Source Weekly February 27, 2020

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2020

GUIDE INSIDE

20 YEARS LATER...

Sand

of

SAME STORY

DIFFERENT DECADE

VOLUM E 2 4 / I S S UE 0 9 / FEBRUA RY 2 7 , 2 0 2 0

Mirror

PLUS

JULY 29, 1999 COVER

ROOM TAX RIFT

IS BEND GETTING SHORTED ON TOURISM TAXES?

OREGON BEER AWARDS POLECAT’S LAST HURRAH CENTRAL OREGON CLEANS UP

BELLINGHAM BAND SAYS BYE TO BEND


$1500 IN PRIZES

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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PURCHASE A RAFFLE TICKET FOR A CHANCE TO WIN PRIZES FROM THULE, YAKIMA, KUAT & DAKINE. Raffle tickets are $10. All proceeds go to help support the Humane Society of Central Oregon. Raffle tickets can be purchased at all Hutch’s locations, Rack N Roll, Winter Fest and at the Humane Society of Central Oregon.

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COME TO PARTY AND LEAVE WITH A NEW BEST FRIEND Sunday March 1st we will be hosting a pet adoption day from 11am to 3pm with the Humane Society of Central Oregon.


EDITOR’S NOTE: The Source Weekly 704 NW Georgia Ave., Bend, OR 97703 t. 541-383-0800 f. 541-383-0088 bendsource.com info@bendsource.com

LIGHTMETER: PRESENTED BY HARVEST MOON WOODWORKS

Isaac Biehl

On the Cover: Main cover photo by Darris Hurst; inset, a similar cover—on the same topic—from 1999.

EDITOR Nicole Vulcan - editor@bendsource.com REPORTER / DIGITAL PRODUCER Isaac Biehl - isaac@bendsource.com REPORTER Laurel Brauns - laurel@bendsource.com

COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts

The wind was a little too strong Sunday! Here’s a look at the aftermath in the parking lot of the Bend-La Pine Schools administration building in downtown Bend. Bend Senior High School saw damage too, when a winds resulted in a transformer fire that closed classes there Monday.

FREELANCERS Jim Anderson, Teafly Peterson, Lisa Sipe, Jared Rasic SYNDICATED CONTENT Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Brendan Emmett Quigley, Jen Sorensen, Pearl Stark, Tom Tomorrow PRODUCTION MANAGER / ART DIRECTOR Darris Hurst - darris@bendsource.com GRAPHIC DESIGNER Shannon Corey - shannon@bendsource.com

CONTROLLER Angela Switzer - angela@bendsource.com PUBLISHER Aaron Switzer - aaron@bendsource.com WILD CARD Paul Butler

27 - Screen 29 - Outside 32 - Real Estate 34 - Advice 35 - Astrology 38 - Smoke Signals 39 - Puzzles

CUSTOM. CABINETS.

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Timm Collins, Ashley Sarvis, Ban Tat advertise@bendsource.com

DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Sean Switzer

8 - Feature 11 - Source Picks 12 - Sound Polecat’s Last Hurrah - If you’re a fan of this longtime Americana jam band, this may be your last chance to see it live.

HARVESTMOONWOODWORKS.COM

ADVERTISING SALES DIRECTOR Amanda Klingman - amanda@bendsource.com

OFFICE MANAGER Bethany Jenkins - bethany@bendsource.com

4 - Opinion 5 - Mailbox 6 - News Mirror of Sand - Should we pay to dredge Mirror Pond? And what about that pesky dam? If those sound like questions the public asked 20 years ago, it’s because they did… and they continue to do. Room Tax Rift - Market research statistics reveal that the City of Bend may be getting shorted potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars in room taxes, due to unpermitted vacation rentals.

14 - Live Music & Nightlife 17 - Events 22 - Artwatch 23 - Chow Central Oregon’s Beer Awards Showing - Central Oregon breweries took home awards for Best New Brewery and Best Small Brewery, plus a lot more.

Call for Artists: If you're interested in being a SW featured artist, email: darris@bendsource.com.

REPORTER / CALENDAR EDITOR Cayla Clark - cayla@bendsource.com

INSIDE THIS ISSUE:

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3 VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Several months ago, a press release came across my desk, alerting us to a stat regarding the Bend/Sunriver area being the nation’s fourth-highest area per capita for short-term rentals. That was interesting enough—and it was reported elsewhere—but the release didn’t paint the full picture. With an audit forthcoming and Airbnb guarded about its data, we’re still grasping the fullest picture possible—but the result of our efforts thus far is this week’s news story about a possible shortage in short-term rental income for the City of Bend, due to an apparent plethora of unpermitted rooms and homes. While it’s taken some time, this is a subject—and a facet of the housing crisis—that takes some digging to fully understand. A City audit will paint an even clearer picture—but what we’ve uncovered so far has certainly been in line with what other cities have found with their own short-term rental programs. Stay tuned for much more on this developing story.


Market of Choice

BCD zoning changes were needed. But affordable housing should still be the priority

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WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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he area just east of Bend’s downtown, dubbed the Bend Central District, has long been heralded as the area holding the most promise for redevelopment, and for adding more housing and commercial space close to the center of town. But in the few years since the City of Bend adopted special development standards for that area, not a single new unit of housing has been added. Prospective developers have said the development codes for the BCD have been too restrictive. They’ve complained about having an absolute requirement to include both residential and commercial spaces in new buildings. They’ve said the parking requirements were too much, making it so that their planned developments couldn’t pencil out. Given the lack of new housing added in that area in recent years, their complaints appear founded. Last week, the Bend City Council voted in favor of relaxing portions of the development code, including easing, or in some cases, cutting on-site parking requirements all together, as well as allowing developers more flexibility in deciding whether to add commercial space to their buildings. Under the new code, developers have to build the first floors of buildings that face a “main street” (such as Third Street, Greenwood or Franklin, for example) so that they’re “commercial-ready”—even if the developer ultimately puts housing in that portion. The code changes also added in a provision that says developers can build their buildings higher than is otherwise allowed—up to 85 feet—if at least 10% of the residential spaces are allotted for affordable housing. These are good changes, and hopefully, they’ll result in more housing being built in a city that badly needs it. They’re not without controversy and further monitoring and consideration, however. At first glance, the move to ease parking, or eliminate any provision for on-site parking, can be “shocking,” as described by Bend Planning Commission member Scott Winters during the Feb. 19 City Council meeting. But looking toward the future, in which people are increasingly less dependent on their own vehicles, this is not that shocking at all. (For the record, the BPC is in favor of the changes.) In “Parking Has Eaten American Cities,” a 2018 article on CityLab—a website “dedicated to the people who are creating the cities of the future,” author Richard Florida states, “America devotes far too

many of its precious resources to parking. This is especially troubling given that driving is in decline. For example, the share of Seattle households with a car has fallen for the first time in at least 40 years, and the percentage of U.S. high school seniors with a driver’s license is at “a record low”—down from 85.3 percent in 1996 to 71.5 percent in 2015.” The article goes on to detail the work of Eric Scharnhorst of the Research Institute for Housing America, who inventoried the parking of five American cities and calculated the cost of replacing that parking with housing or bike lanes or parks. “Measured in terms of replacement, it [parking] costs more than $35 billion in Seattle, $20 billion in New York, $17.5 billion in Philadelphia, $6 billion in Des Moines, and $711 million in Jackson [Wyoming],” Florida writes. In other words, parking, and many Americans’ apparent thinking that it’s a birthright that should be afforded to them directly in front of every building they visit, is outdated and results in the loss of other spaces we should value more—namely, in Bend’s case, housing. Another study published on the CityLab site points out that easing development codes to spur the construction of more housing, called “upzoning,” does come with other concerns. The 2019 article, “Does Upzoning Boost the Housing Supply and Lower Prices? Maybe Not,” (also penned by Richard Florida) discusses a study of zoning changes in Chicago, which found that upzoning there led to “higher, not lower, local home prices, while having no discernible impact on local housing supply.” The ultimate takeaway there is that while upzoning is intended to encourage development, it doesn’t necessarily achieve it—and that the development it does foster doesn’t tend to benefit low-income people, or those who need truly “affordable housing.” The recent code changes that make a small provision for affordable housing in the way of allowing developers to build up in exchange for adding 10% affordable units is one example of an effort to combat this, but we need even more of that type of encouragement. We support the efforts to remove barriers that will help build in the BCD—but those improvements need to make provisions that allow it to be enjoyed by all. What Bend needs most is more affordable units, not more high-end luxury development.


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HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY? Send your thoughts to editor@bendsource.com.

