE HOOTEN HALLERS
WOOD & WIRE
EVENTS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
LGBT Movie Night Featuring the movie,
“Heartland.” July 24, 7pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $5.
Office Space Join us for a late night movie
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / July 20, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
24
screening of “Office Space.” McMenamin’s Late Night Summer Movie Screenings every Friday & Saturday night. Check McMenamin’s website for final show times. July 21, 10pm-midnight and July 22, 10pm-midnight. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. $4.
LOCAL ARTS Art of the West Opening Reception Join us for an evening filled with art and excitement. The opening event includes artist demonstrations and a chance to mingle with the artists. No-host bar. July 27, 6-8pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Free.
Artventure with Judy Artist-led painting
event! No experience necessary! Fee includes supplies. Pre-register and see upcoming images at artventurewithjudy.com. Tuesdays, 6-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 541-410-3267. $25 pre-paid.
Camp Caldera Tours Join us this summer for a tour of our Arts Center while Camp Caldera is in action! You’ll see Caldera youth exercising their creativity, learning from professional artists and mentors, and building positive, long-lasting relationships. Call 503-937-3075 to reserve your space. Sat, July 22, 11am-1pm. Caldera Arts Center, 31500 Blue Lake Dr. Free, RSVP required. Figure Drawing Sessions We hold
figure drawing sessions with a live model every Tuesday evening from 7-9 pm at the Workhouse, there is no registration required so drop in. Bring your own drawing materials, some easels are provided but are first come, first serve. Tuesdays, 7-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 541 241 2754. $15.
Kailah Bartolome Exhibits Artwork
Tattoo artist and Bend native. Her art comes in various forms, tattoos, jewelry, pencil drawings, watercolor and acrylic paintings and more. Kailah enjoys pushing her artistic limits and finding new ways to express herself in her art. Mondays-Sundays, 9am-9pm. Through July 31. Townshend’s Bend Teahouse, 835 NW Bond St. 541-312-2001.
Lee Kelly: Sculpture and Print A North-
west icon, sculptor Lee Kelly has made his mark on Bend with two large public sculptures, “Bend Gates” and “Sound Garden.” This exhibit presents a decades-long body of work inspired by his visits to Turkey. Mondays-Fridays, 10am-7pm, Saturdays, 10am-6pm and Sundays, noon-5pm. Through July 31. Bend Art Center, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 180. 541-330-8759. Free.
Night Sky in the High Desert Are you
interested in using your digital camera to capture images of the night sky? This is your chance to learn how! July 22, 8:30pm. Cascade Center of Photography, 390 SW Columbia St. Suite 110. $115.
Art & Wine, Oh My! Local artists guide you through replicating the night’s featured image. Food and beverage available for purchase. Register online. Tuesdays, 6pm. Level 2, 360 SW Powerhouse Dr. Suite 210. 541-213-8083. $35-$45. Saturday Press Play Discover A6, the
vibrant printmaking studio housed within Bend Art Center. Pop in any Saturday in July and try your hand at printmaking with a local artist. Saturdays, 10am-6pm. Through July 30. Bend Art Center, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 180. 541-330-8759. Free.
Sisters Library Art Exhbit Exhibit for July
features “Urban PDX” in the Community Room, an exhibit of small art quilts by the MIX group of Portland. Sponsored by the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show. Wednesdays, 10am-5pm. Through July 31. Sisters Library, 110 N. Cedar St. 541-312-1070. Free.
Summer in the High Desert Featuring
VOLUNTEERS
PRESENTATIONS
courage awareness of the need for meaningful climate action. Speak or organize educational events, attend rallies, write or do art about the climate. Bend, RSVP for address. 206-498-5887.
the art of JM Brodrick, MaryLea Harris and Karen Ruane. Continues through September 6. Betty Gray Gallery, Sunriver Resort, 1 Center Dr.
Bat Walk July Join an exciting evening ex-
pedition in search of bats on our grounds using echolocator equipment. Bring weather-appropriate clothing and a flashlight to be prepared for touring the Museum after hours. July 21, 8-9:30pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. $5/members, $10/non-members.
Build a Better Understanding of Civics Series Brush up your civics education with a
three-part series led by local educator Trevor Tusow. Mon, July 24, 6-7pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-312-1032. Free.
Cheers to Art: Gustav Klimt Join art historian Lorna Cahall for an encore presentation of a popular “Cheers to Art” talk from the 2016-17 season! One of the Kings of Art Nouveau, Gustav Klimt led the new artists of Vienna through an artistic rebellion. Includes wine. July 26, 7-8:30pm. Bend Art Center, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 180. 541-330-8759. $10. History Pub Talk Farmer’s Markets are all
the rage today, but were they always? Through an examination of the famous Ferry Market in San Francisco, join High Desert Museum Curator Laura Ferguson on an exploration of the history of the farmer’s market in America. July 25, 7pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. Free.
Lava Cast Forest Hikes Join us every Sunday for an interpretive hike and learn about how Lava Cast Forest received its name and more. Meet new people, learn and have fun in this unique Central Oregon forest. Sundays, 10am-1pm. Through Sept. 3. Lava Lands Visitor Center, HWY 97. 541-593-2421. Free.
THEATER BEAT Presents The Fantasticks A funny, romantic musical about a boy and a girl kept apart by the wall their parents have built and by many other mischievous and fantastical plots against them. Fri, July 21, 7pm, Sat, July 22, 2 and 7pm and Sun, July 23, 3pm. 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave. $12-$18.
WORDS Author John Bruning Presentation
The author shares the history of P.I. Gunn an aviator in the Pacific theater of WWII in his book “Indestructible: One Man’s Rescue Mission That Changed the Course of WWII.” July 22, 6:30-8pm. Paulina Springs Books-Sisters, 252 W Hood Ave. 541-549-0866.
The Lost History of Stars by David Boling This is a powerful and shocking story
about a family during The Second Anglo-Boer War during the early part of the 20th century in Africa. It’s a work of historical fiction inspired by true events. July 21, 7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 Northwest Mount Washington Drive, #110. 541-306-6564. Free.
Poet Ellen Waterston Shares Hotel Domilocos Rounadabout Books is delighted
to have literary arts advocate and award-winning poet Ellen Waterston here to share her newest poetry release, “Hotel Domilocos.” July 27, 6:30pm. Roundabout Books, 900 Northwest Mount Washington Drive, #110. 541-306-6564. Free.
350Deschutes Climate Advocacy & Education Use your special talents to en-
Become a Big Brother or Big Sister in Redmond It doesn’t take much to make a
big difference in the life of a child. Looking for caring adult mentors who are willing to spend a few hours a month sharing their interests and hobbies. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon - Redmond, 412 SW Eighth St., Redmond. 541-617-4788.
Fences For Fido Help free dogs from chains!
Seeking volunteers to come out and help us build fences for dogs who live on chains. No experience is required. Sign up on Facebook: FFF Central Oregon Region Volunteers or Bend Canine Friends Meet Up group. More information can be found at fencesforfido.org. Bend, RSVP for address.
Go Big, Bend Big Brothers Big Sisters works
with kids who need a positive role model and extra support. By being a mentor you have the opportunity to help shape a child’s future for the better by empowering them to achieve. We need caring volunteers to help children reach their full potential! Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon, 2125 NE Daggett Ln. 541-312-6047.
Make Your Mark at Bend Spay+Neuter! Compassionate, awesome people to join an
incredible team, whether you volunteer in the clinic, festivals or helping with our community cat population. Bend Spay+Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. Suite B1. 541-617-1010.
Mentor Heart of Oregon Corps is a nonprofit
that inspires and empowers positive change in youth through education, jobs and stewardship. For more information or to become a mentor, contact Amanda at 541-526-1380. Mondays-Fridays. Heart of Oregon YouthBuild, 68797 George Cyrus Rd.
Patagonia Fundraiser for OAS The ultimate win... play and shop while supporting Oregon Adaptive Sports! 10% of proceeds on this day go to OAS. Any new folks who pledge to volunteer with OAS this summer get OAS swag. July 20, 1-6pm. Patagonia@Bend, 1000 Wall St. Suite 140. 541 306 4774. Volunteer—BCC Bend’s Community Center
has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for individuals over age six. If interested in volunteering go to bendscommunitycenter.org or call 541-312-2069 for more info. 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 541-6472363 for more details.
Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond
Looking for volunteers to receive donations, sort, and price items. Volunteers are critical to the operations of our high-save shelter and contribute directly to the care of our animals by ensuring our donations are processed. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St. 541-504-0101.
CLASSES AcroYoga Join Deven Sisler to experience how the power of acrobatics, wisdom of yoga and sensitivity of thai yoga intertwine. No partner necessary! Wednesdays, 7pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $7-$15.
EVENTS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
African Dance Classes are taught in a friendly, welcoming and fun environment, and you will leave every class with a smile on your face and joy in your heart! Wednesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. Gotta Dance Studio, 917 NE Eighth St. 541-3220807. $12.
Buddhist Mantras Chanting Explore
Capoeira Experience this exciting martial art
form of Afro Brazilian origins which incorporates music and acrobatic movements. For adults and teens. Mondays, 6:50-8:15pm and Thursdays, 6:50-8:15pm. Sortor Karate, 63056 Lower Meadow Dr. $30, two week intro.
The Change Militia - Change Your World From the Inside Out Do you have
great ideas, lots of potential and world-changing intentions? Are you curious and ready to explore what else is possible for you? This monthly program and community gives you the tools you need to get unstuck, lower your stress and believe in yourself. Mondays. Through Aug. 16. Sisters, Sisters. 805-746-6255. $99.
Couples Golf Clinic Golf is a great opportu-
nity to spend some quality time with your spouse or significant other. The Couples Clinics allows you both to learn a little about the game, particularly if your partner is new to golf. Casual and fun atmosphere. Saturdays, 5-6pm. Through Aug. 26. Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 231-218-6120. $50/couple.
Bingo Bingo cards are only $1. Winner gets half the pot; the other half goes to benefit the Bend Spay and Neuter Project, keeping pets + people together. Wed, July 26, 6-8pm. Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St. $1 bingo tickets.
German Conversation Group With a
Central Oregon Saturday Market
tutor to learn conversational German. Mondays, 7-8pm. In Sisters, various locations. 541-5950318. Cost is variable depending upon number of students.
Good Form Running Clinic Learn to run
at Brightside Animal Shelter. Ages 9-17 years. July 19, 2-3pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free.
Online Chair Tai Chi Classes Designed
Drawing Under the Influence Bring pa-
for people who have limited mobility and cannot stand for long periods of time. From a seated position soft movements are used to help increase energy, improve blood circulation. Fridays, 2-3pm. Grandmaster Franklin, 51875 Hollinshead Pl. 623-203-4883. $40.
Japanese Group Lesson We offer group lessons for both beginners and intermediate students for Japanese for all ages. Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. 541-6337205. $10 plus material fees. Kids Paddle Sports Adventure Camp
more and sign up at DIYcave.com. July 19, 10:30am. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-3882283. $70.
DIY Copper Solar Eclipse Earrings
New to Golf Clinic Whether you have just
Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com. Sat, July 22, 10am and Wed, July 26, 6pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $75.
DIY Date Night - Weld Together Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com. July 21, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $40. DIY Leather Bracelets Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com. Sun, July 23, 2:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $45.
DIY TIG Welding Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com. July 27, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $70.
DIY Welding Learn more and sign up at
DIYcave.com. Wed, July 19, 5:30pm and Wed, July 26, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-3882283. $50.
DIY Wood Lathe Turning Learn more
and sign up online at DIYcave.com. Sat, July 22, 12:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-3882283. $40.
Drop In PlayShops at The Workhouse
Drop in on Bend’s creative community. Meet local artists and work alongside them in their studios. Each session includes instruction by a local artist, all the tools and materials needed, and a finished piece for you to take home. $45 at the door. Learn more: www.theworkhousebend.com. Sat, July 22, 1:30-2:30pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 541-241-2754. $45.
Empezando su Proprio Negocio (Business Start-Up in Spanish) ¿Le
gustaría empezar su propio negocio? Asista a las clases en la cual aprenderán como tramitar los requisitos necesarios, llenar formularios, tramitar su EIN y como realizar su nómina que su negocio sea todo un éxito. July 26, 6-9pm. COCC Chandler Lab (off-campus), 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541-390-9621. $59.
Full Swing Golf Clinic For golfers that
want to learn a little more about the golf swing
Crafts to Build a Better World: Animal Shelter Make-a-Thon Create toys for animals
easier, faster and injury-free in this 90-minute clinic. We’ll go over the four points of Good Form Running, do some drills and take and review short clips of video to help build awareness. Thurs, July 20, 5:30-7pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free, RSVP required.
Tumalo Creek’s four-day paddle sports adventure week includes a day of standup paddleboarding, kayaking, rafting and learning to sail with our Hobie Adventure Island trimarans on Elk Lake. Mon, July 24, 9am-4pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541.317.9407. $395.
DIY Abstract Stepping Stones Learn
A gathering place for artists, craftspeople, growers, gatherers and food vendors to display and sell their work which is uniquely their own. Saturdays, 10am. Through Sept. 2. Downtown Bend. Free.
started playing golf or are thinking about it, this is the place for you. Fun is our method as we take you through an introduction to the swing with some time spent on the do’s and don’ts on the course. Wednesdays, 10-11am and Fridays, 4-5pm. Through Aug. 25. Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 231-218-6120. $40.
per, pen, creativity and draw under the influence! This DUI club is for anyone looking for some fun on a Sunday. Sundays, 6-9pm. JC’s Bar & Grill, 642 NW Franklin Ave.
Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers welcome. For info contact Sue at 541-610-3717. Mondays, 6-9pm. Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. $1 to $13. High Desert Garden Tour Tour seven beautiful gardens in Bend. For ticket information call 541-548-6088. Presented by Oregon State University Extension Service. July 22, 9am-4pm. City of Bend. $10, ages 16 and under free. High Desert NOW’s Wonderful Women Wednesday Join us for a no-host happy hour
and an opportunity to kick back, enjoy the weather and meet others in the area who are interested in women’s issues and social justice causes. RSVP at facebook.com/pg/HighDesertNOW/ events. July 19, 5:30-7:30pm. The Restaurant at Awbrey Glen, 2500 NW Awbrey Glen Dr.
Hopservatory Cosmic Tours The Worthy Garden Club Hopservatory is now open to the public. Register for a Wednesday or Sunday tour (9-10pm) on the Worthy Garden Club website or enjoy open viewing Thursday, Friday and Saturday (9-11pm) by signing up at the host stand. Wednesdays-Sundays, 9-10pm and Thursdays-Saturdays, 9-11pm. Through Sept. 1. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr. $5 donation. Local Artisan Trunk Show In honor of our Oregon High Desert Classics visitors, Brave hosts a trunk show featuring local artisans: Lux Reve Jewelry, She’s Happy Design Pillows and Broken Arrow Handbags. July 24, 2-6pm. Brave Collective, 133 Century Blvd. 541-408-4755. Mama Circle It’s tough being a mom. It’s easier with community. Join us for free, non-judgmental support. Share your concerns, questions, joys, challenges, experiences and practical tips. Open to pregnant women and moms with babies up to one years old. Held at the playground. Wednesdays, 11am-12:30pm. Juniper Park, 800 NE Sixth St. 541-306-8466. Free. Northwest Crossing Farmers Market
Discover a bounty of fresh produce, locally raised meats, fresh eggs and cheese, handmade items and much more. Eclectic mix of live music. Special guests and chefs throughout the season. Petting zoo and more. Saturdays, 10am-2pm. Through Sept. 16. NorthWest Crossing Neighborhood Center, 2754 NW Crossing Dr.
Pool Tournament Cash Cup Anyone can
join in, regardless of experience! APA rules, winnings based on number of participants. Tuesdays, 8pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-760-9412. $5.
Preventative Walk-in Pet Wellness Clinic First come, first served. Vaccines, micro-
chips, toenail trims and de-worming available. Service fees can be found at bendsnip.org. Saturdays, 10am. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. A-1.
Oriental Palm Reading Discover how the brain, nerves and lines connect in palmistry. Wednesdays, 6-7pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. 541-848-1255. $10. Positive Meditation Enhance relaxation, positive focus and inner awareness. For those choosing positive living. Mondays, 9-10:30am and 12-12:30pm. Through July 31. Bend Golf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Dr. 971-2176576. $8 minimum donation. Short Game Golf Clinic Short game improvement is the quickest way to lower your scores. These 60-minute clinics cover a variety of topics tailored to the attendee’s ability level and needs. Tuesdays, 10-11am and Wednesdays, 4-5pm. Through Aug. 30. Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 231-218-6120. $40. Tai Chi A free Tai Chi class open to the Bend
Community centered on a gentle and basic form for Arthritis and Fall Prevention, but will introduce more aspects of Tai Chi as the class progresses. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:30-11am. Brooks Hall at Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 Wall St. 541-548-1086. Free.
West African Drumming Level 1 Learn traditional rhythms and experience the brain-enhancing, healing and joyful benefits from David Visiko. A beginner class open to all. Mondays, 5:30-6:30pm. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. 541-760-3204. $15. West African Drumming Level 3 Build on your knowledge, technique and performance skills. Teacher/troupe director David Visiko and members of Fe Fanyi study, practice and play joyfully. Thursdays, 7-8:30pm. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. 541-760-3204. $15.
Lee Kelly displays his sculptures and prints at Bend Art Center through 7/31.
25 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
the spiritual insights and learn how to correctly chant mantras in Japanese. Reservations required. Mondays-Tuesdays-Thursdays-Fridays, 10:30am-4pm. Custom Built Computers Of Redmond, 439 SW 6th St. 541-848-1255. $10.
EVENTS
and perhaps want to find out “why does my ball always go to the right?” This session is an open forum for just about anything that has to do with a golf swing. Tuesdays, 4-5pm and Fridays, 1011am. Through Aug. 25. Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 231-218-6120. $40.
BEND’S
& CAFE OUTDOOR PATIO NOW OPEN NEW SUMMER MENU ITEMS
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Open to the Public! Best mountain views in town & only 5 minutes from downtown!
Summer Hours
Wednesday-Friday 11am-9pm Saturday & Sunday 8AM-9PM Happy Hour every Friday 5-7 Call 541-383-8200 for reservations or visit us on OpenTable 62000 Broken Top Dr. www.brokentop.com
Riverside Dining. Tasty Food. Spectacular View. Come Celebrate a Decade on the Deschutes with us S
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HAPPY HOUR 4-7
AUGUST 2ND-6TH
Rides for all ages • Rodeo & Live Animals • Concert Series www.expo.deschutes.org
August
2nd-6th Davis Shows NW will return for the 2017 Fair & Rodeo with a second carnival location called FAMILYVILLE!
RIDES • ANIMALS • EXHIBITS • FOOD • GAMES • MORE
Rides for all ages! To celebrate the excitement, discounted advance pre-sale carnival ride wristband coupons are now being offered at all Central Oregon BI-MART stores. For the low price of $29 each per person, per day. That’s right ... Ride all the rides you can for one low price! (Bi-Mart offer expires Aug 1st. Starting Aug 2nd prices increase to $36 and purchase only available at Carnival)
Rodeo & Live Animals Experience Oregon’s largest county fair and rodeo.
Celebrating 98 years and counting!
ENJOY OLD-FASHIONED FUN EVERY DAY AT THE FAIR! Day and Season Passes Available at all C.O. BI-MART stores, the Fair office and The Ticket Mill in the Old Mill District.
FREE Bus Rides! Ride the bus from Bend, Sisters or Redmond for FREE! For more info: 541-548-2711 or www.expo.deschutes.org
BRINGS YOU THE DESCHUTES COUNTY FAIR
FREE
CONCERT SERIES IN THE BANK OF THE CASCADES CENTER
AUG 3 M.E. Live
MONTGOMERY GENTRY
MELISSA ETHERIDGE
AUG 2
AUG 4 THE MARSHALL TUCKER BAND
AUG 5 OLD DOMINION
www.expo.deschutes.org
I CO
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Sunday Jams at bpk Live, Local Music every Sunday Evening
NG
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R B R EW VE
TWO LOCATIONS.
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THREE PATIOS.
Local . Organic . Farm to Table
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16 Taps . Wine . Cider . Mead . Kombucha
SUNRIVER PUB I N T H E V I L L A G E , B L D G 4 GALVESTON PUB 1 0 0 5 G A LV E S T O N I N B E N D SUNRIVERBREWINGCOMPANY.COM
Now Open
star bar
More than just NYC style pizza: deep dish . vegan . organic salads . hot sandwiches 2755 NW Crossing Drive 541-647-1819 bendpizzakitchen.com
Authentic Thai Food Happy Hour 2:30 - 6:00 Everyday in the Lounge or Outside
CATERING
Entrance on Bond Street
8035):#3&8*/( $0. Â… #&--&76& %3*7& #&/% 03
BEER * WINE * LIQUOR LARGEST LIQUOR SELECTION IN BEND
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2220 NE Highway 20 541.318.2977
Relax and Dine on our Beautiful Patio
MONDAY - SUNDAY 4:30PM TO CLOSE / LOCATED IN THE ATHLETIC CLUB OF BEND NO MEMBERSHIP REQUIRED TO DINE
61615 ATHLETIC CLUB DRIVE / BISTRO28.COM / 541.728.0065
EVENTS Sisters Arts, Crafts and Antique Show
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / July 20, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
28
An annual event that features a variety of arts, crafts, food, entertainment with a special fundraiser benefiting the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Oregon. July 22, 10am-5pm and July 23, 10am4pm. Creekside Park, Hwy 20 and E Jefferson St. 541-420-0279. Free.
Smiles of Hope & Healing For Saving Grace Distinctive Dentistry of Bend is proud
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT Young Professionals Network at High Desert Museum YPN: Growing relationships
in and out of the workplace. July 26, 5-7pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-3823221. $5/Bend Chamber member, $10/General admission.
SENIOR EVENTS
to help victims of domestic violence rediscover their smile. We want to bring awareness to all resources needed for Saving Grace. July 26, 5-7:30pm. GoodLife Brewing, 70 SW Century Dr.
Senior Social Program Monday, Tuesday and Friday social hour. Wednesday soup/salad $2 from 11-12pm. Closed Thursday. Mondays-Tuesdays-Fridays, 10am-1pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St.
Sunriver Anatique & Classic Car Show
Tai Chi for Diabetes This ongoing, very
Listen to music while wondering through the Village admiring cars from the 1920s, '30s, hot rods and the muscle cars of the '70s and '80s. July 22, 10am-2pm. The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Dr. 541-636-7591. Free.
Third Friday Stroll Third Friday of every month, 4-8pm. Downtown Redmond, Sixth Street. Free.
Visitors Day at Tech Trek AAUW Tech Trek is a weeklong residential STEM camp-taking place at OSU-Cascades. Drop in to see first-hand the exciting classes and activities taking place. July 26, 9am-4pm. Oregon State University-Cascades Expansion, SW Century Dr.
gentle class is starting over! Can be done seated, come join! Tuesdays-Thursdays, 8:30-9:30am. OREGON TAI CHI - TaiChi for Health, 1350 SE Reed Mkt Rd Ste 102. 541-639-9963.
Tai Chi for Parkinson’s & MS Walker,
cane and wheelchair ok. Certified and endorsed by the Council on Aging of Central Oregon. Thursdays, 1-2pm. Grandmaster Franklin, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd. 623-203-4883. $50/month.
MEETINGS Adelines’ Showcase Chorus Practice
For more information call Diane at 541-447-4756
or showcasechorus.org. Mondays, 6:30-9pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave.
Al-Anon Family Groups 12-step group for
friends and families of alcoholics. Check afginfo. org or call 541-728-3707 for times and locations.
Alcoholics Anonymous If you want to
drink, that’s your business. If you want to stop, we can help. Call Alcoholics Anonymous. Hotline: 541-548-0440. Ongoing. Brooks Hall at Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 Wall St. 541-548-0440.
Bend Chamber Toastmasters Develop
and grow your public speaking and leadership skills, whether you’re an executive, stay-at-home parent, college student or retiree. Wednesdays, noon-1pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. Free.
City Club of Central Oregon It is a lunch
discussion, but don’t expect this City Club forum to turn into a food fight. They are way too civil for that. But if insights are what you want, there’s no better place for lunch today. Thursday, July 20, 11:30am. Riverhouse on the Deschutes, 3075 N Hwy 97. 541-633-7163. $20/$40.
Central Oregon Homebrewers Organization A fun group of people, dedicated to improv-
ing our craft. Educational sessions, group brewing, competitions and other beer-related events. Third Wednesday of every month, 6:30-9pm. Aspen Ridge Retirement, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd. Free.
Emotions Anonymous EA provides a warm and accepting group setting in which to share experiences without fear of criticism. Through weekly support meetings, members discover they are not alone in their struggles. Wednesdays, 9:30am and Thursdays, 10:30am. Bend Church United Methodist, 680 NW Bond St. Evolutionary SELF-Healing Through guided imagery, you’ll learn how to tap into your internal power. Thursdays, 6:30-8pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-3908534. Free. Italian Conversation Group Conversational Italian group in a relaxed atmosphere. Mondays, 1-2pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. Free. Italian Language Group Italian conversation group in a relaxed atmosphere. Saturdays, 9:45-11am. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. Free.
Marijuana Anonymous Meeting Know
you need to quit, but can’t? Help is here. Share experience, strength and hope with each other. 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.
Open Meeting: Complete Relaxation Empowers Everyday Life Learn about
a simple practice, which guarantees complete relaxation, mental and emotional stability and more. Register at meetup.com/Balanced-ViewBend. Thurs, July 27, 6:45-8pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. $10-$20 or donation.
Overeaters Anonymous Meeting
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. Free.
Socrates Cafe Group People from different backgrounds get together and exchange thoughtful ideas and experiences while embracing the Socratic Method. Fourth Thursday of every month, 6-8pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-749-2010. Free. Spanish Club Spanish language study and conversation group. All levels welcome. Thursdays, 3:30-5pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-749-2010. Free. Women’s Cancer Support Group For the newly diagnosed and survivors of cancer. For information call: Judy, 541-728-0767. Call Musso on the call box upon arrival. Thursdays, 1-3pm. 990 SW Yates, 990 SW Yates Dr. Free.
Learn about volcanoes and local geology during the Mt. Bachelor Patio Talks With a Forest Ranger Mondays-Fridays at Mt. Bachelor.
Zen Discussion & Meditation A weekly lay-led Dharma discussion and meditation (zazen). Mondays, 6-8:30pm. St. Helen’s Hall - Trinity Episcopal, 231 NW Idaho St. 541-3901220. Free.
The Drum and Guitar Shop
Mon-Sat 7am - 2pm / Sun 8am - 2pm
Follow us on Instagram @fearlessbaking and facebook
541.382.2884
1900 NE Division St Suite 102 Bend, OR 97701 541.508.7469
63830 NE Clausen, Ste.100 www.thedrumandguitarshop.com
C
CULTURE
The Wonders of Flight
Balloons Over Bend Children’s Festival illuminates the community by Annette Benedetti 29 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Ready, set, lift off! Balloons Over Bend and many other activities take off 7/28.
