Source Weekly - August 31, 2017

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THE LITTLE WOODY

GUIDE INSIDE! VOLU ME 21 / IS SUE 3 5 / A UGUS T 3 1 , 2017

BRINGIN’ DOWN THE NOISE

Are Bend’s outdoor concerts too loud?

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BOULDERS IN THE ROAD

THE OUSTING OF A REDMOND HOMELESS CAMP BEGINS P.7

BULLIES SINGING HEATHERS: THE MUSICAL COMES TO BEND P.25

BAD AIR ABOUNDS WHEN TO CUT OUT THAT OUTDOOR WORKOUT P. 37


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / August 31, 2017  /  BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 2


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

ASSISTANT EDITOR Magdalena Bokowa magdalena@bendsource.com CALENDAR & MUSIC WRITER Anne Pick anne@bendsource.com COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts BEER REVIEWER Kevin Gifford micro@bendsource.com FREELANCERS Josh Jardine, Nick Nayne, Teafly Peterson, Jim Anderson, Lisa Sipe, Jared Rasic SYNDICATED CONTENT Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Brendan Emmett Quigley, E.J. Pettinger, Pearl Stark,Tom Tomorrow, Shannon Wheeler PRODUCTION MANAGER Wyatt Gaines wyatt@bendsource.com

NEWS – Displacing the Displaced

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FEATURE – Bringin’ Down the Noise

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Landowners on a swath of land outside Redmond have begun taking steps to remove the many homeless people camped on their land, including placing barriers in the roads accessing the area. Magdalena Bokowa reports.

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Thought the noise issues near the Century Center and other outdoor music venues had been settled long ago? Nope. With a petition circulating and a mediated agreement brewing, Anne Pick reports on the latest in the efforts to bring down the noise in some of Bend’s neighborhoods.

CULTURE – Heathers: The Musical

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SCREEN – May the Source Be With You

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The classic tale of high school bullying—and deadly revenge—comes to the stage in Bend. Jared Rasic talks with cast members about their take on “Heathers The Musical.” Netflix! Podcasts! Other binge-worthy stuff! Behold, Benditos—we’re rolling out a new Screen feature, giving you our take on what’s worth watching (and listening to) on the big and little screen.

OUTSIDE – Bad Air Abounds

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When the air is thick like chili con carne, the last thing you should be doing is hitting the forest for some exercise. Grant Woods tells you what to look out for when bad air abounds, and what to do instead of gettin’ after it on those dusty (and smoky) trails.

On the Cover: Spot illustration by Wyatt Gaines. Call for Artists: If you're interested in being a SW featured artist, email: wyatt@bendsource.com.

Opinion 4 Mailbox 5 News 7 Feature 8 Our Picks

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Sound 13

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Astrology 43 Pictured here is winning team, Elvis Parsley, with their cucumber salad with Thai dressing, in the COCC kids Culinary Camp's first Iron Chef competition. Photo provided by Suzanne Landry.

I didn’t think I needed physical therapy. My neck and back pain and muscle soreness gets worse around the holidays. I’ve always taken care of it myself.

Now I know what my physical therapist can do. The Source Weekly is published every Thursday. The contents of this issue are copyright ©2017 by Lay It Out Inc., and may not be reprinted in part or in whole without consent from the publisher. Cartoons printed in the Source Weekly are copyright ©2017 by their respective artists. The Source Weekly is available free of charge at over 350 locations, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies of the Source Weekly may be purchased for $1.00, payable in advance. Anyone removing papers in bulk will be prosecuted on theft charges to the fullest extent of the law. Subscriptions are available: $125 for a full year. For back issues, send a $2.00 self-addressed, stamped envelope (9” x 12”). Writers’ Guidelines: Call first or send an email outlining your intention. We accept unsolicited manuscripts and comics.

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You don’t need an injury to benefit from physical therapy.

Contact us directly for knowledgeable care and lasting results. focusptbend.com | (541) 385-3344 Eastside and Old Mill Locations

Smoke Signals

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Puzzles 47

VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

EDITOR Nicole Vulcan editor@bendsource.com

IN THIS ISSUE

COVER


OPINION

An elected mayor can provide cultural and ethical leadership.

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mong the many reasons that Bend is in dire need of changes to its City Charter, here’s another one.

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / August 31, 2017  /  BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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At an Aug. 16 City Council meeting, Bend City Councilor Barb Campbell asked fellow councilors to come together to send a letter of support to the city council in Charlottesville, Va., following the Aug. 12 protests that left one woman dead. In some cities, this is a no-brainer—it’s a simple gesture that can help communicate a message for the community sending the letter, a reiteration of the community’s values, if you will. In this case, the wider City Council rejected the idea as superfluous and not in line with its mission to focus on “core services.” We acknowledge that the City Council has a great deal on its plate in terms of managing and planning for core services. The job of a city council does indeed lie in mundane duties that in Bend include implementing a growth plan consistent with community goals, improving road conditions, increasing affordable housing options, keeping residents safe and modernizing and professionalizing how city government operates—items the current council has identified as its goals and objectives for the 2017-19 session. Yet, a city also needs a leader who can help set the value baseline for its community. That person should be a directly-elected mayor. If Bend had a publicly-elected mayor instead of one chosen by fellow councilors, his or her values would be clearly stated and understood through the

campaign process, and through his or her continued visibility in the community. From that, the mayor would be able to skip over the groupthink and pen a letter of support like the one Campbell suggested, while leaving the council to focus on core services. All communities need leaders who can set the tone, interpret and share their values with the wider world. This is a function of government. If you don’t believe that political leaders set a tone, simply look at what’s happening right now on the national stage. And let’s not overlook how councilor pay fits into the current situation in Bend. City councilors who are already basically donating their time to lead the city may be less tolerant of spending time on cultural matters than councilors who are adequately paid to do their jobs. When councilors are beleaguered by Bend’s problems and compensated poorly, it’s natural to want to stick to the basics. But governance is more than road repair. Being a role model for a community is also a “core service.” Let’s elect a leader who can set that tone for our community. Thankfully, city leaders are moving forward on changes to the city charter. The newly-formed Charter Review Committee began meeting in early August and is already tackling the issue of a directly-elected mayor. Should you have an opinion on this, attend the meetings, or visit the city’s Charter Review Committee page to learn more about why these changes are crucial for Bend. SW


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OPINION Letters

HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY? Send your thoughts to editor@bendsource.com. Letters must be received by noon Friday for inclusion in the following week’s paper. Please limit letters to 250 words. Submission does not guarantee publication. Letter of the week receives $5 to Palate!

IN RESPONSE TO, “MIRROR POND TO DREDGE OR NOT TO DREDGE, THAT’S THE $6.6 MILLION QUESTION”(8/16) To quibble a bit with the fine investigative piece on dredging Mirror Pond, “Mirror Pond: To Dredge or Not to Dredge” cites a Nov. 2016 City of Bend survey, but leaves out an important finding. While it is true that 60 percent of respondents said it was extremely important to “ensure that historic aesthetic and iconic pond views are maintained,” 77 percent of the same sample felt it extremely important to provide improved water quality, river banks and wildlife habitat.” Can we have healthy river conditions AND keep the dam and pond? A sizeable portion of the public seems to think so, despite evidence to the contrary. Kudos to the City of Bend for producing the only statistically accurate survey ever done on

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@simeonpurkey tagged us in this awesome shot at Powell's Sweet Shoppe.

Mirror Pond. But, can the next survey, where it lists the usual options for the future of Mirror Pond, ALSO append the cost in terms of environmental degradation and public expenditure that goes with each choice? — Foster Fell

WE ASKED, YOU ANSWERED, “HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE THE TOTAL ECLIPSE, IN ONE WORD?” Surreal — Mariah Staats Phantasmagoric — Jessica Rae Ecliptical — Tyler Mathers Eerie — Karen Gojdics Smuland Chills (Because I was cold) — Ban Tat Haunting — Ethan Maffey Breathtaking — Jeannie Whittle Dreamy! — Lindsey Clark Fleeting — Cynthia Flupachi Dark — Sarah Guilfoy Electrifying — Christine Alvarado Incredible — Mandee Love Rad — Anne Pick Exhilarating — Richard Sitts Beautiful — Esther Gray Tiiight — Wyatt Gaines Humbling — Faith Gilpin Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious — Magdalena Bokowa Over. — Bruce Hilliard

IN RESPONSE TO, SMOOTH AND SEAMLESS, HEAVY ECLIPSE PLANNING PAYS OFF (8/23) Planning ahead is a heck of lot better than being caught short. The Central Oregon Emergency site was a big help for fire and eclipse updates. It’s good to know that the counties can

plan, coordinate and share together for any big event, or catastrophe. Central Oregon rocked the event and information! — Angela Carmen I think Wednesday or Thursday night there was a big freak out about gas and food on Facebook. I decided to go get some gas for one vehicle then and the other in the morning. I was awake so no biggie. Left my house at 11pm from Boyd Acres by Cooley Road. Drove to Business 97 all the way down to Third Street and down past Walmart and every gas station was closed with cones in front of the pumps. I took this to mean they were out of gas. When I arrived at the AM/PM there were 60-70+ cars lined up for gas. I wasn’t overly concerned but decided to wait anyways. It took an hour to gas up and there were more people there when I left at 1am than when I arrived. That was the only crazy moment in the whole week of the eclipse. A manufactured Facebook frenzy. — Matthew Bryant

I’m actually really proud of the planning done by Central Oregon emergency services. Multiple hippie festivals focused on a major celestial event and not a single reported case of human sacrifice. Good job, everyone! — Jason Adams

LETTER OF THE WEEK

Anything involving talk of evaded human sacrifice simply has to garner a win for letter of the week. Thanks for making us laugh! Come on in for your gift card to Palate. — Nicole Vulcan, Editor

E.J. Pettinger’s

copyrighted 2017

Mild Abandon

It was good to plan ahead which is what I did because of the warnings. I avoided C.O. for that reason (traffic etc.) but instead hit Stanley, Idaho — but went the back route to avoid predicted delays. Awesome experience! — Ron O’Brien Well, now I have tons of booze and groceries and my gas tank is full. Could be worse. — Shelly Lilja

“That’s weird, I put breasts on both the front and the back.”

@sourceweekly     Keep in the know of what's going on in Central Oregon, follow us on Instagram and Twitter.

visit us on Facebook

The first time I came to Bend over 20 years ago it was love at first sight. I knew this was the place that I belong. The place that felt like home. Not many people get to find that place in their lifetime, but I did. I lived in Oregon, moved to California (due to my husband's job) and now I’m back. During my time living in CA, I continued to come to Bend as much as possible, including renting houses and living here in the summertime. You do what you have to do to be where you love. I still love Bend and now live here full time (a dream come true). This summer I am saddened by the anti-tourist/anti “out of state” antics that I’ve witnessed here. The other day I finished a run and found on my car a note that said “Welcome to Oregon, now go home.” Yes I still have CA plates on my car, but I AM home. I noticed that all the other cars in the lot with out of state plates had the same note. I get that people are upset by the growth of Bend and the lack of high paying jobs and affordable housing. I’m a victim of this too. But this person (or people) doesn’t know my story, or other people’s story. They ASSUME that we are all tourists and/or rich transplants and are telling us we should leave. It was heartbreaking to me. In the 20 plus years that I’ve been coming here, I’ve never witnessed such contempt. I’ve always bragged about how friendly Bend is, how it is such an amazing, welcoming place. I still think Bend is amazing and I love living here. Whomever the person or group is that is going around with these messages, I urge you to think twice about what you are doing. It is unkind and sending the wrong message. I‘m not going to let you get me down. I know I belong here. Home is where your heart is and my heart lives in Bend. — Chris Samaras.

LIGHTMETER

VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

CALIFORNIA PLATES — FINDING A NOTE THAT SAYS, “WELCOME TO OREGON, NOW GO HOME.”


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ne night last week, I suddenly started pouring sweat, heart pounding, as I fell off my couch. It was the beginning of a high-fever, five-day stomach flu. To paraphrase Joan Didion, it was not an unreasonable response to the summer of 2017. I’ve been thinking about Didion a lot, especially “Slouching Toward Bethlehem,” her piece from 50 years ago, a report on some of the lost children of the Summer of Love and also an extended meditation on William Butler Yeats’ poem, “The Second Coming.” The line connecting Yeats to Didion to us: The center cannot hold. The election should have shown us that clearly. The majority lost and we elected an authoritarian entirely uninterested in compromise. Some of the president’s most prominent supporters on the far right think of their movement as countercultural. Paul Joseph Watson, a British YouTube twit turned Alex Jones acolyte, even sells swag sporting the phrase, “Conservatism is the New Counter Culture.” He’s not entirely wrong. As Watson points out, he’s not talking about Mitch McConnell, but the likes of him and Milo Yiannopoulos and Cassandra Fairbanks, who also writes about conservatism as the new punk. Even Mike Flynn is a surfer. This so-called counterculture of pseudo-journalists is trying hard not to be called “alt-right”—the moniker was coined by Depeche Klan clown Richard Spencer— because the Unite the Right rally Spencer was supposed to speak at gave this counterculture its Altamont. “Stones Concert Ends It: America Now up for Grabs,” read the headline in the Berkeley Tribe in December 1969, following the massive Rolling Stones concert where Hells Angels, who were supposed to be security, killed a young African-American man named Meredith Hunter. When James Alex Fields slammed his car into a crowd of celebratory Antifa protesters marching through Charlottesville after the racists had been largely routed, killing Heather Heyer, he changed the American right in ways they don’t understand—just as the Hells Angels murder changed the left of that era. It destroyed their counterculture, releasing and magnifying its most violent elements and revealing its essence. It was a tragically clarifying moment, and #45 has decided where he stands. He erases every measured statement read from a teleprompter with an unhinged rant about how they are trying to take our heritage away when statues of white supremacists are taken down. He sees the battle as one not between Democrats and Republicans, but between the alt-right—the deplorables and Nazis and the guys wearing white khakis and polos and the new right media frat pack counterculture crew, all led by

Baynard Woods

himself—and the “alt-left”—Black Lives Matter, Antifa, and maybe he hates journalists enough to throw us in there, too. Americans might have been surprised to see Nazis in America, but anyone who was ever involved in a punk scene knew about Nazis. There were always skinheads around. And often punks to kick their asses. That’s essentially what Antifa is— punks getting stuff done. They do Food Not Bombs to feed the homeless. They offer court support to political prisoners and work as street medics during protests. “If it hadn’t been for the antifascists protecting us from the neofascists, we would have been crushed like cockroaches,” Cornel West said, noting that the “police didn’t do anything in terms of protecting the people of the community, the clergy.” One reason that the cops didn’t do anything: They were guarding the windows of the shops flanking Emancipation Park. The cops, it seems, were more worried about Antifa than the alt-right. Because sometimes some of them also break windows. More than 200 people were arrested in an anti-fascist and anti-capitalist black bloc protest on Inauguration Day after some people in the group smashed the windows of several multinational corporations. Many find it hard to sympathize with people who smash things, thinking people should be punished for that kind of stuff— without quite realizing how it is that the government is charging 200 people for breaking the same windows. But the District of Columbia’s chief judge made a ruling on Aug. 24 that may make the broader left more sympathetic toward the J20 defendants. “You are providing all the data to the government,” Chief Judge Robert Morin said to lawyers for DreamHost, the web registrar that hosted disruptj20.org. They were fighting against a warrant that would allow the government to take all of the contents of that site—and any emails associated with it. “It appears that what the government is saying is that just because it is under the same domain, they can use one search warrant to obtain content from numerous specific email accounts,” said Raymond Aghaian, a lawyer for DreamHost, who likened it to searching all Gmail accounts with a single warrant. A lot more people go online than will ever be arrested at a protest—and no one likes the idea of giving the government a list of people who have visited a site opposed to the president. If the larger left can embrace Antifa and Black Lives Matter, instead of being scared of its own most vital elements and rushing toward the center, it may have some sort of chance. The center cannot hold.  SW @baynardwoods on Twitter. Tips to baynard@democracyincrisis.com


NEWS

Displacing the Displaced

Redmond’s homeless find blockades to encampments. Deschutes County says it’s a “land-use” issue; COID plans to sell parcel for a reported $8 million. 7

By Magdalena Bokowa

VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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arge boulders or physical gates sit at the head of two main roads leading to a swath of land on the outskirts of Redmond. A notice, posted on Aug. 15, explains to the people camping on the nearby land that the barriers are there to block vehicular access to the area. For years, people have been camping on the land, east of Redmond, owned by Deschutes County (2,000 acres), Central Oregon Irrigation District (200 acres) and the Redmond School Board (50 acres)—but those residents will soon be gone, if the landowners get their way. “The goal is to have the land vacated by October 31,” said James Lewis, Deschutes County’s property manager. “We are aware this is a highly sensitive issue and are therefore giving extra time to let them vacate.” The homeless population in the area has visibly grown throughout the past few years, according to volunteers who hand out water and propane each Monday. “I have no idea where I’ll go,” says Art, a camper of three years, “or how I’ll get there since my RV isn’t registered, has out-of-state plates and I don’t have a valid driver’s license. I don’t have the money to make it legal and I’ll lose everything if I get impounded.” “At the end of the day, this is a landuse issue,” says Lewis. “There’s a point at which the impacts are so great to the land, that some action needed to be taken. We’ve received complaints for numerous years from the public and they have just the same right to use this public land...It’s not a one-size-fits-all solutionbut this solution was the best idea.” Lewis says the landowners decided to move forward, even after media pushback when the notice became public a few days early. “We spoke with and heard from multiple people including the Redmond Police Chief, Homeless Leadership Coalition, the City of Redmond, Bureau of Land Management and COID.” Lewis speaks not only of the prohibited long-term camping, but also of illegal dumping that he says has rampantly risen in the area in recent years. “You’ll see couches, washing machines, you name it, it’s out there,” he asserts. “And it’s not just the illegal dumping, but wood cutting and widespread firearm discharging. There’s a real fire and public safety issue out there.”

Two Sides to Every Story “Firearms? What firearms? Most of us are felons and can’t own firearms,” argues Sharon, a two-year inhabitant on COID land. “Even if we did own a firearm, we would pawn it or sell it to survive.” She disputes the notion that the homeless population is contributing to shooting and dumping reports. “Most of us don’t have a car or drive. So do they think we’re packing mattresses on our back? Or rolling our tires to our imaginary cars? That’s the general public and we’re getting lumped in. We’ve been respectful.” Still, Lewis says regardless of who it is, blocking vehicular access would stem the flow of garbage. “Ultimately all of those activities are tied to vehicular access to the property,” he said. “They’ve been lying since the beginning,” says Sharon. “They said they wouldn’t start until August 15 and they started blocking everything a week early.” She taps her foot against a large dusty boulder now blocking a route that was once easy to navigate. The trails on these lands are dusty and sandy; filled with large ruts. When I traveled to the encampment on Aug. 25, in a jeep driven by powerhouse volunteer Margaret King, we nearly became stuck several times. “How will these people get out?” King worries. “We can barely get out here in a four-wheel.” Volunteers who have been working with the population for three years are pleading with COID and the county to reopen routes on certain dates in order to facilitate a smoother exit—though no such plan has been put in place. “Some of these guys need tow trucks to get out, otherwise they’ll lose the only thing they have called home. Do we really want to do that to them?” “You’ve got two problems here: How do you get them out of here? And where do they go?” says Ken Cardwell, another volunteer. “It’s a legality versus humanitarian issue.... They could’ve taken the money they spent on that new City Hall and built a homeless shelter, you know? They’re just passing the buck.” Cardwell is referring to the $12 million, recently-completed Redmond City Hall. When asked about using some of the 2,000 acres of county land, property manager Lewis says that due to zoning laws determined by the State of

Chad Tullis

Estimates vary, but soon 200 to 400 people will be finding a new place to call “home,” packing up their motorhomes, tents and tarps and hitting the road to find unoccupied land on which to settle.

Hawk, who has lived on COID’s land for six years doesn’t know where he’ll end up.

Oregon, opening a permanent homeless camp such as the Right 2 Dream Too camp in Portland isn’t a current and available option. He also notes there has been a 2011 license with the Redmond Area Park and Recreation District and the Central Oregon Trail Alliance to develop recreational trails for biking, hiking and horseback riding that have not been able to be fulfilled due to the increase in conflicts. He hopes with the vacant land, those groups can develop the trails. “We just don’t have a solution for this issue,” says Colleen Thomas, the homeless outreach coordinator for Deschutes County Behavioral Health. “It’s a bigger conversation that needs to happen community wide and ultimately it lands with the fact that we need more services and better funding.” Thomas has been visiting the camps for the past five months, saying from her experience, some people are, “leaving the area completely to Idaho, Washington and California, some are trying to move in with family, camp on BLM land, while other folks are refusing to leave.” Although the Source spoke to only a small portion of campers, most confirmed they were planning on leaving — “the difficulties come with how to move and where to move to,” says longtime resident Art. A Silver Lining “The blessing in disguise is that through this action we have been able to connect with folks that we may not have otherwise been able to have

connected with and give them community resources and access to mental health resources,” says Thomas. “Some folks have been isolated for years, so this event is showing some what else is available for them.” Thomas says she’s been establishing a rapport with residents, coming up with plans, sourcing new tires and getting them on waitlists for low-income housing. “What I’d like to remind everyone is that we are all human. A lot of these folks don’t have criminal backgrounds and have fallen on hard times. So hopefully this will raise awareness of the lack of resources that we have…. And will provide a bigger community discussion for better resources.” Thomas notes that anyone wanting to help can donate to charities such as Vincent De Paul, which aids the homeless with water, propane, food and clothing on a weekly basis. “Those are immediate impacts,” she says, “and homelessness will never be solved. But more importantly, in my mind, is the long lasting effect, which is to treat these people kindly, and with dignity and respect.”  SW

St. Vincent De Paul Society 950 SE 3rd St. #B, Bend 541-389-6643

Deschutes County Behavioral/Mental Health 2577 NE Courtney Dr., Bend 541-322-7500


FEATURE

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BRINGIN’ DOWN THE NOISE Residents of the River West neighborhood and business owners at the Century Center meet with mediators to find a solution to noise complaints in Bend BY ANNE PICK

Talk toPaw

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Free cat vaccine with cat exam.