Letters

BEND CENTRAL DISTRICT (“BIG TOWN SMALL CITY,” 2/20)

COMPLAINTS ABOUT PROCESS LAUGHABLE

As I watch the delaying tactics of Republicans in the Oregon House and Senate with regards to SB 1530 and HB 4167 (legislation to cap and put a price on the harmful emissions generated by only the largest polluters in our state) I could almost laugh if it were not so frustrating. Now they are crowing about process, yet no bills have ever had this much work, this much input, this much public process. This legislation has been carefully crafted and amended to answer most reasonable objections. It has been worked on for more than five years, voted out of committees eight times, had four public hearings this year alone, and eight last year, a statewide tour of public townhalls including here in Bend where support for meaningful action was evident. It has gone through working groups, studies, debate, thousands of

@sourceweekly

pages of testimony and a bi-partisan Joint Committee on Carbon Reduction. Truly “unfinished business,” this legislation needs to pass. The science is clear. We are in a climate emergency and we cannot continue to “fiddle while Rome burns.” Oregon must do its part. Our air, our water, health and economy will benefit. Legislators, do your job! —Dave Calvert

NO ON TRANSPORTATION BOND

On May 19, Bend voters will be asked to approve a $190 million bond issue for “transportation improvements." If you recall the previous attempt to raise money for this purpose (the failed gas tax) you may want to recollect the reasons it failed. If you drill down to the specifics, the City is expecting you believe that this money will go to improve roads and intersections and to expand east-west corridors. More specifically, it will be focused on projects at “Murphy Road and other U.S. 97/Parkway on/off ramps, intersections at Third Street, Olney Avenue, Revere Avenue, Butler Market Road, Empire Avenue, Wilson Avenue." The one thing that these have in common is that it all occurs on the Eastside and areas where the vast majority of development is occurring and/or planned. It does not, and will not, translate into improvement in existing roads. You know, like paving, pot holes, etc. I personally live on a dirt (not even gravel) street with 11 other houses, one block from Wall Street in town. Linster Place has been there for over 100 years, receives absolutely no maintenance from the city, and most certainly won’t benefit as a result of this bond. The bottom line is that the bond issue fulfills one primary goal – enabling and facilitating the unsustainable growth in the city and subsidizing the development industry. These folks will benefit by the continued under-funding of Transportation System Development Costs that is currently artificially held down to appease developers. And make no mistake, these are the people who set growth and development policy for the city, NOT the Planning Commission or City Council, who merely go along. If you are cool with this, then vote yes on the bond. —Henry Williamson

RE: LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR FORUM (AT AT LIBERTY ARTS, 2/19)

Dear Nicole & Staff— Last night was supposed to be a Susan Orlean night. New to Bend (from Cape Cod) I switched it up feeling maybe the “Love Your Neighbor” panel was a better way to get a sense of the—my—community. The experience was a rich one. I didn’t think anywhere was more “whitish” than the Cape until I moved here. The Cape, I now realize, has a pretty rich heritage of Cape Verdeans, Brazilians, immigrants and Black heritage & Wampanoag history present. Anyway, just being present for the exchanges and conversation made me feel at home more here. Diversity isn’t just a race issue, of course, so “breaking it down” and opening up aspects of diversity is essential. I came with the mantra of “Beloved Community” first espoused by Josiah Royce and taken up by Dr. Martin Luther King. To me it is a beautiful [one] to carry in the heart. Big thanks to all! —Kathy Johnson

Letter of the Week:

Kathy—Thank you for the hand-written letter/card to the editor. I became intrigued by Royce’s term after reading it, and found this quote in looking up more information on him: “When one cannot find the ‘beloved community,’ she needs to take steps to create it and if there is not evidence of the existence of such a community then the rule to live by is To Act So As To Hasten Its Coming.” I’d like to believe our partnership in creating the Love Your Neighbor forum series ‘hastens its coming’ here in Bend… Come on in for your gift card to Palate! —Nicole Vulcan

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

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5 VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Thank you for covering the upcoming barrage of blight removal in the Bend Central District. My wife and I moved to Central Oregon in 2019 after five years in Detroit, Michigan, the epicenter of so-called “urban renewal.” While we were there, we were consistently reminded that when some folks start boasting about redevelopment, it always means that other folks will be displaced—usually long-time, low-income residents. In Detroit, the subsidized gentrification is replacing older Black residents with young white professionals moving into new lofts. In Bend, who will be hauled out when Three Sisters Inn is transformed into the next hipster heaven? What will this mean for working families and beloved businesses like Colima Market? Who are the few wealthy white men who will benefit from this facelift? Let’s connect these dots and tell the truth about how neo-liberalism works. In reality, cities and neighborhoods making a “comeback” are really collaborative, well-orchestrated, upwardly mobile strategies for wealth redistribution. Those who are trying to “make Bend great again” boast of benefits. The rest of us should demand that they start being clear about who will get left behind. —Tommy Airey

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. Opinions printed here do not constitute an editorial endorsement of said opinions. Letter of the week receives $5 to Palate!


NEWS

Darris Hurst

Mirror of Sand WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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As Bend Park and Recreation District and the City of Bend move forward with plans for a fish passage committee for Newport Dam and Mirror Pond, the age-old debate about dredging resurfaces once again. By Laurel Brauns

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end has been talking about Mirror Pond since the last time it was dredged in 1984. Yes, you read that right. The cover of the Source this week shows the debate was in full swing 20 years ago, and while the stars of this never-ending story change as the decades go by, the same debates circle endlessly around, like pond sediment—notions of “historic preservation” and taxpayer money disappearing into the murky sludge. The last time Bendites saw large community consensus around the fate of Mirror Pond was in 2015—but it didn’t last long. A majority of people who filled out an online poll at the time wanted to see a hybrid compromise between a free-flowing river and the current shallow pond in the center of Drake Park near downtown Bend. But all of that was contingent on PacifiCorp, the company that owns Newport Dam—divesting of its property. That scenario, supported by the highest number of poll respondents, fell through when PacificCorp decided not to sell the dam, leaving behind more unanswered questions around whether to dredge and restore the historic Bend landmark that sits behind it. It feels like the Bend-style debate that never ends—and after all that public process back in 2015, local leaders are now moving forward with their own process, opting to pay up for dredging... however long it takes. In 2015, the Bend City Council and Bend Park & Recreation District

come up with a new community vision for the pond—though then again, that process could potentially take an entirely different form if that's what elected officials choose to do. The MOU will come before the BPRD board on March 17 and then go on to Bend City Manager Eric King. After the entities involved sign the MOU, they can move forward with the details of the dredging project by creating an Intergovernmental Agreement, which won’t land in front of the City Council or BPRD until this summer or fall. Despite endless setbacks, both BPRD and the City are still making progress in addressing the seven goals agreed upon in 2015. Next summer, BPRD will start construction on an extension of the Deschutes River Trail from Pacific Park (next to Portland Avenue) to Drake Park. Horton said BPRD is also finishing up plans to restore the banks of the pond to a more natural state by replacing the retaining walls with vegetation. The dam is the last human-made block on the upper Deschutes River that prevents some species of trout from migrating upstream. Environmental and recreation advocates see the addition of a fish ladder at Newport Dam as a positive step toward bringing back some river-like qualities to the area, despite the fact that the river will remain artificially dammed for now. As BPRD and the City move forward with some aspects of Mirror Pond improvements, some members of Bend

Both Smith and Taylor did not return multiple requests for comment. City Councilor Bruce Abernethy cautioned against talking solely about dredging Mirror Pond, since it’s too polarizing, and said instead the community should focus on other positive aspects of the project, already in process. He believes last year’s City Council agreement was very clear that some of the money would go toward dredging— the majority even. “This resolution is grounded in the reality that the dam is going to stay,” Abernethy said. “The idea that we need to do a public process, people are just going to say they want the dam removed. They don’t recognize that these decisions have already been made by public bodies; we need to move forward.” BPRD board member Ariel Méndez disagrees. With the long-term future of the dam unresolved, he’s skeptical about dredging and is advocating for a new public process around Mirror Pond, called deliberative polling. He explained this works by randomly selecting a representative sample of people who live in Bend to come together for two or three days with access to experts on the issues. Trained facilitators make sure no single voice dominates the conversation, which leads to informed and significant opinion change, he said. While Méndez supports the fish passage, he said the potential to leave the pond “as is” is an option that has not been given adequate consideration, and it could be the best use of taxpayer dollars. He notLaurel Brauns

adopted the 2015 vision by resolution, committing to the following goals: -Retain Mirror Pond in its near historic condition -Modify the dam to function more like a river -Enhance habitat -Enable fish passage -Maintain or improve public spaces -Reduce the frequency or quantity of future sediment removal efforts -Identify funding sources other than tax dollars Then in 2018, both BPRD and the City committed $300,000 each to support dredging, according to Don Horton, executive director of BPRD. In 2019, the City agreed to pay $3 million to contribute to “historic preservation” of the pond. Horton said both parties have conditions that must be met before reaffirming their commitment to dredging. First, both entities required an update to the Mirror Pond community vision from 2015, as well as a plan allowing fish to move from above and below the dam. Both the City and BPRD are now working on a memorandum of understanding to hash out the details of a new fish ladder committee, to be run by the Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council. The MOU also calls for a public process to update the overall plans for Mirror Pond and to clarify everyone's responsibilities moving forward, according to a Dec. 3 draft of the MOU from BPRD. The group that will work on the fish ladder could be the ones to

Bend Park and Recreation District Executive Director Don Horton stands on the banks of the Deschutes River near his office at Riverbend Park.

City Council and the BPRD board disagree about spending public funds on dredging Mirror Pond. Mirror Pond Solutions, the group headed by developers Bill Smith and Todd Taylor (who own the land underneath Mirror Pond) has been pushing for the dredging project to move forward as soon as possible. MPS has a deadline of next year before its permit to dredge the pond runs out (again). They’ve already sunk over $400,000 of their own money into the deal and have been raising more, according to Horton. The total cost of the dredging project is estimated at $6.7 million and MPS wants the City, BPRD and other private entities to pitch in. Taylor also wants his construction company, Taylor Northwest, LLC, to be the lead contractor on the dredging project.

ed that the section of river near the Old Mill District was once a pond, but grew in over time, and became of the most beloved recreational areas in the city. “As an elected board member, I feel responsible to consider the ecological and financial burdens of dredging,” Méndez said. “It should be carefully scrutinized. I’ve been advised by Parks [BPRD] staff that the silt in the pond has reached equilibrium. After it was dredged in 1984, seven years later in The Bulletin there were articles asking, 'When are we going to dredge again?'" Horton said he has discussed creating a ballot measure with County Clerk Nancy Blankenship to resolve community disagreement around dredging, but she said they couldn’t do it unless it involved a bond measure.