T
he Balloons Over Bend Children’s Festival is a time-tested tradition that brings the community together to witness the wonder of hot air balloon flight, all while raising money for its most vulnerable members. This year’s event launches with the colorful orbs at sunrise July 28, and continues through the weekend with the Children’s Festival, the Balloon Blast Kids Race and the awe-inspiring Night Glow. Early risers get the opportunity to meet the pilots of the fire-powered crafts, offering a helping hand and watching as they inflate them and take flight at dawn three mornings in a row. These early morning launches will take place at R.E. Jewell Elementary School. Night owls will have their own chance to experience the wonder that hot air balloons offer during the Night Glow held on Friday at Riverbend Park and Saturday at Sunriver Resort. The events take place at dusk. As the sun descends, the pilots pull the propane levers, illuminating and giving life to the colorful beasts still tethered to the ground. This event captivates visitors both young and old and brings each day to a close with a touch of magic. The Children’s Festival The fun may begin and end with balloons, but on July 29, the festival has packed the day with a multitude of hands-on and interactive activities. Newly located in the Des Chutes Historical Museum parking lot and adjoining grassy grounds, this event features a heavy equipment rodeo, a bicycle rodeo where young cyclists can learn to navigate obstacles, an abundance of booths loaded with art projects, interactive games, face painting and more. The festival’s new location brings additional opportunities for fun as it provides space for the Balloon Blast Kid’s Race, a new addition to this year’s festivities. The race consists of a child-centric obstacle course loop set up in the museum’s grassy area. Kids run, climb, slide and tunnel their way through each challenge to the finish line.
This event divides competitors by age with children ages 3 and 4 going through the course once, 5 through 7 year-olds going through twice and 8 to 10-year-olds running around the course one time before taking on the obstacles twice. All competitors will end the challenge on a waterslide through the archway. While much about this year’s festival is new and exciting, returning families will find plenty of the most popular past activities. Children will get their chance to enjoy a large selection of bounce houses. They will even be able to keep the summer heat at bay on a new one that has a water feature. The ever-popular stuffed animal corral will be onsite and allows kids to pick their favorite animal to take home as a souvenir. Tickets to the Children’s Festival cost $10 in advance and $15 at the door. The price of the ticket also includes entry into the Des Chutes Historical Museum’s annual Summer Shootout Marble Tournament, happening the same day. While the purchase of a ticket buys attendees their way into a day filled with fun and excitement, it also lends support to Saving Grace: Imagine A Life Without Violence, a nonprofit serving the Central Oregon community by providing comprehensive family violence and sexual assault services. Tickets to the festival, along with a full schedule of events, can be found on the Balloons Over Bend Children’s Festival website. SW
Balloons Over Bend Children’s Festival Fri., Jul. 28,8:30pm Night Glow Sat., July 29, 10am – 4pm Children’s Festival Sun., Jul. 30, 8-9:30pm Night Glow Des Chutes Historical Museum 129 NW Idaho, Bend balloonsoverbend.com
KIDS' EVENTS Animal Shelter Make-a-Thon Create
toys for animals at the Humane Society of Central Oregon. Ages 9-17 years. July 27, 3-4pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7087. Free.
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Around the World: African Safari Safari
means adventure. Yours includes stories, an animal mask craft and a very silly game called “On Safari”. Ages 6-11 years. July 27, 10:30am. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7097. Free.
Around the World: Australia Get your passport stamped and take a trip down under to the land of the didgeridoo and kangaroos, too! Explore Aboriginal art through drawing, painting, and activities. Ages 6-11 years. July 21, 1:30pm. Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Ln. 541-3121080. July 26, 10:30am. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-312-1070. Free. Around the World: Costa Rica Got sloth? Venture into the Costa Rica rainforest and discover some astonishing animals and flowers as well as traditional activities. Ages 6-11 years. July 24, 10:30am. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1061. Free. Around the World: Egypt What would it be like to ride a camel around the Great Sphinx and Pyramids of Giza? Zap back in time to Ancient Egypt and create your own cartouche, LEGO Sphinx and sugar cube pyramids. Ages 6-11 years. July 19, 10:30am. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-312-1070. Free. Big Kids Yoga This class is for older kids who want to learn more of the fundamentals of yoga through more technical yoga games and a deeper exploration of postures and flow sequences. Wednesdays, 4-5:30pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $5-$6. Build a Better Balance with Tai Chi
Learn the basic kicking, jumping and stretching movements of this form of martial arts. Taught by instructors from Oregon Tai Chi Wushu. Ages 6-11 years. July 20, 1pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-312-1070. July 26, 10:30am. Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Ln. 541-312-1080. July 27, 1pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1061. Free.
Build a Better World for Pets Meet
animals available for adoption from Brightside Animal Adoption. All Ages. July 19, 1-4pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.,
Redmond. 541-312-1050. July 25, 1-4pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541312-3760. July 26, 1-4pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7050. Free.
Build a Better World with Tai Chi
Learn the basic kicking, jumping and stretching movements of this form of martial arts. Taught by instructors from Oregon Tai Chi Wushu. Ages 6-11 years. July 19, 1pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7097. Free.
Build a Better World with Trucks Knife
River construction trucks on display for you to climb, learn and explore. Check with the library for exact times. All ages. July 22, 10am-5pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free.
Camp C.R.E.A.T.E. Our experiential educa-
tion summer camp program blends learning and traditional day camp fun with seven different Storyline themed weeks. Kindergarten through 5th grade. Mondays-Fridays, 9am-4:30pm. Through Aug. 18. Cascades Academy, 19860 Tumalo Reservoir Rd. 570-575-3497. $299/week.
Cardboard Boat Races A Deschutes Public Library event, build a boat and race it at Cascade Swim Center. Ages 9-17 years. July 22, 8amnoon. Cascade Swim Center, 465 SW Rimrock Dr. 541-312-1050. Free. Cardboard Cosplay A design challenge: your costume supplies are cardboard and duct tape. Ages 12-17 years. July 20, 4-5:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7087. Free. Central Oregon Sundays Includes outdoor/ indoor aquatics and disc golf. Must show proof of residence in Deschutes, Jefferson or Crook County. Sundays. SHARC, 57250 Overlook Rd. 541-585-5000. $19/person.
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.
Discover Nature Days - What’s all the BUZZ About? Presented by Discover Your Forest. Meet and greet the local buzzing, burrowing and creeping bugs of our forests through science activities, stories and games. July 20, 11amnoon. Ponderosa Park, 225 SE 15th St.
Discover Nature Days - Birds of Prey
Experience an up close encounter with a raptor, learn about its amazing adaptations and play a game about bird migration. July 25, 11:15am12:15pm. Ochoco Creek Park, 296 NE Elm St. & NE 4th St., Prineville. July 27, 11am-noon. Pine Ridge Park, 61250 Linfield Ct.
Discover Nature Days - Habitat Heroes With Children’s Forest of Central Oregon.
Learn about what makes healthy habitat for wildlife and how you can help. July 21, noon-1pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond.
Family Eco Bike Adventure Explore some of the natural phenomena that Sunriver has to offer. Bring your bike. Fri, July 21, 9-10:30am. Sunriver Nature Center, P.O. Box 3533. 541-5934394. $60/family of 4, $10/additional person. SNCO Members get 10% off. Junior Droids Science Camp Youth ages 5-9 are invited to explore science and engineering with the High Desert Droids. Check our website for camp details. Every other Monday-Wednesday, noon-4pm. Through Aug. 9. Mountain View High School Cafeteria, 2755 NE 27th St. 541-410-7594. $75 week/camp.
Junior Golf Clinic Our PGA Professionals keep fun in the forefront of all of our clinics focusing on the basic skill sets and mental approaches needed to enjoy the game for years to come. Ages 7-16. Saturdays, 3-4pm. Through Aug. 26. Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 231-218-6120. $20. Kids Night Out Drop your kids (ages 3-10)
River Rd., Sunriver. 541-593-4394. $18/class.
LEGO Block Party Kids + 1 gazillion LEGOs
= fun. All Ages. July 22, 1pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. 541-312-1090. July 22, 3pm. Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Ln. 541-312-1080. July 26, 2:30pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-3303760. Free.
Movement, Music and Stories Movement & stories to develop skills & fun with music. Ages 3-5 years. July 25, 10:30am. Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Ln. 541-312-1080. Free.
MUSE Summer Camps for Teens/ Tweens Our Teen Muse 3-Day Summer Camps
offer a fun summer camp setting that empowers and encourages girls to find their voices, move their bodies and make a difference in themselves as well as the world around them. Through July 26, 9am-1pm. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St. $125.
Story Time - Music, Movement & Stories Movement and stories to develop skills and
fun with music. Ages 0-5 years. July 20, 10:30am. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7097. July 27, 10:30am. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. 541-312-1090. Free.
Story Time - Saturday Stories Interactive story time with songs, rhymes and crafts. Ages 0-5 years. Sat, July 22, 9:30am. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-330-3760. Free. Story Time - Sensory Story Times
off for a night of fun while you go enjoy yourselves. Dinner, snack, craft and movie included. Advanced registration required via website. Sat, July 22, 6-9pm. Bouncing off the Walls, 1134 Centennial Ct. $20.
Activities, songs and stories for children with sensory processing differences. Ages 3-7 years. Thurs, July 20, 11:30am and Thurs, July 27, 11:30am. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1061. 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! No training, experience or long-term commitment required. Saturdays, 9-10am. Through Sept. 2. 9th Street Village, 909 SE Armour Rd. 541-728-3798. $10. Mondays, 4:30-5:30pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 541-728-3798. $10.
Teen Night Teen night pool party. Reserva-
Kids Summer Camps Need a two-hour
Wildheart Summer Camps We offer a va-
break from the kiddos? Sign up for a three day camp with progressive skill building. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 10am-noon Through Aug. 31. Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245
tions required. Call 541-585-3147. Wednesdays, 8-10pm. SHARC, 57250 Overlook Rd. 541-5853147. $7-$10.
Tiny Explorers Meetup Serve as the point person and distribute free baby carriers. 4th Tuesday at Larkspur Park from 1-2pm.
riety of summer camps for ages 5 - 12. Through July 28, 9am-3:30pm. Skyliners Lodge, 16125 Skyliners Rd. 503-680-9831. $257/Full day week
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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
Kolby Kirk
S O U R C E
S P O
T
L
I G H T
The Hiker Guy By Richard Sitts
— KOLBY KIRK
“I
don’t like getting somewhere. I like being somewhere. I don’t consider hiking a sport like some people do. Hiking has a style.” For Kolby Kirk, it’s not about the destination or goal; it’s about the journey itself and everything that you can see and experience along the way. Kirk is all about taking the time to stop and observe along the trail—any and every trail. And along the way, he faithfully creates detailed journals of words and drawings. “I’m writing it down in a way that, hopefully, when someone reads it later, it will be good data for them,” he says. “When I write my journals I write for someone who might be reading this 50 years from now.” Kirk’s website, thehikerguy.com, contains words, photos and drawings inspired by his hikes and travels. There’s also a book in the works. Kirk says his grandparents moved to Bend with his infant father in 1947, making him a third-generation Oregonian. He lived in Eugene until the age of nine, and since then has lived all over, he says, from Minnesota to California. He estimates that by the age of 17 he’d lived in 17 different houses. He landed in Arcadia, Calif., where he had a job in research and development for the matchmaking website, eHarmony— from which he was laid off in 2011. Kirk says that he knew
ARTWATCH
what he wanted to do within a week of being unemployed: hike the Pacific Coast Trail, move to Bend, meet a girl and get married. He started on the south end of the 2,650-mile PCT and headed north, making it about 1,700 miles before “the weather kicked me off in October,” at Etna, Calif., near the Oregon state line. He’s lived in Bend ever since, and last September married wife Jasmine. From that 2011 PCT jaunt Kirk ended up with 7,700 photos and 650 pages of journals, including prose and sketches. Earlier this year, his words and drawings began to grace cans of Crux Fermentation Project’s PCT Porter. He’s now in the midst of transcribing all those notes (some 176,000 words) into a book scheduled for publication in 2019. Kirk’s day job is working as a content specialist at local marketing company G5, which, Kirk says, “is ironic because my website sucks right now.” He attributes that to neglect, as he works full time at G5 and strives to meet book deadlines. When asked if he ever wanted to return to the PCT to hike the remaining miles he missed, Kolby is uninterested. However, he says he fell in love with the Sierra Nevada mountains and did return in 2012 to explore side trails
Darwin’s writings about the Galapagos Islands. “We’re in the golden age of science, still.” As we sat and talked in the shade in downtown Bend, Kirk noticed a longhorn beetle. Its antennae are longer than its body, making for an awkward flight pattern that’s easy to notice, he noted. This year, he’s focusing on learning about beetles and ants. Last year, he says it was lichen. “I like to say I’m a citizen scientist. I just love learning about everything. I am a life-long learner.” Kirk, 42, says he has been a world traveler since he was 25, and has since visited 30 countries. Most recently, he and Jasmine went on a 16-day honeymoon exploring Italy by backpack, journaling all the way. At 6’3” and over 300 pounds, Kirk runs roughshod over the stereotypical image of a hiker (although he did lose 90 pounds on that 2011 PCT hike). “I’m carrying all this weight.” Then, he adds, with a laugh, “I’m like a mule but sometimes I act like an ass.” Asked how many miles he thinks he’s hiked in his life, he can only venture, “Thousands.” SW
By Howard Leff
Art in the Round
Traffic Circles Are Sights to See
"Guilded River" at the roundabout at 3rd St. and Murphy Rd.