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

aybe you live in the River West neighborhood on Bend’s west side and have heard the bass thumping from one of the outdoor concerts put on by Bend Radio Group. Maybe you’ve heard whispers of neighbors and friends complaining about noise. Or maybe you’ve attended one of the shows at the Century Center and enjoyed yourself until the music stops at 10 pm. Whatever the case, people living in the River West neighborhood are calling into question the details of Bend’s noise ordinance—bringing the issue back into the forefront of local politics. In the time since the last update to the Bend noise ordinance in 2012, business owners at the Century Center have received thousands of complaints, both to the owners personally, as well as in the form of complaints to local law enforcement. “The problem at a place like Century Center is that the physical distance between the stage and the homes is just too close to ever really be in compliance,” Bill Bernardy of the Bend Neighborhood Coalition says. “And that’s not even allowing for the fact that sound in Bend can be twice as loud as in Portland. Our decimal limits are much more liberal than in most other cities, so there’s already this kind of extra margin, and even then just because of the short distance it’s virtually impossible to make it work.” Over the last several months, the City of Bend has been working with a mediator, Community Solutions of Central Oregon, to find a solution that works for both neighbors and the businesses at the Century Center. The most recent meeting took place on Aug. 17, with more meetings to come. The goal: finding a solution that doesn’t involve changes to the noise ordinance itself. “Noise, in general, is a real challenge in the city of Bend,” Community Solutions Executive Director Gary

Winterstein says. “A generating noise problem, construction efforts, rock concerts, you name it. Festivals. This gets to the City Council and the city manager’s world. They are honestly trying to put great policies in place that help the city be the most livable city. They’ve got their work really cut out for them. I give them some credit for moving the issue over to us.” In addition to complaints reported to the Bend Police Department during concerts hosted by Bend Radio Group and GoodLife Brewing, Derek Sitter, owner of Volcanic Theatre Pub, has received his fair share of heat from neighbors surrounding the Century Center. While he owns an indoor music venue, he says neighbors have complained about the noise that escapes when patrons open his doors during concerts. “What happened is that, from my end, from Volcanic, we see very little problem,” Sitter says. “I’ve done some things to make the room cooler to prevent people leaving the building as often. I’ve done some things to be neighborly, as they call it, to prevent noise from escaping the Volcanic.” The main issue stems from the outdoor amplified concerts held at the Century Center. Grey areas do exist, such as unreadable decibel levels from subwoofers and bass and noise escaping during late-night concerts at the Volcanic; however, outdoor amplified noise is the main source of contention. According to the noise ordinance, daytime hours occur between the hours of 7am and 10pm, while night time hours run from 10pm to 7am. Business and event companies have the option to file a noise variance, which upon approval from the city can allow the 10pm noise curfew to be pushed out later into the night. Lorelei Williams, program coordinator for the City of Bend, says each time the parking lot between Volcanic and GoodLife is used for an outdoor concert,


The last revision of the noise ordinance came in 2012. According to the ordinance: 5.50.020 Noise Limits: No person may create noise on a property if that noise results in a noise level above the levels listed in this subsection when measured on a property other than the source of the sound and that contains a residence or other noise sensitive unit. Daytime

Nighttime

Residential

65 dBA

60 dBA

Commercial

70 dBA

65 dBA

Industrial

75 dBA

70 dBA

the promoter files for a Temporary Change in Occupancy Permit, allowing the space to be used as a music venue. Williams confirmed that Bend Radio Group hasn’t filed for a noise variance when using this space. As long as outdoor concerts end by 10pm, there’s no need for a noise variance. At the end of the 2016 concert season, Bend Radio Group received a citation for a noise violation during the Grace Potter concert. Upon receiving a citation, a business cannot apply for a noise variance for one year—which means next summer, Bend Radio Group can apply again. Bend Radio Group has since installed noise buffers to decrease sound levels traveling away from the venue. GoodLife also applied for a noise variance this summer, which was approved for its sixth anniversary party. Many of the applications for noise variances at the Century Center are denied due to the venue’s proximity to the residential neighborhood—though many of the concerts do remain within the permitted decibel levels before the 10pm cutoff, according to Williams. Local Context: Les Schwab Marnie Smith has been the venue director at the Les Schwab Amphitheater since 2004. The Amphitheater has an advantage over “pop-up” venues such as the Century Center due to land use approval to be a music venue. Smith says the rezoning effort took four years, 11 months and two days to acquire. Despite this advantage, they don’t take it for granted, she says. “Anybody who does call and complain, if they are willing to leave their number, I will call them back and talk to them,” Smith says. “Talk about what’s bothersome about it, talk about how sound travels. Having open communication with people and making sure they understand that they are heard and that we pay attention to that has been what worked for us so far.” Smith remains in contact with area residents with noise complaints, many of whom have her cell phone number and call her directly. She’s developed relationships with them, as the complaints tend to come from the same people. It’s important to Smith to make these connections with residents in real time in order to try to make them happy.

A Circulating Petition While many people were unaware of the mediation between the Century Center businesses and the River West neighbors, Bend Radio Group has brought it to light with a new petition, even creating radio ads encouraging people to sign. The petition, circulating on social media, hit more than 1,000 signatures Monday. The petition states: “We, the undersigned, believe outdoor events and concerts in Bend, like concerts at the Century Center, add to the quality of life, community and culture in our city of Bend, Ore. WE do NOT want to see them go away.” In an email from Sitter, he states, “The petition was written and executed by Bend Radio Group. It is simply a list of supporters of outdoor music and concerts in Bend. The goal is to reveal to the neighbors that there are TONS of supporters that outweigh the complaints.” Not all River West neighbors are worried about the noise at Century Center. Tina Reisfar has lived one block from the Century Center since 1995. She loves the live music at the Century Center and being able to walk somewhere for fun. She sees many of her neighbors attending the concerts as well. “The first 15 years we lived here, there was a factory there and it made so much noise,” Reisfar recalls. “There were trucks coming in 24/7, it was horrible. It was an industrial zone. To have a little music now and then that ends at 10 o’clock, there are worse problems in the world.” Reisfar says she and most other people she’s talked to thought the noise ordinance issue had been handled. She says when a Century Center concert ends at 10, you barely hear a peep by 10:15 outside of a few people talking on their walk home. She believes most people have been conscientious about working with the neighbors. “People get off the river, they go see a show, that’s the Bend experience,” Sitter says. “Volcanic is a huge part of that experience. If it comes down to a dozen people who don’t like their quality of life impacted by Century Center—I think we have a pretty big problem with very few people that are way outnumbered.”

gaps in city policy. If those gaps aren’t addressed, there will be more conflicts going forward as the city grows. That is our point.” Winterstein believes each side has smart people with good ideas. With more mediation meetings scheduled, the City of Bend, the business owners and the neighbors all hope to reach a reasonable solution in the coming months, allowing live outdoor music to continue to thrive in Bend.  SW EDITOR’S NOTE: We reached out to Dave Hill, owner of Century Center, Jim Gross, owner of Bend Radio Group and Patrick Griffiths, River West Neighborhood Association board member, for comment. Each chose not to respond.

STREET BEAT

Do you think Bend's outdoor concerts are too loud or disruptive? Why or why not? Matt Vaness No I don't think they are too loud. I think it's awesome that you can be in the neighborhoods and still listen to the music that's going on in town and it's a part of the summer energy of what's happening in Bend. I love it. Amie Filben No, I think they are awesome. Too expensive, but not too loud. Lauren Bodeman I think they're fine, I like them. They're good activities, things to do. Shelbi Doerfler I haven't been to any concerts and I haven't heard them at all so I don't think they're too disruptive. Henry Daniels-Koch I would say no, they aren't that loud or disruptive. A lot of them are either pretty quiet just outside of restaurants and a lot of them are just between the hours of 5 and 9; they really don't go that late. I work at a brewery and they have to stop playing at 9 which I think is a really reasonable time. They really aren't that loud, I've never had a problem with them. Anne Currin I do live downtown and on occasion, if I'm trying to do homework or something like that, especially in the summer having the windows open, it can be a distraction. However, I understand that it's a big part of our community so it doesn't really bother me, but they are loud. - Intern Sophia Sahm contributed to this report.

9 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Zone

Finding a Solution While progress is moving at a slow pace, Community Solutions’ Winterstein sees a little more understanding happening on both sides. The biggest challenge comes in scheduling, which contributes to the elongation of the process. “Life is one big negotiation,” Winterstein says. “Give and take here. If anyone is going to give any room, it’s because they understand that it’s good for them. I see some positive overtones about Volcanic, the work the owner has done with indoor productions he manages and oversees, have gotten positive feedback from the residents. GoodLife’s outdoor beer garden is pretty popular and residents use it. It’s in their best interest to have talent coming. Maybe we can manage these events a little better for everybody.” Meanwhile, Bernardy and the Bend Neighborhood Coalition have several suggestions in mind for mitigating the noise issue at the Century Center. “Other cities have a more prevention-oriented approach, a more proactive approach where they’re trying to make sure that places that have outdoor music are in compliance up front,” Bernardy says. “And a good example of that is Austin, Tex., which bills itself as the ‘Live Music Capital of the World.’ So our feeling is that if they can get it right, Bend can get it right.” Adopting a prevention-oriented approach could result in fewer complaints, he says. Some of the policies Austin has implemented include requiring an outdoor music vendor permit— which would require any place that wants to have outdoor amplified music to apply for a license and take other preventative steps, such as having a sound technician out to perform a sound impact evaluation ahead of an event. GoodLife and Volcanic have already adopted changes in order to be both neighborly and compliant with the noise ordinance. As for the bigger outdoor concerts put on by Bend Radio Group, Bernardy and the Bend Neighborhood Coalition suggest moving them to the other side of the building for the next concert as a short-term solution. “Long term, Bend needs one or more designated entertainment districts and another outdoor music venue kind of like Les Schwab, maybe one that belongs to the park district,” Bernardy suggests. “Were not opposed to Jim Gross [owner of Bend Radio Group] staging concerts, but wouldn’t it be great to find an appropriate place where it’s not causing conflicts? How about a place that can accommodate a thousand people with room for food carts and parking and that kind of stuff?” “Noise ordinances aren’t just about grumpy people who are anti-music or anti-fun,” Bernardy says. “They come from a position of saying that noise threatens the health and welfare of the community. What’s happening right now with noise pointing out


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / August 31, 2017  /  BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 10


Saturday 2 and Sunday 3

ROOTS — This week we chat with Bellingham-based band, and Bend favorites, Polecat. The band has made a number of appearances in our fair city and love coming back here, saying we have the best crowds. If you haven’t caught them live, maybe you saw them on a recent Alaska Airlines flight in their episode of “Bands in Seattle.” // 6-10pm. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend. No cover.

BENEFIT — Love running? Want to help local cancer patients, while running in the heart of Central Oregon’s inspirational running country? This annual event held at Sunriver Resort boasts beautiful views of Mt. Bachelor and proceeds benefit St. Charles Cancer Services. For runners of all ages and abilities. // Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Dr., Sunriver. $70-$90/half marathon, $40-$50/5K, $15-$20/kids dash.

Friday 1

Saturday 2 and Sunday 3

HALF MARATHON FOR A CAUSE

POLECAT

SISTERS FALL STREET FESTIVAL

FESTIVAL — Now in its 10th year, the Sisters Fall Street Festival kicks off the season with arts, crafts, food, beer and live entertainment. Head to Sisters to enjoy a festival weekend with all of the makings for an excellent street festival experience. Also a special fundraiser benefiting the Sisters High School Visual Arts Department. // Saturday 10am-5pm, Sunday 10am-4pm. Downtown Sisters. Free.

DOGS — Looking to spend First Friday with your pup? Willow Lane Artist’s Creative Space hosts a happy hour open to you and your canine companion. Joined by the Humane Society and Bend Spay + Neuter Project, several cats and dogs will be available for adoption. Check out the custom tags available for purchase! // 4-6pm. Willow Lane Artist’s Creative Space, 400 SE Second St. Ste 2, Bend. Free.

Friday 1 and Saturday 2

Sunday 3

GNOME-TASTIC — Do you love craft, barrel-aged beers from across the Pacific Northwest? Have you tried any? Bend’s more unique craft beer, cider and whiskey festival features small-batch American rye whiskeys, bourbons, wood-aged beers and ciders alongside plenty of garden gnomes and live music. Try a variety of craft beverages in a intimate outdoor setting. // Friday 5-10pm, Saturday 12-10pm. Deschutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend. $5-$35.

SURF ROCK — As the summer season comes to a close in Central Oregon, your last night of freedom before school starts should include some Bay Area surf rock via Aloha Screwdriver. High-octane, high-energy rock and roll with just the right amount of surf vibes closes out the summer season in the perfect punk rock fashion. // 9pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $5.

Friday 1 and Saturday 2

Sunday 3

THE LITTLE WOODY

ALOHA SCREWDRIVER

ART AT THE RANCH

FAMILY TUNES WITH PIETA BROWN

FINE ART — What better way to end the summer than with fine arts and crafts created in the Northwest? Enjoy an artist’s reception, silent auction and live music on Friday. Saturday features plein air painting during “Paint Out at the Ranch.” Observe these talented artists in their element. Benefiting local art students. // Friday 5:30-7:30pm, Saturday 9am-4pm. Black Butte Ranch, 13899 Bishops Cap, Sisters.

FOLK — Looking for a family-friendly folk concert for a relaxing end to Bend’s busy summer season? Pieta Brown’s sultry voice and inspiring words bring sonic beauty to your ears. Hang out on the patio downtown at Crow’s Feet while enjoying a cold craft beverage and a stunning sunset reflected in the Deschutes River. // 7-10pm. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend. No cover.

Saturday 2

Monday 4

CENTRAL OREGON SHAKEDOWN

GOODBYE TO SUMMER WITH PRECIOUS BYRD

CARS AND PINUPS — Each year, Bendbased charity organization Patriot Pinups comes together to benefit veterans. At the Central Oregon Shakedown, view all makes and models of cars and trucks pre-1980, as well as all years of motorcycles in the Show & Shine. The event also features “Lowrider Limbo,” live music, Pinup contest, food and drinks. Registration at 9am. // 10am-4pm. Redmond VFW Hall, 1836 SW Veterans Way, Redmond.

DANCE ROCK — With the number of shows that Bend-based dance rockers Precious Byrd plays each summer, it’s good odds you’ve seen them before. Maybe at Ghost Tree or the GoodLife 6th Birthday Party? Either way, the funky originals and dance-worthy covers always have concert goers on their feet. Read our interview with the band in this week’s SOUND feature. // 6-9pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr., Bend. No cover.  SW

ROCK OF AGES

THE RED VIOLIN

September 15-23

September 30

UNDERWATER BUBBLE SHOW October 24

BODYVOX’S BLOODY VOX October 30

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FIRST FRIDAY HAPPY HOUR WITH THE DOG PACK COLLARS AND FRIENDS

OUR PICKS AUG 31 - SEPT 7

Thursday 31


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Hours: M-S 9-9 Sun 9-8 2205 NE Division St, Bend Oregon 97703 Ph 541-550-7325

Largest selection of Cannabis Concentrates, Edibles, Glass and Accessories at the lowest prices. Representing the Best Growers, Processors and Artists in the State.

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GRAND OPENING


S

Summer SOUND Superphonic Bend’s own Precious Byrd performs dozens of shows this summer with no sign of letting up anytime soon By Anne Pick

13 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Certain band names always seem to creep up into the Source’s Clubs and Live Music calendar. These local musicians are the equivalent to marathon runners, keeping a strong pace throughout the race we call the summer music lineup in Bend. Precious Byrd takes the cake as one of the hardest working bands of the summer, racking up dozens of performances at Sunriver Resort and the Ghost Tree Invitational Dinner on the Range—not to mention a few trips to Portland and other Central Oregon locales.

P

recious Byrd includes Corey Parnell on vocals, Casey Parnell on lead guitar, Michael Summers on drums and Lonnie Chapin on bass. For the seasoned musicians, who became friends through the local music scene, the idea to come together as a band occurred when Corey Parnell began getting his hair cut by Chapin, also a talented barber, at his home about three years ago. “We’d all been doing music forever, but it always felt heavy and strive-y and emo,” Parnell says. “I looked at him and said, ‘Do you just want to start a rock band and have fun?’” From there on out, Precious Byrd has been nothing if not a fun band. Known most prominently for their covers, the band also released their debut album, “Superphonic Magical,” in 2016. According to Parnell and Chapin, the magic happened pretty quickly, allowing them to find their sound, both in covers and originals. “Being a musician, it’s still hard,” Parnell says. “We all have day jobs as well. We just have a guiding compass. We want to make sure our families are taken care of and we maintain healthy relationships. I think the best way to manage a busy schedule is to just love what you do. We get tired just schlepping the gear around, but once we’re making music, I was born for this and it doesn’t feel like work.” For Chapin, watching the smiles on people’s faces makes their busy summer show schedule worth all of the gear hauling. “We get paid to set up gear and tear down gear—we’ll play for free all day,” Chapin says. “That makes it easy when you love it.” It doesn’t hurt to be in a beautiful city with folks who love and appreciates music as much as people in Bend do. According to Parnell, Bend has a grassroots feel that makes bands feel like they’re in it with you. “There’s a rad buzz in Central Oregon as far as the music scene; outside of Precious

Byrd, people love music here,” Chapin says. After playing dozens of concerts this summer, I asked the guys which show stands out as their favorite. They agreed on two separate events. Parnell noted Ghost Tree, for its amazing job with promotion, the beautiful stage and the sound system. Chapin cited the GoodLife sixth birthday and celebration of Curt Plants, GoodLife co-founder and brewmaster who passed away in April of this year. “It was so meaningful,” Chapin says. “The songs Corey was picking for that set, the compassion knowing Curt, the compassion of those who showed up to hear us play, honoring Curt, so many things came together and just at the end, watching Rick Plants hug us and say thank you with tears in his eyes. I think that’s one of the reasons we’re all in this band; An ability to bring a certain hope, love to our shows.” Up next for one of Central Oregon’s hardest working bands includes showcases in L.A. and Nashville in order to garner support from managers and publicists. The band admires

the indie approach to music that Chance the Rapper has used to find success. They hope to surround themselves with a good team and use the power of social media to propel themselves forward. “Long gone are the days of traveling in a van; that’s not the way to make a living anymore,” Chapin says. “We’re writing for a full length right now,” Parnell says. “We’ve done all of our production and recording in the past and would love to hire a producer, but we may or may not do that. That part of the industry still hasn’t changed. We’re still trying to figure out exactly what our sound is; it’s not a stationary thing. Funk, rock, combination, danceable. More videos, definitely more videos.”  SW Twilight Tunes with Precious Byrd Monday, Sept. 4. 6-9pm Worthy Brewing 495 NE Bellevue Dr., Bend. No cover.


On Their Terms

S

Bellingham-based band Polecat has gained considerable recognition in the PNW, continuing onward at its own pace By Anne Pick

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14

Prepare to get rowdy with Polecat at Crow’s Feet Commons on 8/31.

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ometime over the course of the last year, I and equal ownership of the band. According boarded a flight on Alaska Airlines. Upon to Guest, the band’s five members each own opening the in-flight entertainment app, I 20 percent of the band. Over the course of the pleasantly discovered a show called “Bands in past seven years, they have grown into a place of Seattle.” Ahhh. Perfect. As I browsed through modest recognition around the Pacific Norththe options, one band stuck out: Polecat. Not west. Now, the band swims a little closer to only had I seen them live in Bend several times, home, rather than exploring the country in the but I’d also interviewed them for The Source back of a van for hundreds of shows a year. back in 2015. As soon as I heard they would be “We maintain the towns we love,” Guest returning to Bend this summer, I knew I had to says. “Bend is top two. Bend is always the most find out more about this unique opportunity. fun crowds. We always keep going back. We’re “They searched out bands from Seattle excited it’s going to be a free show. We love or that played in the Seattle area a lot,” Aar- playing these concert series, these are great for on Guest, singer and guitarist for Belling- this band. We can be a party band but it’s still ham-based band Polecat, says of the producers fun and kid-friendly.” of “Bands in Seattle.” Seven years in and Polecat continues onward, “They did a huge blanket search and got a on their terms. They play the music they want ton of bands to do it and we were lucky enough to play, when they want to play it, in the towns to be one of those bands that could. The pro- they love and they do so with open and honest ducers really loved our episode, which is flat- communication. And making sure they all have tering, so we ended up getting double airtime their own personal lives. for our show on public TV and then they ended “We’ve always talked, we’ve always connectup selecting ours to be one of the few that were ed with each other,” Guest says. “We really lisactually aired on the plane.” ten to each other and make sure that if someone After the episode aired on public televi- needs some time off, it happens. I think we dig sion and on Alaska flights, the band did see an each other musically and inspire each other. increase in downloads from a variety of differ- Showing each other stuff that we really like. Our ent places farther out in the world. Mostly, the music has really allowed us to evolve thematiappearance resulted in a lot of random texts cally and change on the albums and in our live from friends and shout-outs years later from shows as well.” Bend music writers. Everyone in the band contributes to the One thing that’s really admirable about Pole- arrangement of the set lists and helps keep cat, beyond its blend things fresh. of rock, bluegrass, “When we come Polecat Americana and roots together, it’s a job, Thursday, Aug 31. 6-10pm Crow’s Feet Commons music (among many but it’s still fun,” 875 NW Brooks St., Bend. other styles), is the Guest says.  SW No cover. band’s longevity


CLUBS

CALENDAR

>

Tickets Available on BendTicket.com

Pronghorn Resort Lino Pronghorn’s Music

30  Wednesday Canyon - Too Slim & the Taildraggers Fine rock and blues music. 18 albums later the band is still going strong, hot on the heels of their newest release. 5:30-8 pm. No cover.

Astro Lounge Onward Etc. with Tim McNary Rowdy folk music. 8-11 pm.

Cabin 22 Useless Knowledge Bowl! Great

prizes! 7-9 pm.

Checker’s Pub Talent/Open Mic Bring your talent to this weekly open mic night. 6-8 pm. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Karaoke FUN with DJ Roseybabe. 9 pm.

Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Sing your

favorite songs every week. 9 pm.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you

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

Immersion Brewing Honey Don’t with Full

Band Shelley and Bill joined by Don Hawkins on snare and Benji Nagel on dobro- for a great night of roots original roots music. 6-8 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

The Resolectrics A classic rhythm & blues band. 7-10 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic

Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe Pickin’ &

Paddlin’ Join Tumalo Creek on our back lawn for our bi-annual local cult-classic concert series featuring Julie & the Wayves, Space Heaterz, Doc Ryan, brews and food cart goodness. Tumalo Creek provides free demos of all boats and boards. In conjunction with the Whitewater and Surf Festival. 4-10 pm. $5 for ticket in advance, $10 for a mug and three drink tickets.

Volcanic Theatre Pub Amoramora Blast off into a cosmic dance party that features an ever-changing blend of psychedelic jams, funk, bluegrass and beyond. 9 pm. $8/adv, $10/door. Worthy Brewing Wayward Soul - Worthy Wednesday’s Six-piece band built from strong roots in the gorgeous Central Oregon landscape they call home, Wayward Soul blends styles from bluegrass and country to funk and R&B. 6-9 pm.

31  Thursday Brasada’s Range Restaurant & Bar

Feast from the Fire - Featuring Honey Don’t Come out to Brasada Ranch for the summer music series featuring ranch-raised meat courtesy of Windflower, local brews from Worthy Brewing and live music by Honey Don’t. 6-8 pm. $39/ adults, $23/children.

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.

Cooper All original folk-rock, Americana and blues. 6-8 pm. No cover.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Karaoke FUN with DJ Roseybabe. 9 pm.

Crow’s Feet Commons Polecat

The Lot Gen Obata A wide variety of folk, blues, bluegrass and Americana original and cover songs. 6-8 pm.

1  Friday

The general appeal of Polecat comes from their unique take on roots music and their interactive and high energy live shows. 6-10 pm. No cover.

Checker’s Pub Thomas T & The Bluechips Professional blues band and fun! Let’s dance! 8-11:30 pm. No cover.

Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Kinzel & Hyde Join multi-award winners Stu Kinzel & LynnAnn Hyde as they take a tour of Southern & Gulf Coast flavored blues/roots and Cajun music. Bon ton roulette! 7-10 pm.

Crux Fermentation Project Jeff Ibach

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you

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

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover. Spoken Moto Palo Sopaño Palo Sopraño per-

forms high energy indie rock and puts on shows that wow house parties and venues wherever they play. Come celebrate the beautiful gift of life with a few beautiful boys. 7-9 pm. No cover.

Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic Fresh talent and fresh coffee every week. 6 pm.

Transplant from Hawaii, Jeff brings a little bit of home to his folk music as he grooves on this guitar. 5-8 pm.

Dogwood Cocktail Cabin DJ Wicked A night of old school hip-hop and R&B with DJ Wicked. First Friday, Saturday of every month, 10 pm. No cover. Hub City Bar & Grill Friends of Lenny Classic rock. 9 pm-1 am. No cover.

JC’s Bar & Grill Strange Rover Sex, drugs and rock n roll, just minus the sex and drugs. Come down to JC’s this Friday to get amped with local rockers Strange Rover! 21+. 7-9 pm. No cover. Juniper Golf Course and The View Tap and Grill Friday Evening Music on the Patio

Enjoy live music on our patio overlooking the 9th green and the Cascade mountains. All ages welcome. Food and beverage available. 5 pm. No cover.

The Summit Saloon & Stage 97 Comedy Presents Some of the best comics from around the US to the Summit Saloon and Stage. Comics as seen on Comedy Central, TBS, NBC and more. Last Thursday of every month, 8-11 pm. $12.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Friday Dance Lessons 21+. 8 pm. No cover.

Sunriver Resort Abluestics Bring the family,

dy Gravelle Singer-songwriter-pianist performs originals and country and pop covers. 7-10 pm.

pull up a blanket and enjoy live music at The Backyard at Sunriver Resort! Blues. 6:30-8:30 pm. No cover.

Niblick and Greenes at Eagle Crest LinNorthside Bar & Grill FunBobby ‘80s pop rock dance band with light show. 8:30 pm. $3.

submitted

Local artists perform. 6-9 pm.

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

Chops Bistro Melanie Rose Dyer and Daniel

Old=-time bluegrass band Honey Don't performs at Brasada Ranch's Feast From the Fire on 8/31. Enjoy ranch-raised meat, local brews and live bluegrass music.

15 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

American Legion Park Music in the

on the Patio series brings you live music with Lino. 6-8:30 pm. No cover.


CLUBS

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT

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

M&J Tavern Seed Ling Sultry vocals im-

mersed in a heart beat called drums bring on the Labor Day weekend celebration. 9 pm.