NEWS

Room Tax Rift

The City of Bend may be losing out on hundreds of thousands of room tax dollars from unreported vacation rentals

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ata from market research firm AirDNA reveals that the City of Bend may not be getting all the tax dollars it’s entitled to from vacation rental operators. AirDNA listed 1,411 active rentals on Airbnb or VRBO within Bend city limits as of last month. Eighty-five percent, or 1,200, are reported as whole-house rentals. City of Bend data provided to the Source Weekly through a public records request in November revealed that the City was collecting transient room tax from just 965 properties—meaning the owners of hundreds of properties may not be reporting their rent-

Comparing AirDNA’s data with the City’s reveals that hundreds of Airbnb scofflaws could be shorting the City hundreds of thousands of dollars in lost revenues. Airbnb began sending its host’s taxes directly to the City in October of 2016, but the company refuses to also send the contact information for its Bend hosts—meaning the City doesn’t know which rentals have a permit and operating license and which ones don’t. Airbnb, one of a handful of web-based reservation platforms, allows anyone to operate, regardless of whether they have

Unless someone reports an illegal rental in Bend, its owners can continue to operate without consequence. al incomes to the City of Bend, nor paying the required transient room taxes. TRT revenues from short-term rentals currently bring $2 million a year into City coffers, of which 64.8% goes into the General Fund to pay for road improvements, law enforcement and other public needs—including managing Bend’s booming tourism. Vacation rental operators in Bend are required to obtain a onetime land use permit at a cost of either $693 or $1,929, depending on the property’s location. Owners must also pay a yearly operating license fee of $275 and then collect and pay a 10.4% transient room tax for each night a room is rented.

a license and land use permit from the City of Bend. This summer, the City of Portland struck a deal with the big tech giant to provide the addresses of its hosts, which Portland now uses to police rogue rentals, according to Oregon Public Broadcasting. Bend has no such deal and not much enforcement for illegal listings. The City has a “complaint-driven enforcement model,” according to Lorelei Williams, the City’s business license program manager. Unless someone reports an illegal rental, its owners can continue to operate without consequence. The City is the midst of a tax audit for short term

organizations) to write op-eds and attend local meetings supporting Airbnb. Cities including Los Angeles have taken that stance at face value and used it to crack down. In December 2018, after three years of deliberation, the Los Angeles City Council ruled that only a host’s primary residence (where they live for six months or more) can be used as an STR, according to Curbed. In May 2019, Hood River County passed a similar ordinance with a residency requirement. The county’s board of commissioners also ruled that a majority of existing STR land use permits would sunset after seven years, filtering out STR density in residential neighborhoods. When the Bend City Council passed new STR rules in 2015, it also considered sunsetting land use permits to restore close-in neighborhoods to residential use. Carrington said she got wind of the plan and led the charge to flood City Council with hundreds of letters from STR owners threatening to sue the City. “I did advise Council that I thought that it would be legally defensible to adopt regulations that made both new and existing STR permits not run with the land,” said Mary Winters, Bend city attorney. “At the time, Council chose not to do so in light of the testimony and the program it was adopting.” Kevney Dugan, CEO of Visit Bend— the entity charged with using a portion of TRT dollars to promote tourism in Bend—said the VB Board of Directors has been “extremely encouraging” of a physical audit, because it hurts the industry as a whole when some people aren’t playing by the rules. “The City is missing out. They could be leaving $700,000 on the table—why would they want to do that?” Dugan said. Williams told the Source that the City of Bend will begin to focus on compliance issues, such as illegal listings, this spring. But to do so, it will have to pay an outside audit company, instead of just getting contact information directly from Airbnb.

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By Laurel Brauns

rentals. The next step will be to focus on compliance. Airbnb has a long history of clashing with cities trying to regulate vacation rentals. Airbnb sued the City of Boston last year when Boston demanded host data from the company for enforcement purposes, according to the Boston Globe. Paris threatened to sue Airbnb in 2019 for $14 million because of illegal listings, according to Bloomberg. Susan Carrington, owner of Bend Dutch Property Management, described numerous negative experiences with Airbnb. She attended a 2016 City Council meeting in Portland during a debate over STR regulations. Airbnb had gathered dozens of local “ambassadors” (hosts) to testify at the meeting, who then told the Portland City Council they were only renting rooms in their home and needed the money to afford to live in Portland. “They slithered through by saying ‘we’ll just do rooms only,’ knowing they were going to do anything and everything,” Carrington said. According to AirDNA data, 15% of hosts in Bend rent out rooms in their primary residences. Airbnb actively encourages its hosts to use the housing affordability crisis to their advantage, according to the company’s Citizen Policy Tool Chest. Meanwhile, many of Airbnb hosts are outside investors who took advantage of the slow governmental response to STR neighborhood takeovers by flipping large swaths of middle-class housing into business opportunities, and then threatened to sue cities that challenge their “property rights.” In 2016, Airbnb hired former Bill Clinton aide Chris Lehane in an attempt to transform the company’s businesses model into a political movement. Lehane set up political action committees throughout the U.S. to support pro-Airbnb candidates for local office, according to the Washington Post. Lehane hired campaign managers in 100 cities around the world who set up “home sharing clubs,” (lobbying


FEATURE

R.I.Bee.

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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Amanda Photographic

In full protective gear, Jimmy Wilkie, owner of Broadus Bees, makes sure his hives are thriving.

Oregon lost nearly half its honey bee population from 2018 to 2019. Local honey bee experts explain the importance of doing our part to keep bees alive By Cayla Clark

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fter a poolside bee sting sent me into anaphylactic shock several years ago, I quickly labeled all stinging insects my mortal enemies. Since then, whenever a honey bee or yellow jacket stopped by a picnic to say “hello,” I’d head for the hills, screaming at the menacing party-crasher to go back home. But as I read up on the state of honey bees in Central Oregon and got to know some local beekeepers, my tune began to change. After visiting Broadus Bees in southeast Bend, I grew to admire and respect the fascinating and crucial creatures I used to run from in fear. Happy, hard-working honey bees floated around peacefully, focused on protecting their queens and completing their assigned tasks. Though unconcerned with those around them, they were unwittingly and immensely contributing to our overall quality of life. It became clear that beekeeping isn’t just fundamental to our environment and agriculture; it’s an artform. Local bees The good news: there’s a thriving beekeeping community in Central Oregon. Central Oregonians can learn to beekeep at the Tumalo Bee Academy, which

meets monthly at the Tumalo Garden Market. Those interested in beginning beekeeping can stop by The Environmental Center for classes led by members of the Central Oregon Beekeeping Association. Central Oregon Locavore offers classes in natural beekeeping. Really, those interested in keeping bees need simply Google “learn to beekeep in Bend” and a number of honey-drenched doors will instantly open.

“The honey bee population is both vital and at risk,” said Jimmy Wilkie, a master beekeeper, COBKA member and owner of Broadus Bees. He explained the issues that European honey bees face, and why it’s so imperative that humans do our part to keep them alive. “Bees are responsible for onethird of every bite we eat. If hives keep dying at such high rates, we’ll suffer as a result.” According to the Pollinator

“The honey bee population is both vital and at risk. Bees are responsible for one-third of every bite we eat. If hives keep dying at such high rates, we’ll suffer as a result.” —Jimmy Wilkie The bad news: the bees themselves are thriving far less than the local community of keepers. Oregon lost a shocking 48% of its bee population from 2018-19, as confirmed by the PNW Honey Bee Survey Reports. Colony collapse disorder has been widely reported, but local bee experts say that in Oregon, that massive loss has another apparent culprit.

Partnership—the world’s largest nonprofit supporting the health of all pollinators—roughly one-third of our total agricultural production relies on the European honey bee. “Bees aren’t just responsible for making honey,” Wilkie said. “They pollinate a huge portion of our food supply. If we don’t have healthy bees, we don’t have healthy food.” This

concern is further confirmed by a 2018 U.S. Food and Drug Administration report, which states, “This agricultural benefit of honey bees is estimated to be between 10 and 20 times the total value of honey and beeswax. In fact, bee pollination accounts for about $15 billion in added crop value.” Wilkie explained that while honey bees are essential to crop pollination, they also feast on the pollen themselves. “Bees get most of their protein from pollen,” he explained. “It’s called ‘bee bread.’ They also get vitamins and minerals from the pollen they bring back to the hive. If a bee is collecting pollen from a flower that’s been treated with a chemical pesticide, it can do serious harm to the bee and to the colony as a whole.” He currently looks after 90 hives of Russian honey bees, which are, as he explained, an ideal variety based on their cleanliness. “There are two groups of bees that I manage here in Bend,” he said. “I’ve got 50 hives in one area and 40 hives in another. I breed Russian honey bees, because they’ve got this characteristic where they groom each other more often and pick mites off of each other. Subsequently, I have to treat them less