and areas that he missed the first time. “I’m still waiting to see my first mountain lion. I know they’ve seen me. I’ve seen countless bears, usually their butts running the other way. “What I was looking for on the PCT I’ve already found. Being on the trail is like life; it’s different for everybody. I always say that the people who are out there on those long trails are either trying to find something or lose something.” Kirk says besides the wonders that nature has to offer, he also finds humanity from fellow hikers and others with whom he comes into contact. Along the way, Kirk has earned a certificate as an Oregon Master Naturalist, a program offered through Oregon State University. And for the past three years he has been a volunteer for the Deschutes Land Trust. He also has been running his own outdoor journaling program, encouraging others to journal about their own adventures. He says he tries to capture thoughts and scenes by sketching. Kirk says he is inspired by the journals of pioneer explorers Lewis and Clark, as well as Charles
In spite of the opinions you may have about driving through Bend’s ubiquitous roundabouts—one thing’s for certain: They generally contain some attractive art. Check out the intersection of SE 3rd Street and Murphy Road for the latest example. Inside the traffic circle sits a sparkling new sculpture entitled “Gilded River,” installed earlier this summer. It’s one of about two dozen roundabout art projects in Bend—and one of the most visually striking. “The arches of the [tree] trunks of Gilded River come together to represent an outdoor cathedral,” says Ken McCall,
one of three Idaho artists who worked on it. “There are over 500 moving parts.” So who’s behind all this public art? Credit local nonprofit, “Art in Public Places,” started by a group of young mothers in the early ‘70s who originally sought out ways to bring both art classes and shows to Central Oregon. The process starts with AiPP soliciting ideas from artists across the West. “Bend has a great reputation for public art,” says board member Jody Ward. “It’s a very desirable place for a public artist to have their work displayed. That helps as far as the quality of the artists that apply. We take a look at applications and then narrow
them down.” Eventually, she says, Bend citizens get a chance to comment on the possible choices. Their input plays a role in the final decision—and those decisions aren’t easy. Over 130 applications came in during the last artist call. Ward also notes that most people mistakenly assume that public funding pays for this art. In fact, she says, it’s funded by private donations—primarily the Bend Foundation, the philanthropic organization established by Brooks Resources. Either way, public art pieces brighten a community’s shared spaces. “I think they make you smile,” Ward adds. “And as they say—if you don’t like one, keep on driving.” SW
31 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
"What I was looking for on the PCT I've already found. Being on the trail is like life; it's different for everybody."
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REDMOND’S FREE SUMMER MUSIC SERIES IN SAM JOHNSON PARK
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CH
CHOW
LITTLE BITES
A Locavore’s Tea Tour
By Kelly Lawer
By Kelly Lawer
Tasting Notes
Tea tasting in (and from) Central Oregon
This Writer’s Picks for the Best Teas 33
T's Tonics' blends are on display at The Hub in Prinveville, where patrons can pull up a chair and sip their tea.
S
ip. Ah. There’s nothing like an iced tea in the middle of summer. (Or hot tea, according to my insane friend who insists you feel cooler in the long run for it.) The point is, tea is amazing. Bendites are blessed with a host of cafes featuring their own blends of home-roasted coffee, but what often gets overlooked in the caffeine high is just how many tea blenders we have right here in Central Oregon. With several small businesses making premium quality teas that are served at equally local cafes, Central Oregon is overdue for its very own tea guide. And so, this tea enthusiast had a mission: giving you a taste of the tea offer-
always something new being blended each season, inspired by herbs that grow naturally along the Metolius River. While the camellia sinensis plant— the leaf that puts the actual black, green, or white tea into a tea blend— can’t be grown here or in most of the United States, Metolius goes the extra step of getting to know the farms and farmers it relies on around the world. The company’s website features blogs about trips to their partner tea farms in Yunnan, China. Other herbs that aren’t native to Central Oregon are also sourced with care; Metoluis works with a women’s co-op in Kenya, for
wanting flavors to be bold by using natural extracts and flourishes such as chocolate and fruit pieces. “It’s a letdown when you try a flavor of tea that sounds really amazing but doesn’t actually taste like much.” The company boasts dozens of bold flavors. They also sell soaps scented by their own teas. In Powell Butte it's T’s Tonics, a family business that not only blends tea from local herbs, but also makes a variety of herbal healthcare products. Tea blends range from “Pain in the Joint Relief Tea,” which helps with exactly what it sounds like, to “Central Oregon Outback,” which helps with allergies and may have the most "We definitely wanted to have a tea company that local ingredients of any tea in existence. stood out." While it officially became a busi— CINDY NEISWONGER, OWNER OF INSPIRED LEAF TEA ness eight years ago, owner Teresa Schings in our area. example. They’re a small business that weitzer has been making and sharing Metolius Tea is the easiest localputs small business first. her herbal creations as long as she can ly blended tea to find for the average Another Bend company is Inspired remember. “I just came by it very natcafé-hopper. Blended in Bend, MetoLeaf Tea, which specializes in unique, urally. My dad is a farmer and so was lius is sold at over 20 cafes around and decadent flavors including Coconut my grandmother. We were just raised just outside of town. Dudley’s BookTruffle, Cucumber Mojito (which dou- around it.” Their tea is served at The shop Cafe in downtown Bend lets you bles as a unique cocktail mixer) and Hub in Prineville. T’s Tonics can also enjoy the tea and a variety of pastries Carrot Cake. The locally-blended tea be purchased online, but both the tea while browsing its impressive selection is sold in grocery stores around the and the café are well worth a trip out of books, including local magazines. area along with being served at Café of town. Bom Dia near the COCC campus has Sintra in a teapot big enough for two Next time you visit a local cafe an impressive happy hour with 50 perpeople to share. for a local cuppa, consider switchcent off tea and other drinks. It’s easy “We definitely wanted to have a tea ing things up and trying one of the to see why so many cafes have takcompany that stood out,” owner Cinblends brought to you by our local en to this brand in particular: there’s dy Neiswonger explained, stressing tea companies. SW
The Carrot Cake tea by Inspired Leaf Tea really does taste like liquid carrot cake with a little bit of sugar and cream. Without, it’s a more soothing, but has a still-bold flavor that makes a great guiltfree dessert tea for cool nights.
T’s Tonics may be best known for its herbal tea blends, but its Lavender Earl Grey is one of the best Earl Greys I’ve ever had. The blend has a malty black tea and a generous amount of locally grown lavender. It’s heavenly with a splash of milk. SW
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Metolius Tea’s Little Bear tea is great over ice this time of year. The lemongrass in the blend balances out a hint of spicy ginger, and the pear mildly sweetens the tea rather than tasting too strong or artificial.
FOOD & BEER EVENTS
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34
Taste the difference at the Superfood Sorbets & Smoothie Bowls Workshop at Pure Joy Kitchen on 7/26.
FOOD Bend Farmers Market The Market occurs once a week downtown in the Brooks Street Alley behind the Tower Theater. Wednesdays, 3-7pm. Through Oct. 11. Downtown Bend. Find everything you need from fruits and vegetables, to meat, poultry, dairy, sweet treats and flowers. Fridays, 2-6pm. Through Aug. 18. Mt. View High School, 2755 NE 27th St. Prineville Airport Open House Fly-in and Car Show Activities include EAA 617
Pancake Breakfast, Aircraft Displays Crook County Rodders Classic Cars, Discovery Flights Raffles and Prineville Lions Club/Parr Lumber hamburger/hot dog lunch. July 22, 8am-2pm. Prineville Airport, 4585 Airport Way. 213-3053241 or 541-416-0805. Free.
Superfood Sorbets & Smoothie Bowls Workshop Learn how to replace eggs, dairy
Best Venue for live music, dancing, food and libations
Live Music 5 Days a Week Thu 7/20
Scott Wyatt 7:30 to 10:30 Fri 7/21
The Substitutes 8:30 to 12 Sat 7/22
The Substitutes 8:30 to 12 Sun 7/23
Dark and Grey 6 to 8
Mon 7/25
Blues Night 6 to 9
Tue 7/26
Acoustic Open Mic
w/ Derek Michael Marc 6 to 9
Saturday and Sunday Breakfast 62860 Boyd Acres Rd in Bend
(541) 383-0889
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and gluten by using wholesome plant-based ingredients. July 26, 6-7pm. Pure Joy Kitchen, 519 NW Colorado Ave. 541-389-5224. $40.
Tapas Cooking Class Tapas are beautiful
small bites that are a staple in Spanish cuisine. In this hands-on workshop, learn to make a variety of tapas. July 21, 5:30-9pm. Kindred Creative Kitchen, LLC, 62070 27th Street Bend. 541-6400350. $85.
Wednesday Night Cookouts Enjoy a
casual dinner from the grill on the lawn overlooking Suttle Lake, along with local brews. Each Wednesday hosted by a different guest brewery pouring four seasonal beers. Wednesdays, 5-8pm. Through July 19. The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse, 13300 Hwy 20.
BEER AND DRINK 10 Barrel Charity Night Join us for some
good chow and cheer at 10 Barrel’s Westside pub! Profits from food and drink sales from 5-9pm go towards Oregon Adaptive Sports along with the profits from their charity t-shirt sold throughout the month of July. July 25, 5-9pm. 10 Barrel Brewing Co., 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-306-4774.
2017 Oregon Legislative Session Wrap-Up at Pints and Politics Special
guests Russ Hoeflich, executive director of 1,000 Friends of Oregon and Paige Spence, director of the Oregon Conservation Network, update guests about what happened in the 2017 Oregon Legislative Session. July 20, 7-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 541-241-4762. Free.
Bingo & Mimosas Play bingo and drink mimosas in the sunshine at Aspect’s outdoor beer garden. #sundayfunday. Sundays-noon. Aspect Boards & Brews, 1009 NW Galveston Ave.
Cork & Barrel - The Wine Event of Central Oregon Three-day fundraising
event benefiting KIDS Center. “A Taste of the PNW” with 17 guest wineries from Walla Walla, the Willamette Valley and Columbia Gorge. Local and regional guest chefs. Thurs, July 20, 6pm, Fri, July 21, 5pm and Sat, July 22, 4:30pm. Broken Top, 62000 Broken Top Drive. 541-3835958. $100+.
Cribbage for a Cause In partnership, White Water Taphouse and Boneyard put on a fundraiser for Oregon Adaptive Sports! Grab a pint, play some cribbage, put your feet up knowing that $1 of every beer goes to OAS. July 26, 6-9pm. The White Water Taphouse, 1043 NW Bond St. 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.
Food Truck Fridays & Saturdays Tasting
flights take center stage when paired with the European cuisine provided by We’re the Wurst. Fridays, noon-8pm and Saturdays, 1-7pm. Monkless Belgian Ales, 20750 High Desert Ln. Suite 107. 541-610-5098.
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.
Shepplekofeggan CAN Release Get
your first crack at Monkless in CANS! Our super drinkable Shep Witbier is perfect for hot summer days, river hangs and any occasion that calls for a sessionable beer! July 22, 3-6pm. Monkless Belgian Ales, 20750 High Desert Ln. Suite 107. Free.
Three Creeks Brewing Company 9th Anniversary Celebration Cake
and beer pairing on Friday night, raffles and giveaways Saturday and photo contest winner announced Sunday. New beer releases. Stop by for a chance to win gift cards, gear and more. July 21, 6-9pm and July 22, 11:30am-9pm. Three Creeks Brewing Co., 721 Desperado Ct., Sisters. 541-549-1963. Free.
Tipsy Trivia Featuring craft cocktails, amazing food and trivia prizes for the best and worst. Thurs, July 20, 7pm and Thurs, July 27, 7pm. The Barrel Thief Lounge at Oregon Spirit Distillers, 740 NE First St. 541-550-4747. Free.
Wine Tastings Join us every Friday and
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.
Beer Tastings Don’t miss out! Join us every Friday afternoon for delicious beer tastings. Fridays, 3:30-5:30pm. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave. 541-382-3940. 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.
Saturday for tasty wine tastings. Fridays, 3:305:30pm and Saturdays, 3:30-5:30pm. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave. 541-3823940. Free.
MICRO
Mexican Lager All Summer
Craft breweries turn south of the border for inspiration
Does your piano need to be tuned? Call a professional.
W
and Modelo, all of which are around a century or so old. It’s not a genre that has a massive amount of nerd-beer appeal, but it’s the bread-and-butter of several well-known craft outfits, including Ska Brewing (Mexican Logger), Oskar Blues (Beerito) and the in-house Josephs Brau brand sold in Trader Joe’s stores. A few locally-made ones worth checking out: • Tranquilo Especial MSA (Tranquilo): Not a lager beer, strictly speaking, but a “Mexican style ale” made by these local guys, affiliated with the Hola! restaurant. The Especial is like a much nicer version of Corona, but look out for the Amber MSA for more of a flavorful feel. • ¡Uno Mas! (Mazama): Not to be confused with “Una Mas” (made by Left Coast in California), Uno Mas offers a full-flavored introduction to the genre. The Corvallis-based brewer keeps it pretty traditional with this one, so expect light malt flavor and the kind of crisp finish that does, in fact, inspire a desire for another one quickly. • Mexican Style Lager (Pfriem): For a truly Northwest take on the genre, look no further than our benevolent friends from Hood River. Made with a mixture of malted barley and corn, Pfriem’s version has a lot more malty backbone than most in this genre, which features just a bit of light hoppiness that works perfectly with the crisp finish. SW
541.388.5147
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
currently available
hole Foods’ annual Brewfest, held in early July each year and benefiting the High Desert Museum, can always be a bit of a challenge. It’s a small, intimate festival, with just over 25 breweries showing up, and all the booths are managed by actual brewery representatives who can tell you much more about their drinks than a volunteer in a T-shirt. But the fest is in a parking lot in the middle of summer, and that means hydration—and choosing the right beer for the hot weather—is important. That’s where Mexican-style lagers come in, and this year’s festival had no fewer than five of them on hand; a pretty hefty percentage for such a laidback event. Even before the Spanish conquistadors entered the lands south of what’s now the United States, people were drinking fermented beverages down there. Much of it was made from the agave plant, the origin point of tequila and mescal. Once upon a time, Mexicans overwhelmingly beat the heat by drinking pulque, a sour, yeasty drink made from fermented agave sap. It’s got a sour, viscous flavor and clocks in at around 5 percent ABV, but an influx of German immigrants in the 19th century, as well as a wacky period in the 1860s when Mexico was an “empire” ruled by an Austrian noble, allowed beer to very neatly take pulque’s place on dining-room tables. (Pulque is still made, even enjoying a PBR-style hipster resurgence around Mexico City.) These days, Mexican lager (itself based on Vienna lager) is popularized by brands such as Dos Equis, Pacifico
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Keeping Central Oregon in tune for over 20 years.