Madras Saturday Market Allan Byer

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / August 31, 2017  /  BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

16

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 FunBobby ‘80s pop rock dance band with light show. 8:30 pm. $3. The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Biggz

21+. 9 pm. No cover.

Sunriver Resort Me Like Bees Bring the family, pull up a blanket and enjoy live music at The Backyard at Sunriver Resort! Indie/alternative rock. 6:30-8:30 pm. No cover. The Drum and Guitar Shop Saturday Blues Jam This weekly jam meets every 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. Velvet Sharlet Crooks Bend native, Corinne Palo Soprano performs high-energy indie rock at Spoken Moto on 8/31.

Organic Earthly Delights Allan Byer Project Allan shares his all original Americana music with his all-star band as part of First Friday Farm to Table feast at the farm. 7-10 pm. $10 suggested donation. Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy Presents:

Travis Nelson & Mike Masilotti Travis Nelson has made a name for himself touring across the United States and Canada. Mike Masilotti is a self-proclaimed comedian and videographer but doesn’t stray from his humble upbringing as an idiot in Upstate, NY. Ages 21+. 8-10 pm. $8/adv, $10/door.

The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Biggz

21+. 9 pm. No cover.

Sunriver Resort Precious Byrd Combo Bring the family, pull up a blanket and enjoy live music at The Backyard at Sunriver Resort! Dance/rock. 6:30-8:30 pm. No cover. The Pickled Pig Bobby Lindstrom Bobby’s on fire this summer, playing your favorite old blues,

some rock ‘n roll and his own list of original songs. Played with those smokin’ guitar skills, vocals and even some whistling! 6:30 pm. No cover.

2  Saturday

Chops Bistro Sugar Mountain Duo Eclectic

acoustic roots music. A little bit of somethin’ for everyone. 6-8 pm. No cover.

CHOW Bobby Lindstrom Blues, roots, Ameri-

cana, rock, all originals. 10 am-1 pm. No cover.

Crux Fermentation Project G Bots &

Angeline’s Bakery Brent Alan and his

The Journeyman It started with Greg Botsford, looping solo. He recorded an album playing every instrument, but wanted a live bass player for the CD release, and the Journeymen have been playing with him ever since. 5-8 pm.

Bend Brewing Company Allan Byer Proj-

Dogwood Cocktail Cabin DJ Wicked A night of old school hip-hop and R&B with DJ Wicked. First Friday, Saturday of every month, 10 pm. No cover.

Funky Friends Brent Alan lays down his funkiest, most soulful grooves with his electric dream band. 7 pm.

ect Allan shares his all original Americana music with his all-star band featuring Rose Witnaur on banjo & vocals, Jimmy Jo Mckue on lead guitar, Jamie Morris on percussion and Jamie Morris on bass. 6:30-9 pm. No cover.

Checker’s Pub Thomas T and the Blue Chips

Classic rock/variety. Must-hear band. Let’s dance! 8-11:30 pm. No cover.

Where Every Hour is Happy Hour

CENTRAL OREGON’S

PREMIERE

GENTLEMEN’S CLUB

Sharlet, brings her new Americana-soul music project, Sharlet Crooks, to Velvet for their first appearance in Bend. 8-10 pm. No cover.

Velvet DJ Tailspin After several years of exploring the musical scene at Black Rock City experience a unique blend of hip/hop and electronic bass goodness. First Saturday of every month, 10 pm-1 am. No cover.

Volcanic Theatre Pub Kuinka Indie folk pop and rock. 9 pm. $8/adv, $10/door.

3  Sunday 10 Barrel Brewing Co. Eastside Bobby Lindstrom Blues, roots, rock, Americana - and the new CD, “FireTender.” 4 pm. No cover.

Elk Lake Resort Music on the Water Kaylee James Live music. 5 pm.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Karaoke FUN

Hub City Bar & Grill Friends of Lenny Clas-

Crow’s Feet Commons Family Tunes with Pieta Brown Her sultry voice and inspiring words bring an beautiful evening to your weekend plans. Folk. 7-10 pm. No cover.

sic rock. 9 pm-1 am. No cover.

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Karaoke Get

with DJ Roseybabe. 9 pm.

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CLUBS Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Picnic People Live alternative folk/country. 8-10 pm. No cover. Juniper Golf Course and The View Tap and Grill First Sunday Band Jam/Open Mic

Northside Bar & Grill Holus Bolus The one-

with DJ Roseybabe. 9 pm.

Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Sing your favorite songs every week. 9 pm. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you

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

man psychedelic, acoustiloop musician brings his one-of-a kind show to the Northside Bar and Grill. 8 pm.

M&J Tavern Open Mic Bring your talent or

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.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke Blake? Shania? Get in touch with your inner country star. 7 pm.

Sunriver Resort Precious Byrd Bring the

family, pull up a blanket and enjoy live music at The Backyard at Sunriver Resort! Dance rock. 6:30-8:30 pm. No cover.

Volcanic Theatre Pub Aloha Screwdriver High-octane surf rock from the Bay Area. 9 pm. $5.

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

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Ashleigh Flynn and the Riveters Infectious well-crafted Americana music delivered by a well-curated band of musically virtuous middle-aged women who write classic songs that speak to our common humanity. 7-10 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Open Mic Local

artists perform. 6-9 pm.

4  Monday Astro Lounge Open Mic Night Hop on stage

and show off your talent at this weekly open mic night. 8 pm.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Karaoke FUN with DJ Roseybabe. 9 pm.

Worthy Brewing Goodbye to Summer

with Precious Byrd Listen to danceable rock music while saying goodbye to summer. Benefiting Family Access Network. 6-9 pm.

5  Tuesday Astro Lounge Trivia Tuesdays Bring your

Pronghorn Resort Appaloosa Pronghorn’s Music on the Patio series brings you live music from Appaloosa! 6-8:30 pm. No cover.

Sam Johnson Park Music on the Green -

Hokulea Dancers Traditional Hawaiian dance and drumming. 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.

7  Thursday Chops Bistro Melanie Rose Dyer and Daniel Cooper All original acoustic folk-rock, Americana and blues. 6-8 pm. No cover.

team or join one! Usually six categories of various themes. 8 pm. No cover.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Karaoke FUN

Crow’s Feet Commons Story Tellers Open

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.

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.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke Have you

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.

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Ukulele Jam All

ages. 6:30 pm. No cover.

M&J Tavern Tuesday Tunes Featured local

musicians from weekly open mic night supply the live sounds to entertain the masses. 9 pm.

The Lot Trivia at The Lot Bring your team or join one. Enjoy the brews and tasty eats while rubbing elbows with Bend’s smartest smartipants who love trivia. A rotating host comes up with six questions in six different categories. 6-8 pm. No cover. Velvet Bobby Lindstrom & Ed the Whistler

Born in a small timber town on the Oregon Coast, Bobby’s passion for music began at Christmas at age 10 with his first guitar. Many bands and guitars later, he connected with his treasured 1968 Les Paul in 1970. 8-10 pm. No cover.

6  Wednesday Cabin 22 Useless Knowledge Bowl! Great

prizes! 7-9 pm.

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

with DJ Roseybabe. 9 pm.

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

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

Jive Coulis & Friends - Tribute To The Grateful Dead Come on down to enjoy a night of Jive Coulis, Grateful Dead and special guests. 7-10 pm. No cover.

Spoken Moto Dive Bar Theology Indie-pop

trio that loves to bring their own distinct flavor to popular songs old and new, sprinkled with their own originals. 7-9 pm. No cover.

Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic Fresh talent and fresh coffee every week. 6 pm.

The Lot River By My Side Bend-based acoustic band that performs American music ranging from traditional folk and bluegrass to country soul. They blend three-part harmonies into both hand-crafted originals and timeless covers. 6-8 pm. No cover. Velvet Ruby Force The musical brainchild of

Erin McLaughlin, captures her personal journey of self-discovery... marked by a maturity and ease in tone, lyrics that elicit confidence in the midst of questions and a flirty playfulness that will melt hearts. 8-10 pm. No cover.

17 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Bringing seasoned and novice musicians together to share the stage. Family-friendly event, so bring the kids. They can even join in. Food and beverages available. Hosted by Dave and Melody Hill. First Sunday of every month, 4-7 pm. No cover.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Karaoke FUN


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EVENTS

CALENDAR MUSIC Bella Acappella Harmony Chorus

Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice A traditional bagpipe and drum band

with members from the Central Oregon area. Experienced pipers and drummers are welcome to attend, along with those who are interested in taking up piping or drumming and would like to find out what it would take to learn and eventually join our group. Mondays, 5:30-7pm. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St. 541-633-3225. Free.

Community Orchestra of Central Oregon Warm-up Sessions Here is an opportu-

nity to come meet COCO musicians in a fun series of warm-ups before we start Fall rehearsals. Location varies, please call for directions and music. Mondays-Fridays, 2:30-4:30pm. Through Sept. 2. Sunrise Village Community Center, 19560 Sunshine Way. 541-306-6768. 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.

Open Hub Singing Club You’re invited

to come sing! No previous singing experience required. Singing together gives us tons of endorphins, challenges our brain to grow and encourages connection. Song is also a deeply effective tool for developing community in these troubled times. Aug. 31, 7-8:30pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541-6336025. $5-15.

The Notables Swing Dance Join us for

the Sunday Afternoon Dance with The Notables Swing Band. Dance from 2-4pm. Light refreshments served. First Sunday of every month, 2pm. Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Rd. 541-388-1133. $5 per person.

Salsa Footwork & Partnerwork Patterns Learn a series of fun footwork

combinations followed by partner work patterns. No experience required, but the class is still challenging for experienced dancers. Tuesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. 541-325-6676. $10.

live music led by David Visiko. Mondays, 6:307:30pm. Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd. 818-636-2465. $10.

FILM EVENTS Munch and Movies - “Hidden Figures”

The evening begins with live performances by local musicians. Food vendors are available on site. Relax in the park, under the stars in front of a 20 x 40-foot outdoor movie screen featuring recent favorites. Sept. 1, 6pm. NorthWest Crossing’s Compass Park, 2500 NW Crossing Dr. Free.

Sunriver Twilight Cinema - Beauty and the Beast Enjoy a movie in the outdoors with

your family! The Sunriver Twilight Cinema movie nights are free of charge and a fun way to spend an evening with your family. Sept. 2, 6:30-11pm. SHARC, 57250 Overlook Rd. Free.

Scottish Country Dance Weekly Class

LOCAL ARTS

Tess Minnick Dance Workshops The

“Lunar” Exhibit Identically sized moon prints and drawings—each made by a different local or regional artist—wrap around the gallery, creating an ethereal environment. Each work creatively mines a different aspect of the moon, from its abstract surfaces to world myth and symbolism. Also includes handmade artist books. Saturdays, 10am-6pm, Sundays, noon-5pm and Mondays-Fridays, 10am-7pm. Through Oct. 1. Bend Art Center, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 180. 541-330-8759. Free.

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.

first Saturday of every month, Tess teaches private lessons, a level 2 and 3 West Coast Swing Workshop and then a social dance from 9-11pm. 4-6pm Level 2 - West Coast Swing Workshops. 6-8pm Level 3 - West Coast Swing Workshops. Sugar Push Dance Studio, 211 NE Revere Ave. $50/all workshops/dance pass, $15/individual hour workshops, $5/social dance.

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

Art at the Ranch Presenting fine arts

and crafts of the Northwest. Artist reception, silent auction and live music on Friday. Art Fair on Saturday from 10am-4pm. Plein Air “Paint out at the Ranch” from 9am-4pm Saturday. Benefiting local art students. Sept. 1, 5:30-7:30pm and Sept. 2, 9am-4pm. Black Butte Ranch, 13899 Bishops Cap.

Artist Reception Local artist featured for a full month in the Humm brewery. Artist receptions the first Thursday of each month are held with local music and snacks from Agricultural Connections and Locavore. Guests receive a complimentary glass of kombucha! First Thursday of every month, 4-6pm. Humm Kombucha, 1125 NE 2nd St. 541-306-6329. Free. Artventure with Judy Artist-led painting

event! No experience necessary! Fee includes supplies. Pre-register and see upcoming images at artventurewithjudy.com. Tuesdays, 6-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 541410-3267. $25 pre-paid.

Barbara Smiley Exhibition A native of Bend and graduate of Fine and Applied Arts, Barbara Smiley expresses her artistic creativity in mixed media paintings, prints and pottery. Thurs, Aug. 31, 10am-9pm. Townshend’s Bend Teahouse, 835 NW Bond St. 541-312-2001. 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. First Friday Art Walk Art, music and drinks in downtown Bend. First Friday of every month, 5-9pm. Downtown Bend. Free. First Friday at Red Chair First Friday in

September focuses on color with artist members Stephanie Stanley, Fiber Arts, Julia Kennedy, Beaded Jewelry and Joanie Callen, Mosiac Creatures and more. Join us to see new works by these and all member artists. Sept. 1, 5-8:30pm. Red Chair Gallery, 103 NW Oregon Ave. 541-306-3176.

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

Drop-in class. Styles include contemporary, modern, jazz and ballet. Teachers rotate monthly. Friendly, supportive atmosphere! Performing opportunities available. Fridays. Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave. 541321-4321. $5.

Argentine Tango Class & Práctica No partner needed. Four-week fundamentals class begins the first Wednesday of every month, 6:307:30pm. Followed by intermediate lesson and práctica. Wednesdays. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. $5/class. Lori LaBissioniere carves lines on wood surfaces to create beautiful landscapes on display this month at Velvet.

SEPT 1-2

Deschutes County Historical Museum Presents

THE LITTLE WOODY

SEPT 9

Hardtails Bar & Grill Presents JUKEBOX HEROES THE BEST FOREIGNER TRIBUTE IN THE USA

SEPT 2

Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents

SEPT 13

Century Center Presents

KUINKA W JESS RYAN

PEPPER AND TRIBAL SEEDS

19 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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.

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.


EVENTS First Friday Happy Hour with The Dog Pack Collars and Friends We are

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / August 31, 2017  /  BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

20

celebrating all our furry friends this month! The Central Oregon Humane Society and Bend Spay and Neuter Project join us and a few cats and dogs that are currently available for adoption. Custom tags made in house for purchase. Feel free to bring your friendly furry friends. Sept. 1, 4-6pm. Willow Lane Artist’s Creative Space, 400 SE Second St. Suite 2. 541-241-8991. Free.

Get Out of the Heat... Read a Used Book and View A New Art Show Want

a great page turner to read? Visit your local reBOOKS Used Bookstore inside Redmond’s Bazaar for something to pass the time. We have lots of “affordable books. While there, check out the new art display by members of the FORO Art Committee. First Tuesday-Saturday of every month, 10am-6pm. Through Sept. 26. reBOOKS Used Bookstore, 531 NW Elm Street. 541.238.2181. Free.

Julia Bradshaw Photography Presentation PLAYA resident, Julia Bradshaw shows

images of her photographic work and talks about her process at BendArtCenter. Sept. 5, 6-7pm. Bend Art Center, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 180. 541-330-8759. $5.

Katie Culbertson Exhibit Aspiring illustrator

Katie Culberston has been a Bendite for over a decade. Working with ink and watercolor, Culbertson grasps the vibrancy and versatility of both media and expresses mood and style in her artwork focused on fantasy and particularly fantasy involving outer space. Townshend’s Bend Teahouse, 835 NW Bond St. Carissa Glenn, 541-312-2001.

Lori LaBissoniere Art Walk Lori carves

lines on wood surfaces much in the way she surfs and shreds, working with and passionately respecting the mountain and coastal landscapes she plays in. Sept. 1-Oct. 6, 5pm-2am. Velvet, 805 NW Wall St. 541-728-0303. No cover.

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. Summer in the High Desert Featuring the art of JM Brodrick, MaryLea Harris and Karen Ruane. Through Sept. 6. Betty Gray Gallery, Sunriver Resort, 1 Center Dr.

PRESENTATIONS Author Jane Kirkpatrick Presentation

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT Jane Kirkpatrick presents her newest novel “All She Left Behind.” Once again she shares the story of an incredibly strong woman striving for her dreams while facing adversity. Sept. 2, 6:30-8pm. Paulina Springs Books-Sisters, 252 W Hood Ave. 541-549-0866.

Author Jim Cornelius Presentation Jim reads from and sign his newest book, “Warriors of the Wildlands: True Tales of the Frontier Partisans.” Stories of the real-life frontiersmen and warriors who lived large lives offers history lessons seldom told today. Sept. 1, 6:30-8pm. Paulina Springs Books-Sisters, 252 W Hood Ave. 541-549-0866. Innovation Lab: Design Inspired By Nature Learn how designers, engineers and

architects are taking a page from nature’s book, and create some designs of your own in this family-friendly exhibition. Sept. 2 through February 17, 2018. 9am-5pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Free with Museum admission.

International Vulture Awareness Day

Leland Brown, Oregon Zoo’s non-lead hunting education coordinator, presents information about vultures and lead poisoning at a table in the Bird of Prey Pavilion. He also talks about these topics during the 3:30pm Bird of Prey Encounter. Sept. 2, 1-5pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Free with Museum admission.

Know Industry - How Bend Became the Center of the Lumber Industry Local

historian Tor Hanson takes you on a trip to 1905 Bend to explain why the city ended up becoming the center of the lumber industry and home to two of the largest pine mills in the United States in the ‘20s and ‘30s. Sept. 6, 6-7pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-3121032. 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, 10am1pm. Through Sept. 3. Lava Lands Visitor Center, HWY 97. 541-593-2421. Free.

THEATER Auditions for “Secret Garden” Sunriver

Stars Community Theater opens its 2017-2018 season with a musical version of the beloved story, “The Secret Garden” by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Aug. 30, 6-9pm. The Door, 56870 Venture Ln. Suite 4, Sunriver.

Heathers: The Musical Veronica Sawyer, a brainy, beautiful teenage misfit who hustles her way into the most powerful and ruthless clique at Westerberg High: the Heathers. But before she can get comfortable atop the high school food chain, Veronica falls in love with the dangerously sexy new kid J.D. Fri, Sept. 1, 7:30-10:30pm, Sat, Sept. 2, 7:30-10:30pm, Sun, Sept. 3, 3-7pm and Thurs, Sept. 7, 7:30-10:30pm. 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave. 541-312-9626. $25/adults. $22/seniors and students. Peter and the Starcatcher Climb aboard

for the Neverland you never knew! The Boy is en-route to a distant island ruled by the evil king Zarboff when he meets a precocious young girl named Molly, a Starcatcher-In-Training when their ship is taken over by pirates led by the fearsome Black Stache. Thursdays-Saturdays, 7:30-9:45pm and Sun, Sept. 3, 2-4:15pm. Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. 541-389-0803. $13-$20.

WORDS Welcome Settled Minister The Unitar-

ian Universalist Fellowship welcomes its new settled minister, Rev. Scott Rudolph today. He brings a commitment to multigenerational parish ministry, spiritual and intellectual depth, a commitment to empowering lay leadership and abundant enthusiasm and creative energy. Childcare provided. Sept. 3, 10:30-11:30am. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd. 541-385-3908.

VOLUNTEERS 350Deschutes Climate Advocacy & Education Use your special talents to encourage

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.

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!

We are seeking volunteers to come out and help us build fences for dogs who live on chains. No experience is required. Sign up on Facebook: FFF Central Oregon Region Volunteers or Bend Canine Friends Meet Up group. More information can be found at fencesforfido.org. 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.

The Rebecca Foundation The Rebecca

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

Volunteer The Salvation Army has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for almost every age. We have an emergency food pantry, we visit residents of assisted living centers and we make up gifts for veterans and homeless. If interested, please contact us. First Monday-Friday of every month. Bend, RSVP for address. 541-389-8888. Volunteer—BCC Bend’s Community Center

has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for individuals over age six. If interested in volunteering go to bendscommunitycenter.org or call 541-312-2069 for more information. 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.


EVENTS Volunteer for the 17th Annual Green Tour! Join The Energy Challenge and be an ambassador in one of several Green Homes during the annual tour on Sept 30. Lunch is provided during event and during training. We would love your help. Contact Ani for more information! The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave.

Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond

CLASSES AcroYoga Join Deven Sisler to experience how

the power of acrobatics, wisdom of yoga and sensitivity of thai yoga intertwine. No partner necessary! Wednesdays, 7pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $7-$15.

African Dance Classes are taught in a friendly, welcoming and fun environment, and you will leave every class with a smile on your face and joy in your heart! Wednesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. Gotta Dance Studio, 917 NE Eighth St. 541-3220807. $12.

Electric Vehicle Workshop How far can

you go? How do I charge at home? Will my whole family fit? Can I power it with solar? We invite you to join us as we demystify electric vehicles and learn how you can get 50% off a new car. Aug. 30, 5:30-6:30pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. 541-385-6908. Free.

Essential Tibetan Buddhism Michael Stevens, director of the Natural Mind Dharma Center, offers an introduction to Buddha’s teachings and how they are expressed through the Vajrayana tradition. The event includes lecture, discussion, chanting and meditation. naturalminddharma.org. First Monday of every month, 7-8:30pm. Natural Mind Dharma Center, 345 SW Century Dr. Suite 2. 541-388-3352. $10 donation. Drying & Curing - A Fundamental Discussion of Principles One of the most

important aspects of ensuring that your smoke is tasty, smooth and has reached the plant’s maximum potential, comes from the last steps in growing cannabis - drying and curing. Meet other growers, enthusiasts and people in the cannabis industry. 21+. Sept. 7, 6-8pm. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NW Tin Pan Alley. Free.

German Conversation Group With a

tutor to learn conversational German. Mondays, 7-8pm. In Sisters, various locations. 541-5950318. Cost is variable depending upon number of students.

Business Start-Up Class Do you have a

Hemp Oil CDB Health Benefits In an hour-and-half, get up to speed on the enormous health benefits of CBD oil. This is a casual home environment where you hear testimonials. Free samples available to try. Every other Wednesday, 7-8:30pm. Through Sept. 13. Aingeal Rose & Ahonu, https://www.meetup.com/Aingeal-Rose-Ahonu. 925-366-3091. Free.

Capoeira Experience this exciting martial art

Online Chair Tai Chi Classes Designed for people who have limited mobility and cannot stand for long periods of time. From a seated position soft movements are used to help increase energy, improve blood circulation. Fridays, 2-3pm. Grandmaster Franklin, 51875 Hollinshead Pl. 623-203-4883. $40.

Buddhist Mantras Chanting Explore

the spiritual insights and learn how to correctly chant mantras in Japanese. Reservations required. Mondays-Tuesdays-Thursdays-Fridays, 10:30am-4pm. Custom Built Computers Of Redmond, 439 SW 6th St. 541-848-1255. $10.

great idea that you think could be a successful business, but just don’t know how to get started? Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you. Sept. 6, 6-9pm. COCC Chandler Lab (off-campus), 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541-383-7290. $29.

form of Afro Brazilian origins which incorporates music and acrobatic movements. For adults and teens. 541-678-3460. Mondays, 7-8:20pm and Thursdays, 7-8:20pm. City of Bend, Bend, OR. $30, two week intro.

DIY Learn to Weld Workshop Learn more about this class and sign up online at DIYcave. com. Wed, Aug. 30, 5:30pm and Wed, Sept. 6, 5:30pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150. 541-388-2283. $50.

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. Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction Course MBSR uses meditation and gentle

yoga to help you be more present. Learning to be mindful of the present moment can help you to reduce stress, pain and suffering to lead a

First Friday at Red Chair Gallery includes new works of art by member artists on 9/1.

more healthy, enjoyable life. This 8-week course teaches you how to do that. Tuesdays, 6-9pm. Through Oct. 24. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541-640-0597. $395.

exchange for canned and dry foods in support of Neighbor Impact food bank. First Thursday of every month, 5-7pm. The Old Stone, 157 NW Franklin Ave. 541-389-1159.

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.

Drawing Under the Influence Bring pa-

Tai Chi A free Tai Chi for health class open to

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

West African Drumming Level 1

Learn traditional rhythms, and experience the brain-enhancing, healing and joyful benefits from David Visiko. A beginner class open to all. Mondays, 5:30-6:30pm. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. 541-760-3204. $15.

West African Drumming Level 3 Build on your knowledge, technique, and performance skills. Teacher/troupe director David Visiko and members of Fe Fanyi study, practice and play joyfully. Thursdays, 7-8:30pm. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. 541-760-3204. $15.