Amanda Photographic

Bee data The catastrophic bee loss is backed by data from Dr. Dewey M. Caron, a retired affiliate professor in the Department of Horticulture at Oregon State University. Currently, Caron is a member of the Willamette Valley Beekeepers Association, and although retired, regularly conducts informative talks on honey bees and beekeeping. In a testimony submitted to the Oregon state legislature in 2019, Caron detailed his support for House Bill 3058, which would ban the use of chlorpyrifos, a harmful agricultural pesticide. “I write to support passage of HB 3058 that would ban purchase and sale of the insecticide chlorpyrifos, and restrict use of neonicotinoids to trained individuals by licensing them as restricted use pesticides,” he wrote. “Neonicotinoids have been found in residue studies of common foods consumed in Oregon, taken from our own outlets. I strongly urge the passage of HB 3058 to help protect the health of Oregon citizens and our environment, especially our highly vulnerable honey bee pollinator populations.” While mentioned in Caron’s testimony, HB 3058 failed to address

neonicotinoids, which remain the most widely used pesticide in the world. In May, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced that 12 commonly used neonicotinoids would be canceled effective in 2020—four of which were deemed acutely toxic to bees (meaning that after exposure, bees died within 48-96 hours). These cancellations were part of a 2018 settlement agreement with several concerned environmental groups, according to Bloomberg Environment. As of now, chlorpyrifos remain legal to use throughout the U.S. The spiking deaths of European honey bees isn’t the only concern as far as this class of chemical pesticide goes. “It’s important to understand the importance of keeping bees alive, but also of the risks involved in using pesticides in hives and on agriculture as far as human consumption goes,” said Wilkie. Oregon lawmakers debated over the proposed bill before it ultimately died alongside half of the state’s honeybees. HB 3058 called upon the Oregon Department of Agriculture to take a look at the safety of chlorpyrifos, an insecticide that has been scientifically confirmed to cause health problems in exposed children. In 2015, the Obama administration agreed to ban the pesticide after studies confirmed that it caused lowered IQ and cognitive function in developing children (illustrated by many studies, including an in-depth examination conducted by the National Center for Biotechnology Information in 2012). The pesticide was first patented in 1966, and is currently a registered treatment for nearly 50 crops throughout Oregon—many of which are pollinated by bees. In 2017, the Trump Administration overturned Amanda Photographic

Jimmy Wilkie, owner of Broadus Bees, lifts a frame out of its box to inspect his bees.

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Jimmy Wilkie’s daughter, Delilah June, happily supports local bees.

this decision, prompting public outcry and a lawsuit challenging the U.S. EPA. Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum joined the lawsuit in 2019. For now, despite apparent risks, chlorpyrifos use will be “studied” until 2022, when its safety will be reevaluated in court. The mighty mite Agricultural pesticides can harm bees, kill colonies and contaminate beeswax and honey, leading to serious health concerns. However, some pesticides are necessary in the survival of bees, and making this distinction will help prevent extinction. Interestingly enough, the majority of the state’s recent bee loss is attributed to the invasive Varroa mite, not to the overturned House bill. Terry Holm, a journeyman-level beekeeper in Stayton, Oregon, and graduate of the Apprentice Beekeeper program at Oregon State University, explained the importance of treating hives infected with mites naturally, and avoiding dangerous pesticides whenever possible. “Oregon lost almost half of its bees last year, mostly because people don’t know how to treat Varroa mites and the diseases they cause,” Holm informed. “Varroa mites cause the biggest percentage of hive death here in Oregon. I only treat mites with natural products; Apiguard or ApiVarLife, which are derived from thyme, or oxalic acid which is derived from rhubarb and spinach. It’s important to remember to test for mites, treat the mites, and then retest to see if the treatment worked. You can’t just glance at your hive and say, ‘Well, I don’t see mites.’ If you do see mites in your hive, your hive is so over-populated that it’s probably dead already.” Holm explained the importance of communication when it comes to local beekeepers and their neighbors. “As far as pesticides, they can be a major danger if the directions aren’t followed,” she said. “If you have neighbors that spray shrubs, flowers or trees that are blooming, and your bees are attracted to them, it can be a major problem. Farmers want the pollinators, and they have to know not to spray fungicides or

pesticides at the same time their crops are blooming. The problem occurs when you have a neighbor that doesn’t know you have bees, or hasn’t followed the directions about the right time to spray or apply the pesticide. Most people realize our pollinators are in trouble and want to help. Let everyone around you know that you have bees! Suggest planting pollinator-friendly flowers, and ask them kindly not to spray pesticides when things are in bloom. A gifted honey sample goes a long way.” Both Wilkie and Holm encourage those interested in beekeeping to explore the vital profession (or hobby, as the case may be) and get educated about the importance of keeping honey bees mite-free, pesticide-free and alive through the bitter Central Oregon winters. “Beekeeping is not a cheap hobby, but if you want to do it you have to stay on top of the mites,” Holm urged. “It takes a little time and effort once a month, or every other month, to keep your hives alive. It’s very similar to having any other pet or livestock, you have to have rabies shots for your dogs and treat them for fleas to keep them happy and healthy.” “Come down to the Environmental Center the third Tuesday of every month at 5pm,” Wilkie added. “I lead a discussion for beginners; it’s a totally judgment-free zone to ask any and all questions. We’ve got a couple of fun upcoming events to check out. Utilize local resources! It’s a fascinating hobby, and it’s an important one. If we keep local pollinators alive and increase the local pollinating population, it’s only good and healthy for the environment. The more bees, the better.” Bees and Brews

Tue., March 10, 6pm. Initiative Brewing 424 NW 5th St., Redmond

March COPKA Meeting

Tue., March 24, 6-7:30pm Beginner’s Corner at 5:30pm Bend Environmental Center 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend cobeekeeping.org/events

VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

with chemicals. This means less residual chemicals in beeswax, which is healthier for the bees and those consuming the product. I use oxalic acid, which naturally occurs in fruits and vegetables in smaller amounts. It’s an organic chemical.” He explained that he uses this chemical to vaporize the hive when he needs to, rather than leaving “nasty chemical strips inside the hives for months at a time.” Despite Wilkie’s success keeping bees alive in Central Oregon, many hobbyists and professional beekeepers have been experiencing CCD at devastating rates.


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 10


SOURCE PICKS WEDNESDAY

2/26

FRIDAY

2/26 – 3/3

2/28

SATURDAY

2/29

AHELP BURLESQUE BENEFIT A LOCAL NONPROFIT

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FRIDAY

2/28

kbongmusic.com

Submitted

UMPHREY’S MCGEE 20 YEARS OF ROCKING OUT!

KBONG & SENSI TRAILS REGGAE KEYBOARD STAR

The band’s six members communicate with each other expertly on stage and in the studio. At any moment, heavy guitars could give way to powerful blues as the band members explore instrumental virtuosity and impressive song-craft. Wed., Feb. 26, 7pm. Midtown Ballroom, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $25.

THURSDAY

KBong is a multi-instrumental artist, best known for his role in reggae band Stick Figure. KBong has solidified his place as one of the top keyboard players in today’s current reggae scene. Sensi Trails playfully blurs the lines between Cali reggae, surf and psychedelic rock. Sat, Feb., 29, 8-11:45pm. The Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $15.

2/27

SATURDAY

2/29

Submitted

2020 WOMEN OF THE YEAR AWARDS CELEBRATE WOMEN!

Submitted

TOMMY CASTRO AND THE PAINKILLERS SOUL, BLUES AND R&B

The Women of the Year Awards showcases inspirational stories and extraordinary achievements by formally recognizing and celebrating the outstanding contributions of Central Oregon women. They honor exceptional individuals of all ages, of diverse cultures and roles, celebrating their power to spark change within the community. Fri., Feb. 28, 7-8:30pm. Eagle Mountain Event Center, 2221 NE Third St., Suite 100., Bend. $40-$50.

FRIDAY

Whether he’s playing the funkiest soul grooves or blues, this legendary soul giant knows how to fire up a crowd. Over the course of his still-unfolding career, the guitarist, vocalist and songwriter has released 15 eclectic albums. Thu., Feb. 27, 7-10:30pm. The Belfry, 302 E. Main St., Sisters. $20.

THURSDAY

2/27

MONKLESS’ GIRL SCOUT COOKIE PAIRING BELGIAN ALES AND DO-SI-DOS

2/28

ALBERT CUMMINGS GUITAR VIRTUOSO

Cummings’ years of experience and masterful guitar wizardry have drawn comparisons to legends Freddie King, Jimi Hendrix and his own musical inspiration, Stevie Ray Vaughan. If you can appreciate a truly gifted player, you won’t want to miss this live show. Fri., Feb. 28, 9-11pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $18.

FRIDAY

2/28

ART WALK IN SISTERS 4FINEFRIDAY ART, FOOD AND FESTIVITIES! TH

It’s Thin Mint season yet again! Indulge your nostalgic side with a grown-up twist, as Monkless offers a pairing flight of Girl Scout Cookies and tasty Belgian Ales! Thu., Feb. 27, 4pm. Monkless Belgian Ales Brasserie, 803 SW Industrial Way, Bend. $15.

Enjoy beautiful art, good company, refreshments, music, demonstrations, hors d’œuvres and family-friendly fun during and following the downtown stroll. Visit with local artists and explore their work! Fri., Feb. 28, 4-7pm. Downtown Sisters. Free.

LIVE FROM LAUREL CANYON March 5

WE SHALL OVERCOME March 12

Submitted

FILM SCREENING: SOUFRA POWERFUL DOCUMENTARY

Inspiring film covering the life of Mariam Shaar, a Lebanese refugee. Against all odds she launches a successful catering company with a diverse team of fellow female refugees, and together they help heal the wounds of war through the unifying power of food. Sat., Feb. 29, 6:30pm. Bend Church United Methodist, 680 NW Bond St., Bend. Free.