By Kevin Gifford
Bend's entry into Mexican-style cerveza includes Tranquilo Especial, affiliated with Hola!
JANA HYDER'S PIANO SERVICE
Drake Park | Free Music | Food Carts | Deschutes Brewery On Tap | Art/Craft Vendors | Kids Zone
FILM SHORTS By Jared Rasic
JULY
THURSDAY NIGHTS 5:30PM
20 OZOMATLI
"Band Aid”
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / July 20, 2017 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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SPECIAL GUEST
Possessed by Paul James
47 METERS DOWN: A thriller about two young
women on vacation who get trapped in a shark cage...47 meters down. Some critics are saying this movie is an absolute blast and others are calling it the worst shark movie since “Sharknado.” Either way, it will be very entertaining. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX.
THE HOUSE: Will Ferrell and Amy Poehler starring in an R-Rated comedy about gambling hits right in my cinematic sweet spot. These two actors together are an absolute treat and the movie looks hysterical. Hopefully catching this one on the big screen won't be too much...of a gamble. Sorry, not sorry. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
BABY DRIVER: Edgar Wright is the visionary
RADIANCE OF RESISTANCE: From Rise
BAND AID: An adorable romantic-comedy musical about a bickering married couple who turn all of their biggest fights into songs and start a band. Featuring a cast including the wonderful (and writer/director) Zoe Lister-Jones, Adam Pally, Fred Armisen, Colin Hanks and Hannah Simone, “Band Aid” will charm the pants right off of you. So wear two pairs. You're in public. Tin Pan Theater
ROUGH NIGHT: In the spirit of “Bridesmaids”
THE BEGUILED: A remake of a weirdly sexist
SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING: We know what you're thinking: “Another rebooted Spider-Man??” Yes, they just tried this and failed, but the difference is now Marvel Studios gets to play with him. That means team-ups with Iron Man, Captain America, the Guardians of the Galaxy and more. Tom Holland's Peter Parker is fantastic, so this is nothing but good news. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema
THE BIG SICK: Based on the real-life romance of comedians Kumail Nanjiani and Emily V. Gordon, “The Big Sick” was one of the breakout movies of Sundance this year. The film walks the line between hilarious and bittersweet so beautifully that anyone who's ever thought they found love will be enchanted. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX.
TRANSFORMERS: THE LAST KNIGHT:
behind such modern classics as “Shaun of the Dead,” “Hot Fuzz” and “The World's End.” It's been way too long since his last movie, but now we can rejoice as he brings his distinct style to a crime thriller/musical/comedy. It looks absolutely sublime. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
WE ARE TELEVISION IN CENTRAL OREGON
Independently Owned and Operated
Clint Eastwood movie puts Sophia (“Lost in Translation”) Coppola in the director's chair once again. It tells the tale of a wounded enemy soldier who takes refuge in an all-girls boarding school. The original was from the POV of the man, whereas the remake follows the women. An edge-of-your-seat story. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House
CARS 3: The continuing adventures of Lightning McQueen and Pixar's most annoying creation: Mater. I know the kids like him but, holy hell, what did we do to deserve Larry the Cable Guy in our ears for another 90 minutes? C'mon Pixar, you're better than this. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX DESPICABLE ME 3: Whether or not you'll enjoy this new entry in the massively successful animation series depends on whether you're sick of the minions yet. If you can still handle them, then this is a pretty funny animated movie that kids will love and parents won't feel insulted by. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX. Sisters Movie House. Redmond Cinema. 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? Sisters’ Movie House, Redmond Cinema.
THE HERO: Legend Sam Elliott plays an actor who gets a cancer diagnosis and questions his legacy. The film is simultaneously heartbreaking, life affirming and beautiful. A lovely piece of work. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
Up International and AMZ Productions comes a powerful look at Palestinian refugees through the lens of children who only know what it's like living in occupied territory. For anyone fascinated or enraged by the Palestine/Israel conflict, this film is unmissable. Tin Pan Theater
and “Very Bad Things” comes a star-studded comedy about a bachelorette party that goes horribly wrong when the women accidentally kill a male stripper. I hope they all learn a valuable lesson because male strippers are people, too, and he was probably working his way through college or something. McMenamins Old St Francis
Another summer means another “Transformers” movie, but this one goes a little bonkers with its plot. Now with King Arthur, Merlin, dragons and space gods...just in case the mythology of this series needed to be a little more convoluted. Still, if you like explosions, this series continues to deliver. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
WAR FOR THE PLANET OF THE APES:
The “final” installment to the “Planet of the Apes” prequel trilogy not only sends the series out on a high note, but also manages to be one of the best films of the year. When all is said and done, “Dawn,” “Rise” and “War” will be recognized as one of the high watermarks of speculative fiction and allegory of the last 30 years. See full review on p 37. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema.
WISH UPON: An evil old music box grants wishes that turn out to cause super elaborate deaths for everyone involved. This sounds a bit like the “Final Destination” franchise and its Goldbergian murder party but without the charm or inventiveness. They should make more “Final Destination” movies instead of this crap. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
WONDER WOMAN: Finally, a big screen adaptation of one of the most beloved superheroes in history. It's amazing that it took this long. Advanced word is that the DC Extended Universe has finally gotten it right with this one in ways they failed with “Batman Vs. Superman” and “Suicide Squad.” History has been made with this film. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
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SCREEN Gorilla Warfare
A True Summer Blockbuster By Jared Rasic 37
20th Century Fox
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
You really don’t want Caesar looking at you like that.
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know you’re not going to believe me, but “War for the Planet with truly emotional storytelling. of the Apes” is a masterpiece. Not a masterpiece in comparMatt Reeves doesn’t shoot the film like he’s directing a goofy ison to other summer blockbusters, but compared to other summer blockbuster; instead his influences shape a movie cinematic works of art. Somehow, a movie where 75 percent of much more memorable than the usual popcorn garbage. There the main characters are computer-generated primates speak- are shades of Francis Ford Coppola’s “Apocalypse Now,” David ing in sign language is the most exciting, emotionally brutal Lean’s “Lawrence of Arabia” and Shakespeare’s “King Lear” for and satisfying film I’ve seen this year. good measure. There are large stretches of the film with no diaThis is the third (and final?) film in the rebooted “Apes” logue at all, content to treat the audience like intelligent movietrilogy, which follows 2011’s goers who can handle looking Bad Ape broke my heart a dozen times surprisingly good “Rise at visual poetry instead of of the Planet of the Apes” hearing the half-baked diathroughout the film and made me want to and 2014’s darkly beautiful logue which normally comes break into a zoo and hug some primates. “Dawn of the Planet of the from the typical summer popApes.” I don’t have a strong corn fare. connection to Pierre Boulle’s 1963 novel or Charlton Heston’s Instead of feeling like an homage to better works of art, 1968 film, so the fact that this modern retelling has surpassed “War for the Planet of the Apes” manages the much more difthe source material isn’t much of a shock. ficult task of being a lovely and thoughtful social allegory and Caesar (once again played by the remarkable Andy Serkis) a heartbreaking look at the cost of war. There’s a chimpanzee is now the war leader of the remaining simians, but he would in “War” named Bad Ape (beautifully played by Steve Zahn) prefer to hide out in the forest and let the virus that gave who made me cry more than I felt comfortable with. He used him his intelligence wipe out the rest of humanity. He sends to live in a zoo and thinks that’s his name because that’s what the rest of the apes out to a new territory to live and takes his keepers called him most of the time. Bad Ape broke my a small group into human territory to kill a sadistic and psy- heart a dozen times throughout the film and made me want chotic army colonel played by Woody Harrelson (channeling to break into a zoo and hug some primates. He’s a completehis inner Brando). ly CGI creature created with motion capture, and it might be That’s basically it. The film has a very simple story on my favorite performance of the year. That’s amazing. which to hang some very big ideas that usually don’t get cov“War for the Planet of the Apes” has no right being this ered in our multiplexes. Whether the film is touching on Cae- good. It has raised the bar not just for summer blockbustsar’s choice of what kind of ers, but for everything comleader he needs to be (noble ing out across the rest of the or bloodthirsty) or on Haryear. There’s imagery in this War for the Planet of the Apes relson’s colonel as he forces that will stay with me the Dir. Matt Reeves captured apes to BUILD A rest of my life and ideas that Grade: A WALL TO KEEP OUT HIS will change how I look at the Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema ENEMIES, it’s always balworld. Pretty good for popancing character moments corn entertainment. SW
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Bad Habits
Prepare to be here-tickled By Jared Rasic 39
Gunpowder & Sky
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
They won’t take any of your nun-sense. That was the last one, I swear.
“T
he Little Hours” has a one-joke premise that could have laughter that it easily could have been a television show (on easily been a “Saturday Night Live” sketch rather than a cable, obvi) and might have even worked better as one. I wantfeature-length movie. For any other movie, that would ed to spend more time with these characters and was genuinebe an insult—but this perfect cast and team of filmmakers ly taken aback when the movie ended. squeezes every drop of hilarity and mirth out of that one joke. The anachronistic dialogue was mostly improvised by the Based on “The Decamergifted cast, as writer/director on” by Renaissance author That sense of freedom is felt in every Jeff Baena shot the picture Giovanni Boccaccio, “The Litwith only an outline to work frame as the film feels like it could tle Hours” feels like a ‘70s artfrom. That sense of freedom house picture combined with jump off the rails at any second and run is felt in every frame as the a gleefully profane ‘80s sex film feels like it could jump naked and screaming into the woods. off the rails at any second and comedy, shot through the lens of modern gender politics, all run naked and screaming into while being set in the 14th century. Somehow, all these aspects the woods. are so perfectly curated that the film never suffers from tonal Underneath all the jokes is also something truly subversive. whiplash and it never runs out of steam with what, on paper, is an There are flourishes of Pasolini’s adaptation of “The Decamawfully thin premise for 90 minutes of entertainment. eron,” and Ken Russell’s “The Devils,” which were released Dave Franco plays Massetto, a handsome young servant around the time second-wave feminism was on the rise. This who’s sleeping with his master’s wife. When his master finds is not as post-feminist as “The Handmaid’s Tale,” but watching out, he escapes to a convent filled with foul-mouthed, horny these nuns fulfill their desires for the first time in their lives and possibly insane nuns. The perfectly-cast Alison Brie, sends a powerful message. Aubrey Plaza and Kate Micucci are the three young sisters, Yes, “The Little Hours” is sacrilegious. It’s also offensive, with Molly Shannon and John C. Riley playing the head nun absurdist and dry as the inside of an old VCR, but the film has and priest, respectively. With guest turns by Fred Armisen, more to say about sexism, racism, classism and the failings of Nick Offerman, Adam Pally, Paul Riser, Jemima Kirke and the 21st century patriarchy than anything released in theaters Lauren Weedman, the bench is so deeply stacked with bril- so far this year. Late in the movie, when Fred Armisen’s clueliant comedians that the less Bishop screams at a nun movie feels like it’s 20 minfor “living in pleasure,” and utes long. “loving the world,” it’s hard The Little Hours Dir. Jeff Baena That’s actually the biggest not to think about how far Grade: Aproblem with the film. The we’ve come and how much Sisters Movie House characters are so well drawn further we have to go. SW and the premise so ripe for
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OUTSIDE EVENTS ATHLETIC Athletic Conditioning Summer Camp
Sign your 8th graders and high schoolers up for this awesome summer camp. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9-10, 10:15-11:15 and 11:30-12:30am. Through Aug. 17. Fusion Fitness, 951 SW Simpson Ave. #104. 541-306-6757. $225.
Basic Skills Standup Paddleboard Class Sundays, 9-11am and 10am-noon, Thurs-
days, 9-11am. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541-317-9407. $55.
Cascade Cycling Classic The longest consecutively run elite stage race in the country, attracting North America’s top cyclists and teams. July 19-23.
FootZone and light up the night on a group run. July 24, 8pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St.
OAS Rocks! Join Oregon Adaptive Sports at
Homewaters Roundup Join Native Fish
Society for an evening of live music with Franchot Tone to benefit wild, native fish and the Deschutes & John Day Rivers. July 22, 5-9pm. Miracle Barn, 65599 Tweed Rd. 503-344-4218. $75.
Interpretive Patio Talks Volunteer Interpretive Rangers share information on the cultural history of this area. Mondays-Fridays, 11-11:30am and 1:30-2pm. Lava Lands Visitor Center, HWY 97. 541-383-5530. Free. Long and Winding River Explore the Upper Deschutes River and learn about its geology and hydrology. July 26, 8am-4pm. Gail Snyder. 503961-4528. $10.
Rapid Progression Whitewater Clinic
Moms Running Group All moms welcome with or without strollers. Thursdays, 9:30am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free.
Steel Road Bike Group Ride No-drop
group road bike ride. Leaves from Jackson’s Corner Eastside location. Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Jackson’s Corner Eastside, 1500 NE Cushing Dr. Suite 100. 541-382-2453. Free.