EVENTS Ales & Tails Adoption Day Come meet

some adorable furry animals available for adoption including puppies, dogs, kittens and cats. The animals play outside on our new lawn waiting to meet their future families while you sip on a pint! Adopt, don’t shop! Wed, Sept. 6, 4-7pm. Bend Brewing Company, 1019 NW Brooks St.

Central Oregon Saturday Market A

gathering place for artists, craftspeople, growers, gatherers and food vendors to display and sell their work which is uniquely their own. Sat, Sept. 2, 10am and Sun, Sept. 3, 10am. Downtown Bend. Free.

Central Oregon Shakedown Patriot

Pinup presents a veteran’s benefit. All car/truck models pre-1980 welcome. All year motorcycles. Lowrider limbo. Live music. Pinup contest. Food and drink available. Registration at 9am. Sept. 2, 10am-4pm. Redmond VFW Hall, 1836 SW Veterans Way.

Community Healing Night Intuitive

readings, energetic healing, and bodywork in

per, pen, creativity and draw under the influence! This DUI club is for anyone looking for some fun on a Sunday. 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. Heartsongs Song Circle Heartsongs is a celebration of sacred sound and song that encourages self discovery. All are welcome to share songs! Bring any acoustic instrument. First Sunday of every month, 7-9pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-285-4972. $5-15. HOPE Food Bank Distribution Free food

for up to three pets for one month. Must be on government assistance or show proof of low income to qualify. Call The Bend Spay + Neuter Project for more information. First Saturday of every month, 10am. Bend Pet Express Westside, 133 SW Century Dr. 541-617-1010.

Hopservatory Cosmic Tours 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. 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. Connect, rejuvenate and care for you. Open to pregnant women and moms with babies up to one years old. Held at the playground at Juniper Swim & Fitness Center. Wednesdays, 11am12:30pm. Juniper Park, 800 NE Sixth St. 541306-8466. 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.

21 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Looking for volunteers to receive donations, sort and price items. Volunteers are critical to the operations of our high-save shelter and contribute directly to the care of our animals by ensuring our donations are processed. Mondays-Sundays. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St. 541-504-0101.

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / August 31, 2017  /  BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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EVENTS Pizza Fundraiser Join us for a Base Camp Pizza Fundraiser supporting Mustangs to the Rescue. Visit our website: MustangsToTheRescue.org to download and print the required flyer, give it to Base Camp Pizza when you order, and 50% of your food order purchase will benefit Mustangs to the Rescue! Important—Be sure to download and print the flyer so that the money is donated to Mustangs to the Rescue. First Sunday of every month. Base Camp Pizza, 8060 11th St. 541-330-8943. 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.

Power Panel: Millennials in the Workplace How do we as the stereotyped lazy, enti-

tled, disloyal professionals stand a chance to be successful in a workplace full of Gen X’ers and Baby Boomers? This is a 21+ event, bring your ID. Sept. 7, 5-7pm. The Capitol, 190 NW Oregon Ave. 541-382-3221. $15 Chamber members; $25 general admission.

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.

Pulmonary Hypertension Support Group A supportive group of individuals and caregivers affected by Pulmonary Hypertension. Social, educational and includes lunch. Topics include: new treatments, traveling with PH, insurance, tai chi, anxiety and depression. First Saturday of every month, 1-3pm. Deschutes East Bend Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-408-4943. Free.

Sisters Fall Street Festival In its 10th

year! Featuring an arts, crafts, food, beer, wine garden, entertainment and a special fundraiser benefiting the Sisters High School Visual Arts Department. Sept. 2, 10am-5pm and Sept. 3, 10am4pm. Downtown Sisters. 541-420-0279. Free.

Vintage Flea Market Hunt for great finds from vintage to upcycled, shabby chic to antique, mid-century to industrial. Hand-picked vendors set up their wares (from smalls to furniture) in the gardens at Pomegranate. Sat, Sept. 2, 10am4pm. Pomegranate Home and Garden, 120 NE River Mall Ave. 541-383-3713. Free.

SENIOR EVENTS 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. Tai Chi for Diabetes This ongoing, very

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

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. Bendharma - Consciousness Discussion Exploring pathways to peace by study of

human consciousness. Relaxed group discussion facilitated by an experienced western yogi and all those who like bear-hugs. First Wednesday of every month, 6-8pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-383-3531. 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. 541-390-8534. Free.

French Conversation Table Every first and

third Monday of the month. All are welcome! First Monday of every month, 10:30am-12:30pm. Barnes and Noble, 2690 NE Hwy 20. 541-389-8656. 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.

League of Women Voters of Deschutes County First Thursday Luncheon Speaker: Mikaela Rickards, FAN Donor Relations & Events Planning. The public is invited to this luncheon. Please arrive at 11am if ordering from the menu. The speaker begins at noon. Sept. 7, 11am-1pm. Black Bear Diner, 1465 NE Third St.

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 Method-

ist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-480-8269. Free.

Overeaters Anonymous Meeting

Mondays-noon-Saturdays, 9:30am and Thursdays-noon. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-306-6844. Free. Wednesdays, 4pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave. 541-306-6844. Free.

Refuge Recovery Meeting An addiction recovery community that practices and utilizes Buddhist philosophy and meditation as the foundation of the recovery process. Drawing inspiration from the core teachings of the Four Noble Truths, emphasis is placed on both knowledge and empathy as a means for overcoming addiction. Mondays, 4:30-5:30pm. Wren and Wild, 910 NW Harriman St. 541-233-6252. 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. Candy, 907-209-8181. Call Musso on the call box upon arrival. Thursdays, 1-3pm. 990 SW Yates, 990 SW Yates Dr. Free.

Zen Discussion & Meditation A weekly lay-led Dharma discussion and meditation (zazen). Open to all. Discussion 6pm, sitting/walking meditation 7-8:30pm. Mondays, 6-8:30pm. St. Helen’s Hall - Trinity Episcopal, 231 NW Idaho St. 541-390-1220. Free.

23 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Pool Tournament Cash Cup Anyone can

Episcopal Church, 469 Wall St. 541-548-0440.


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Head to Sunriverfor Twilight Cinemas and enjoy a movie outdoors on the big screen on 9/2 and 3.

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. 541-5508550. $5-$6. Build a Better World with Music & Stories Bilingual stories and Spanish sing-along songs. Make a simple musical instrument. All Ages. Aug. 31, 9:30am. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-330-3760. Aug. 31, 1:15pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7097. Free.

Central Oregon Sundays Includes outdoor/indoor aquatics and disc golf (when available). Must show proof of residence in Deschutes, Jefferson ​or Crook County​ . Sundays. Through Sept. 3. 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.

Kids ROCK(!) Choir This is a place where

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. Mondays, 4:30-5:30pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 541-728-3798. $10.

Kids Summer Camps Need a two-hour break from the kiddos? Sign up for a threeday camp with progressive skill building. Individual day sign-up options available.

Camps include exploration of ecosystems, water, animal life, habitats, and more! Tuesdays-Thursdays, 10am-noon Through Aug. 31. Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Rd., Sunriver. 541-593-4394. $18 per class.

LEGO Block Party Kids + 1 gazillion LEGOs = fun. All Ages. Sept. 2, 1-2pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541617-7097. Free. Story Time - Music, Movement & Stories Movement and stories to develop skills. Ages 3+ years. Sept. 7, 10:30am. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541312-1070. Free.

Teen Night Teen night pool party. Reservations required. Call 541-585-3147. Wednesdays, 8-10pm. Through Aug. 30. SHARC, 57250 Overlook Rd. 541-585-3147. $7-$10. Tiny Explorers Meetup The Children’s Forest is seeking committed volunteers to host Tiny Explorers Meetups in the outdoors. Serve as the point person and distribute free baby carriers. 2nd Tuesday at Pilot Butte Neighborhood Park from 11am-12pm. 3rd Tuesday in Redmond at Sam Johnson Park from 11am-12pm. 4th Tuesday at Larkspur Park from 1-2pm. Tuesdays, 11am-noon. Twilight Cinema- Sunriver Style

Presented by Cascade Sotheby’s and Sunset Lodging in Sunriver. All movie activities start at 6:30pm with concession stands (proceeds benefit the Sunriver Women’s Club fundraiser), an inflatable bouncy house,and entertainment for the whole family! Bring low-profile chairs and blankets! Sat, Sept. 2, 6:30pm and Sun, Sept. 3, 6:30pm. The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Dr. 541-585-3333. Free.


DON'T MISS!

Gnome Costumes & Gnome Games

Local & Regional Brewers

Velvety • Deep • Intense

September 1st & 2nd, 2017 Friday the 1st from 5pm-10pm ° Saturday the 2nd from Noon-10pm

VIP entry includes a t-shirt, special VIP glass and 10 tasting tokens,

at Des Chutes Historical Museum

BREWERIES/CIDERIES/DISTILLERIES

plus early Friday entry starting at 4pm.

SPONSORS RE

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www.thelittlewoody.com


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The Little Woody Bend

o t e m o c l e W

Y D O O W E L THE LITT T

he Little Woody Barrel-Aged Beer, Cider & Whiskey Festival will celebrate barrel-aged beers and ciders from across the Northwest during the 8th annual festival Friday, September 1st from 5pm-10pm, VIP Hour on Friday from 4pm-5pm, & Saturday, September 2nd from 12pm-10pm. Located on the lawn at the Deschutes Historical Museum, in beautiful downtown Bend. New This Year, all ages welcome from 12pm-6pm on Saturday, September 2nd. Come taste the velvety, deep,and intense flavors and enjoy the intimacy of small batch brewing from 25 local and regional brewers.

S E I R E S R E K SPEA Lineup

Saturday September 2nd, 3pm - 5:30pm

ram Tag us on Instag

d #littlewoodyben adventures #gnome iesat #wheremygnom

Deschutes Historical Society Library

The origin of The Little Woody 9 years ago was the desire of beer visionaries to share the beers they were creating, innovative and based on their extensive knowledge of traditional barrel aging. This year’s theme for the Series is “Founded in Tradition, Innovation Leads.” Grab your favorite rare brew, settle into the cool of the library and prepare be entertained and enlightened by three highly creative owners from beer and cider world, on how this informs their individual creative process.

3:00 4:00 5:00

Reverend Nat Roger Worthington Sean Kelly

Reverend Nat West from Reverend Nat’s Hard Cider Nat West is a single-minded cider evangelist and die-hard craft beer revolutionary who started Reverend Nat’s Hard Cider in his basement in 2011 and continues to dedicate his time there as Cidermaker and President. Known for his unusual American ciders and love of experimentation, Nat has created some of the most unusual ciders than no one else will make including unique products like the multiple-fermented Revival, dry-hopped Hallelujah Hopricot, quinine-bittered Deliverance Ginger Tonic and many barrel-aged and one-off ciders. In the past five years, Nat has grown the business from 1 employee operating out of his basement to 18 employees with distribution up and down the West Coast and all the way to Japan. In addition to winning dozens of cider awards, Reverend Nat’s has appeared in many national publications including Saveur, Men’s Health, Men’s Journal, Imbibe, Women’s Health, Eater.com and three major books. Nat regularly teaches cider classes around the country with a strong emphasis on merging the history of cider with new directions of the industry.

Join Sean Kelly of Wildcraft Cider Works , as he explores the truly ancient traditions that are leading him to innovations of practice . Sean Kelly, founder and operator at Wildcraft Cider Works helps forgotten or wasted resource become a high quality local product with a traditional profile and historic nostalgia. Sean, 33, is a Eugene, Oregon native who grew up between Oregon and New Jersey with sporadic long travel periods abroad before coming back to Eugene in 2005 to raise a family with his partner Brianna. WildCraft Cider Works founded in 2014 is a combination of professional urban salvage utilization, resource management and a longtime passion for traditional wild fermentation of fruits, grains and plants. In addition to the fermentation of cider, fruit wine and botanicals, WildCraft also combines Sean’s culinary passions and community involvement to provide a farm to table restaurant and a platform of community sourced fruit to benefit our conservation groups. In 2017, Sean will be expanding the cider business into the districts first planning mill as an apple mill, fermentation and packaging facility as well as expanded tasting room.

Roger Worthington: the New Directions in Aroma Hop Breeding in Oregon Roger Worthington, the founder of Worthy Brewing, is also the co-founder of Indie Hops along with his childhood friend, Jim Solberg. They partnered up in 2009 and rebooted Oregon State University’s hop-breeding program with a $1 million donation. Under the leadership of Shaun Townsend, Ph.D, they have developed over 50 new aroma-centric genotypes that thrive in the Willamette Valley terroir. Strata is the first hop creation to emerge from the OSU-IH aroma hop breeding program. “I felt like a proud daddy whose baby girl just won the state title in the 100-meter dash, shot put and mile,” said Roger Worthington. This was all part of our utopian vision to revive hop farming in Oregon and bring worthy flavors to the craft market. ”

TICKETS AVAILABLE ON BendTicket.com DESCHUTES HISTORICAL MUSEUM LAWN 129 NW IDAHO For special needs requests call 541-323-0964 email info@layitoutevents.com

PRICING FOR EVENT

$15 BASIC ENTRY $20 TASTING PACKAGE 8 TOKENS

$35 VIP PACKAGE

INCLUDES T-SHIT & 10 TOKENS

ADDITIONAL TOKENS $1 EACH

  

@littlewoodybend @littlewoodybeer /thelittlewoodybeerfestival

E G A T S N I MA Lineup

Check out amazing regional bands as they blend folk, rock, bluegrass and classic country in their acoustic performances.

Friday, September 1st

Leadbetter and Young Duo 6:30pm Leadbetter and Young Duo are a two-man semi-acoustic jam band based out of Bend, Oregon, featuring Eric Leadbetter on vocals and guitars and Mark Young on bass. They travel all over Oregon and the northwest to play their energetic blend of classic rock, funk, and blues, and when they're not performing as Leadbetter & Young they can be found onstage with Jive Coulis - one of Oregon's premier rock bands.

Hutch and Gentry 8:30pm The ever talented and old timey virtuoso’s, Hutch & Gentry (David Hutchins, Jason Chinchen, and Darin Gentry). The trio is led by musician David Hutchins who has focused on learning, performing and exploring America's traditional roots music over the last 15 years.

Saturday, September 2nd

Boxcar String Band Double Set 6:30pm Boxcar stringband is an three man rock and roll blues machine that plays an eclectic mix of old rock and roll, blues, hillbilly rock and rockabilly music. While the band is based out of Bend, Oregon, it’s members bring influence from the greater pacific northwest and far beyond.


THE LITTLE WOODY

Whiskey Tasting The Woody Whiskey Tasting Tug Fest takes place in the whiskey tent by the music stage.

Clear Creek Distillery Founded in 1985 with a vision to use the bountiful fruits of the Pacific Northwest to create fruit-based spirits that rivaled the best of their European counterparts. Using old-world techniques and sourcing ingredients from the local orchards and fresh water springs of Mount Hood in the Oregon countryside, Clear Creek became one of the first craft distilleries in the United States. Now you can discover one of the Northwest’s unique “orchard to glass” treasures. Clear Creek’s fruit brandies and liqueurs are distilled in small batches using traditional copper pot stills. It takes 20lbs of pears to create just one bottle of our flagship pear brandy. Experience the authentic taste of locally grown and handcrafted fruit spirits, the essence of pure fruit lovingly crafted to create exceptional products.

McCarthy’s® Oregon Single Malt Whiskey

Origin: Oregon Distilled in a Holstein pot still using one pass distillation. This premium, non-chill filtered product is then barrel-aged in air-dried Oregon Oak barrels. The result is remarkably smooth for a 3-year-old whiskey.In the Whiskey Bible’s review of the world’s whiskeys, McCarthy’s was recognized as the “Best Small Batch Whiskey” in 2004 and 2006.

House Spirits Distillery in the heart of Portland, Oregon, is an invitation to explore the tradition and the future of American craft distilling. Every day, through our oversized tasting room window or on a distillery tour, our guests witness the transformation of grain and natural botanicals into some of the world’s most admired spirits. A leader of Portland’s world-renowned maker community, we are a real distillery, where real people put their heart, soul, and artistry into crafting products that delight and inspire.

Westward American Single Malt Whiskey Origin: Oregon A grain-to-glass celebration of the American pioneer spirit. Made from scratch from Pacific Northwest two-row barley, fermented with American ale yeast for outstanding flavor, double pot distilled for exceptional character, matured in new American oak barrels, and never chill filtered, Westward brings together the very best of the American whiskey and craft beer traditions.

Bull Run Distillery We started Bull Run Distillery to make an Oregon Whiskey. A whiskey that would reflect the place where it is made and the influences that guided its vision. Our goal was to create nothing less than a new style of American Whiskey. Made from 100% malted barley from the Klamath Basin and brought up in new American oak barrels influenced through the years by Western Oregon’s four distinct seasons. Our whiskey is the culmination of the combination of grain, wood, time and home.

Bull Run Single Malt

Origin: Oregon

American Single Malt

Oregon Spirit Distillers Founded on a dream to do what we love resulting in an end product that shows the integrity and playfulness of our work. We sought to create spirits that bring an experience to the consumer, which we can be proud of and excited to share with them. From the beginning we wanted our spirits to participate in the cocktail and we think that they do that well. Wanting to involve the consumer we sought after those who had an interest in spirits and asked for their help to develop our products. We have found that working with others who are excited about this industry as much as we are was extremely helpful and rewarding to us. We hoped to develop a sense of community at Oregon Spirit that would reach out and include those wishing to be (what we affectionately refer to as) Spirit Geeks!

thelittlewoody.com

Oregon Spirit Distillers Bourbon Whiskey Origin: Oregon Color: Red Amber. Aroma: Oak, vanilla and caramel. Taste: Snickerdoodle cookies, vanilla, caramel and a hint of mint. J. Becher Straight Rye Whiskey - On the Nose

Origin: Oregon Sweet ginger, tropical fruit, bubblegum. On the Palate: honey, sweetmint, earthy cinnamon, and a hint of oak.

Four Roses Bourbon Only Four Roses handcrafts 10 distinct and extraordinary Bourbon recipes then mingles them by hand to create our family of award-winning brands. Artistry such as this is how we survived Prohibition, The Great Depression, Two World Wars, and 40 years of exile from the US, only to be named American Whisky Distiller of the Year for 2011, 2012 and 2013 – three years in a row – by Whisky Magazine. Handcrafting this way may be a bit more time consuming, but one sip, and you’ll no doubt agree, it’s worth the extra effort.

Four Roses Bourbon Origin: Kentucky Nose: Pear and light fruitiness, floral, gentle spice, honey. Palate: Crisp, yet soft & smooth, fresh fruit, hints of apple. Finish: Soft & smooth.

Crater Lake Spirits Crater Lake Spirits is celebrating it’s 20th Anniversary!!! Crater Lake Spirits is based in Bend, Oregon and produces Vodka, Gins and Rye Whiskey. Visit our tasting room 19330 Pinehurst Road Bend, OR 97703 or soon in Downtown Bend!

Crater Lake Spirits Rye Whiskey

Origin: Oregon There was a time when every town had a distillery making rye whiskey. Crater Lake Rye Whiskey hopes to revive the traditions of these small family brands that were lost during Prohibition. crafted from 95% rye grain and pure Cascades Mountain water the character of our rye is rich with deep toffee notes and a peppery spice that defines true American rye whiskey. Color: Straw Yellow. Aroma: Grass, honey, lemon. Taste: Oatmeal, charred oak, and freshly-clipped grass.

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The Little Woody Bend

y d o o W e l t t The Li

ENJOY BARREL-AGED BEER & CIDER FROM T REGIONS TOP BREWERHE S

S E I R E W E R B D E R S FEATU E I R E D I &C ATTENTION CIDER DRINKERS!

Look for the apple to find your brew.

10 Barrel Brewing Co. Fueled with the desire to reshape the craft beer landscape of Bend, Or., the team at 10 Barrel is using their handcrafted ales to reach the masses and fine beer connoisseurs alike. Crafted in our 10 Barrel brew house, each batch is brewed with love and delivered to you with care. So when choosing your next brew just remember, we just want to make you happy and fill your glass with a little, well, great beer… Cheers!

Hooligan ABV: 9.7% • IBU’s: 33 2 Tokens Barrel Aged Pumpkin Sour. There’s one in every bunch. While tasting through barrels of Jamaican Me Pumpkin (our rum barrel aged imperial pumpkin ale), we noticed a few hooligan barrels – these didn’t taste the same as the others. Thrilled with our belligerent barrels, we moved the beer in to wine barrels in our sour barrel room. Extended aging allowed the pumpkin spices to meld further into the beer and wild yeast creates layers of fruity, earthy flavors and alight acidity.

DryFly Evolution ABV: 10.7% • IBU’s: 30 2 Tokens Barrel Aged Wheat Wine. DryFly Evolution is a treasure we found buried in our cooler. it made its debut several years ago at Little Woody. It is a Wheat Wine aged in Dry Fly Wheat Whiskey barrels. Lucky for us one keg was forgotten in a corner. Sometimes time makes beautiful things.

Atlas Cider Co ATLAS Cider Co. produces authentic hard cider fermented from 100% fresh pressed fruit from our region. Partnering with Northwest farmers to source our fruit has been a priority of ours from the beginning. Our ciders start with a base of NW fruit that are pressed to achieve a balance of sweetness, tartness, and dryness. We forge our ciders in the heart of the NW in Bend, OR.

Hard Apricot Cider ABV: • IBU’s: n/a 2 Tokens Pressed golden orange apricots dominate this uniquely tart cider. The Romans and Greeks had it right when they used apricots as a main ingredient in their drink known as the “Nectar of the Gods”. The driest of our ciders leaves a lasting round finish that calls for more. May the Gods be appeased.

Blackberry Hard Cider ABV: 6.2% • IBU’s: n/a 2 Tokens Oregon has a state flag, song, flower, and this my friends is our nomination for a state cider. The tartness of blackberries is rounded out by the complex characteristics of elderberries. Filled with tannins, the cider leaves a delightful dry and rich finish. Cheers to NW berries! Gluten free.

Bend Brewing Company Bend Brewing Co. was established in 1995, and is the second oldest brew pub in Bend, Oregon. Brewing only 1,000 barrels annually, Bend Brewing Co. has a rich history of brewing award winning craft beers at their landmark location in Downtown Bend. Future expansion plans include a riverfront outdoor beer garden adjacent to their current property and expanded production. Exciting times for BBC!

Pinot Peach Offering ABV: 4.5% • IBU’s: 5 2 Tokens Pinot Noir barrel aged peach sour.

Raven ABV: 10.5% • IBU’s: 35 2 Tokens Bourbon barrel aged Baltic Porter.

Boneyard Beers BoneyardBeer was started with one goal in mind – make great beer. Our system is pieced together, second hand equipment that we pulled from “The Boneyard”.

Incredible Pulp ABV: 6.0% • IBU’s: 35 2 Tokens Blood Orange Extra Pale Ale. Secondary fermentation on blood orange with a citrus hop profile and pilsner malt platform. Very citrusy and zesty. Over 84lbs of Blood Orange Puree used!

Gooze Cruze ABV: 5.7% • IBU’s: 10 4 Tokens Belgian-style Oude Gueuze Lambic. From Bend, not brussels –Gooze Cruze uses Boneyard’s proprietary wild yeast culture and is aged in Seguin Moreau foeders. This process creates a complex and balanced version of a traditional Oude Gueuze Style Lambic. Carbonation is achieved through a secondary fermentation in the bottle.

Deschutes Brewery Deschutes Brewery was founded in 1988 as a brew pub in Bend, Oregon. Family and employee-owned, the brewery is known for brewing a diverse line-up of award-winning beers. From the beginning, the focus has been on crafting the best beer and cuisine using only the finest ingredients. Deschutes Brewery now ships beer to 28 states, the District of Columbia, and around the world from its main brewing facility located on the banks of the Deschutes River.

Black Barleywine ABV: 11.9% • IBU’s: 45 3 Tokens This behemoth of a barleywine brings all of the rich malt character you would expect, with a color and subtle roasted edge that makes it surprisingly drinkable. The chocolate and licorice flavors help cut the malt sweetness, with a finish of vanilla, nougat and crème brûlée from extended aging in oak.