TUESDAY

3/3

LOOKING BEYOND OUR DIFFERENCES SEEING THE HUMANITY IN EACH OF US Oregon Supreme Court Justice Adrienne Nelson will talk about how being the first black valedictorian at her high school, and serving as the first African American on the Oregon Supreme Court, have informed her focus on leadership, diversity and inclusion. Tue., March 3, 6pm. Wille Hall, Coates Campus Center, COCC Campus Center, Bend. Free.

IRISH RAMBLING HOUSE March 16

MOSTLY KOSHER March 19

VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Bend Burlesque is gearing up for a donation-based show with proceeds going to help a local nonprofit. Enjoy an evening of raucous (adult) entertainment while giving back to the community. Suggested donation $5-$500. Fri., Feb. 28, 8-11pm. The Capitol, 190 NW Oregon Ave., Bend. By donation.


S WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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SOUND

February Selections

February is kind of a weird month where you’re stuck in limbo between winter and spring. It’s definitely not my favorite. But this year it seems that musicians sought to kick out those February blues, because there were a ton of good tunes put out this month. Let’s take a look at some of my favorites from the last month with this round of Source Material.

LOCALS' BIN

Amy Castano

“Lonely For You” – Alicia Viani The first single from the singer/songwriter’s upcoming album does not disappoint. Alicia Viani (along with Mark Karwan) dive into the idea of emotional distance. While your bodies might physically be near the other, is your heart just as close? “My heart’s in a tangle, I need comfort from ya,” pleads Viani in a croon. It’s a heartbreaking feeling recognizing that distance, and Viani’s writing perfectly captures that fear. Look for the Bendite’s album coming this spring.

Five for the Rotation “Breathe Deeper” – Tame Impala “Dream Boy” – Beach Bunny “Expectations” – Katie Pruitt “A Thousand Words” – Jay Som “Bad Algebra” – Pictish Trail

Sourc e Mat erial

By Isaac

Biehl

NATIONAL BEATS

“And It’s Still Alright” – Nathaniel Rateliff Nathaniel Rateliff is one of the best at music right now, and that’s the simple truth. The Night Sweats’ frontman is on his own during “And It’s Still,” marking his third solo album. The project goes deep beyond the surface as it comes following his divorce and death of friend Richard Swift. It’s a somber and introspective collection of acoustic tunes as Rateliff Stax ponders regret, grief and looking on the bright side. Recorded mostly in Oregon at Swift’s studio, Rateliff’s songwriting chops are on incredible levels throughout the 10 songs.

“UNLOCKED” – Denzel Curry & Kenny Beats Sheesh. Denzel Curry might only be 25 years old, but the young Floridian is absolutely on a heat check right now. Following last year’s “Zuu,” an impeccable album I might add, he goes and makes a new project with incredible producer Kenny Beats. The two make for a knockout punch of a combo—the album seriously might make you run through a wall. “UNLOCKED” has an intensity about it that is always riveting to hear on a rap album, and Curry does Kenny’s beats justice by delivering on the mic.

Loma Vista


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Polecat’s Last Hoorah Bellingham’s favorite Americana band is hanging up its hat after 10 years By Isaac Biehl

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Courtesy Volcanic Theatre Pub

Don’t miss the chance to see Polecat doing what they do best for a final time in Bend.

T

en years is a long time to be doing anything. Even only after a year in, that thing can become an integral part of your life. For Polecat, a folky-bluegrass band from Bellingham, Washington that thing was performing music for people that made them happy. Now, after a decade-long run as a beloved group up and down the west coast, Polecat is officially retiring from the music circuit and closing out with four final shows in March. The five-piece will kick things off in Bend on March 4 at the Volcanic Theatre Pub, along with stops in Portland and Seattle before going out with a bang in their hometown of Bellingham. “Bend has just always been—I feel like since the first time we played, Bend just kind of gets us. It’s just always been killer and the crowds have been so great over the years,” says frontman Aaron Guest. “A few of us, if we ever moved, anyway, Bend would have been a contender for sure.” Polecat’s first booking agent was actually Parallel 44 Presents’ Gabe Johnson, a Bend-based musician and concert booker. The band played many times in Bend, including stints at McMenamins, 4 Peaks Music Festival, Volcanic, Pickin’ and Paddlin’ and more, so the ties to Central Oregon are strong. Thinking of where the band is at now, Guest fondly remembered the group’s beginnings starting off playing Monday nights in a taproom in Bellingham. “We started with a weekly up here, at Boundary Bay Brewery. I had a weekly piano gig that I had just started for a few months—and actually I still have that gig,” recalls Guest. “I wanted to approach this band as a potential professional endeavor. I took it seriously from day one and everyone I brought on board I kind of handpicked from the scene in Bellingham. I ended up with some of my absolute favorite performers. I knew it was going to be special just because of that.” For six years, Polecat was playing around 100 shows a year. Now, the band members are turning to other personal projects. Guest will focus on studio work and his solo music, playing as “A.guest.” Fiddle player Cayley Schmid is becoming more involved with producing

music festivals and concerts in Bellingham. Drummer Karl Olson plays percussion for Polyrhythmics. Guitarist Jeremy Elliott now lives in Portland and is diving into the music scene there. And bassist Richard Reeves is living on the San Juan Islands in an art commune, restoring wooden boats and playing music. “We’ve all kind of grown more into our own personal lives and endeavors pretty naturally. After 10 years of us five, we never did any subs or cancellations or anything, it was always us five,” says Guest. “That’s why when we decided when we wanted to end it, we wanted to really do it. Not fizzle out. It feels right. Like it’s our choice.” Over the past decade, Polecat released three studio albums, one live album, an EP and two singles. And you can’t forget about the countless memories or shows the band experienced with fans. “The purpose of our music, we’ve always felt, is to bring joy and to make people move. To make people smile. It’s really, for the most part, happy kind of triumphant music,” Guest says. “To have people react to our original music like that over the years has always been really special. It was never lost on us as far as getting to connect with our audience through original music like this. We hope that people have great memories of Polecat shows.” 10 Polecat Songs for 10 Years (chosen by me, in no particular order) “Can’t Run Can’t Hide” “To the River” “Four Leaf Clover” “So Easy” “Steeplechase” “Domino” “Tell Me Show Me” “Skankles” “Devil on My Shoulder” “Marmot” Polecat Farewell Show w/ Alicia Viani Band Wed., Mar. 4, 8pm Volcanic Theatre Pub 70 SW Century Dr., Bend Bendticket.com $12/adv., $15/door

DOCTORS BYRON MAAS, LAUREN STAYER, ERIN MILLER, TABITHA JOHNSTON, MEGAN KINNEAR & GINNY KUNCH

BENDVETERINARYCLINIC.COM 360 NE QUIMBY AVE 382-0741

?

David Guarraia, MD St. Charles Heart and Lung Center

THE SUGAR POISONING OF AMERICA UNDERSTANDING THE LINK BETWEEN YOUR DIET AND YOUR HEALTH

Mar. 16 | 6:30 - 7:30 P.M. Father Luke’s Room - McMenamins, Bend

FREE ADMISSION

Dietary sugars are one of the biggest health threats in America. Join board-certified cardiologist Dr. David Guarraia to better understand our troubling consumption of sweetened food and learn more about the steps you can take to prevent chronic conditions like diabetes and heart disease, and improve your overall health. Dr. David Guarraia is the director of cardiac rehabilitation at the St. Charles Heart and Lung Center. Guarraia joined St. Charles Health System in November 2018, and brings with him an interest in preventive cardiology in an attempt to improve long-term outcomes and quality of life with fewer medications or procedures. He is currently the principle investigator of a low-carb diet study at St. Charles Bend. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. First come, first served, arrive early. Food and beverage sales help support this lecture series.

stcharleshealthcare.org/doctalks

VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Caring for your pets 7 days a week / Urgent Care


LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE

CALENDAR WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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Tickets Available on Bendticket.com

The Lot Wednesday Open Mic Night Everyone

26 Wednesday The Astro Lounge Bingo w/ Janney to benefit Oregon Wild Winners take home half the pot, the rest goes to Oregon Wild! 6-8pm. $1-5 per game.

Bledsoe Family Winery “Wine” Down

Wednesday’s with KC Flynn Long time local favorite KC Flynn plays an acoustic set in an intimate setting. 6-8pm. No cover.

from brave amateurs to seasoned professionals. Covers, originals, instrumentalists or poets. Hosted by local musicians. 6-8pm. No cover.

Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House Kurt Silva

Live Kurt’s musical influences were the some of country music’s pioneers. 6:30-8:30pm. No cover.

27 Thursday

Brasada Ranch Winter Songwriters Series - Coyote Willow Please join us for an evening of music. Ranch House is a casual and family-friendly. Reservations are recommended! 6-8pm.

7th Street Brew House Bow Wow Bingo

Cabin 22 Locals Night w/ UKB Trivia It’s fun and

The Astro Lounge Rockin’ Robin Karaoke

free to play! Enjoy Central Oregon pint specials, all day, all night! Prizes include Cabin 22 gift cards! Team up with friends join in this week. 7pm.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.

Craft Kitchen and Brewery Comedy Open

Mic Come watch local comics work on new material and people try stand up comedy for the first time. Sign up 7:30pm, show starts at 8pm. 18+. Free.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your goto karaoke tune? 8:30pm. Immersion Brewing Geeks Who Drink Pub

Trivia Win fun prizes and challenge your friends on obscure knowledge while enjoying beer and delicious food. Come early for hoppy hour. 6-8pm. Free.