Under Armour Mountain Running Series Seven trail race distances: 5K, 10K, 50K, half marathon, marathon, marathon relay and vertical K. A $5,000 prize purse divided between the top three male and female 50K finishers. July 22, 7:30am. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Dr.
OUTDOORS Basic Skills Kayaking Class Learn
Move it Mondays Runs are between 3-5 miles, paces between 7 and 12-minute miles. Mondays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Mt. Bachelor Patio Talks with a Forest Ranger Learn about volcanoes, geology, ecology and the cultural history. Mondays-Fridays, 11:45am-12:15pm and 1:30-2pm. Mt. Bachelor - Pine Martin Lodge, 13000 SW Century Dr. 541383-5530. Free. (With purchase of lift pass).
PONDERosa: Nature Talks in the Trees
Deschutes National Forest specialist talks about a different aspect of Central Oregon’s landscape. Thursdays, 10-11:30am. Cascade Lakes Welcome Station, 18390 Century Drive. 541-383-5453.
The Unusual Flora of Pine Mountain
comprehensive safety and basic paddle stroke techniques. Thursdays, 9am-1pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541.317.9407. $75.
Learn about fascinating species adaptations. July 23, 9am-3pm. Oregon Natural Desert Association, 50 SW Bond St. Suite 4. 541-330-2638. Free.
Bike with a Ranger Enjoy an interpretive
Explore vast stretches of the Deschutes National Forest by boat. Saturdays and Wednesdays, 9am-4pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541-317-9407. $105.
bike ride, meet new people and have fun while learning about the natural and cultural history of this monument. Fridays, 11am-1:30pm. Lava Lands Visitor Center, HWY 97. 541-593-2421. Free.
Full, Half & 6.5 Trail Marathon | Bend, Oregon www.haulinaspen.com
run. Wednesdays-noon. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free.
the Bend Rock Gym for a community climbing celebration and fundraiser for the launch of our adaptive rock climbing club. July 27, 6-10pm. Bend Rock Gym, 1182 SE Centennial Ct. 541-3064774.
Concentrate on specific topics and skills. Every other Thursday, 6-8pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541.317.9407. $25.
Saturday August 6th 2016
FootZone Noon Run Lunch hour 3 to 5 mile
FootZone’s Bend Classic Mile A
Light Up the Night Join Cascade Relays and
Bend, Oregon
out Sunriver’s diverse habitats. Mon, July 24, 8-9:30am. Sunriver Nature Center, P.O. Box 3533. 541-593-4394. $60/family of 4, $10/additional person.
Half-Day Deschutes River Tour Explore the heart of the Deschutes National Forest. Fridays, 9am-1pm and Tuesdays, 9am-1pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541-317-9407. $75.
welcome for a 3-5 mile run. Thurs, July 20, 6-7:30pm. Market of Choice, 115 NW Sisemore St. July 27, 6-7:30pm. Dillon Falls, Deschutes National Forest. Free.
Count on samples and recipes – and nutrition expertise. July 20, 7-8pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free, please RSVP.
Half As, Half & Full Trail Marathon
Family Birding at the Sunriver Nature Center Locate and observe birds through-
Free New Rider Clinic Come learn the Olympic sport of BMX with USA BMX certified Head Coach, Matt Nelson. Mondays, 5:306:30pm. High Desert BMX, 21690 Neff Rd. 541390-1608. Free.
pulse-pounding, downtown Bend foot race between the men’s and women’s criterion races during the CCC. July 22, 6pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. $25.
Monday - Saturday 10am - 6pm Sunday 10am-5pm
Eddyline Kayaking Clinic Casual Eddyline specific kayaking clinic. July 20, 5-8pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541-317-9407. Free.
Central Oregon Running Klub (CORK) Weekly Thursday Run All ages and levels
Homemade Nutrition for the Trails
834 NW Colorado Ave Bend, Oregon 97703 541-388-0688 www.mountainsupplybend.com
Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541-3179407. $25-35.
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. Tuesdays, 7-7:30am. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St. Free. Brace & Roll at Tumalo Creek Every other Thursday, 5-8pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak &
Upper Deschutes River Kayak Tour
Walk Up Pilot Butte Join JessBFit for this breathtaking walk up Pilot Butte. Tuesdays, 8-9am. Pilot Butte State Park, Pilot Butte State Park. 503-446-0803. Free. Wedesnesday Night Racing Bring your
bike, helmet, long sleeve shirt, long pants and closed toe shoes. Wednesdays, 5:30-7:30pm. Through Oct. 25. High Desert BMX, 21690 Neff Rd. 541-390-1608. $8.
O
OUTSIDE 20/40/60
Pickleball: Why yes, this is your mama’s racquet sport!
Look for the 20/40/60 feature, featuring three generations trying out a new activity, in the Source the third week of each month.
By Anne Pick, Nicole Vulcan and Richard Sitts
Anne Pick, 20-something-ish I’ll be honest, despite being the youngest, I considered myself to have the greatest disadvantage when it came to pickleball. Racquet sports have never been my forte. I think it’s the hand-eye coordination element, which is the same reason I’m not successful at video games. Or maybe there’s just too much space in my brain taken up by song lyrics. The day started out with me aimlessly driving around the parking lot at Pine Nursery Park. When I finally stopped and asked two lovely women where I could find the pickleball courts, the first woman gleefully responded, “Oh! I love pickleball!” Once I found my way there, Richard, Nicole and I met with Christie
who taught us the basics, the history of the sport and offered information about the Bend Pickleball Club. I was stunned to find out the club has 650 paying members! I’d heard ramblings about pickleball throughout the office, but had no idea it was this popular. The rules seemed simple enough, and one thing Christie said that resonated with me was that the game was created based in fairness—which I love. I’m generally not that competitive, unless you ask one of my sisters, that is. Rules designed for fair play and making games fun definitely stuck out as a great reason to take up pickleball. Christie had to keep telling me to keep my wrist straight. Taking that kind of instruction can be difficult for me, as my brain doesn’t compute that way (see above). By the end, she complimented my strokes. Despite losing to her and Nicole twice, I came out feeling confident in the game I’d just learned to play. I don’t know if I’ll ever play pickleball again, but I would definitely love to introduce the sport to my mom. Nicole Vulcan, (almost) 40-something I grew up next to a neighbor with a tennis court, where every summer, my mother would send us over to take our turns attending Jean Nash’s tennis camp. While my sisters and I didn’t emerge victorious tennis pros, Williams sisters style, I’m sure my mother had a great time sipping margaritas with us kids out of her hair. The point: I have a little experience on the tennis court—which meant that I was ready to crush some serves over the net at my opponents on the pickleball court. My mistake. Pickleball doesn’t require the force of tennis, especially on the serve. Where tennis can involve an overhand serve that sees the ball howling over the net, pickleball serves are underhand. They can howl a bit too, but with a smaller court than tennis, and a light, plastic whiffle ball, it’s not quite so much. In fact, “dinking” the ball, as in, hitting it just enough to “dink” it over the net, close-in, is the money shot in this game, not the hard hit. Unless someone is serving toward you, pickleball is largely played near the “kitchen,” the line closest the net. While you’ll need agility to
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Want to see the 20/40/60 team—and its awesome teachers—in action? Check out the new 20/40/60 video on pickleball at BendSource.com.
Christie Gestvang, left, instructs Richard Sitts on balancing and bouncing the ball. Below, Nicole Vulcan strokes a winning shot.
shuffle across the court, you’re not likely to suffer extreme rotator cuff or elbow injuries with pickleball. It’s just more mellow—and with my nearing-40 body suffering silly, lingering injuries on the reg, that’s a good thing. Richard Sitts, 60-something On sweltering, humid summer nights in small-town southeast Kansas, there wasn’t a lot for high schoolers to do on Friday and Saturday nights besides hang out at the lighted asphalt tennis courts in the city park. Rather than burning gas and cruising the repetitive loop through town, we’d work up a dank sweat on those dark, muggy nights. Slurpies were our salvation! Who knew that tennis experience would come in handy 45 years later when I tried out pickleball for the first time. Knocking that baseball-sized plastic ball around brought back ingrained memories of nailing perfect tennis and ping-pong shots. Christie, our pickleball sensei, said that my tennis and ping-pong experience would serve me well. During our two games of doubles (I won’t mention the scores—I’m sorry, Ann, you deserved better) I hit many more bad shots than good, but I could see myself getting better at this game and having fun doing so. I liked how pickleball concentrates the fun of tennis and ping-pong into a smaller space, thus requiring less movement on my part. Another thing: Pickleball people are about the friendliest folks you’ll come across. Christie could not have been a kinder and more supportive teacher, not to mention a walking
encyclopedia of pickleball knowledge. My wife, Floy, dropped by to watch us play, and another pickleball club member, Brian (I didn’t catch his last name), reached out and gave her a tutorial on the sport on an adjoining court. Pickleball wasn’t entirely foreign to me; I wrote a story about it several years ago, back when it appeared to be an activity geared toward older participants. But now, it’s ON for all ages. Even former pro tennis players are lunging into the sport. It’s fun, you can play at your own speed, and there’s an informal vibe that is welcoming. And bottom line, it just seems like a great way to get some fresh air and exercise with minimal wear on the bod. SW Pickleball Zone Bend USAPA PNW Regional tournament Aug. 10-13 Pine Nursery Park BendPickleBallClub.com
Places to play:
Larkspur Park 1700 SE Reed Market Rd., Bend (Bring your own net) Pine Nursery Park 3750 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend Organized play through Bend Pickleball Club Mon.Sat. 7am-12:30pm; courts also open to the public Ponderosa Park 225 SE 15th St., Bend (Bring your own net) Quail Park 2755 NW Regency St., Bend Summit Park 1150 NE Promontory Dr., Bend La Pine Community Center (indoor) 16405 1st St., La Pine ($2 drop-in fee) Sam Johnson Park 333 SW 15th St., Redmond Other private facilities available; check BendPickleballClub.com for more courts.
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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ow that all the Wimbledon stuff has died down, the world can stop talking about tennis, and focus instead on the number-one growing racquet sport in the nation: pickleball. People love the sport; perhaps even disproportionally so in Central Oregon, where the Bend Pickleball Club boasts on its website as having over 2,500 members. The website of Cascade Indoor Sports, soon to open a private indoor pickleball-slash-trampoline facility in northeast Bend, recalls how club members, a few short years ago, used to sneak onto the tennis courts at Pine Nursery Park, eventually working out a deal with Bend Park & Recreation District to build dedicated courts. The District offered the land for the courts; the club raised half the funds to build them. According to that account, the club went from 84 to 350 members in one year. With membership soaring and the club set to host the U.S.A. Pickleball Association’s Pacific Northwest Regionals Aug. 10 to 13, we set out to find out what all the fuss is about. Christie Gestvang, Central Oregon ambassador for the U.S.A. Pickleball Club and owner of accessories/instruction company Pickleball Dawg, was happy to oblige, meeting us on Sunday morning for a primer. The first lesson: Pickleball is a combination of racquetball, ping pong and tennis… and it’s a lot more fun than watching Wimbledon on TV.
JULY 11
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The Pandora Moth Has Returned
Think you need to eradicate them with chemicals? Don’t do that. Just wait a week. By Jim Anderson
At left is the adult female Pandora moth. Right, (inset), are a last instar Pandora moth larva and parasitic wasp cocoons on a Pandora moth caterpillar.
Y
ep, those are Pandora moths flying around your front porch lights. If they could speak, they’d be shouting, “We’re baaaaaack!” However, this has been a minor outbreak. Last time they appeared in massive numbers was in 1990 and ’91.