Spiritual Awakening ABV: 10.7% IBUs: 20 3 Tokens Barrel Aged Scotch Ale We brought in some really nice scotch whisky barrels and had a great pub recipe for a peated scotch ale, so we decided to combine the two. The result is a rich and luxurious marriage of malt and oak, with notes of toffee, dried fruit, whisky, vanilla, and a delicate smoky finish. 100% barrel aged for 10 months

Finnriver Farm & Cidery At Finnriver we gather and ferment the flavors of the land to offer you farmcrafted hard ciders and spirited fruit wines. We are inspired by the allure of the fruit, the ancient history of the craft of fermentation and the lively traditions we now seek to revive. Our mission is to inspire a deeper connection to the land that sustains us.

Cider Summit Saison ABV: 6.5% • IBU’s: n/a 2 Tokens Organic WA select apples fermented with saison yeast with Turkish apricots, black pepper and clove.

Oak & Apple Cider ABV: 6.5% • IBU’s: n/a 3 Tokens Organic WA select apples barrel aged in highest barrels.


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Fort George Brewery Fort George crafts original beers distributed only in the Northwest. Whether in cans or kegs, at our pub in Astoria or on your front porch, our brews bring people together in aromatic headiness and lupulin ecstasy.

Old Girl ABV: 10.25% • IBU’s: ? 3 Tokens Bourbon Barrel aged Old Ale that spent 18 months in Four Roses Barrels.

3-way IPA ABV: 7.0% • IBU’s: ? 2 Tokens New England Style Hazy IPA. In collaboration with Great Notion and Rubens Brew.

Founders Familly The Founders Family, a group of passionate beer enthusiasts, has grown around this simple philosophy: “We don’t brew beer for the masses. Instead, our beers are crafted for a chosen few, a small cadre of renegades and rebels who enjoy a beer that pushes the limits of what is commonly accepted as taste. In short, we make beer for people like us.”

KBS ABV 11.8% • IBU’s: 3 Tokens What we’ve got here is an imperial stout brewed with a massive amount of coffee and chocolates, then cave-aged in oak bourbon barrels for an entire year to make sure wonderful bourbon undertones come through in the finish. Makes your taste buds squeal with delight

Doom ABV: 12.4% • IBU’s: 2 Tokens Doom may be impending but that doesn’t mean you have to fear it. A collision of worlds, the intense hop character of our imperial IPA mingles with the warm vanilla and oak notes imparted from time spent in our favorite bourbon barrels. Like all good things, Doom comes to those who wait.

Fremont Brewing We are a family-owned craft brewery founded in 2009 to brew artisan beers made with the best local ingredients we can find … Because Beer Matters!

B Bomb ABV: 14% • IBU’s: 65 3 Tokens This year’s release of B-Bomb is aged in 12 & 15-year-old American Oak whiskey barrels and is a blend of 24 and 12-month old barrel strength Winter Ale. B-Bomb achieves distinct bourbon, oak, cacao, leather and dark coffee notes from its extended barrel aging and barrel bending.

Lush IPA ABV: 7.0% • IBU’s: 70 2 Tokens We bring this tropical treat to you as a gift from the Pacific Northwest. Lush is brewed with a hand-selected blend of malts and lush, tropical hops reminiscent of lime, manganese’s and gave… Because Beer Matters!

GoodLife Brewing Company Brewing on a 30 barrel, 4-vessel brew system that was built right here in Oregon, We strive to creates fresh craft ales. Our system is custom designed to produce quality beer. Contemplate the balance it takes to gracefully zip down a tight tree run on your ski’s. This is the image we perceive when we balance a malt and hop profile, a natural requirement for everything we brew. Inspired by the beautiful surroundings, the stimulating culture, and fantastic lifestyle that is true to Central Oregon, we like to think we know the definition of a GoodLife.

Aprinaut ABV: 6.0% • IBU’s: 18 2 Tokens A Farmhouse Aged in Pinot Noir Barrels with Brettanomyces and Lactobacillus. Huge notes of Apricot and Stone-Fruits

Gnome Games

This year we’ve decided to expand the fun while all our gnome-loving buddies sip on their favorite Little Woody beverage. Located next to the Oregon Spirit Distillers whiskey tent, we offer you giant Jenga, cornhole and of course, Hillbilly Horseshoes. Listen to music while you play, drink, and enjoy your time with your “gnomies,”. Whether you’re an expert or new to these games, it sure will be a fun time for all.

PROUD SPONSOR OF THE LITTLE WOODY BEND!

Grown with love in the Central Oregon sunshine @plantaehealth @alfalfavalleyfarms /plantaebend /alfalfavalleyfarms

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S E I R E W E R B D FEATURE RIES & CIDE 6th Anniversary Ale Cherry American Dark Sour ABV: 7.0% • IBU’s: 20 2 Tokens This Dark American Sour is a blend of three distinct beers aged in Syrah Barrels for 8 months with Oregon Tart Red Cherries. The flavors marry to create a tart and dry beer that is not your everyday sour.

Hop Valley Brewing Co Our original idea was pretty simple. Four lifelong Oregonians with knowledge of the local beer market and a better understanding of craft beer just wanted to make some good beer. We found the perfect place to start smack dab in the middle of the old hop central, and the rest is history, albeit a very short history.

A Long Turkey Kiss Goodnight ABV: 10.2% • IBU’s: 30 4 Tokens Belgian Triple Aged in Wild Turkey barrels for 90 days.

Imperial Mistress ABV: 8.6% • IBU’s: 90 3 Tokens Imperial IPA with grapefruit peel.

Immersion Brewery Immersion Brewery is a Brewery plus a Brew-It-Yourself Pub in Bend, Oregon. We are a family-owned business, born from the desire to create quality craft beer as well as embrace the process that brings it to life. We believe anyone can become a brewer if given the right tools, a bit of knowledge and the best quality ingredients. We have just enough room to put into place a barrel aging program with local Oregon Winery barrels. The beer reflects the time honored traditions of the brewers before us, and continues to push the limits of tradition in order to find our own place in this wonderful time in brewing history.

Raven Ryesn CDA ABV: 8.1% • IBU’s: 30 3 Tokens Oregon Spirit Distillers Otis Webber Barrel Aged Rye CDA, whiskey barrel aged Rye CDA, for 5 months.

Immersion Red Ale (aged in a whiskey barrel) ABV: 8.0% • IBU’s: 39 3 Tokens Our Red Ale was aged in a rye whiskey barrel for 5 months.

Lagunitas Brewing Company The Lagunitas Brewing Co. was not so much an act of ordinary ‘foundling’ as it was willed into being by the unspoken desire of supportive beer-lovers in Northern California after which they continued to nurture their creation and urged us forward to fulfill the unifying needs of that same beer-loving diaspora from coast to coast and beyond.

Willett Whiskey Barrel-Aged Imperial Stout ABV: 11.7% • IBU’s: 32 3 Tokens When drinking this barrel-aged whiskey stout, you can taste the smoky hints of chocolate, coffee, blended with bourbon notes created from its time spent in the barrel.

12th of Never Ale ABV: 5.5% • IBU’s: 45 2 Tokens This beer carries a blend of old and new hops. Light, yet full-bodied surrounded by the taste of citrus.

Mazama Brewing Company

Oakshire Brewing Company

Mazama Brewing is a family owned and operated production microbrewery in Corvallis, Oregon. Jeff and Kathy Tobin started home brewing in 1984 and knew they had found a passion in their new hobby. Their brewing pursuits included making beer styles that were once very difficult to find in the United States. This finally led to a long delayed trip to Belgium in 2011, which provided the inspiration to start Mazama Brewing.

Begun in October 2006 by brothers Jeff and Chris Althouse, Oakshire Brewing is a 15-barrel production brewery in Eugene, Oregon dedicated to making fine craft beer. What began as a home-brewing hobby and a love of beer has turned into award-winning beer on draft and in bottles throughout the Pacific Northwest. The name Oakshire represents our core values: Strength, like the enduring Oak; Independence, which fuels our innovation; and Community, remembering our place within the whole.

Barrel-Aged Sour Sunset ABV: 8.0% • IBU’s: n/a 4 Tokens Sour Ale fermented with Raspberries, aged in Oak barrels. Oak barrels complement this sour raspberry ale to produce a complex treat. Vanilla brings out the brightness of the raspberries, while tannins accentuate the tartness. All around, this is a complex, delicious beer.

Gose to 11

Barrel-Aged Sour Peach

ABV: 5.5% • IBU’s: 20 3 Tokens For our Tenth Anniversary we dug deep into our wild cellar and carefully selected the most expressive and unique barrels. We developed a blend of three distinct threads; Farmhouse Golden with wine grapes, Brett Table Saison, and Biere de Garden. Sunset orange in appearance, the nose evokes tropical fruit and wild rose petals. Dry on the palate, with complex acidity, fruitiness, and a touch of oak.

ABV: 8.0% • IBU’s: n/a 4 Tokens Sour Ale fermented with Peaches & Apricots, aged in Oak Barrels A sour ale fermented with peaches and apricots. Aged in Oak barrels for over six months. The bright fruitiness from this beer is accentuated by vanilla and wood from the barrel.

El Duque do Porto

ABV: 4.5% • IBU: 11 2 Tokens Say “Goes-uh.” This light, salty and tart German-style wheat ale turns the music up — not to 10, but just a little bit louder, Gose to 11!

X: Tenth Anniversary Cuvee Blend Ale

ABV: 10.0% • IBU’s: n/a 3 Tokens Port Barrel Aged Belgian Golden Strong Ale. Made by aging out Grand Cru in Port barrels for 3+ months. Immediate notes of toasted oak resolve into red currant, Italian plums, wildflower honey, cantaloupe, and a hint of cinnamon. Finishes with Seville orange peel.

Plank Town Brewing Co

Ninkasi Brewing

Barrel-Aged Hobbit’s Habit

In late 2005, Nikos Ridge and Jamie Floyd met at a bottle shop in Eugene, Ore. Nikos was sampling a beer Jamie had brewed and the two started talking. The conversation landed on the question, “What would you do if you could open your own brewery?” Today, Ninkasi Brewing Company is dedicated to brewing the highest quality craft beers in support of culture, community, and the uniqueness of each individual and their passions. We believe in and are committed to sharing experiences that create value for our customers, our partners, and our communities in service to our core purpose: to Perpetuate Better Living.

Ground Control 2015 ABV: 10.0% • IBU’s: 80 3 Tokens Seven Years after we started brewing in Oregon, we decided the sky was not the limit. One year, two rockets and countless lab hours later, we successfully launched a payload of brewer’s yeast not our outer space with the help of rocket scientists. After a much awaited return to Earth, the mission of creating space beer is now complete. Ground Control boldly combines local and out-of-this-world ingredients. This rich, complex Imperial Stout is brewed with Oregon hazelnuts, star anise and cocoa nibs, and fermented with an Ale yeast that survived a trip to space and back. Mankind will enjoy the sweet finesse of this beer that only fares better with time.

First Rule IPA ABV: 7.5% • IBU’s: 60 2 Tokens First rule of this IPA is: you do not talk about this IPA. Crafted in secrecy by our band of brewers, First Rule uses a fistful of the most sought-after hops around. Juicy, citrusy, tropical and dank, this IPA is a powerful combination of hop aroma and flavor.

With experienced head brewmaster Steve van Rossem, Plank Town Brewing has created a relaxed brewpub with NW cuisine in the heart of historic downtown Springfield offering a range of delightful brews, including cask conditioned and barrel aged ales. ABV: 9.5% • IBU’s: 30 3 Tokens A rich, smooth, malty copper-colored ale with subtle noble hop aromas to balance out this complex yet very drinkable beer. Whiskey barrels add vanilla and toasted oak flavors for a long, warm finish.

Tripp Sommer IPA ABV: 7.6% • IBU’s: 89.7 2 Tokens The dark gold color of summer “Tripps” your senses into a dance of citrusy hops with sweet and balanced malts. (Named in honor of our friend and beer lover Tripp Sommer from KLCC).

Reverend Nat’s Hard Cider Reverend Nat is a single-minded cider evangelist who searches the world for superior ingredients to handcraft the most unusual ciders that no one else will make. Founder Nat West began making cider at home in 2004 and opened Reverend Nat’s Hard Cider in 2011. With unique flagship products like the multiple-fermented Revival, dry-hopped Hallelujah Hopricot and quinine-bittered Deliverance Ginger Tonic, the cidery is the nation’s leading producer of creative, innovative and unique hard ciders as well as being one of the nation’s fastest-growing.

Barrel-Aged Tassajara Peach Book ABV: 8.5% • IBU’s: n/a 4 tokens NO PEACHES in this cider. A combination of a season yeast and mosaic hops give this dry and oaky cider its flavor.

Sacrilege Sour Cherry ABV: 6% • IBU’s: n/a 2 tokens Created using Granny Smith apples from the Pacific Northwest and combined with tart cherries fora. tart, but semi-sweet cider that has a subtle kick from the addition of Ghost Chili Peppers.


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Silver Moon Brewing Silver Moon Brewing crafts all of our beer out of Bend, Oregon. Thanks for letting us be your favorite local Bend brewery. Our brewers, Jeff Schauland and Alex Sarames, bring an eclectic style to our signature beers. We appreciate all of our local brewers not only at Silver Moon, but all over Bend. This one great challenge unites us all: satisfying our thirst for a well-crafted beer in Bend, and contribute great brews to our favorite communities in Central Oregon.

Ale-X ABV: 9.0% • IBU: 20 4 Tokens Barrel aged Oud Bruin with cherries, plums and cranberries. This 2016 version was aged in Argyle and Sokol Blosser Pinot Noir barrels for 8 months with Brettanomyces and has notes of raisin, dark fruit and tart.

Dark Tranquility ABV: 10% • IBU’s: 50 2 Tokens Barrel Aged Imperial Stout with notes of chocolate, coffee, vanilla, and whiskey. This 2016 version was aged in Bendistillery Rye Barrels for 5 months with licorice root, orange peel and molasses.

Three Creeks Brewing At Three Creeks Brewing Company we utilize only the finest ingredients available for all of our food and brewing activities. Our menu of excellent yet casual and unpretentious pub food is served in a family-friendly, smoke-free environment that all patrons will enjoy. Our old west livery stable provides a comfortable, warm and rustic atmosphere that includes a full restaurant, 10 barrel brewing system, comfortable bar area complete with large screen TV’s and pool tables as well as a large patio for the enjoyment of our hand crafted ales.

Whiskey Barrel Aged Stampede Strong Ale ABV: 10.1% • IBU’s: 70 2 Tokens This award winning ale was aged fora. year in Rye Whiskey barrels, delivering dark, plumelike malt flavors with notes of oak, spice and vanilla. Don’t get run over!

Batch 1000 Barrel Aged Smoked Porter ABV: 9.0% • IBU’s: 2 Tokens Brewed in July 2016 to commemorate our 1000th bath then aged in both stainless steel and oak barrels, this Imperial Chocolate Smoked Porter was then blended with some of our favorite one-off batches throughout the year and infused with Black Currant puree to create a luxurious special occasion beer that exemplifies our creative spirit.

Tumalo Cider Co. Specializing in small batch, artisan cider with a focus on dry, complex profiled. Perfectly balanced and inspired by tradition, creativity and the Central Oregon landscape. Our promise to you is to make the best damn cider we can. A true northwest original crafted in the heart of the high desert. Tumalo Cider is a reflection of ourselves as well as the roots we grow from- roots deep in the Central Oregon community. So please, grow with us, share the journey, and follow Tumalo Cider Company as we pursue the absolute best cider you’ve ever tasted.

Maple Oak ABV: 6.5% • IBU’s: n/a 3 Tokens NW Heirloom apples aged with American Oak with a hint of organic maple syrup.

Wildcraft Cider Works At WildCraft Cider Works, we pride ourselves on developing innovative, artisanal dry ciders inspired by traditional and wild methodology. Insisting on whole fruit and botanicals grown in Oregon to create pure ciders without artificial flavorings, sulfites or added sweeteners. WildCraft cider is uniquely dry cider unpasteurized & bottle conditioned. We consider ourselves stewards of the outdoors; always acting consciously to ensure that our ingredients are regional.

Barrel Aged Heirloom Cider ABV: 6.5% • IBU’s: n/a 3 Tokens Six unknown apple varieties harvested from abandoned homestead orchards around Lane County, wild fermented in single barrel batches and blended after 18 months of aging. Good baked apple flavors and true barrel aroma provide a nice rendition of a traditional native yeast fermented Western US farmhouse cider.

Wild Plum Mirabelle ABV:7.2% • IBU’s: n/a 2 Tokens Mirabelle plums are a specialty plum from the Lorraine region of France. Prized for their full flavor and high sugar content, they have been used for centuries to make jams, wine and brandy. These mirabelles were biodynamically grown in Oregon’s beautiful Lorane valley, fermented whole, pressed and aged to make a full bodied wine. This cider is a blend of Jonathan and Gravenstein apples and Mirabelle plum wine. A rich full bodied version of the Wild Plum series. All Oregon grown all the time.

Farmhouse Raspberry ABV: 6.5% • IBU’s: n/a 2 Tokens Made with Pacific Northwest apples unfiltered with a hint of raspberry.

Since its inception, the Little Woody Barrel-Aged Brew and Whiskey Festival has taken place at the Des Chutes Historical Museum, a place that honors and preserves the storied past of than 25 years been telling the story of Bend from its early days as the epicenter of the Northwest logging industry to the present, Lay It Out Events, the producer of the Little Woody and many other Central Oregon events, is donating proceeds from every entry ticket to the event to the Des Chutes Historical Society. During the Little Woody, the museum will be open for you to see what this area looked like in its earlier years and also investigate

VISIT US FOR 25% OFF A TASTER TRAY

Oregon over the years.

DESCHUTES COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY

129 NW Idaho Ave. Bend OR 97701 (541) 389-1813

550 SW INDUSTRIAL WAY IN THE BOX FACTORY WWW. ATALASCIDER.COM

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S E I R E W E R B D FEATURE RIES & CIDE Wild Ride Brewing Wild Ride Brewing is a production brewery and Tap Room located in the heart of downtown Redmond, Oregon. Planning began in late 2011, and the beers began flowing from the taps at Wild Ride Brewing on May 10, 2014. We are now open 7 days a week with food options available from the food cart community located in the parking lot just off our patio outside of our family-friendly Tap Room.

Bourbon Barrel-Aged Brain Bucket Ale

Wolf Tree Brewery Wolf Tree Brewery is located along Beaver Creek, on a working cattle ranch in Seal Rock, Oregon. The flagship beer, Spruce Tip Ale is made by using spruce tips harvested from Sitka Spruce trees located on the property. The name “Wolf Tree” is also associated with our Spruce Tip Ale. A wolf tree is a forestry term used to describe the biggest tree in the forest, and Sitka Spruce trees are generally the largest trees along this stretch of the coast range. Wolf Tree Brewery is one of very few brewery’s operating on a working cattle ranch, so are able to grow a number of ingredients for our beer on the ranch and dispose of our spent grain onsite.

Donker Boom

ABV: 9.8% • IBU’s: 90 3 Tokens Buckle up your chin strap and enjoy the ride! This beer breaks free from the pack and cranks it up a notch. This Brain Bucket Imperial IPA was aged on barrels for 3-4 months to give it a distinct character. Classic Northwest hops, pine, and citrus tones will knock your senses senseless! It wouldn’t be a bad idea to wear a helmet while drinking this big bold barrel-aged delight.

ABV: 12% • IBU’s: 20 2 tokens Translated from Dutch “Donker Boom” describes a dark, suspicious, sinister tree. With this in mind we brewed a rich, malty, Belgian Dark Strong Ale and tucked it into the darkest of a Pinot Noir barrel for the last year. Cherries and both English and Belgian yeasts were added to lee the fermentation train rolling inside the darkness. The result? Sweet cherry and malty goodness with some subtle oak flavors round out this high ABV monster.

Red Ryeno Imperial Red Rye Ale

King of the Forest Oud Bruin

ABV: 9.0% • IBU’s: 42 3 Tokens Take charge and enjoy a barrel-aged beer that will stamp your palate with a harmony of flavors. This Imperial Red Ale was aged on Rye Whiskey barrels from Bendistillery, making the beer strong like a rhino. The combination of malt and hops packs a punch that will excite any craft beer hunter!

ABV: 6.5% • IBU’s: 25 3 tokens King of the Forest is a blend of wine barrel aged beer and fresh beer. The aged beer was stored in Pinot Noir barrels with a house facto string. Citra hops, caramel malts and lots of spruce tips were used to create this oneof-a-kind beer that combines tart fruity flavors with a malty backbone.

Camille’s Golden IPA ABV: 6% • IBU’s: 70 2 Tokens A blend of the Pacific Northwest’s most intriguing aroma hop varieties are used in this golden ale. city dn Mosaic hops create complex flavors combined with a smooth, crisp finish. ABV: 6% • IBU’s: 70 *A portion of proceeds for this beer go to benefit the Heartland Humane Society in Corvallis, OR.

Worthy Brewing Company Worthy Brewing Company opened its doors in early 2013, delivering remarkably balanced, filtered ales that are handcrafted using premium ingredients and the pristine water from the Cascade Mountains in Bend, Oregon. Worthy’s campus includes a large outdoor biergarten, full restaurant, and a greenhouse and hop yard onsite for growing estate and experimental hops in conjunction with Oregon State University and Indie Hops. An indoor expansion was complete in March 2017 featuring the “Hopservatory,” with a large telescope, “The Hop Mahal,” a banquet space, “The Beermuda Triangle” expanded indoor seating, and “The Star Bar,” an open air mezzanine bar.

Pucker Punch ABV: 8.0% • IBU’s: n/a 3 Tokens Farm out saison finished with Lactobacillus. Aged in red wine barrels.

Postfunk ABV: 6.0% • IBU’s: 30 3 Tokens Blend of Prefunk pale with Brettanomyces used in red wine barrels.

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What’s Your Damage?

The kids aren’t alright in "Heathers: The Musical" By Jared Rasic 25

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VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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he first time I saw the movie “Heathers,” a few things happened almost instantly: I fell madly in love with Winona Ryder, I started trying to talk like Christian Slater (who in turn was talking like Jack Nicholson) and I bought a trench coat that made me creepier than I already was. I was being bullied fairly heavily, so I connected to Veronica Sawyer’s desperate need to fit in, to J.D.’s desire to turn his pain into someone else’s problem and to Martha Dumptruck’s feeling that none of it was ever going to get any better. Obviously, I was wrong. The cliché is right, in that it does always get better, that fitting in really only matters in high school and that pain can never really be shared. Still, “Heathers” maintains the same power over my emotional real estate as it did when I was growing up. With the smashing success of 2010’s “Heathers: The Musical” and the fact that there’s a TV show based on the story coming out later this year, I would say I’m not the only one still mesmerized by the brutally hilarious satire. The film, released in 1989, caught between 80s fashion and 90s disaffected youth syndrome, is still the most incisive, brilliant and sobering high school comedy yet told. Its look at teen suicide, bullying, homophobia and gun violence is no less relevant today as it was 30 years ago. Every new generation finds a bit of hard truth in the film, and now that 2nd Street Theater and Lonely Fish Productions are bringing the musical to Bend, it has the chance to connect with even more alienated and frustrated kids. Director Scott Schulz explains the continued popularity of the film: “Those themes had never had such a platform to be brought to the forefront of the viewer’s mind. It took such a

These three are taking names and kicking you-know-what. Check these chicks out at 2nd Street Theater.

careful look into those themes and left you laughing in one scene and crying in the next.” “Heathers: The Musical” is the perfect extension of the film, since it takes the absurdist candy colored nightmare to its most logical conclusion: bursting out into song. If Christian Slater and Winona Ryder had done so in the movie, it wouldn’t have felt out of place in the slightest. The film is so iconic that it can be hard to imagine anyone else as these characters, but actress Miranda Rose (playing Heather McNamara) sees the challenge as something altogether more exciting. “While we want to embody the original feel of the show that everyone loves, there’s less pressure to be like the movie and more excitement at the opportunity to show more layers to our

SOURCE  SUGGESTS THIS BOOK My Absolute Darling: The Best Novel You’ll Read All Year Before you stroll the streets on First Fridays in downtown Bend, check out this monthly review featuring reading recommendations courtesy of the Source and Dudley's Bookshop Cafe. Then head down to the shop for a discount!