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Rockin’ Robin

Karaoke Rockin’ Robin takes our stage, running Bend’s #1 karaoke show. 7-11pm. No cover.

Great food, wonderful brews and a whole lot of fun! Benefitting the BrightSide Animal Center in Redmond. 6:30pm. Sing your favorites on a rockin’ good system, every Thursday! 9pm-1am. No cover.

The Belfry Tommy Castro and the Painkillers Castro's aggressive, inspired attack on vocals and guitar is phenomenal. 7pm. $20. Bridge 99 Brewery Thursday Trivia Night

Come play our genuine and original trivia. Enjoy great brews and food truck fare. 6:30-8:30pm. Free.

Cabin 22 The Abluestics Acoustic duo & trio of old time blues. 7:30-10pm. No cover.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.

Currents at the Riverhouse Riverhouse Music Series Highlighting local Central Oregon talent and genres ranging from bluegrass, acoustic, indie, blues, jazz, singles and duos. 7-9pm. No cover.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your go-

to karaoke tune? 8:30pm.

Level State Beerhouse Bend Comedy Pub

Trivia Free to play, prizes to win and all ages until 9pm! Assemble a team or go at it alone, test your knowledge against our fun rounds. 7pm. No cover.

M&J Tavern Wed Night Open Mic All musicians

welcome. Bring your instruments and your friends. Everyone else come on by and support the local music scene. 21+. 6pm. No cover.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke

Come sing your heart out every Wednesday night at Maverick’s! 9pm. No cover.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Shady GroOove A charismatic blend of genres conveyed through violin, keyboards and the rhythmic drive of bass and drums. 7-10pm. No cover.

Midtown Ballroom Umphrey's McGee This world-famous band has been rocking out for over 20 years! The band's six members will make sure you're in for an evening of music you won't soon forget. 7pm. $25.

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Live Electric Jam with Jeff Leslie Local musician Jeff Leslie hosts our electric jam night! 7:30-9:30pm. No cover.

LOGE Entrada Open Mic Night All are welcome!

Poetry and comedy are welcome too. 6-9pm. Free.

Northside Bar & Grill Geezer Rock Rock music! 7:30pm. No cover.

River’s Place Heyukekas The Heyukekas play

an eclectic mix of reggae, soul, blues and folk punk. Light hearted and positive sounds, aimed to uplift your spirit. 6-8pm. No cover.

Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy Open Mic All

performance types are welcome! Each performer will have 5 minutes. Ages 21+ 7pm.

Silver Moon Brewing Trivia on the Moon!

Prizes to 1st and 2nd place teams! 7-9pm. Free.

The Bite Comedy Night at The Bite! This month’s headliner is Derek Sheen. 6:30-8:30pm.

The Capitol Bass in the Basement SZN 2, EP 4:

Chase Manhattan + Friends 21+ with ID. Featuring the talents of Chase Manhattan, Welter Weight, ¥oko and Tphunk. 10pm. $10.

cuddly mess of insecurities, a gifted storyteller, an actor and writer. He’s become a favorite among comedy fans all over! 8-10pm. $8/adv., $10/door.

Silver Moon Brewing Fair Trade Boogy Local funk/jam band includes John Cardwell on guitar, Conner Bennett on guitar, Patrick Pearsol on bass and Belong Vancouver on drums! 9-11:30pm. $5.

The Commons NPT Benefit for Haelen House Come join us for an evening of song in the round in support of Haelen House. Judi Seger and Fiona Christoe will be the soothing mist around the firestorm of Twig. Family-friendly! 7-9pm. No cover.

The Capitol DJ Theclectik Resident DJ mixing all styles from hip hop, R&B, remixes, throwbacks, currents and mash-ups. 10pm. No cover.

The Lot Appaloosa A local Americana band which

Moonlight Live in the Saloon Their love of music and stage banter is infectious. 7-9pm. No cover.

plays new folk and old country music in a rootsy, raw and authentic configuration. 6-8pm. No cover.

28 Friday The Brown Owl Blue Flamez, The HardChords and MarVan Award Winning Native American Hip Hop group The Blue Flamez, with The HardChords, who will open the show with beats and instrument infused poetry. 8pm-1am. No cover. Cabin 22 Devils Duo Folk, bluegrass duo! 7:3010pm. No cover.

Checkers Pub Derek Michael Marc Derek and

the band play the blues and variety. You won’t want to miss this weekend! 8-11:30pm. No cover.

Craft Kitchen & Brewery Abstract Acrylic Paint Night at Craft Kitchen & Brewery Fee includes supplies. No experience necessary! Paint your masterpiece, and enjoy some delicious food and drink (sold separately). Ages 15+. 8-10pm. $30. Hub City Bar & Grill DJ Chris DJ music from the 70s to today! 9pm. No cover.

Lava Lanes Karaoke Night Come sing with us! 8pm-Midnight. No cover.

Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House Burnin’

Volcanic Theatre Pub Albert Cummings at Volcanic Cummings masterful guitar wizardry has drawn comparisons to iconic axe legends Albert King, Jimi Hendrix and even his own musical inspiration, Stevie Ray Vaughan. 9-11pm. $18.

29 Saturday Broken Top Bottle Shop Call Down Thunder Newly formed Grateful Dead tribute band featuring Eli Madden, Dave Pettibone, Sunshine and Jason Plankey! 7-9:30pm. No cover. Cabin 22 Eric Leadbetter Band Americana rock! 7:30-10pm. No cover. Checkers Pub Derek Michael Marc Derek and

the band play the blues and variety. You won’t want to miss this weekend! 8-11:30pm. No cover.

The Domino Room Sugarshack Sessions Presents KBONG & Sensi Trails KBONG is a multi-instrumental artist who is well known for his role in reggae band Stick Figure. He has solidified his place as one of the top keyboard players in today’s current Reggae scene. 8-11:45pm. $15.

M&J Tavern Night Channels & Dr Green

Dreams Rock music and debauchery from this year’s best local band and their co-horts, trip hop especials, Dr Green Dreams. 9pm. No cover.

Double J Saloon Comedian Derek Sheen at Double J Saloon Derek Sheen is a cuddly mess of insecurities and a gifted storyteller, actor and writer! 8-10pm. $8/adv., $10/door.

Northside Bar & Grill James Dean Rock

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Rockin’ Robin

music! 8:30pm. $3.

On Tap Live Music with Jordan Wolfe Join us in our heated taproom for free live music featuring Jordan Wolfe. 6-8pm. No cover.

Submitted

Karaoke Rockin’ Robin takes our stage, running Bend’s #1 karaoke show. 8pm-12:30am. No cover.

Lava Lanes Karaoke Night Come sing with us! 8pm-Midnight. No cover.

LOGE Entrada Live Music Come enjoy local

beer, wine and cider and listen to some of the PNW’s top talents. Family-friendly event, and dogs welcome on leash! 6-8pm. No cover.

M&J Tavern Lighterlights Leap Day Celebration

Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic Join

Leap into the evening on a day of magic and charm with one of Bend’s biggest and best cover bands bringing you current alternative and modern folk covers. 9pm. No cover.

us for open mic every Wednesday. 6pm.

River’s Place Bingo! Have fun, win cash prizes

and support a local non-profit organization. 6-8pm. Cards $1-$5.

Northside Bar & Grill James Dean Rock music! 8:30pm. $3.

Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke Every

On Tap Live Music with Clyde McGee Join us in

Wednesday night! 8pm. No cover.

our heated taproom for free live music featuring Clyde McGee. 6-8pm. No cover.

Silver Moon Brewing UM Pre-Party w. Ike

Willis, Marcus Rezak & The Brothers The music of Frank Zappa & Marcus Rezak directly before Umphrey’s McGee at Midtown Bend. Performed and led by Zappa Guitarist Ike Willis and guitarist Marcus Rezak. 5-8pm. $7.

The Outfitter Bar at Seventh Mountain Resort Heller Highwater Heller Highwater

playing swing, R&B and country covers! Enjoy great apps while sitting by the fire at 7th Mountain resort next to the ice rink. Don’t forget to make happy hour! 3:30-6pm. No cover.

Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill Texas Hold ‘em Poker Grab a seat early! 7pm. $20 buy in.

The Capitol T.S.O.L T.S.O.L. is coming back to

celebrate 40 years! 7:30pm. $10/adv., $15/door.

Seven Nightclub Comedian Derek Sheen A

Coyote Willow comes to Brasada Ranch on Wed., Feb. 26 at 6pm.

Submitting an event is free and easy.

River’s Place Leftslide Take bluesy rock with left-handed slide guitar, add some groovy reggae inspired backbeats. 7-9pm. No cover.

Add your event to our calendar at bendsource.com/submitevent


LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT

Submitted

Silver Moon Brewing ELECTRIBE - Thom,

Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke Every Wednesday night! 8pm. No cover.

Mark Brody, Caputo and Daners DJ ChellyBean is at it again, teaming up with Mark Brody and bringing talented DJs to the dance floor! 9pm-2am. $5.

Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill Texas Hold

genres, remixes and mashups. 10pm. No cover.

‘em Poker Join us for Poker Night upstairs at The Saloon! First hand dealt at 7pm, so grab a seat early! 7pm. $20 buy in.

The Commons Cafe and Taproom The

The Lot Wednesday Open Mic Night Come prac-

The Lot Bobby Lindstrom Do you love local live music but prefer to be in bed by 6pm? Come enjoy live music and a tasty dinner from our food truck offerings. 3-5pm. No cover.

Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House Olivia

tice your lyrics and feel the support. Hosted by local musicians. 6-8pm. No cover.

Whippoorwill Songwriter Series Featuring Corey & Whitney Parnell and Pete Kartsounes. 7pm. $5.

Harms Live in the Saloon Olivia is following in her mothers footsteps and making music her full-time career. 6:30-8:30pm. No cover.

The Moose Lodge Country Dance Night with The Dance Ranch We offer a variety of line dancing and swing with all sorts of other partner dancing as well. 6-10pm. Free.

5 Thursday 7th Street Brew House Bow Wow Bingo

Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House Burnin’

Cards are $1 each for the first 2 games and $2 each for the last 2 games. Benefitting the BrightSide Animal Center in Redmond. 6:30pm.

Moonlight Live in the Saloon Their love of music and stage banter is infectious. 7-9pm. No cover.

Volcanic Theatre Pub Sleepless Truckers,

The Shining Dimes and Johnny Bourbon Come juke, jump and swing to three country artists in one night. The Honky Tonk of Sleepless Truckers, Alt Country of The Shining Dimes, and the punk country of Johnny Bourbon. 8pm-midnight. No cover.

1 Sunday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.

Hub City Bar & Grill Open Mic All welcome to sing or play an instrument, just come on in and get on Gordy’s signup sheet. 3-6pm. No cover. McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Cascade School Of Music Rock Band Showcase Cascade School of Music presents Rock U in their first Rock Showcase of the year. Four bands comprised of young rockers (ages 13-18) under the direction of Nathan Wegner. 5-8pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Bobby Lindstrom Blues and rock music! 6pm. No cover.

River’s Place Sunday Funday Trivia + Happy

Hour Come by to play at River’s Place Taproom and Food Cart Yard. 4-6pm. Free to play.

Silver Moon Brewing Not Cho’ Grand-

ma’s Bingo! Not Cho’ Grandma’s Bingo is back! 10:30am-1pm. No cover.

Sisters Saloon Sisters Saloon Open Mic Night

Open Mic at Sisters Saloon hosted by Bend musician, Victor Johnson. Covers and originals, all ages welcome. . Free.

Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill Paul Eddy Bedell Artist and local troubadour fills your cup with memories and forgotten gems. Every other Sunday, 3-5pm. No cover.

2 Monday The Astro Lounge Open Mic hosted by The

Harris Blake Band First timers, get your feet wet! Pros, test out your new stuff. Its relaxed and super supportive of your craft! 8-11:59pm. No cover.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.

Cloverdayle, country music duo, comes to McMenamins on Thu., March 5 at 7pm! No cover!

Northside Bar & Grill Blaine Cameron Acoustic! 6pm. No cover.

On Tap The Bluegrass Collective A weekly

gathering of local bluegrass musicians, sharing their passion for bluegrass and old time music with those in attendance. 6-8pm. No cover.

Riff - Craft Food & Beverage Taproom

Open Mic at Riff Join us to enjoy some great local music. 6-8pm. No cover.

The Capitol Open Mic Nite Poets, singer/songwriters, acoustic, electric, stand-up comedians, emcees. No full bands, please! 7:30-11:30pm. Free. The Lot Bingo For a Cause 50/50 split each round between the bingo winner and the rotating local non-profit organizations. 6-8pm. No cover.

Bend Golf & Country Club First Wednesday Jazz Enjoy live jazz along with great food at a premier club. 6-8pm. $10. Bledsoe Family Winery “Wine” Down

Wednesday’s with KC Flynn Long time local favorite KC Flynn plays an acoustic set in an intimate setting. 6-8pm. No cover.

Brasada Ranch Winter Songwriters Series Justin Lavik Please join us for an evening of music and dinner. Reservations recommended! 6-8pm. Cabin 22 Locals Night w/ UKB Trivia Prizes include Cabin 22 gift cards. 7pm.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.

Craft Kitchen and Brewery Super Fight Mic

Qualifier This is Central Oregon’s only competitive Open Mic. Comics battle for audience votes and a place in the final round! 18+. 8-10pm. Free.

3 Tuesday The Astro Lounge Tuesday Trivia Prizes, drink specials and a mental challenge. 8-10pm. Free.

Cabin 22 Tequila Taco Tunes-Day Local musical

talent, paired with $6 House Altos Margaritas & Famous Pork Verde Tacos. No cover.

Craft Kitchen and Brewery Comedy Open

Mic Come watch local comics work out new material and try stand up comedy! Free to watch and perform. 18+. 8-10pm. Free.

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Scott Fox Hosts -

Acoustic Open Mic Local musical artist Scott Fox hosts this fun event with great local talent. 7:30-10pm. Free.

The Commons Cafe Storytellers Open Mic

Sign up starts at 5pm. 6-8pm.

The Lot Trivia Tuesday Bring your team or join one. A rotating host quizzes you in six different categories. 6-8pm. Free.

4 Wednesday

Cabin 22 Comedy Night at Cabin 22! Rotation of four local comedians every week! Hosted by Katy Ipock. 7-9pm. Free.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.

Currents at the Riverhouse Riverhouse

Music Series Focuses on bluegrass, acoustic, indie, blues, jazz. 7-9pm. No cover.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your goto karaoke tune? 8:30pm. LOGE Entrada Open Mic Night All are welcome! Come play some music in a cool living room setting, with no pressure! Poetry and comedy are welcome as well. 6-9pm. Free. McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your goto karaoke tune? 8:30pm. Immersion Brewing Geeks Who Drink Pub

Northside Bar & Grill Corrupted Kin Local

Trivia Win fun prizes and challenge your friends on obscure knowledge. 6-8pm. No cover.

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Rockin’ Robin

Karaoke Rockin’ Robin takes our stage, running Bend’s #1 karaoke show. 7-11pm. No cover.

Level State Beerhouse Bend Comedy Pub

Trivia Free to play, prizes to win and all ages until 9pm! 7pm. No cover.

M&J Tavern Wed Night Open Mic Bring your instruments and friends. 21 and over. 6pm. No cover. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke Come sing your heart out! 9pm. No cover.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Slade and The Hatchet Maximum rock n’ roll delivered in a sexy black Cadillac. Come and dance! 7-10pm. No cover. us for open mic every Wednesday. 6pm.

Oregon Wild Winners take home half the pot, the rest goes to Oregon Wild! 6-8pm. $1-5 per game.

Sing your favorites on a rockin’ good system, every Thursday! 9pm-1am. No cover.

Cloverdayle Since the birth of Cloverdayle in 2008, Chad and Rachel Hamar have had a relentless determination to bring their brand of country music to the masses in a grassroots way. 7-10pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic Join

The Astro Lounge Bingo w/ Janney to benefit

The Astro Lounge Rockin’ Robin Karaoke

River’s Place Bingo! Have fun, win cash prizes

acoustic trio playing alternative and classic rock covers. 7:30pm. No cover.

Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy Open Mic

All performance types are welcome! Each performer will have 5 minutes. Signup by 7:20pm. Ages 21+ 7pm.

Silver Moon Brewing Trivia on the Moon!

Bring your team and come down. Prizes to 1st and 2nd place teams! 7-9pm. Free.

The Capitol PRGRM Sequence 0.8 - Dark Vel-

vet/Thumbprint Collective/Goleyeth PRGRM is a community driven event, uniting and strengthening our underground electronic scene. 9pm.

The Lot Victor Johnson Johnson finds inspiration spending time amidst the many mountains, rivers, lakes, and trees in Bend. 6-8pm. No cover.

The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse Fireside Show: Blossom with Cory Limuaco Trio One of Oregon’s favorite singers comes to Suttle with The Cory Limuaco Trio opening. 6pm. $12-$18.

and support a local non-profit organization. 6-8pm. Cards $1-$5.

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EVENTS

CALENDAR MUSIC Bella Acappella Harmony Chorus

Award-winning Bella Acappella seeks women who love to sing and harmonize. Meet upstairs. Tuesdays, 6:30-9pm. Aspen Ridge Retirement, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend. Contact: 541-728-9392. bellaacappellasai@gmail.com. $35/membership.

Bachata Turn Patterns Learn fun turn

pattern combinations with Latin Dance Bend. Tuesdays, 7:30-8:20pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-3256676. info@LatinDanceBend.com. $12/class, $40/4-Class package, $65/monthly unlimited.

Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice Experienced pipers and drummers are

Beginning Salsa! Learn the basics so you can

welcome, along with those interested in taking up piping or drumming. Mondays, 5:30-7pm. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St., Bend. Contact: 541-633-3225. pipersej@yahoo.com.

get on the dance floor and know just what to do! 4 week series. No partner or rhythm needed but please register in advance. March 5, 7-8pm. Bend Dance, SW Porcupine Dr., Bend. Contact: 541410-0048. SalsaVictoria@yahoo.com. $40/month.

COCC Big Band Jazz We will feature the

Beginning WCS Lesson & Dance Begin-

ning lesson, followed by a dance. Fridays, 7pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-401-1635. Cooperdancecompany@gmail.com. $10/lesson, $5/dance.

High Desert Harmoneers Four part Aca-

version of Swing. Register in advance. March 4, 7:15-8:15pm. Bend Dance, SW Porcupine Dr., Bend. Contact: 541-410-0048. SalsaVictoria@yahoo.com. $40/month.

pella Barbershop Harmony for men and women. Reading music is not a requirement. Thursdays, 6:30-9pm. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE 9th., Bend. Contact: 541-241-4315. Free.