The earliest Pandora outbreak recorded was in 1893, when federal Indian agents noticed the Klamath People roasting the larvae. As you can see, they’re attracted to lights—so if you don’t want them to lay eggs on your pines, turn off your lights; you’ll save energy and money at the same time. The Pandora moth’s life cycle works something like this: around the end of June, the adult moths appear (dig their way out of the ground where they went from caterpillar to adult in the pupae stage) and lay eggs, which hatch in August. Those larva satisfy their hunger by eating the needles of pines— and only pines. Pandora moths are not found everywhere. It’s the loose pumice soils that make this part of North
An
n
er so
er so
Sue Anderson
Jim
d
Jim
An
d
America their desired stomping (pardistinctive to their species, which the don, flying and eating) grounds. The males—with their oversized yellow pine tree needles (leaves) they devour antennae—are quick to sense and recgo with the soils, making them a very ognize. Nature, however, has dictated specialized insect. that they have only a very short time They grow as they eat, and at the to get the job done; in about a week point where they get too big for their they’ll all be dead. britches, they burst the outer skin and The Paiute people of today in Calithe next instar (the term for growth fornia’s Owens Valley and Mono Lake of a caterpillar) emerges. After its 6th areas still harvest, prepare, store and or 7th instar, the caterpillars leave eat the larvae of the Pandora moth, the trees and bury themselves in the which they call “piuga.” The larvae ground, where they will remain for a year (or, in some instances, two to four are collected during their late August migration across the forest floor at the years) to later emerge as adult moths. end of their first year of life. The catOn a big hatch year, caterpillars erpillars are gathered by hand once or heading for their underground home twice a day and temporarily stored in can cause—and have caused—costly trenches in the ground. The larvae are problems for the Oregon Department then roasted in fire-heated sand for of Transportation. During a massive 30 minutes; the sand not only cooks outbreak in the ‘70s, cars and trucks the insects but also serves to remove on Highway 97 between Bend and the fine hairs (setae) from their bodies. Klamath Falls crushed millions of catLike other things in nature, everyerpillars attempting to cross the highthing is connected, and there are “natway, which became slick as winter ice. ural controls” for population buildups. As a result, sanding trucks had to be One is a “wilting virus” that puts the employed to prevent more accidents. finish on expanding adult PandoKris Kristovich, retired Sisters ra moth numbers. Also, during their cross-country coach, recalls back in population explosion, wasp and fly ‘91 when he and his six-year-old grandparasites lay eggs on, and in, the catdaughter, Natasha, were attending a erpillars, which also takes a great toll night baseball game in Vince Genna on the moths, while helping the wasps Stadium when the moths appeared and flies to build up their populations. in great numbers, making a real mess Then there’s our little Screech Owl of things. look-alike, the Flammulated Owl. The earliest Pandora outbreak They nest in and around the Lava Top recorded was in 1893, when federal Butte area, south of Bend and in othIndian Agents noticed the Klamath er pine forests with dead trees and People roasting the larvae. Converwoodpecker cavities. While most owls sations with the Klamath leaders are rodent-eaters, flams, on the other indicated the caterpillars were a wonderful addition to their diet when they hand, are insect-eaters, with Pandora moths high on their menu. appeared— which wasn’t very often. Sure, you can kill the moths with And here the moths are with us chemicals, but why bother? Nature’s again… noticeably flying about the been dealing with insect outbreaks lights of homes, barns and businessever since the sun was a tiny thing, es. The adult moths, however, have there weren’t no moon and the no interest in eating. Even if they Big Dipper was a little tin did, they couldn’t, as they have drinkin’ cup. So, please, no eating apparatii. They’re Have a question about the natural world let them live out their interested in one thing and of Central Oregon? time and you keep our air one thing only: mating. Send your questions to jimnaturalist@gmail.com. and soil clean of chemiThe female moths are cals… this outbreak’s about flying about releasing pherdone anyway. SW omones (scent) that are
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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REAL ESTATE ADVERTISE IN OUR REAL ESTATE SECTION ADVERTISE@BENDSOURCE.COM
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Otis Craig Broker, CRS
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3795 NW Summerfield Timeless single level home on Awbrey Butte close to the river trail. Open & bright floor plan extends to a private patio. Spacious master suite + 2 bedrooms.
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1855 NW Troon Ave A rare opportunity to build your dream home on Bend's westside.
63192 Via Palazzo Private townhome located in NW Bend. Welcoming great room w/vaulted ceilings, floor to ceiling windows & a chef’s kitchen w/slab-surface counters & SS appliances.
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DESERT PINE PROPERTIES, LLC
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Cole Billings Broker
Skjersaa Group | Duke Warner Realty
For Rent
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541.383.1426
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Downtown Sisters Live/Work Townhome $3400/mo New Industrial/Rustic Luxury Live-Work space in
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IN REAL ESTATE FOR YOU! NICK NAYNE
PRINCIPAL BROKER, GRI CELL 541.680.7922 OFFICE 541.647.1171
The Broker Network, LLC www.TheBrokerNetworkRealty.com 505 NW Franklin Ave, Bend, OR 97703
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TAKE ME HOME
By Nick Nayne Principal Broker, The Broker Network, LLC
Real Estate Statistics for June 2017
T
HOME PRICE ROUND-UP
from $193 in June 2016. Sales for June were mainly among the low and middle price points. The largest share of homes sold were in the $100,000 to $400,000 price range comprising about 49 percent of total home sales, followed by the $400,000$600,000 range at 29 percent. The remaining home sales for the higher end of the market comprised about 22 percent. Building permits issued decreased from 91 in June 2016 to 70 in June 2017 and inventory levels continue to remain tight. Most industry analysts feel that a four to six month inventory level is needed for a balanced market that favors neither buyers nor sellers. Most of these analysts are also saying that new construction is not keeping up with housing demand.
Photos and listing info from Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service
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 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
Pioneer Park Condimium 1565 Northwest Wall Unit 103
1 bed / 2 baths 650 sqft $219,000 Great as an investment vacation rental. This unit is available as a vacation rental. Get a piece of the wast side at this price! Maria Halsey, Broker 541.788.0876 Listed by My Lucky House
Monticello Estates
Off Deschutes Market Rd 4 bed / 2.5 baths 1921 sqft $336,000 Walking distance to Pine Nursery Park. Fenced back yard, upgraded blinds and comes with all appliances. Maria Halsey, Broker 541.788.0876 Listed by My Lucky House
LOW
2637 N.E. Pilot Butte Dr., Bend, OR 97701 2 beds, 1 bath, 912 square feet, .17 acre lot Built in 1969 $244,900 Listed by Preferred Residential
$336,000
MID
207 N.E. 10th St., Bend, OR 97701 4 beds, 2 baths, 1,726 square feet, .16 acre lot Built in 1957 $409,000 Listed by Sunriver Realty
HIGH
18883 Sutherland Court, Bend, OR 97702 6 beds, 7.5 baths, 7,994 square feet 10.09 acre lot Built in 2005 $4,250,000 Listed by Premier Property Group, LLC
45
55300 Huntington Road, Bend, OR 97707
VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
he Beacon Report, based on real estate statistics from our local MLS, released its report of the June 2017 figures which allow some interesting comparisons to last month’s and last year’s Bend single family residence sales of one acre or less. According to the report, closed sales in Bend for the month of June 2017 increased by 30 transactions over May 2017 for a total of 246 sales as compared to 210 for May 2017. The median sales price increased from $379,000 in May to $409,000 for June. Not only were more homes sold and at a higher median sales price, but they were sold at a higher price per square foot as reflected in the median price per square foot increase of about 4 percent over May. The median price per square foot increased from $204 for May to $213 for June 2017, and up
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s y a D Dog Summer of
With more dog friendly parks, patios and ponds than you can count, Central Oregon sure is a puppy’s paradise! The Source loves our four-legged friends so we are pleased to present you with The Dog Days of Summer issue. From health tips to activities for you and fido to do together, we have got you covered! Reserve your ad space today and be a part of the “fur”tastic issue!
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AUGUST 18TH-19TH 2017 SHAKESPEARE’S EPIC PLAY FOR
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BEND, OREGON
A guy friend of 20 years and I once fooled around years ago. Though he has a girlfriend, he keeps throwing sexual remarks into our conversations, sending inappropriate texts, and asking me to send naked photos. I wouldn’t be interested even if he were single, and I’ve been giving subtle hints, like “ha-ha…gotta go,” right after he says something provocative, but it isn’t working. How do I politely get him to stop without ruining a very long friendship? —Upset As a means of communication, hinting to a man is like having a heartfelt conversation with your salad. This isn’t to say men are dumb. They just aren’t emotional cryptographers. Social psychologist Judith A. Hall finds that women are generally far better at spotting and interpreting nonverbal messages (from, say, facial expressions and body language, including that female specialty, the pout). Women tend to use their own ability for decoding unspoken stuff as the standard for what they expect from men. So, for example, the longer a man takes to notice that his girlfriend is pouting (perhaps about what was initially some minor to-do) the darker things get — with hate glares and maybe some cabinet-slamming…and then, the grand finale: “Hey, heartless! Time for a monthlong reunion with your first sex partner, aka your right hand!” There’s also a major sex difference in how males and females speak. A body of research finds that from childhood on, males tend to be direct: “Gimme my truck, butthead!” Females tend to be indirect (couching what they want in hints and polite and even apologetic language): “Um, sorry, but I think that’s my Barbie.” Psychologist Joyce Benenson points out that these conversational sex differences line right up with evolved sex differences in our, uh, job descriptions. Men evolved to be the warrior-protectors of the species. This is not done with coy hints: “Oh, Genghis, you look so much more tan and handsome while invading our neighbors to the north.” Women’s mealy-mouthing, on the other hand, dovetails with a need to avoid physical confrontation, which could leave them unable to have children or to care for the ones they’ve already had. However, in women’s self-protectively not quite saying what they mean, they trade off being understood — especially by men. Making matters worse, research by
evolutionary psychologists Martie Haselton and David Buss on the “sexual overperception bias” in men suggests that the male mind evolved to be a bit dense to a woman’s signals that she isn’t interested. Basically, men seem evolutionarily predisposed to make errors in judgment in whether to pursue or keep pursuing a woman — erring in whichever way would be least costly to their mating interests. So, for example, you might eventually forgive this guy for all the tacky come-ons, but his genes won’t if they miss that vagina-shaped bus into future generations. In other words, in giving this guy “subtle hints,” you aren’t being polite; you’re being wildly ineffective. Yank off the marshmallow fluff and tell him: “I need you to kill all the sex talk. Immediately. And yes, this includes requests for naked selfies.” (Be prepared to need to repeat yourself.) If he really is a friend, he’ll continue being one. He might even become a better one — the sort you can call anytime, day or night, from the coldest place on the globe, and he’ll say, “I’ll be Amy Alkon there with the sled dogs pronto,” not, “Text me a shot of your boobs before you die of hypothermia!”
Eau Gag Me
I love how my boyfriend smells, but I hate his new cologne. The smell literally makes me queasy. Is it even my place to ask him to stop wearing it? How do I tell him I don’t like it without it being mean? —Plagued Try to focus on the positive: You find him extremely jumpable whenever he isn’t wearing a $185 bottle of what it would smell like if sewage and verbena had a baby. Unfortunately, it seems that his cologne and your immune system are poorly matched. Biologist August Hammerli and his colleagues find that a person’s fragrance preferences correlate with their particular set of infectious intruder-tracking genes, called the “major histocompatibility complex.” So, in not liking your boyfriend’s cologne, it isn’t that you think he’s an idiot with bad taste; it’s that your…I dunno, great-great-grandma got it on with some hot peasant with the “verbena smells like dead, rotting chickens” gene. The science is your way in: “Sadly, your cologne does not play well with my genes...” Cushion the blow with something sweet, like, “I know you love it, and I wish I loved it, too.” Suggest you shop together for a new cologne for him (ideally something that makes you want to get naked, and not just down to your World War II gas mask).
AKA Geoffrey of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (c) 2017, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave. Suite 280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (advicegoddess.com).
ASTROLOGY
CANCER (June 21-July 22): I predict that four weeks from now you will be enjoying a modest but hearty feeling of accomplishment — on one condition: You must not get diverted by the temptation to achieve trivial successes. In other words, I hope you focus on one or two big projects, not lots of small ones. What do I mean by “big projects”? How about these: taming your fears; delivering a delicate message that frees you from an onerous burden; clarifying your relationship with work; and improving your ability to have the money you need.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “I’m very attracted to things that I can’t define,” says Belgian fashion designer Raf Simons. I’d love for you to adopt that attitude, Virgo. You’re entering the Season of Generous Mystery. It will be a time when you can generate good fortune for yourself by being eager to get your expectations overturned and your mind blown. Transformative opportunities will coalesce as you simmer in the influence of enigmas and anomalies. Meditate on the advice of the poet Rainer Maria Rilke: “I want to beg you to be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and to try to love the questions themselves.” LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I’ve compiled a list of four mantras for you to draw strength from. They’re designed to put you in the proper alignment to take maximum advantage of current cosmic rhythms. For the next three weeks, say them periodically throughout the day. 1. “I want to give the gifts I like to give rather than the gifts I’m supposed to give.” 2. “If I can’t do things with excellence and integrity, I won’t do them at all.” 3. “I intend to run on the fuel of my own deepest zeal, not on the fuel of someone else’s passions.” 4. “My joy comes as much from doing my beautiful best as from pleasing other people.” SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): The world will never fully know or appreciate the nature of your heroic journey. Even the people who love you the most will only ever understand a portion of your epic quest to become your best self. That’s why it’s important for you to be generous in giving yourself credit for all you have accomplished up until now and will accomplish in the future. Take time to marvel at the majesty and miracle of the life you have created for yourself. Celebrate the struggles you’ve weathered and the liberations you’ve initiated. Shout “Glory hallelujah!” as you acknowledge your persistence and resourcefulness. The coming weeks will be an especially favorable time to do this tricky but fun work. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): I suspect you may have drug-like effects on people in the coming weeks. Which drugs? At various times, your impact could resemble cognac, magic mushrooms, and Ecstasy — or sometimes all three simultaneously. What will you do with all that power to kill pain and alter moods and expand minds? Here’s one possibility: Get people excited about what you’re excited about, and call on them to help you bring your dreams to a higher stage of development. Here’s another: Round up the support you need to transform any status quo that’s boring or unproductive. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.” So said psychologist Carl Jung. What the hell did that meddling, self-important know-it-all mean by that? Oops. Sorry to sound annoyed. My cranky reaction may mean I’m defensive about the possibility that I’m sometimes a bit
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A source of tough and tender inspiration seems to be losing some of its signature potency. It has served you well. It has given you many gifts, some difficult and some full of grace. But now I think you will benefit from transforming your relationship with its influence. As you might imagine, this pivotal moment will be best navigated with a clean, fresh, open attitude. That’s why you’ll be wise to thoroughly wash your own brain — not begrudgingly, but with gleeful determination. For even better results, wash your heart, too. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): A “power animal” is a creature selected as a symbolically by a person who hopes to imitate or resonate with its strengths. The salmon or hare might be a good choice if you’re seeking to stimulate your fertility, for example. If you aspire to cultivate elegant wildness, you might choose an eagle or horse. For your use in the coming months, I propose a variation on this theme: the “power fruit.” From now until at least May 2018, your power fruit should be the ripe strawberry. Why? Because this will be a time when you’ll be naturally sweet, not artificially so; when you will be juicy, but not dripping all over everything; when you will be compact and concentrated, not bloated and bursting at the seams; and when you should be plucked by hand, never mechanically. ARIES (March 21-April 19): The Greek word *philokalia* is translated as the “love of the beautiful, the exalted, the excellent.” I propose that we make it your keyword for the next three weeks — the theme you keep at the forefront of your awareness everywhere you go. But think a while before you say yes to my invitation. To commit yourself to being so relentlessly in quest of the sublime would be a demanding job. Are you truly prepared to adjust to the poignant sweetness that might stream into your life as a result? TAURUS (April 20-May 20): It’s a favorable time to strengthen your fundamentals and stabilize your foundation. I invite you to devote your finest intelligence and grittiest determination to this project. How? Draw deeply from your roots. Tap into the mother lode of inspiration that never fails you. Nurture the web of life that nurtures you. The cosmos will offer you lots of help and inspiration whenever you attend to these practical and sacred matters. Best-case scenario: You will bolster your personal power for many months to come. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Two talking porcupines are enjoying an erotic tryst in a cactus garden. It’s a prickly experience, but that’s how they like it. “I always get horny when things get thorny,” says one. Meanwhile, in the rose garden next door, two unicorns wearing crowns of thorns snuggle and nuzzle as they receive acupuncture from a swarm of helpful hornets. One of the unicorns murmurs, “This is the sharpest pleasure I’ve ever known.” Now here’s the moral of these far-out fables, Gemini: Are you ready to gamble on a cagey and exuberant ramble through the brambles? Are you curious about the healing that might become available if you explore the edgy frontiers of gusto?