Harper’s Bazaar calls it “One of the most important books you’ll pick up this decade.” Stephen King calls it a “masterpiece,” comparing it to “Catch-22,” “To Kill a Mockingbird” and the “The Things They Carried,” as a book you’ll remember forever. In my write-up to the publisher, I used words including “searing,” “brutal,” and “incandescent.” Simply put, “My

characters,” says Rose. “It is difficult going into any cult classic that’s been adapted into a musical, because there are just some things that won’t be the same. Fortunately with ‘Heathers the Musical,’ they kept many of the iconic lines/themes and they expand on characters you didn’t get to know as well in the film.” Anyssa Bohanan (who plays queen bee Heather Chandler) thrives in exploring the lighter side of the characters. “Surprisingly, the challenge isn’t really fitting into the mold as far as recreating a cult classic because, even though they’re very similar in the plot and characters, the movie and the musical are fairly different,” says Bohanan. “The movie is much darker than the musical, the music adds a level of brevity that you don’t see in the movie. It’s

still quite dark but it’s more relatable to the audience when presented the way we’re doing it on stage.” “Heathers: The Musical” shouldn’t just be seen because it’s got some great songs and a wonderful story, but also because it’s still a powerful window into the minds of disaffected youth. If the show helps one kid feel like they’re not alone in the world, then theater has achieved its purpose once again. Art makes the world better, but great art makes the world sing.  SW Heathers: The Musical Fri., Sept. 1-Sat., Sept. 16. 7:30pm. Matinees at 3pm 2nd Street Theater 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend $22-$25

By Tom Beans, Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe Absolute Darling” by first-time author Gabriel Tallent, is the Best Book of 2017 and one that will be talked about for a long time to come. Set in a beautifully rendered rural Mendocino, Calif., community, this is the story of Turtle Alveston, a 14-yearold wild child more at home cleaning a gun or running barefoot through the redwood forests than at school or hanging out with friends. As we meet Turtle, she is only just beginning to realize that something is wrong with how her father treats her. How she comes to terms with this and what she’s going to do about it are at the heart of this gutpunch of a novel.

Turtle’s father, Martin, is a charismatic monster who will haunt your thoughts. Moments of horrible cruelty toward Turtle are juxtaposed with others of great insight and tenderness, helping us to see him much the same way Turtle does as she begins to understand the relationship can’t continue. It’s been almost two months since I read “My Absolute Darling,” and I still wonder how Turtle is doing. Never in my life have I pulled so hard for a young girl to find some small bit of happiness in hers. Does she find it? I’ll let you decide—but in the end, she at least finds some semblance of peace… and maybe that’s enough. SW


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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

John Reed

ARTWATCH

“Kukkulkan” woodcut by Abney Wallace.

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Deschutes County Fair. Other Aspen Ridge beers include Aspen Kickin’ Stout, Grumpy Grasshopper Stout, Old Tart Cream Ale, Cherry Kiss Stout and Aspen Stinger Cream Ale. “It’s not the first one, but it’s the best one,” Reed says of Machine Gun Maggie. “It’s won the most prizes.” The beer has been brewed in collaboration with different Bend breweries, including Worthy, Oblivion and Silver Moon, and is distributed to different taps around town, with a portion of the proceeds going toward Alzheimer’s research. The Aspen Ridge brewers appear to have quite a bit of support from the local brewing community. The Central Oregon Homebrewers Organization even meets at Aspen Ridge once a month. The brew room at Aspen Ridge is nothing fancy just a kitchen countertop and stove. On brew days, the team brews in the morning, pausing for a Costco pizza at lunchtime. That combination is “kind of hard to turn your back on,” Reed says. “I like a beer and pizza and to have a good time. Drinking beer is a social enterprise, and making it can be one, also.” For retired folks with lots of time

on their hands, Reed says the act of following the recipes and putting together the ingredients is good for people who need something to occupy their time. “When you can get something going, it keeps your mind going, and you like to take advantage of it.” However, Reed laughs, “I don’t see a career of making beer.” The team’s equipment came from The Brew Shop above Platypus Pub, according to Reed. Asked if he has a favorite style of beer, Reed offers, “I’m not a connoisseur; I kind of like them all.” The brew team has even made a mead, he says. “It’s almost like a dessert wine, quite potent and quite delicious, but it sure doesn’t taste like a beer.” The team also has brewed an IPA aged in a whiskey barrel. The team gets out to sample the local goods from time to time, venturing out in the company van to a local brewery for lunch. “It’s nice to get out, and the merchants are always really nice, even though we’re kind of a motley crew with wheelchairs and such.

I know we’re not the easiest group to deal with because we can’t always hear everything, but they put up with us.” During his younger years, Reed occupied his free time with gardening, woodworking and traveling. Before that though, he served in the Army infantry in Germany during World War II, where every little town had a brewery. He and his fellow soldiers were used to beers with a 3 to 5 percent ABV, while the German beers were closer to 12 percent, he says. The Midwest-born man was raised mostly in Portland, where he lived until 1975 when his job with the United Airlines reservations department transferred him to Seattle. Reed retired in 1983, eventually moving to the area to be closer to his daughter and her family, who live in Prineville. Reed attributes his longevity to good genes and clean living. “If you’re lucky, they (genes) stay in the family,” he says. Apparently, “clean living” can include the occasional beer. SW

By Teafly Peterson

The moon is still on display at Bend Art Center While the eclipse and its madness may be behind us, there’s still plenty of opportunity to reflect on the magic of our moon and the relationship we have with it at The Bend Art Center. Through September, the Lunar Show— an exhibition of work from a variety of artists showcasing how we feel, think and relate to the lunar cycle—is on display as well as being a backdrop for several events. (You might have also heard about the show in this week’s Chow.) Organizers asked artists to reflect on the moon by creating either a piece on a common canvas— a 22-by-22 inch square with a 16 inch circle in the middle, or a handmade book. With each artist bringing their own interpretation

to the piece, the result is an eclectic and insightful mix of woodcuts, typography, solar printing and more. “There are many memory drawings and illustrations that came out,“ reflects Pat Clark, owner of A6, a printmaking studio housed in the Bend Art Center and the juror for the show. “All the way from nursery rhymes you remember as a child to space exploration.” The show will also provide a backdrop for other explorations of the moon. On Sept. 6, local poet Krayna Castlebaum offers an evening of curated poetry for listening and reflecting. On Sept. 17, John Hayes, a retired optical engineer and deep sky photographer, offers a non-technical look at how deep sky images are created, how they relate to what you might see visually through a telescope, and how the colors

relate to what is “really out there.” And if you want to get creative and make your own moon print, you can do that, too! Two more classes let participants dive into memories and illusions of the moon on Sept. 9 and again on Sept. 23. SW Bend Art Center

550 Industrial Way, Suite 180 bendartcenter.org

Harvest Moon Poetic Journey Wed, Sep. 6, 7 pm RSVP required Free

Moon Prints with Wine Sat., Sept. 9. 7-8 pm Sat., Sept. 23. 7-8 pm $25 fee

Photographing Deep Skies Astronomy Talk with John Hayes Tues., Sept. 12. 6 pm

27 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

By Richard Sitts

A

S P O

“I like a beer and pizza and to have a good time. Drinking beer is a social enterprise, and making it can be one, also.”

Brewing Champion

mong the beers that have graced Bend’s Growler Guys fill station is Machine Gun Maggie, an IPA clocking in at about 10 percent ABV. That heavyweight beer is the creation of John Reed and the rest of the brewing team at the Aspen Ridge Retirement in northeast Bend. At age 95, Reed doesn’t fit the stereotype of the bearded Northwest brewer—but that’s not stopping him from being a champion in the local beer scene. “As a young guy, I drank a lot of beer,” Reed says. “It was a warm weather thing when I was mowing the lawn.” In those days, Reed says he mostly drank Rainier and Blatz. Somewhere around the age of 90, Reed decided it was time he learned how to brew the stuff—so he joined the brew team at Aspen Ridge, where he’s lived since relocating to Bend in 2013. “I knew nothing about brewing until we got here,” Reed admits. Four or five people are usually working on the Aspen Ridge brewing team at any given time, following the recipes and “cleaning the pots,” Reed says. “We make different beers each time,” usually in 5- and 10-gallon batches. One of their brews, Mistaken Identity, won best of show at this summer’s

S O U R C E


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / August 31, 2017  /  BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 28


CH

CHOW

Pop-Up Creative Feast Art inspires collaboration between chef, poet and musician Photos and Words By Lisa Sipe

Taste Our State at The Bite of Oregon

At the Bite of Oregon in Portland you can savor food and drink from the coast, high desert, Columbia River Gorge and the mountains, tasting the best the state has to offer. You can also watch some locals compete at the Iron Chef competition. On Friday, Bite of Bend winner Chef George Morris of Bos Taurus will face off against Food Scene Eugene Iron Chef winner Alejandro Cruz of Novo. Saturday, Bartender’s Brawl of Bend winner Josh Behrens competes against Food Scene Eugene’s Master Mixologist winner Danny Barnum. If either—or both—Bendites win their rounds, you can watch them compete for the title on Sunday.

It’s an interesting and engaging way to experience many different art forms in one evening. It’s also a oncein-a-lifetime opportunity. The evening starts with a glass of wine and time to privately tour the art exhibition. Guests receive a menu demonstrating the pieces of art that serve as inspiration for the fourcourse seasonal meal. This gives you a moment to really look at the artwork, to fall into the colors and textures. You may wonder which marks in the piece will inspire your meal. Will a thick orange brush stroke become a carrot? Will a swirling yellow field yield a piece of cheese? You’ll know soon enough, but to start, this is the visual amuse-bouche. Krayna Castelbaum, a poetry instigator from Clear Lens Coaching, is the guide for the evening. She begins with a curated poem, an enticing melody of words that stimulate the mind, connect to the art and leads you into the first food course. This is when Chef Anna Witham, a crafter of decadent culinary delights from 123Ramen and The Root Cellar, enters the scene, sharing her connection to the art and how she channeled the spirit of it into the thoughtfully plated meal in front of you. Her story connects the dots. From there, cellist Billy Mickelson from ThirdSeven takes over and his rhythmic, ethereal musical improv fills the air. His cello’s lacquered surface is worn from the history of the bow crossing the strings and Billy using the body like a drum. The instrument is its own piece of art. Using the art around the room, the aroma from the meal and the energy from the guests, Billy creates his music. It’s an interesting and engaging way to experience many different art forms in one evening. It’s also a once-in-alifetime opportunity. Bend Art Center

By Lisa Sipe

The Bite of Oregon

Sept. 1 – 4 Portland Rose Quarter Tickets available at BiteOfOregon.com

Taste Local Thursdays Are Back

Cellist Billy Mickelson and a plethora of tasty bites help make for a delicious dinner.

hosts several Creative Feasts throughout the year, but each event is completely unique and not repeated. The next Creative Feast is coming in September. Executive Director Alexis Chapman said, “Our Lunar exhibit acts as a celestial inspiration for our Creative Feast. This event is a collaboration of talented community partners coming together to share their passions, each enhancing and inspiring one another to create a unique and

unforgettable evening for everyone involved.” The Lunar exhibit is made up of uniformly sized moon images, each created by a different local or regional artist. The images wrap around the gallery, making for an ethereal effect. As you might have guessed, the exhibition was curated in anticipation of the recent total solar eclipse. If you witnessed totality and were moved by the spectacle, dining at the next Creative Feast is an opportunity to relive and expand upon that experience. What does a lunar-inspired meal taste like? Will it include a cheese course? You don’t have to leave this planet to find out.  SW

Creative Feast: Fall Equinox Fri. Sept. 22, 6pm 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 180 Tickets $60 per person RSVP: 541-330-8759

The High Desert Food and Farm Alliance wants you to experience the seasonal flavors of our region. Starting Sept. 7, participating Central Oregon restaurants are offering unique dining opportunities to taste local ingredients including lamb, chicken, cinderella pumpkin, lavender, zucchini and rainbow trout to support local farmers and ranchers. Find menus and dates online at HDFFA.org.

Little Woody: Not just for beer lovers

If you thought the Little Woody event taking place this weekend at the Des Chutes Historical Museum was just for brew geeks and barrel-aged beer lovers, think again. Back again this year is the Whiskey Tasting Area, where lovers of that “other” barrel-aged spirit can get their taste on with whiskeys from a handful of different local and regional distilleries. In addition to local favorites including Crater Lake Spirits and Oregon Spirit Distillers, check out Four Roses Bourbon out of Kentucky and several Portland-area single malt and whiskey brands. Cheers! Little Woody Bend

Fri., Sept. 1, 5pm-10pm Sat., Sept. 2, Noon-10pm Des Chutes County Historical Museum 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend Tickets at BendTicket.com

29 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

W

hat happens when a chef, a poet and a musician walk into an art exhibition? It sounds like the start of a joke, but in this case, it means the beginning of a pop-up Creative Feast. There are plenty of ways to have a memorable dining experience, but this unique one takes place in a very unlikely space: Bend Art Center. The gallery and studio, located in the Box Factory, hosts an evening filled with art, music, poetry, and of course, food.

LITTLE BITES


FOOD & BEER EVENTS

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / August 31, 2017  /  BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

30

, N.D. Blending Nature with Medicine Insurance Accepted

Take your turn stomping grapes at the 8th Annual Grape Stomp at Maragas Winery on 9/2.

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. Prime Rib Dinner Night Sundays, 5-9pm. Pronghorn Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 541-693-5300. $35. Taste Local Thursdays at Suttle Lodge

Celebrate local food and farms. Suttle Lodge serves up a rustic meal featuring Seed to Table Farm greens and Cascade Mountain Pastures lamb. This special dinner is a part of Taste Local Thursdays, a restaurant series by High Desert Food & Farm Alliance. Sept. 7, 11am-9pm. The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse, 13300 Hwy 20.

BEER AND DRINK 8th Annual Grape Stomp Take your

tootsies for a ride through the fruit of the earth! There will be the general stomp where everybody gets to stomp grapes, and then there will be the adult stomp competition. Sept. 2, 11am-5pm. Maragas Winery, 15523 SW Hwy 97. $10/admission, kids free. $10/wine flight.

Wine Tastings Join us every Friday and

Saturday for tasty wine tastings. Fridays, 3:305:30pm and Saturdays, 3:30-5:30pm. Through Dec. 31. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave. 541-382-3940. Free.

Beer Tastings Don’t miss out! Join us every Friday afternoon for delicious beer tastings. Fridays, 3:30-5:30pm. Through Dec. 29. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave. 541-3823940. Free. Bingo & Mimosas Play bingo and drink mimosas in the sunshine at Aspect’s outdoor beer garden. #sundayfunday. Sundays, 5pm. Aspect Boards & Brews, 1009 NW Galveston Ave.

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 Expe-

rience a little taste of Belgium in Bend! Tasting flights take center stage when paired with the fine bratwurst, Belgian frites & European cuisine provided by We’re the Wurst, European Food Truck. A unique Bend experience not to be missed at this funky industrial brewery setting in the northeast brewers district. Fill a growler while there for your weekend adventures. 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.

The Little Woody Celebrate craft wood-aged beers from across the Northwest, along with small-batch American rye whiskeys and bourbons, during the annual festival. Sept. 1, 5-10pm and Sept. 2, noon-10pm. Deschutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave. $5-$35. The Official Bend Beer Yoga A yoga class

that incorporates the drinking of beer whilst performing traditional beginner yoga poses and not taking life too seriously. Arrive 15 min early. Bring a mat, buy a beer. Namas-drink!™ Sept. 2, 6:30-7:30pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr. 541-668-2391. $15.

Tipsy Trivia Featuring craft cocktails, amazing

food and trivia prizes for the best and worst. Thurs, Aug. 31, 7pm. The Barrel Thief Lounge at Oregon Spirit Distillers, 740 NE First St. 541-5504747. Free.

Trivia Tuesday and Dollar Wells Trivia

Tuesday and Dollar Wells every Tuesday at Astro Lounge! Tuesdays, 8-11pm. Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St.

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.


MICRO An Ode to

the Tugboat

Portland’s oddest brewery closes

31

By Kevin Gifford

VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Tugboat Brewing, below the tenements that doomed it.

I

n a Pearl District back alley in Portland is a bar. A dark bar, one that seems to exist on a different plane from the sun and heat of the current PNW summer. One that ostensibly was a brewery, but few went there for that. And one that, as of this past Monday, is closed, located in too decrepit of a building to continue. “The kindness and generosity of my customers has been absolutely mind-boggling,” said Linsel Greene, on his final night behind that bar at Tugboat. “I’m struggling to answer questions I keep getting, like ‘what’s next?’ when all I can think about is how difficult it is for me to say goodbye to an old friend.” Tugboat Brewing, which opened on 711 SW Ankeny in 1996, is a holdout from when the Rose City was not a hip place for the young and rich to move to The chairs creak. The floor occasionally has foreign matter on it. But it also has a charm that no urban-chic beer bar — of which Portland has dozens, could boast. The small, subdued space is lined with shelves of old books and board games. The walls feature décor straight out of the best thrift store ever, from old album covers to a piece of barbed wire from the Korean DMZ. There’s also an Emmy award, won by Greene’s father for directing TV in the 1970s. This lived-in charm, however, stems in part from being located in a very lived-in building. More like caving-in, actually. The Stewart Hotel building— which also houses a mom-and-pop convenience store and Mary’s Club, the oldest strip joint in the city—is a

throwback to old Portland in ways the tourist board doesn’t like to advertise. The tenements on the upper floors, best viewed from across the street at the Upper Lip bar, look more at home in Jakarta than atop some of this city’s most expensive real estate. It was here that an arson fire started in March. Tugboat avoided the fire itself, but suffered extensive damage nonetheless, with water seeping into the carpet and the ceiling falling on the bar space. It reopened in June, but disaster struck: the city’s Bureau of Development Services ruled the building was too structurally unsound to house apartments. “The Bureau stepped in and demanded an evacuation of all hotel tenants,” Greene said, “and the company that insures the bar claims that the business is uninsurable in this location. So the bar’s closing.” Nobody will remember the Tugboat for its beer—it produced the 13 percent Chernobyl Stout, a surefire showstopper, but saw more business off its extensive guest-tap lineup. The local block houses far better beer options, from Bailey’s across the alley to Kelly’s Olympian, the nearby 1902-era dive with a surprisingly large tapwall (and Untappd Verified Venue status). But Tugboat offered warmth, friendliness, and charm, the sort that some cookie-cutter brewery in a warehouse filled with IKEA furniture can’t provide. “I can’t imagine I’ll ever have another job quite like it,” Greene said, “but I can only hope I’ll find something which suits me as well as the Tugboat did.”  SW

Best Venue for live music, dancing, food and libations

Live Music 5 Days a Week Thu 8/31

Ty Curtis

7:30 to 10:30 Fri 9/1

Fun Bobby 8:30 to 12 Sat 9/2

Fun Bobby 8:30 to 12 Sun 9/3

Holus Bolus 6 to 8

Tue 9/5

Michelle Van Handel Quartet 6 to 9

Wed 9/6

Acoustic Open Mic w/ Derek Michael Marc

6 to 9

Saturday and Sunday Breakfast 62860 Boyd Acres Rd in Bend

(541) 383-0889

Facebook.com/NorthsideBarAndGrill northsidebarfun.com


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / August 31, 2017  /  BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

32

EAR!

DONNER FLOWER SHOP

FLOWERS - HOME DECOR - OUTDOOR 541.382.3791

www.donnerflower.com

605 N.W. Newport Ave. Bend

FIRE SALE!

ALL 2017 BIKES ON SALE, MUST GO! MOUNTAIN / ROAD / CRUISER / COMFORT / KIDS / USED

PUBLICITY ABOUT FIRES HAS AFFECTED BUSINESS. PLEASE SHOP LOCAL!

"The Birth of the Dragon”

FILM SHORTS By Jared Rasic

ALL SAINTS: Starring John Corbett (who played the insufferably condescending Aiden on “Sex and the City” and the insufferably wacky Chris Stevens on “Northern Exposure”) as a pastor who hosts some Burmese refugees at his struggling church. Wouldn't this new Christian White Savior movie from Sony have been gutsy as hell if the refugees were Syrian? Just sayin’. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX ANNABELLE: CREATION: Evil doll movies are normally played for laughs, but the newest film in the “Conjuring Universe” is a rollercoaster ride of jumps, thrills and characters we actually care about. When a group of orphans and a nun start getting messed with by a malevolent, demon possessed doll, their faith is the only thing standing in the way of darkly disturbing Annabelle. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema ATOMIC BLONDE: Charlize Theron plays a British spy hunting for a dangerous list in Berlin during the Cold War. The movie is fun and action packed, and Theron is perfectly cast as a badass super spy. There are a few dumb plot mechanics and story points, but the film is ultimately worth your time. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX BABY DRIVER: Edgar Wright is the visionary

BEKSET

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

BI PRICFES

O AR! THE YE

HOURS Wed-Sun 9am-7pm

BIKES. BEER. FOODCARTS. MUSIC.

Mon & Tues 9am-5:30pm 223 E. Hood Ave. Sisters, OR 97759 ph: 541-549-2471

CELBERATING 28 YEARS

www.eurosports.us

HEALTHY ADVENTURES AWAIT!

BIRTH OF THE DRAGON: A really bad take on old school Bruce Lee movies. It's not as offensive as the movies that came out after his death when they used footage of the martial arts master in his coffin, but it's still a terrible cash grab that will just make you miss the man even more. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX BRIGSBY BEAR: It looks like a charming and strange look at how humanity needs its imagination for survival. With a cast featuring Claire Danes, Mark Hamill, Greg Kinnear and the always hilarious Matt Walsh, “Brigsby Bear” has the talent to back up the bizarre and intriguing visuals. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX THE DARK TOWER: This long awaited adaptation of Stephen King's magnum opus is not only a terrible movie in its own right, but one of the worst adaptations of an existing piece of literature ever made. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

DUNKIRK: Christopher Nolan sets his sights

on making one of the most fiercely original war movies of all time. Told in a jumbled chronology and filled with some of the most powerful imagery of the year, “Dunkirk” is an unforgettable evening at the movies. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

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

BENDVETERINARYCLINIC.COM / 382-0741

THE GLASS CASTLE: Based on the bestselling memoir, “The Glass Castle" tracks the life of a woman who was raised by broke hippies and is still having trouble adjusting to normal life as an adult. This should be a lovely film to watch, especially with the luminous Brie Larson getting another meaty role to sink her teeth into. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX GOOD TIME: A dark and achingly sad look at the

costs of a life of crime as it relates to two brothers in NYC. Robert Pattinson is getting all the accolades for his mesmerizing performance, but it's only one piece of a flawed and fabulous whole. This one is a rough watch, so consume at your own risk. See full review on p35. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

THE HITMAN'S BODYGUARD: Watching

Samuel L. Jackson and Ryan Reynolds as badasses trading quips as they shoot at bad guys should make for an entertaining diversion, even as the reviews come in as pretty terrible. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema

INGRID GOES WEST: This is a brutal black

comedy about Instagram celebrities, obsession and the darkest flavors of love. Aubrey Plaza is on a roll with her choices lately as she's adding many different shades to her typically caustic and bitter wheelhouse. You'll laugh just as hard as you cringe. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX,

LEAP!: It's 1879 in Paris and a young orphan girl

dreams of being a ballerina while never letting her plucky, can-do spirit die. Following your dreams is a nice message, and with vocal performances by Elle Fanning, Mel Brooks, Carly Rae Jepsen and Kate McKinnon, this probably deserved more press than it actually received. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema.

THE LITTLE HOURS: This is a gut busting

comedy about a trio of nuns in the 14th century who are horny, mean, gleefully profane—and possibly heretics. So far this is easily the funniest comedy of the year and is perfect for those looking to be the tiniest bit offended. Tin Pan Theater

LOGAN LUCKY: Channing Tatum, Adam Driver

and Daniel Craig play some blue collar criminals who team up to rob the Charlotte Motor Speedway during the biggest race of the year. “Logan Lucky” is an absolute blast from start to finish and will leave a smile on your face long after the lights come up. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema.

LOST IN PARIS: From the filmmaking team

behind the modern French classic, “The Fairy,” comes another delightfully eccentric comedy packed to the gills with whimsy and wonder. If life is feeling a little too real lately, “Lost in Paris” is the perfect antidote. Tin Pan Theater

THE NUT JOB 2: NUTTY BY NATURE: I'm not sure anyone was clamoring for a sequel to a mostly forgotten animated film from a few years back about a squirrel and a rat, but here we are. As great as the voice cast featuring Will Arnett, Maya Rudolph and Jackie Chan are, the last one was terrible and this one doesn't appear to be any better. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 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. 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. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

WIND RIVER: The directorial debut of Taylor Sheridan, the writer behind “Sicario” and “Hell or High Water,” sees Jeremy Renner and Elizabeth Olsen as law enforcement agents who team up to hunt a serial killer across a frozen Indian reservation in Wyoming. “Wind River” will stick to your bones like whiskey. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House WONDER WOMAN: Looks like 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


O U R T A K E O N T V , N E T F L I X A N D O T H E R F U N S T U F F

May the Source Be With You

The Source’s take on TV, Netflix and other fun stuff on screens big(ish) and small By Jared Rasic 33 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Top, I never knew I was missing Ted Danson in a hoodie but there you go. Bottom, Jason Bateman should really get out of the Ozarks, and maybe take Laura Linney with him.

W

elcome to the inaugural installment of May the Source Be With You. Now that “Game of Thrones” is over until (supposedly) 2019, you might need a few more things to curl up with while you wait for winter to come one last time. Every other week we’ll take a look at whatever we’re either currently enjoying or looking forward to, whether it be a new Netflix show worth binge watching, a great movie under the radar or the podcasts we’re currently obsessed with. DVD and Blu: Raw. Coming out Sept. 5 is the best cannibal movie you’ve ever seen! Only cannibal movie? Anyway, “Raw” is about a young vegetarian girl who leaves home and moves into her college dorm...only to find out she has a taste for the Long Pig. Even if you hate horror movies, this is a seriously woke drama that uses cannibalism as a metaphor for a young woman’s blooming sexuality. Way better than it sounds. In Pod We Trust: We’re neck deep in the Golden Age of podcasts and the Internets are so saturated with thousands of choices that it’s hard to know what’s worth your time. Since my time is worthless, I listen to everything I can get my ear holes on. If you haven’t heard it yet, “S-Town” is probably the most powerful and heartbreaking true story since “Serial” and deserves every bit of acclaim it’s getting. Marc Maron is having a bit of a renaissance on “WTF” lately, with his current interviews being his most incisive since dare I say, Gallagher? Hearing Alice Cooper talk about his 40 years of

sobriety or spending time with Bill Paxton two weeks before his death makes “WTF” still a bit of required listening. Bingeworthy: It’s gonna be tough without “Game of Thrones,” but there’s still plenty of goodness to go around. “Ozark” is the perfect remedy to everyone missing “Breaking Bad,” as watching Jason Bateman slowly get in way over his head with a drug lord never seems to get old. There are only 10 episodes so far, but the show gets its hooks in deeply and quickly. “The Good Place” has also just been added and it’s the perfect antidote to boring sitcom conventions. Kristen Bell plays a self-absorbed jerkface who dies and ends up in The Good Place, an up-beat and cheery New Age version of Heaven run by Ted Danson. When she realizes she wasn’t supposed to get into The Good Place, she does whatever she can to avoid being sent to The Bad Place. This show is brilliant and should last 12 seasons. I’m calling it. What’s really important though is that in September we’re getting new seasons of “Bojack Horseman,” “Narcos,” a new Marc Maron stand-up special as well as the newest seasons of “The Walking Dead” and “Portlandia.” Do you think that will last us a while? If there’s anything you think I should check out for the column, shoot me a note at jared@bendsource.com.  SW


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SC

Vice and Men SCREEN Of "Good Time" is a rough one By Jared Rasic 35

A24

VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

It’s Team Edward all the way looking for a "Good Time."

I

magine if Harmony Korine (“Gummo” & “Spring Breakers”) nothing fun about spending time with these characters. Don’t and Gaspar Noé (“Enter the Void” & “Irreversible”) decidget me wrong, the film is sometimes hypnotic, beautiful and ed they wanted to remake “Of Mice and Men,” “Dog Day downright rapturous, but watching it is about as rough as it Afternoon” and “After Hours” during an acid trip at a rave in gets. The anti-melodic score sounds like John Carpenter, Aphex the 1970s, but then figured they would just combine them into Twin and Vangelis had an orgy while Tangerine Dream sat in one movie and have Edward from “Twilight” play the role that the corner binge watching “Stranger Things.” The music is so Pacino or De Niro would have played back when they gave a omnipresent and atonally upsetting that “Good Time” becomes shit. Welcome to “Good Time.” more oppressive the closer it gets to its nail-biting finale. Robert Pattinson plays Connie Nikas, a petty criminal The movie is also so blisteringly unpredictable that the who robs a bank with his mentally handicapped brother Nick momentum carries us far past a fever dream and deep into (played by co-writer and co-director Benny Safdie). After a dye- nightmare territory. There’s definitely some bizarre and unsatpack explodes, covering the brothers in thick red dust, Nick isfying plotting, but that serves the film well thematically. is caught by the police as Connie gets away. In order to bail “Good Time” never feels artificial for a moment and the Safdie his brother out of Rikers Island prison, Connie needs to find Brothers are edging closer to making a NYC masterpiece along $10,000 before the night is through—and he doesn’t care who the lines of Cassavetes, Lumet or Friedkin. he has to rob, cheat or steal to make it happen. Every frame is grimy, authentic and somehow beautiful. Pattinson is the big draw here, giving a performance that’s Even with some strangely un-cinematic directorial choices in one part Eminem to two parts Juggalo. A lot of critics are call- the final act, the film still stuck to me like the smell of a forest ing Pattinson a “revelation,” but he’s always been a great char- fire two towns over. Whenever I close my eyes I see the vibrant acter actor in the career of a terrible movie star. His work in reds and thick, dark blues that evoke “Blade Runner” and “Sus“The Rover,” “Cosmopolis” and “The Lost City of Z” was fear- piria” without bundling the film up into feeling like a collection less. He’s long since discarded vanity in order to climb inside of the filmmakers’ influences. some fascinatingly flawed folks. It’s impossible to take your At any given moment, “Good Times” is akin to a gorgeouseyes off of him as Connie, but ly evocative poem written in let's not forget that he’s actublood on a prison wall. I loved ally been really good for the it and hated it in equal meaGood Time Dir. Josh & Benny Safdie last five years. sure. I respect the hell out of Grade: B Calling this movie “Good this little slice of nightmare, Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX Time” is a beautiful blast but am also certain I will nevof irony since there’s really er sit through it again. SW

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OUTSIDE EVENTS ATHLETIC Basic Skills Standup Paddleboard Class Prepares participants to confidently

explore our region’s flat and swift waterways. Sundays, 10am-noon Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541-3179407. $55.

CORK Monthly Run Bring your friends to our

BEND’S LOCAL INDEPENDENT OUTDOOR

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monthly run starting and ending at Crow’s Feet Commons. First Monday of every month, 5:30pm. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. Free.

Deschutes Daze Orienteering Festival

A multi-day orienteering festival in the Bend Oregon area, over Labor Day weekend, 2017. This bare-bones event is styled after Laramie Daze, with daily meets and a focus on great orienteering, but no posted results. Aug. 30-Sept. 5. City of Bend.

First Annual Whitewater and Surf Festival Includes both kayaking and surf

events. Aug. 30, noon-6pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541.317.9407.

Gravity Race Series 2017 This is an un-

sanctioned series, so you do not need any special license or membership in order to participate. Simply show up on the evening of the race or pre-register online to participate, competitors will need a valid day/twilight lift ticket or season pass to compete. Sept. 1, 3:30-7pm. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Dr. $20.

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end of events for runners of all ages in the heart of Central Oregon’s inspirational running country includes a half marathon, 5K and kids dash. Proceeds benefit St. Charles Cancer Services. Sept. 2 and Sept. 3. Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Dr. 541-593-4609. $70-$90 Half Marathon, $40-$50 5K, $15-$20 Kids Dash.

Rapid Progression Whitewater Clinic

Alternating weeks we’ll concentrate on specific topics and skills. We encourage attendance bi-weekly. Every other Thursday, 5-7pm. Through Sept. 22. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541.317.9407. $25.

Thrilla Cyclocross Series A weekly cyclocross event that is for the beginner and the expert. Two races each evening. 5:15pm is a 30-minute race and 6pm is a 45 minute race. Same location every week, but the course is different. Beer from Cascade Lakes Brewery and food from Bistro 28 available. Wed, Sept. 6, 5:15pm. Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Dr. $20-$25. WalkStrong 5k Training Info Night Join us for info night to learn about our 5k training program that helps ALL bodies move toward improved fitness. Sept. 7, 6-7pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-323-3488. Info Night--Free.

OUTDOORS Aquatic Exploration for the Whole Family Join a Nature Center Naturalist for a

bike tour around Sunriver’s aquatic ecosystems. Scientific exploration for the whole family. Mon, Sept. 4, 9-10:30am. Sunriver Nature Center, P.O. Box 3533. 541-593-4394. $60/family of 4. $10/ additional person. SNCO Members 10% off.

Basic Skills Kayaking Class Confidently

Call 541.382.6866 for a copy of our 2017-2018 Program Guide or view all class offerings at www.cascadeschoolofmusic.org.

BMC Walk With a Doc Join a BMC provider and other people in the community looking to improve their health. Tuesdays, 7-7:30am. Through Oct. 31. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St. Free. Brace & Roll at Tumalo Creek Tumalo Creek can get you sorted. Every other Thursday, 5-8pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541-317-9407. $25-35. Family Birding at the Sunriver Nature Center Locate and observe birds through-

out Sunriver’s diverse habitats. Fri, Sept. 1, 8-9:30am. Sunriver Nature Center, P.O. Box 3533. 541-593-4394. $60/family of 4, $10/additional person. SNCO Members get 10% off!.

FootZone Noon Run Lunch hour 3 to 5 mile run. Wednesdays-noon. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free.

Free New Rider Clinic Come learn the Olympic sport of BMX with USA BMX certified Head Coach, Matt Nelson. Mondays, 5:306:30pm. Through Oct. 23. High Desert BMX, 21690 Neff Rd. 541-390-1608. Free. Half-Day Deschutes River Tour After launching 20 minutes from Bend, tour participants explore the heart of the Deschutes National Forest on a pristine section of the river that is completely undeveloped. Fridays, 9am-1pm and Tuesdays, 9am-1pm. Through Sept. 5. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541-317-9407. $75. Interpretive Patio Talks Volunteer Interpretive Rangers share information on how the Newberry Volcano was formed, the history of the Monument, Geology highlights and fascinating details about the cultural history of this area. Mondays-Fridays, 11-11:30am and 1:30-2pm. Through Sept. 5. Lava Lands Visitor Center, HWY 97. 541-383-5530. Free. Moms Running Group A fun and encouraging group for moms of all running levels. Thursdays, 9:30am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Move it Mondays Runs are between 3-5 miles, paces between 7 and 12-minute miles can be accommodated. Mondays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. 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. Through Sept. 1. Mt. Bachelor - Pine Martin Lodge, 13000 SW Century Dr. 541-383-5530. Free. (With Purchase of Lift Pass).

Oregon Desert Trail Presentation Join

the Oregon Natural Desert Association for an introduction to one of the newest long distance trails in the country. Sept. 7, 6:30-8:30pm. Mountain Supply, 834 NW Colorado Ave. Free.

Upper Deschutes River Kayak Tour

Explore vast stretches of the Deschutes National Forest by boat. Saturdays, 9am-4pm and Wednesdays, 9am-4pm. Through Oct. 11. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541-317-9407. $105.

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.

explore our region’s flat and swift waterways. Thursdays, 9am-1pm and Saturdays, 9am-1pm. Through Sept. 30. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541.317.9407. $75.

Walk, Wheel and Talk This is a casual pace walk, wheelchairs and walkers/canes welcome. Sat, Sept. 2, 10am-noon. Miller’s Landing Park, 80 NW Riverside Blvd. 541-241-6837. Free.

Bike with a Ranger Come prepared with

Wedesnesday Night Racing Bring your

your own bike, helmet and water. Fridays, 11am1:30pm. Through Sept. 1. Lava Lands Visitor Center, HWY 97. 541-593-2421. Free.

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.


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Workouts OUTSIDE Busted Exercising outside this week? Know what you’re facing first in terms of smoke and your health. by Grant Woods Air Quality Index Levels of Health Concern

Numerical Value

Meaning

Good

0 to 50

Air quality is considered satisfactory, and air pollution poses little or no risk.

Moderate

51 to 100

Air quality is acceptable; however, for some pollutants there may be a moderate health concern for a very small number of people who are unusually sensitive to air pollution.

Unhealthy for sensitive groups

101 to 150

Members of sensitive groups may experience health effects. The general public is not likely to be affected.

Unhealthy

151 to 200

Everyone may begin to experience health effects; members of sensitive groups may experience more serious health effects.

Very Unhealthy

201 to 200

Health alert: everyone may experience more serious health effects.

Hazardous

301 to 500

Health warnings of emergency conditions. The entire population is more likely to be affected.

The chart above explains the different Air Quality Indez ratings.

carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide.” As of 6pm, Tuesday, the AQI for Sisters was 344 (hazardous) and 411 (hazardous) for Bend. High AQI levels have been affecting people in Sisters and the surrounding area. "After a long week of work, prepping for the eclipse, I was hoping to use last week to get outside and enjoy what's left of summer. Honestly, I haven't had much desire to be outside with so much smoke and ash in the air," said Shea Babich, who lives in Sisters. Anyone looking to partake in outdoor activities or exercise can and should consult the AQI when wildfires are ablaze in their region. As Engel suggested, there are other notable signs, beyond the AQI, to be aware of. General

visibility is a key indicator, which can be useful when gauging wildfire smoke levels. Smoke plumes are known to shift, spread and drift sporadically due to changes in wind and weather. Also, look for ash in the air, and avoid that outdoor workout if it’s present, as it has been in recent weeks. Wildfire smoke itself is a concoction of many different substances, water vapor being the majority. While the main ingredient may be harmless, breathing in the additional components — carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and irritant volatile organic compounds — can result in serious health issues. The U.S. Forest Service website notes individuals with heart or lung disease, congestive heart

The AQI for Bend, Sisters and Prineville as of 6pm Tuesday.

disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, emphysema and asthma as having extra risks in smoky areas. Outdoor fitness enthusiasts may try to find ways to grind out exercise regardless of smoke, but it’s not encouraged—especially when the AQI is above 100, the satisfactory mark set by the EPA. Surgical masks may seem like an effective preventative measure, but these masks only filter large particles, not tiny particulate matter, or the host of harmful gases also present in smoke. When wildfire smoke is thick enough to be stirred with a spoon, it’s best to keep workouts indoors. Indoor training on days with poor AQI is a common option for athletes from recreational league youth groups, all the way up to the professional level. If the intention of exercise is physical and mental well-being, enduring wildfire smoke for torturous sprints, bike rides or high-intensity exercise in the local park are the antithesis. Trying to outrun, out-wit, or tough-out thick smoke won’t work. Instead, take advantage of indoor facilities, seek out regions with lower AQI readings or take the day off. In the meantime, show some appreciation and support for the firefighters who are doing their best to battle multiple active wildfires. SW Want to help support firefighters' efforts? Donate to the Wildland Firefighters Association: wffoundation.org.

VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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o one wants to return from a morning run with a scratchy throat, stinging eyes, and lungs that feel like Muhammad Ali’s speed bag. With several wildfires clawing their way through Central Oregon, athletes of all levels should be aware of what they’re up against. Smoke from nearby wildfires has turned Bend and the surrounding communities opaque over the last several weeks. Scratchy throats, bloodshot eyes, irritated sinuses and headaches are all common side effects for those living or working in close proximity of the flames. While indiscriminate in nature, smoke tends to be a more serious concern to those keen on exercising outdoors. “The main concern is respiration. With the smoke, all the ash in the air can have negative effects on respiratory rate, and ash can also affect one’s lungs,” said Joanna Engel, director of athletic training services at the University of La Verne in Southern California. Engel has worked with collegiate level athletes for over a decade. Wildfire smoke is a serious concern for the safety of her athletes. During exercise, respiratory rates increase. With the body demanding more oxygen, pollutants in smoke are consumed at higher rates than normal. On several occasions, Engel has had to cancel training sessions or move athletes indoors to avoid wildfire smoke. Likewise, in Bend and Central Oregon, youth sports programs including the Bend FC Timbers soccer club have been forced to cancel practices due to air quality. “We use Southern California AQMD (Air Quality Management District) reports. If it’s above yellow, we stay inside. I also check to see if there’s ash in the air, if so, we stay inside regardless of AQMD,” said Engel. In Central Oregon, there are several ways to monitor air quality. A great resource for checking air quality in real time is AQICN.org. Reliable air quality sources will display the Air Quality Index (AQI)—a specific number, along with a corresponding color. The AQI scale goes from 0-500 with higher AQI indicating greater health concern. The Environmental Protection Agency “calculates the AQI for five major air pollutants regulated by the Clean Air Act: ground-level ozone, particle pollution (also known as particulate matter),

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The days are a little shorter and a little cooler, but there’s no less fun to be had - it’s fall! Plan for a season full of fun with sports, arts and crafts, ice skating, swimming, fitness, music, outdoor recreation, before- and afterschool care and more activities for all ages! Look for your 2017 Fall Playbook in your mailbox or visit us online at bendparksandrec.org.

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Chip in FORE! Kids Charity Golf Tournament

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Registration at 11am / Shotgun start at 1pm $500 per foursome / $150 per golfer

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Natural World

Have a question about the natural world of Central Oregon? Send your questions to jimnaturalist@gmail.com.

Pity the Poor Bumblebee By Jim Anderson

People who use herbicides to kill dandelions are just one of the reasons our bumblebees are in big trouble. brother who lived in the hired man’s house on our small farm in Connecticut. He ate with us, but other than that I didn’t know (or actually care) much about him… until that day he asked me to help him capture a swarm of bees. “Swarm of bees,” only meant one thing to me then: death. But for some reason, my curiosity made me stop and listen. He said a swarm in an apple tree had no place to call home, and because of his age he could no longer gather the swarm on his own. I helped him carry the ladder and Langstroth bee box to the orchard. He instructed me to climb the ladder with a cardboard box and saw, removing the limb with the swarm (without being stung once!). I let it drop into the cardboard box and came down. He removed half the frames with the wax foundation from the box, dumped the bees into the hive and then, bare-handed and without any protection from being stung (except

and sheltering at night near the food plants in old rodent borrows, or under logs for a few weeks until her body signals it’s time to find a nest site. This is the reason we must be sure there are early pollinating flowers blooming, like the lowly and much unloved dandelion. People who use herbicides to kill dandelions are just one of the reasons our bumblebees are in big trouble. Not only is the bumblebee’s food removed, but residual chemicals are contaminating their (and our) world. Once the queen’s ovaries have eggs starting to form, she starts nest-searching. Deserted small rodent nests are favorite nest sites, but clumps of dead grasses, empty woodpecker holes, cracks in old, rotten logs and even outside furniture can become a nest. Once a queen has found a suitable site she builds a wax honey pot and fills it with regurgitated nectar—honey. Next, she builds up a store of pollen,

39

Photo by Jim Anderson

puffing away on his nasty old pipe like a steam locomotive), slowly searched among the bees to find the queen and her entourage. Then he put her back in the box, replaced the frames, closed it up, smiled at me and said, “Now, Catsfur, watch what happens.” What took place is what I enjoy most about installing a swarm. Several of the workers lined up at the entrance and beat their wings furiously, not to take flight, but fanning the fragrance of the queen’s pheromones outside, so other bees flying about would know where she was and find their new home. The bumblebee life story is quite a bit different. To begin with, only one bumblebee survives winter: the queen. There are no workers to help keep her warm. She’s all alone, hiding under an old log, or buried in the soil of a south-facing hillside or bank, hibernating to keep from freezing, waiting for spring when she’ll emerge and lay eggs. She mated with a drone (male bee) in late summer of the previous year, and she hasn’t eaten anything since then. This is why it is vitally important for bumblebees to find early flowers on which to feed. Newly emerged queens eat both nectar and pollen, and it’s the pollen that helps her ovaries develop—but she cannot fly unless her flight muscles are at about 86 degrees Fahrenheit, so she has to brave the cold weather to feed or else she will sink into torpor and never wake up. The queen continues feeding

VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

T

he present populations of our western bumblebees are in big trouble, which from my perspective is more important from the biological and ecological perspective than the problems facing domestic honeybees. I’ve been a beekeeper most of my adult life. I love having domestic bees in my immediate vicinity. Of course, I love the honey they produce, but perhaps more than that, I love their lifestyle. There’s nothing that brings warmth to my being like coming up to a beehive at 31 below zero, putting my ear to the hive and listening to the warm humming of the bees inside keeping the queen warm and snug, at 90 degrees. In the fall, it’s so sweet to remove the “super” (the box filled with my honey) from the top of the hives, thanking the “girls” for the honey and their contribution to my health and happiness. But all that’s gone from my home today. I’ve given up the love of beekeeping to give our western bumblebee the help they need. If I had more pollinating plants at my place, perhaps I could keep domestic honeybees and have enough habitat for “my” bumblebees, but at the moment, I don’t. I think my Uncle Moulton Alexander Rockefeller—the man who introduced me to honey bees when I was about 12—will look down on me from his present domicile out among the stars, and smile in agreement with my decision. Uncle Moult was my grandfather’s

The poor old vanishing western bumblebee, a victim of everything from climate change to chemicals and greed.

some of which she eats, and the balances he makes into “bee bread.” She issues saliva mixed with pollen, and it is believed that the saliva provides some protection against spoiling by fungi and bacteria. If you’re fortunate enough to observe a bumblebee queen in the act of carrying pollen in her pollen baskets, you know she’s found a nest site and is preparing to lay eggs. The store of pollen, nectar and bee bread enable the queen to survive for a day or two of bad weather without foraging, which in our part of the country is vital. The pollen stimulates the ovaries to produce eggs, which the queen lays in batches of four to 16 on the ball of pollen, then covers them with wax. The eggs are pearly white and sausage-shaped, about 2.5 to 4.0 mm long. The ball of pollen with the eggs is placed within reach of the honey pot thus enabling the queen to brood the eggs and drink honey at the same time. After about four days the eggs hatch. The queen may have to visit as many as 6000 flowers per day to get enough nectar to maintain the heat needed to brood her eggs. During every foraging trip the brood will cool down, so the trips should be short. When the eggs hatch, the queen must make thousands of trips per day to feed her growing larvae.

The grubs are voracious, but do not defecate. The end of their gut is closed, so all the waste material remains inside the larvae; thus, the larval cell and food remain uncontaminated with waste. The waste is expelled while the grub is in the pupal stage, the feces staying within the throw-away cocoon, but not wasted. In case you wondered, nothing is EVER wasted in nature! The feces is smeared on to the inside wall of the cocoon, becoming part of the silken structure. That helps keep it rigid so the new insect inside—now with three body parts, six legs, and other necessities of an adult insect—is not crowded. Entomologists have discovered by examining the feces in the cocoon’s pollen husks they can identify which flower species the adult bumblebees have been foraging from. New queens and drones are produced at a later stage in the life of the colony, as winter is approaching. Somehow, fertilized larvae develop into queens when the queen stops secreting a certain pheromone. Once that queen that will survive the winter is selected, the others succumb to the elements of winter, and the surviving queen goes looking for a place to hibernate and survive winter. What a story!  SW


REAL ESTATE ADVERTISE IN OUR REAL ESTATE SECTION ADVERTISE@BENDSOURCE.COM

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / August 31, 2017  /  BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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Otis Craig Broker, CRS

FIND YOUR PLACE IN BEND

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HELLO VISITOR!

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Principal Broker, CRS

THINKING ABOUT MOVING TO CENTRAL OREGON?

Jason Boone

Principal Broker, CRIS

Mollie Hogan

Principal Broker, CRS

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Skjersaa Group | Duke Warner Realty 1033 NW Newport Ave. Bend, OR 97703

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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

2052 SW Helmholtz Way,Redmond, OR 97756 Invest for yourself or as a Vacation Rental! Possible Additional Dwelling Unit.

Vintage Northwest Bend Charm on larger lot. 2025 NW Harriman $339,900

Get Noticed in our Real Estate Section

For Sale $2,500,000

Development parcel with preliminary plans for 36 lot subdivision in SW Redmond. Possible potential density increase with or with out PUD to R5 or MU. In an area of nice single and multi-family homes. Close to schools, parks and shopping. Zoned R4. Potential buyers should consult the City of Redmond Community Development Department about development. Property includes updated fully renovated home. Acres: 7.5200

Walk to downtown and Drake Park. Near 1st Street Rapids and the Deshutes River Trail. Artist renovated, spacious two bedroom.• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1243 square feet. Fenced with RV storage area. 20 x 20 heated workshop with built-ins. Raised garden beds, drip system, pond, deck and covered patio. Big yard with mature trees.