Homework: In what circumstances do you tend to be smartest? When do you tend to be dumbest? Testify at Freewillastrology.com. © Copyright 2017 Rob Brezsny
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47 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Spain’s most revered mystic poet was St. John of the Cross, who lived from 1542 to 1591. He went through a hard time at age 35, when he was kidnapped by a rival religious sect and imprisoned in a cramped cell. Now and then he was provided with scraps of bread and dried fish, but he almost starved to death. After ten months, he managed to escape and make his way to a convent that gave him sanctuary. For his first meal, the nuns served him warm pears with cinnamon. I reckon that you’ll soon be celebrating your own version of a jailbreak, Leo. It’ll be less drastic and more metaphorical than St. John’s, but still a notable accomplishment. To celebrate, I invite you to enjoy a ritual meal of warm pears with cinnamon.
preachy myself. Maybe I don’t like an authority figure wagging his finger in my face because I’m suspicious of my own tendency to do that. Hmmm. Should I therefore refrain from giving you the advice I’d planned to? I guess not. Listen carefully, Capricorn: Monitor the people and situations that irritate you. They’ll serve as mirrors. They’ll show you unripe aspects of yourself that may need adjustment or healing.
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WELLNESS EVENTS Community Healing Flow A gentle flow
class by donation with all proceeds benefiting the Humane Society of Central Oregon. Fridays, 5-6:15pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. 541-322-9642.
Crystal Bowl Harmonic Sound Bath
Energy Do you find yourself lacking energy?
Find out in this class how you can regain the energy your body should be giving you. July 25, 6-6:30pm. Pangea Chiropractic, 19550 Amber Meadow Dr. Ste#110. 541-728-0954. Free.
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.
Healing Vibrations Meditation Group
Learn tools to transform old, limiting beliefs into life-affirming patterns. Tune into your heart and tap into your highest good. No experience required. Sundays, 6:15-7:15pm. Yogalab, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 170. 541-731-3780. Sliding scale $8-20.
Laughter Yoga Proven to reduce stress
and increase health, it’s a great team-building activity leaving your group energized and relaxed, allowing motivation and cooperation. Fourth Wednesday of every month, 8-9am. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541330-004. Free.
Learn Chi Gung Gentle body movements and breath. For strength, vitality and peace of mind. Register: Judy@JudyCameron.com or 415-3027320. Saturdays, 10-11:30am. Through Aug. 5. Pro Motion Physical Therapy, 1693 SW Chandler Ave, Suite 140. 415-302-7320. $39/4 class series. Men & Stress Learn the causes of stress
and reduce the negative effects. Let go of anger, manage anxiety and improve relationships. Call Dan Anderson, M.A. to reserve your place 541390-3133 or email: dan@anderson-counseling. com. Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. Old Mill District, Upper Terrace Drive. 541-390-3133. $25/week.
Morning Yoga Invigorate your week with Monday morning yoga at the shop! Join us for a free, weekly vinyasa flow class open to all levels of yoga experience. Mats will not be available to rent, so please be sure to bring your own. Rotating Instructors: Deven Sisler & Marlene Covey. Mondays, 8:30-9:30am. Through Sept. 25. OutsideIN, 845 NW Wall St. 541-317-3569. Free. 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. 541-350-6517. Free.
Recovery Yoga Wherever you are on the road of recovery, this yoga class offers a safe and confidential place to explore how meditation, pranayama (breath work), journaling and yoga can aid in your recovery and enhance your life. This gathering is not limited to drug and alcohol dependence, as we are all on the road to recovery from something! Thursdays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-5508550. By donation.
guide you to enhance well being using yoga props, including sandbags. Small class sizes enable individual support and guidance through a creative, healing blend of postures. Reservation required to attend. Mondays-Sundays, 10:30am12:30pm. Nicole Williams, 1245 SE Division Street. 541-848-9156. First class $5, class card prices vary.
49 VOLUME 21 ISSUE 29 / July 20, 2017 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Experience the transformative and awakening tones of over 10 Crystal and Tibetan Bowls, crystal pyramids and more. Your body and soul will thank you. Bring a mat and pillow. July 23, 7-8:30pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 509-456-8315. By donation.
Restorative Yoga Restorative yoga formulas
Roll & Release: Self Myofascial Release Workshop Join Autumn Adams for
this workshop exploring the fascia of the body. Autumn uses multiple techniques to release tension and stuck energy from the body, which are accessible and applicable to anyone who has every “slept funny” on their neck, injured themselves, or is simply a human in a body. July 24, 6-8pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-408-2884. $20.
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. With Grandmaster Franklin, for people of all ages. Tuesdays, 1-2pm. La Pine Parks & Recreation, 16406 First St. 541-536-2223. $30.
Tension and Trauma Releasing Exercises Workshop Participants are introduced
to their own tremor process while learning to listen to internal cues to maintain feelings, comfort and control at all times. Workshop meets three times, attendance at all three is required: July 23 2-4pm, July 30 2-3:30pm and August 6 2-3:30pm. July 23, 2-4pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $85 for entire series.
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. Wednesday Night Kirtan Bring your heart and voice and join our growing community for an ongoing, weekly offering of Bhakti and sacred song. If you have a rattle or play a drum or wind instrument, bring it along. Includes an improvisational chant. Wednesdays, 7-9pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-285-4972. $15 drop-in or use your Sol Alchemy punch card. Yoga 5-Week Series for Beginners
Learn correct alignment, feel better! For students beginning in the Iyengar method or anyone wanting to pick up their practice again. yogaofbend.com. Thursdays, 6-7:15pm. Through Aug. 10. Iyengar Yoga of Bend, 660 NE Third St. Suite 5. 541-318-1186. $57 or $16 drop-in.
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SMOKE SIGNALS
By Josh Jardine
Race Bias and Words Matter
Tony Webster / FLICKR
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If you say it wasn’t racial When they shot him in his tracks Well I guess that means that you ain’t black It means that you ain’t black — Drive By Truckers “What It Means”
W
e recently passed a terribly sad oneyear anniversary July 6, and I’ve been struggling to frame the tragedy properly. It addresses something that I know exists, but that doesn’t mean I’m the best person to speak to it. Because even though I recognize the problem, I think I may still be part of the problem: White Privilege and Cannabis. On July 6, 2016, a traffic stop in St. Paul, Minn., turned horrific in a matter of seconds for the driver, Philando Castile, his fiance, Lavish Reynolds and her 4-year-old daughter. Castile, a 32 year old nutrition services supervisor at a Montessori Magnet School, was licensed to carry a firearm, and he told the officer he was armed in a calm, deliberate manner. Things got really bad, really quick, after that. In a video that you may have seen (and if so, will never forget), Philando Castile was murdered by the officer at point blank range while Lavish live streamed the shooting—and Philando’s death—on Facebook. It’s horrible to watch, from Philando painfully bleeding out, Lavish narrating what no one should ever have to see, to her daughter seeking to calm down her sobbing mother while they sit together in the back of the police cruiser by saying “Mom, please don’t scream ‘cause I don’t want you to get shooted!” Jeramino Yanez, the officer who shot him, was charged with felony manslaughter. As we have seen so many times so as to have become sickeningly surreal yet familiar, he was acquitted. Recently, a transcript was released of Yanez discussing what had happened during the stop, which he gave the day after the shooting. His justification for his actions? He smelled marijuana. These are his words. This really happened. “I thought, I was gonna die and I thought if he’s, if he has the, the guts
and the audacity to smoke marijuana in front of the five-year-old girl and risk her lungs and risk her life by giving her secondhand smoke and the front seat passenger doing the same thing, then what, what care does he give about me,” Yanez told investigators. He continues later in the interview to say by way of justifications of his actions: “Because usually people that carry firearms carry ‘em on their waistband. Um, and or, in between the seats and being that the inside of the vehicle smelled like marijuana, I didn’t know if he was keeping it on him for protection from a drug deal, or anything like or any other people trying to rip him.” Never mind that Minnesota has a licensed regulated medical cannabis program, so there was every reason to assume that Castile had a perfectly valid reason for smelling like cannabis. (And we don’t have anything other that Yanez’s assertion that he did.) I’ve hotboxed literally over 100-plus vehicles, though never as a driver. But I wasn’t smoking alone, and yep, we got pulled over more than once. At no time did it ever cross my mind we would be shot, because smelling like a plant is not an offense that’s punishable by death. That’s my white privilege showing. I take for granted that my consumption of cannabis will not result in a disproportionate response by law enforcement, resulting in my demise. This is why, as a cannabis industry still vastly owned and operated by white people, we need to do more. To encourage investment/ownership into minority cannabis businesses, to support cannabis conviction expungements for people of color, and to speak up on the vastly disparate arrests and sentencing for cannabis offenses placed upon POC. You can start with checking out the Portland-based nonprofit Minority Cannabis Business Association (www. mcba.com). They are addressing these issues and others. And what of Officer Yanez, who shot a young black man because he may have smelled like pot smoke? He recently resigned from the force after being acquitted, and took a $43,500 payout. All because he “smelled marijuana.”
THE REC ROOM Crossword “Russian Influence�
We’re Local!
Š Pearl Stark mathpuzzlesgames.com/quodoku
Questions, comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark at pearl@bendsource.com
51
containing the main ingredient in aspirin. Or as that’s now being called,
ACROSS  1. Somewhat cracked 5. Actor alongside Patrick in “Logan� 9. Marshall boxes 13. Columbus’s home 14. Airy spaces 15. Electrical cord 16. Regular folks on the Russian Space Station? 18. Barron’s subscriber 19. Place to worship an old Russian assembly?
27. Barbecue selection 30. It’s a plus 32. Hairy ox 33. It’s played with 80 balls 36. “Care for this Russian money, Whoopi?� 40. Like some summer rentals 41. Nincompoop 43. Mazda roadster 46. “Wrecked� channel 47. Nincompoop 48. Government agcy. founded by Lincoln 49. Texans sometimes make them: Abbr. 52. Card used in euchre and canasta 53. Russian insect repellent? 58. One of two for J. K. Rowling: Abbr. 59. Flimsy Russian forest? 63. “___ Fan Tutti Frutti� (Squeeze album) 65. Glastonbury grandmother 66. Quick cut 67. Vigeland Museum city 68. Wedding reception song staple
R A N T S
"New research says that _____ used to relieve pain by chewing on a plant
26. Bandmate of Ed, Johnny, Phil and Colin
H E L D
25. Jacket button
Fill in every row, column, and 3x3 box with each of the letters exactly once. The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote:
24. Show that Alec Baldwin has hosted the most
21. New England fish
64. Takes top billing
★★★★
Difficulty Level
DOWN  1. Sub’s counterpart, in nic! We're Nobody pa BDSM new crossrunning a it? Don't? 2. Spicy tuna word. Like to thoughts 3. Tinsel-covered tree Send your urce.com r@bendso ito ed 4. Drum on a rack 5. Implied letters in a URL 6. River to the Caspian 7. Rupert ___ (Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s mentor) 8. Wears 9. Dumbstruck 10. Moments of confusion 11. Incubator baby 12. Trig function 14. Kind of wrestling 17. Ref. book that will probably never be printed again 20. Served blazing 21. Total dump 22. Burn on the outside 23. Big name in streaming players 27. Stink 28. “Picnic� playwright 29. Bit of help 31. Pick up 33. “The Day The Earth Stood Still� alien 34. Fluent to a fault 35. Totals 37. Crunchy sandwich, for short 38. Castling piece 39. Dreamy stare 42. Gift tag word 43. Copycats 44. Retro t-shirt style 45. Birthplace of the saints Clare and Francis 47. Field of flowers? 50. Drunk 51. ESPN numbers 52. Fly like hell 54. A Tribe Called Quest rapper 55. Scorpio stone 56. Roman emperor some considered The Antichrist 57. Earth cycles: Abbr. 60. “What ___ trying to tell you is ...�
“the Republican health care plan." — Conan O’Brien
ANSWER TO LAST WEEKS PUZZLES
“Adults is a word that means obsolete children.� — Dr Seuss
VOLUME 21  ISSUE 29  /  July 20, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Š2017 Brendan Emmett Quigley (www.brendanemmettquigley.com)
By Brendan Emmett Quigley
Pearl’s Puzzle
3RD ANNUAL
BALLOONS OVER SUNRIVER
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July 20
5K Race and 1K Kids Race Benefiting Sunriver Nature Center and Observatory
July 21 July 22 July 27 July 28 July 29
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