Mary Shrauger Principal Broker

541-350-6041

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Matching People and Central • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Oregon Lifestyles Since 1985 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •


TAKE ME HOME

By Nick Nayne

REAL ESTATE

Principal Broker, The Broker Network, LLC

Tips for Competing Against Cash Buyers

I

is the home appraising at the sales price before making offers. Going with a conventional type loan as opposed to VA or FHA also helps, as these agencies have additional qualifications on a property that can be an issue, particularly if it is a fixer. Having a strong prequalification letter to submit with your offer and a lender who is available to get one to you quickly is important. Taking this extra step of almost full prequalification helps cut down the time for closing and assures the seller that the buyer is fully qualified. Accompanying the offer should be a letter to the seller letting them know how you are making this your first family home and why you want to raise your family there, etc. This can go a long way in appealing to a seller’s sentiments in preferring you over someone who is going to just purchase it as an investment with transient occupants. Because it is not uncommon to have bidding wars on good deals, be prepared to offer above asking price. Your realtor can help you in determining this by providing statistics for recent comparative sales in the neighborhood.

HOME PRICE ROUND-UP

Photos and listing info from Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service

LOW

344 S.E. Miller Ave., Bend, OR 97702 3 beds, 1.5 bath, 1,156 square feet, .07 acre lot Built in 2002 $250,000 Listed by Alleda Real Estate

MID

Address: 63366 Tristar Dr., Bend, OR 97701 4 beds, 3 baths, 2,388 square feet, .15 acre lot Built in 2010 $399,000 Listed by Lowes Commercial/Residential Branch

HIGH

657 NW Stonepine Dr., Bend, OR 97701 3 beds, 3 baths, 3,152 square feet .61 acre lot Built in 2000 $1,100,000 Listed by RE/MAX Key Properties

REAL ESTATE LISTINGS Bungalows at NWX $199,000 - $499,000 24 unit condominium development comprised of 4 individual phases. Condos range from 400-1401 sq. ft. Call for more information. 541.383.1426 Listed by The Skjersaa Group

Lot Listing $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

Great Westside Gem 902 NW Ogden Reduced Price! $399,400 Great west side town home steps from restaurants, grocery, coffee, OSU/COCC and downtown Bend. Don’t miss this opportunity to own in the heart of it all. Maria Halsey, Broker 541.788.0876 Listed by My Lucky House

Roundtree PUD

$57,000 4.31 ACRE LOT

This lot will amaze you with breathtaking panoramic mountain and valley views. Don't miss out on owning in this highly desired subdivision just minutes from the Prineville reservoir.

Maria Halsey, Broker 541.788.0876 Listed by My Lucky House

41 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

n recent years, cash buyers, many of whom are investors looking for rental properties, have made it difficult for first-time homebuyers to purchase homes in the lower price ranges. This is a common scenario for firsttime buyers seeking an affordable home in a decent location. In a recent article in Housing Wire, the split is almost equal between cash buyers and mortgage buyers for starter level homes. Sellers tend to prefer the cash buyer who typically can close quickly and for whom there is no financing contingency. In a tight market such as ours (and across the country) for starter homes, what can a buyer do to compete against cash buyers? First of all, remember that typical real estate transactions have several contingencies that are exercised by most buyers, such as approval of the title report, home inspection, appraisal meeting the sales price and financing (loan qualification of buyers and property). The main advantage to a cash deal is the absence of the financing contingency, but buyers can strengthen their position by meeting with a mortgage lender and getting prequalified through underwriting to the point that the only contingency


SCIENCE ADVICE GODDESS WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / August 31, 2017  /  BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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Sofa’s Choice

Getting A Friend To Exorcise

My husband has a great body, but since we got married two years ago, he has completely stopped working out. One reason I was initially so attracted to him was that he was in great shape. I go to Pilates four times a week. How do I motivate him to go back to the gym? —Toned

I’m trying to get over a breakup, and one of my best friends, in an attempt to help me move on, keeps saying, “He doesn’t want you!” I get that (and I do need to move on), but hearing that makes me feel unlovable and even more depressed. I am seeing what went wrong; I should have believed him when he told me at the very beginning that he was “terrified of relationships.” I’m sure it’s frustrating for her to see me in pain, but I’m just not ready to get back out there. What do I tell her so she stops making me feel worse? —Still Sad

If your husband’s starting to see definition in his legs, it shouldn’t be from rolling over and falling asleep on the remote. As for how to get him back into workout mode, consider what psychologists Edward Deci and Richard M. Ryan have learned in studying motivation. They break it down into two categories — intrinsic and extrinsic, fancy terms for internal and external. The extrinsic kind is outside pressure to do something — like nagging from the wife to start going to the gym instead of just driving by the place and waving. Extrinsic pressure tends to motivate defiance rather than compliance — which is to say it’s remarkably effective at bringing out the “terrible twos” in a 46-year-old man. Intrinsic motivation, however, is the kind that Deci and Ryan find leads to lasting change. This is motivation that comes from within a person, meaning that it’s in tune with who they are and what they want for themselves — like abs of steel instead of… wait, there are abs in there? So, the challenge here is not how to make your husband work out but how to get him to start wanting what you want. You’re allowed to make requests of the person you’re married to, so ask him to try something for you — go to the gym…for just three weeks. Reassure him that you still find him hot, but explain that you really, really find him hot when it looks like you could chip a tooth on one of his biceps. The three-week stint — beyond getting him back in the habit of going to the gym — should lead to some positive changes in his body, giving him a sense of accomplishment. Because Deci and Ryan find that feelings of “competence” are an integral part of intrinsic motivation, there’s a good chance he’ll feel motivated to keep working out — instead of trying to get by on making those weightlifter grunts every time he changes the channel.

Misery sometimes wishes company would shut its big flapping trap. Of course, your friend means well. She just wants Pain and its BFF, Suffering, to bugger off already. However, like most people, she probably doesn’t understand that the sadness you’re experiencing isn’t just a crappy feeling. Like all emotions, it has a job to do. In fact, sadness is a tool, just like a hammer, a plunger, or a Winkelschleifer (German for angle grinder). Psychiatrist and evolutionary psychologist Randolph Nesse Amy Alkon explains that “happiness and sadness usually follow experiences of gain or loss,” helping us by “influencing future behavior” in ways that increase our chances of passing along our genes (including surviving long enough to manage that). Happiness, for example, urges us (about whatever led to it), “Do that again and you’ll see even more of me!” Sadness, on the other hand, warns us, “Do that again, missy, and I’ll drag you right back to Boohoosville.” Though sadness can seem like some kind of punishment you don’t remember deserving, Nesse writes that “those people who don’t experience much sadness … are predicted to engage again in the same behaviors that previously led to loss.” Thank your friend for trying to make you feel better, but tell her that what you need from her is not tough love but the kind that involves hugs, Kleenex, and maybe a snack. Explain the utility of sadness — and how you’re using it as a tool to understand the past and act more wisely in the future. In other words, you aren’t stalling in moving on; you’re learning — and not just how long you have to cry before the neighbors start going to work in rowboats and the government sends in the National Guard with sandbags and a year’s supply of Cheetos.

October 6-8 Friday, October 6th / 5pm – 11pm Saturday, October 7th / 11am – 11pm Sunday, October 8th / 11am – 5pm oregonfestival.com/fall-festival

(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

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The computer sci-

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The sadness you feel might be the most fertile sadness you have felt in a long time. At least potentially, it has tremendous motivating power. You could respond to it by mobilizing changes that would dramatically diminish the sadness you feel in the coming years, and also make it less likely that sadness-provoking events will come your way. So I invite you to express gratitude for your current sadness. That’s the crucial first step if you want to harness it to work wonders. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): "Don't hoot with the owls at night if you want to crow with the rooster in the morning," advised Miss Georgia during the Miss Teen USA Pageant. Although that's usually good counsel, it may not apply to you in the coming weeks. Why? Because your capacity for revelry will be at an all-time high, as will your ability to be energized rather than drained by your revelry. It seems you have a special temporary superpower that enables you both to have maximum fun and get a lot of work done.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): During this phase of your astrological cycle, it makes sense to express more leadership. If you’re already a pretty good guide or role model, you will have the power to boost your benevolent influence to an even higher level. For inspiration, listen to educator Peter Drucker: “Leadership is not magnetic personality. That can just as well be a glib tongue. It is not ‘making friends and influencing people.’ That is flattery. Leadership is lifting a person’s vision to higher sights, raising a person’s performance to a higher standard, building a personality beyond its normal limitations.” CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “One should always be a little improbable,” said Oscar Wilde. That’s advice I wouldn’t normally give a Capricorn. You thrive on being grounded and straightforward. But I’m making an exception now. The astrological omens compel me. So what does it mean, exactly? How might you be “improbable”? Here are suggestions to get you started. 1. Be on the lookout for inspiring ways to surprise yourself. 2. Elude any warped expectations that people have of you. 3. Be willing to change your mind. Open yourself up to evidence that contradicts your theories and beliefs. 4. Use telepathy to contact Oscar Wilde in your dreams, and ask him to help you stir up some benevolent mischief or compassionate trouble.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A modern Israeli woman named Shoshana Hadad got into trouble because of an event that occurred long before she was born. In 580 B.C., one of her male ancestors married a divorced woman, which at that time was regarded as a sin. Religious authorities decreed that as punishment, none of his descendants could ever wed a member of the Cohen tribe. But Hadad did just that, which prompted rabbis to declare her union with Masoud Cohen illegal. I bring this tale to your attention as a way to illustrate the possibility that you, too, may soon have to deal with the consequences of past events. But now that I have forewarned you, I expect you will act wisely, not rashly. You will pass a tricky test and resolve the old matter for good.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Want to live to be 100? Then be as boring as possible. That’s the conclusion of longevity researchers, as reported by the Weekly World News. To ensure a maximum life

span, you should do nothing that excites you. You should cultivate a neutral, blah personality, and never travel far from home. JUST KIDDING! I lied. The Weekly World News is in fact a famous purveyor of fake news. The truth, according to my analysis of the astrological omens, is that you should be less boring in the next seven weeks than you have ever been in your life. To do so will be superb for your health, your wealth, and your future.

43 VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

entist Tim Berners-Lee invented the miraculous communication system that we know as the World Wide Web. When asked if he had any regrets about his pioneering work, he named just one. There was no need for him to have inserted the double slash — “//” — after the “http:” in web addresses. He’s sorry that Internet users have had to type those irrelevant extra characters so many billions of times. Let this serve as a teaching story for you, Virgo. As you create innovations in the coming weeks, be mindful of how you shape the basic features. The details you include in the beginning may endure.

ARIES (March 21-April 19): “We are continually faced by great opportunities brilliantly disguised as insoluble problems,” said businessman Lee Iacocca. You are currently wrestling with an example of this phenomenon, Aries. The camouflage is well-rendered. To expose the opportunity hidden beneath the apparent dilemma, you may have to be more strategic and less straightforward than you usually are — cagier and not as blunt. Can you manage that? I think so. Once you crack the riddle, taking advantage of the opportunity should be interesting. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Close your eyes and imagine this: You and a beloved ally get lost in an enchanted forest, discover a mysterious treasure, and find your way back to civilization just before dark. Now visualize this: You give a dear companion a photo of your face taken on every one of your birthdays, and the two of you spend hours talking about your evolution. Picture this: You and an exciting accomplice luxuriate in a sunlit sanctuary surrounded by gourmet snacks as you listen to ecstatic music and bestow compliments on each other. These are examples of the kinds of experiments I invite you to try in the coming weeks. Dream up some more! Here’s a keynote to inspire you: “sacred fun.”

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): On its album Jefferson’s “Tree of Liberty,” Jefferson Starship plays a song I co-wrote, “In a Crisis.” On its album “Deeper Space/Virgin Sky,*” the band covers another tune I co-wrote, “Dark Ages.” Have I received a share of the record sales? Not a penny. Am I upset? Not at all. I’m glad the songs are being heard and enjoyed. I’m gratified that a world-famous, multi-platinum band chose to record them. I’m pleased my musical creations are appreciated. Now here’s my question for you, Gemini: Has some good thing of yours been “borrowed”? Have you wielded a benevolent influence that hasn’t been fully acknowledged? I suggest you consider adopting an approach like mine. It’s prime time to adjust your thinking about how your gifts and talents have been used, applied, or translated.

DO WHAT MAKES YOU HAPPY! SISTERS

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Author Roger von Oech tells us that creativity often involves “the ability to take something out of one context and put it into another so that it takes on new meanings.” According to my analysis of the astrological omens, this strategy could and should be your specialty in the coming weeks. “The first person to look at an oyster and think food had this ability,” says von Oech. “So did the first person to look at sheep intestines and think guitar strings. And so did the first person to look at a perfume vaporizer and think gasoline carburetor.” Be on the lookout, Cancerian, for inventive substitutions and ingenious replacements. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): When famous socialite Nan Kempner was young, her mother took her shopping at Yves Saint Laurent’s salon. Nan got fixated on a certain white satin suit, but her mean old mother refused to buy it for her. “You’ve already spent too much of your monthly allowance,” mom said. But the resourceful girl came up with a successful gambit. She broke into sobs, and continued to cry nonstop until the store’s clerks lowered the price to an amount she could afford. You know me, Leo: I don’t usually recommend resorting to such extreme measures to get what you want. But now is one time when I am giving you a go-ahead to do just that.

Homework: Send news of your favorite mystery — an enigma that is both maddening and delightful. Freewillastrology.com © Copyright 2017 Rob Brezsny

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WELLNESS EVENTS During this 21 day group detox, banish bloat, find freedom from fatigue,and enjoy delicious food that fuels your busy life.This program is the foundation for a lifestyle diet that nourishes you inside and out. Tues, Sept. 5, 7-8:30pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $97 pre-registration, $107/door.

Better Health. Walking for as little as 30 minutes a day can reduce your risk of certain diseases. Join a BMC provider and other people in the community looking to improve their health. Event departs from the Old Mill District Dog Park. First Thursday of every month, 5:30-6pm. Through Oct. 5. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St. Free.

Calm Your Pain! Helps people with persistent (chronic) pain understand how their brain and nervous system participate in and exacerbate one’s pain. Designed specifically for people in persistent pain. Sept. 6, 12-1:30pm. Healing Bridge Physical Therapy, 404 Northeast Penn Ave. 541-318-7041. Free. Community Healing Flow A gentle flow

class by donation with all proceeds will benefit the Humane Society of Central Oregon. Fridays, 5-6:15pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. 541-322-9642.

Restorative Yoga Restorative yoga formu-

las 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.

Structural Reprograming / The Vance Stance Tired of being in pain? Not had lasting success elsewhere? Get to the root of why you are tight, crooked, suffering. In this series of 2-hour classes in posture and flexibility, reduce pain in back, neck, shoulder, knees, hips, bunions. Begins Wed. Sept. 13: you may switch between days and times. Mondays-Thursdays, noon-2pm. Through Nov. 16. EastSide Home Studio, 21173 Sunburst Ct. 541-330-9070. $150 for 10 classes.

Tai Chi Grandmaster Franklin has 50+ years

and well. Tuesdays-Thursdays-Saturdays, 7:45-8:30am. Plantae, 2115 NE Hwy 20 Ste 107. 541-640-8295. Free.

of experience, practice and knowledge. The focus of his teaching is on the individual. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:45-10:45am. Grandmaster Franklin, 1601NW Newport Ave. 623-203-4883. $50. Tuesdays, 1-2pm. La Pine Parks & Recreation, 16406 First St. 541-536-2223. $30.

Free Yoga with Cynthia LaRoche Stop in and center yourself and de-stress with a free yoga session in our store. The session is lead by Cynthia LaRoche. You can expect an intentional experience with Cynthia. Thursdays, noon-1pm. Through Sept. 28. Princess Athletic, 945 NW wall St, Ste 150. Free.

Time, Frequency & Intensity Have you ever wondered why chiropractors want you to keep coming back? Are you getting all you can out of your health care? Find out the depths of healthy living in this week’s class. Sept. 5, 6-6:30pm. Pangea Chiropractic, 19550 Amber Meadow Dr. Ste#110. 541-728-0954. Free.

Healing Vibrations Meditation Group

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.

Love Camp Plant-Based Adventure Retreat Plant-based gourmet meals and holis-

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.

Free Yoga Keep your body and mind healthy

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.

tic nutrition workshops, yoga, hiking, in the Bend forest with our tribe of like-minded souls. Sept. 7. Love Camp Retreat House, Caldera Spring. 253-432-6952. $1,495.

Men & Stress Learn the causes of stress and

reduce the negative effects of stress. Let go of anger, manage anxiety and improve relationships. Call Dan Anderson, M.A. to reserve your place 541.390.3133 or email: dan@anderson-counseling.com. Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. 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. 541-3506517. Free.

Recovery Yoga Wherever you are on the road of recovery, this yoga class offers a safe and confidential place to explore how meditation,

Yoga for 50+ Life is already fast paced. Yoga

doesn’t need to be! Learn to practice safely and still engage in poses vigorously. Detailed instruction and attention to alignment bring one into the present moment in mind, body and spirit. yogaofbend.com Mondays, 11am-12:15pm. Iyengar Yoga of Bend, 660 NE Third St. Suite 5. 541-318-1186.

Young Breast Cancer Survivor Network This network is designed for breast can-

cer survivors diagnosed in their 40s or younger, regardless of current age. Whether you have just been diagnosed, are still undergoing treatment or are several years out, join us to connect with others. First Sunday of every month, 10am-noon. Locavore, 1841 NE Third St. Free.

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45

Lori McRae, WHNP

Women Health Nurse Practitioner, Board Certified

1245 NW 4th Street, Suite 201 Redmond 97756

VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

BMC Walk With a Doc Take a STEP to

• HEAL PAIN OR PLANTER FASCIITIS

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.

WELLNESS

Alive and Energized - 21 Day Detox

COME SEE US AT OUR NEW LOCATION!


smokesignals@bendsource.com

SMOKE SIGNALS

By Josh Jardine

C is for Cookie

Our take on two varieties that didn’t come from your (stoner) grandma’s kitchen

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46

“D

o you like cookies”? I ask. “Well,” you answer coyly, “I’m trying to be “good” this month and avoid gluten. Plus, I just restarted my vegan diet, yet again, but I just love butter so much, I’m so bad, tee-hee….” Well, golly, TMI Tammy, that’s swell and all, and, you know, gluten-free kudos. But you didn’t answer my question, so I will do it for you: Yes, you do. Me, I love cookies. I don’t care if it has butter, sugar, wheat, or freeze dried kittens in it. (Although Cannabis Kitten Cookies are not a thing.) There is a reason I am known in some circles as “Cookie Monster.” Let’s look at two companies making cannabis-infused cookie/cookie-like treats. Both come...highly recommended.

DAILY SPECIALS

$ 4 & $5 GRAMS AVAILABLE

for Recreational and Medical Customers

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

541.678.5199 Accepting All Credit Cards

SHE DON’T KNOW About the name: SDK owner and CEO Jill Trinchero says, “It seems like everyone has the answers, but who really knows.” She started SDK in 2015, foregoing gluten, preservatives, corn syrup or dyes and infusing their offerings with “the clear,” a super clean THC distillate made using ethanol. The products are micro-dosed at 5mg of THC per cookie, which Trinchero says is an amount most anyone can handle, and are made so because, as she put it, “Who eats half a cookie? People don’t eat half a cookie.” She readily admits to being a cannabis edible lightweight, and wanted to offer an option to others who may share her tolerance and dietary choices. SDK is manufactured in a dedicated gluten-free kitchen with vegan options, but wait, come back here, because they are really good. I could eat these by the handful, which I haven’t done because I’m not a stoned bear with poor impulse control. Doing the Whole30, paleo or clean diet plan? First, don’t tell me about it, because I don’t care—no one does or ever will—then grab your dietary pious self a Tokeless B. It’s a raw, gluten-free,

vegan, no-sugar-added bite of goodness made with organic dates, almonds, coconut and sour cherries. The Chocolate Chip Cannabis Cookie is also gluten free and just as tasty. This month they added a savory offering with C’est La Herb, a gluten free crisp, buttery cracker with Herbs de Provence and Maldon flake sea salt. sdksnacks.com ELBE’S EDIBLES Let’s start with their t-shirt: “My balls. Your mouth.” No, it’s not “What are "Things #45 Has Said To Women.” The balls in question are 15 mg THC infused cake balls in numerous flavors, one of the two product lines made by Elbe’s. They also make variously flavored snickerdoodle cookies, each containing 25 mg THC, including a lemon version. They delve into the why on their website, writing, “Lemon contains a terpene called Limone which is a hydrocarbon that has the ability to cross the blood brain barrier and interact with the brain.” They also go a bit into the differences between Delta-9 and Delta-11 THC, so you can get informed while getting high. The more you know. These folks started toiling in the Cookie Mines back in 2010, using a whole cannabis bud butter infusion. They are one of the few companies I have found in the rec cannabis market still using full butter, which is the way I came up enjoying my edibles. The Orange Creamsicle Cake Balls have an uncanny taste resemblance to its namesake frozen treat, and are all too tempting to have on hand in any great quantity. There is a clever cutting guide included in each package to help you determine your proper dose, making it easy to share. Elbe’s recently dropped a 1:1 CBD/ THC ratio Gingersnap Snickerdoodle, with 25 mg of each. One gobbled resulted in a balanced, mellow high, the THC nicely complimented by the CBD. elbesedibles.com


THE REC ROOM Crossword “Truckin�

47

We’re Local!

Š Pearl Stark mathpuzzlesgames.com/quodoku

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

ACROSS 

65 Fuel-inefficient vehicles

1

With 28-Down, surfing annoyances

66 Ancient poet

6

Close pals, initially

DOWN 

10 BuzzFeed fodder

1 Elapse

14 Team building

2

Very decorative

15 ___ Grey

3

M&M variety

16 Compulsion

4

Condo building

17 Escargot piece

5

Place for a king

18 Get the hell out

6 Previously

19 Bit of sparkle

7

“Keep dreaming!�

20 Christmastime rental

8

Stew over

23 Capacity measure used in HVAC

9

Holmes, e.g.

24 Attention to detail

10 Female with drones

25 Yankee hurler Masahiro

11 Bitly result

29 “On the other hand ...�

12 Kroger rival

30 Compass dir.

13 Religion that champions gardening

31 It’s got an electric motor

21 Homes for hermanas y hombres

32 Embalmer’s subj.

22 “Let me get back to you�

35 Bourbon Street necklace (around Mardi Gras)

26 Diminishing sea

36 Jokey way to describe the food truck industry ... and a hint to this puzzle’s hidden theme

28 See 1-Across

41 Painter Margaret who does “big-eyed waifs� 42 Nintendo platform 43 Relating to money 45 Afternoon timeout 47 NL team with the most World Series wins, 11 50 He may make your skin crawl 51 ICU staff 52 Org. with range rovers? 53 Place for battle planning 56 “Like that’s gonna happen� 59 Scum 60 Do the honors, as in November (or October, if you’re Canadian) 61 Man of the hour 62 Bit of light reading? 63 Barq’s rival 64 Funk

D E M O N

P I T Y

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

“Education's purpose is to replace an _______ with an _______.� — Malcolm S. Forbes

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

★

Difficulty Level

VOLUME 21  ISSUE 35  /  August 31, 2017  /  THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Š2017 Brendan Emmett Quigley (www.brendanemmettquigley.com)

By Brendan Emmett Quigley

Pearl’s Puzzle

27 “___ these days!� 33 Blackbird 34 TV show whose theme song is “Falling� 36 Israeli stateswoman Golda 37 Peace of mind 38 Someone up in a tree? 39 Jumped up 40 Celebrity chef Eddie whose autobiography was the basis for the TV show “Fresh Off the Boat� 41 Bucket chain 44 Navigation systems 46 First film to show a flushing toilet 47 Edda writer Sturluson 48 Treasure amounts 49 Most corny 51 Second-in-command, in some states: Abbr. 54 Baseball family name 55 Narc’s attack 56 Vietnamese noodle soup 57 Gave victuals to 58 Do you might pick out

ANSWER TO LAST WEEKS PUZZLES

“When anybody honks at me in traffic, I blush, wave, and shout, ‘Thanks for being a fan.’ Being a celebrity is a 24/7 thing.� — Jarod Kintz

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8 1 , 7 6

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