Open Hub Singing This is an uplifting, soothing, participatory singing group for all voices. We sing accessible modern layer songs, rounds and grooves. The first time is free! Mondays, 7-8:30pm. Through March 24. First Presbyterian Heritage Hall, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. Contact: 541-633-6025. ian@openhubsinging.com. $12.

Open Hub Singing: Morning Renewal A

technology of belonging that connects us to one another and to the earth. First time is free! Thursdays, 10-11am. Through March 27. The Sanctuary, 339 SW Century Dr. #203, Bend. Contact: 541-633-6025. ian@openhubsinging.com. $10.

Bend Ecstatic Dance Dance your own dance

in your own way in a supportive community of kindred spirits. Visit: BendEcstaticDance.com or FB Bend Ecstatic Dance. Tuesdays, 7pm. Bend Masonic Center, 1036 NE Eighth St., Bend. $10-$12.

Conscious Dance Bend First Mondays,

6-7:30pm. Bend Community Healing Center, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 133, Bend. 541-948-7015. consciousdancebend@gmail.com. $10-$20.

Daddy Daughter Dance - Winter Wonderland! A special evening for dads (or male

role models) and daughters to share together this winter. Feb. 29, 6-9pm. Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Dr., Bend. Contact: 541-639-8055. cj@millerferrari.com. $50-$100.

with our live rock band in a fun, non-threatening group where all skill levels have the chance to sing great songs loud! Mondays, 6-8pm. Through June 9. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Bend. Contact: 541-728-3798. singbend@gmail.com. $0 to $16 range w/memberships.

Dry Canyon Stampede Boot Scootin’ Good Time Dance A swinging country dance

Radical Songbook This is a radio show featuring Songs of solidarity, rebellion and social significance. Contact: Michael Funke, funkeredfinn24@gmail.com, with song requests. Fridays, 10am-Noon. KPOV, 501 NW Bond St., Bend. Free.

East Coast Swing Dance Lessons

The Ultimate Oldies Show A locally-produced, syndicated, thematic two-hour radio show highlighting the music, artists, musicians and cultural touchstones of the late 1940s through the late 1960s. Fridays, 6-8pm. KPOV, 501 NW Bond St., Bend. Contact: mikeficher@gmail.com. Free.

party. Dance lessons take place at 6:30pm, music starts at 7:30pm. Feb. 29. The Belfry, 302 E Main Ave, Sisters. Contact: 541-815-5224. drycanyonstampede@gmail.com. $10. Start with the basics and progress weekly to more difficult combinations. Partner not required, although encouraged. Thursdays, 6-7pm. Through Feb. 29. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-602-6168. valdances@hotmail.com. $10.

the #1 Ladies Night Event is coming to Redmond! Limited tickets on sale now, get them while they last! Feb. 29, 8pm. 21+. Hub City Bar & Grill, 2498 S. Highway 97, Suite E, Redmond. $14.95-$74.95.

Intro to Latin Dance - Level 1 You will learn salsa & bachata basics. Dance partner not required. Tuesdays, 5:30-6:20pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: info@LatinDanceBend.com. $12/drop-in.

at Craft Kitchen & Brewery

L-G-B-T-Q-B-I-N-G-O Each regular round

is $1! Win prizes from local businesses. Blackouts are $2 with a chance to win cash. Every other Thursday, 6-8pm. Crater Lake Spirits Downtown Tasting Room, 1024 Northwest Bond Street, Bend. Contact: 541-279-0047. hdcjamie@gmail.com.

Level 1 West Coast Swing For this class,

you should know the 4 basic patterns of west coast swing. We will go over some more patterns and technique in level 1. Thursdays, 6:30-7:30pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-401-1635. Cooperdancecompany@ gmail.com. $12/class, $40/month.

Level 2 West Coast Swing This class goes

over concepts of west coast swing as well as a few more patterns. Contact Jenny Cooper for questions, 541-401-1635. Thursdays, 7:30-8:30pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-401-1635. $30/month.

A BURLESQUE BENEFIT at The Capitol

Salsa Turn Patterns Taken Salsa Level 1

or have a good understanding of the basics? Tuesdays, 6:30-7:20pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-3256676. info@LatinDanceBend.com. $12/class, $40/4-Class package, $65/monthly unlimited.

Scottish Country Dance Class No experi-

ence or Scottish heritage necessary. Weekly classes include beginner & advanced dances. Mondays, 7-9pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. $5/class, first class is free.

Silver Swans Open level class for adult

learners and dancers. Mondays-Tuesdays, 12:301:30pm. Through June 23. Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-382-4055. dance@abcbend.com. $55/month.

Sugarshack Sessions Present

KBONG w/ SENSI TRAILS at the Domino Room

Submitted

MAR 6

Wednesday Night Kirtan Devotional singing. 7-9pm. Bend Community Healing Center, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 133, Bend. $10.

West African Drumming Mondays, Level 1 students will learn traditional rhythms, and on Thursdays, Level 2 & 3 students will build on knowledge, technique and performance skills. Mondays, 5:30-6:30pm and Thursdays, 6-7:30 and 7-8:30pm. Djembe Dave’s Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St., Bend. Contact: 541-760-3204. DjembeDave@yahoo.com. $15/class.

BEATLES & BOWIE

DANCE

at Volcanic Theatre Pub

Adult Intermediate Level Jazz Dance

Adult Intermediate Jazz Dance Class sponsored by the Jazz Dance Collective. Styles include Broadway, Latin, lyrical. Supportive atmosphere, opportunities to perform. Tuesdays, 7-8:30pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63830 Clausen Drive, Suite 202, Bend. $12 donation, first class free.

ABSTRACT ACRYLIC PAINT NIGHT

FEB 29

Public (ROCK) Choir Come sing your face off

Beginning West Coast Swing! Smooth

Girls Night Out - Redmond Girls Night Out,

FEB 28

fabulous Lisa Dae on vocals and play songs from the Stan Kenton Library, Glen Miller, Radiohead, and three arrangements by local Bend composers. Cash only, please! March 1, 2-4pm. COCC Campus Center - Wille Hall, 2600 College Way, Bend. Contact: 541-383-7700. sowen3@cocc.edu. $10.

Fox Trot Dance Lesson If you have wanted to learn the basics of Fox Trot, join this weekly group class held on Wednesday nights during February. Wednesdays, 6-7pm. Through Feb. 29. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-602-6168. valdances@hotmail.com. $10.

B E N D T I C K.CEO MT FEB 28

welcomes all musicians to come have fun. Annual negotiable fee. Wednesdays, 6:30-9pm. Mountain View High School Auditorium, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend. Contact: 541-241-8767. info@bendpops.org.

Egyptian Belly Dance Class Reviews all the basic moves, then gently leads into combinations and short choreographies. Offered through COCC Continuing Education. 8 class series. Sundays, 1:30-3pm. Through March 8. Boyle Education Center, COCC, 2600 NW College Way, Bend. $99.

Dads and daughters, dance the night away at Summit High School on Feb. 26 at 6pm!

LOCAL TICKETING POWER

17 VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Bend POPS Orchestra Rehearsals COCO

Argentine Tango Class & Practica This month-long series begins the first Wednesday of every month, but feel free to drop in anytime. Intermediate lesson from 7:45-8:30pm, followed by dancing. See website for more detail. Wednesdays, 6:30-10pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. Contact: 541-728-3234. tangocentraloregon@gmail.com. $5/adv., $10/drop-in.


EVENTS Square Dance Lessons Learn to square

dance with the Bachelor Beauts Square Dance Club! Thursdays-Sundays, 6-8pm. Pine Forest Grange Hall, 63214 Boyd Acres Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-382-7014. dance@bachelorbeauts.org. $5/first class, $75/15 additional lessons.

Teen/Adult Ballet at Academie de Ballet Classique Any level adult ballet dancer.

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

18

Mondays, 7-8:15pm. Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-382-4055. dance@abcbend.com. $60/month.

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GARDENING. Get good at it. Join OSU Master Gardeners™ for vegetable gardening classes

March 5 in Redmond: 5 - 7 p.m., OSU Extension Bldg. 3, 3800 SW Airport Way. March 7 in Madras: 10 a.m. – 12 p.m., Central Oregon Ag Research Center, 850 NW Dogwood Ln. March 14 in Bend: 2 – 4 p.m., OSU Cascades Tykeson Hall, Room 111. March 28 in Prineville: 10 a.m. – 12 p.m., COCC, 510 S.E. Lynn Blvd. April 11 in Sisters: 10 a.m. – 12 p.m., Park District Administration Bldg., 1750 W. McKinney Butte Rd. Registration: extension.oregonstate.edu/deschutes/home-garden-landscape or call 541-548-6088. Cost: Class includes 24-page book; donations ($5 suggested) collected at door.

welcome. Non-member drop-ins $6! Mondays, 10-11am. Through April 1. Bend Golf Club, Pines Room, 61045 Country Club Drive, Bend. Contact: 541-330-8180. lcyetter@seanet.com. $5/drop-in.

FILM EVENTS

Film Screening - “Hero Dog” Vanessa

Schulz (the filmmaker) and Marianne Cox (Street Dog Hero) invite you to this very special screening of the award-winning documentary, following one brave pup. Feb. 28, 6-8pm. 10 Barrel Brewing Co. Pub & Brewing Facility, 62950 NE 18th St., Bend. Contact: amanda@streetdoghero.org. $20.

Four Films from Iran at the Tin Pan Theater Connected to a country, director, or

theme. Movies can be journeys of connection – outside our preconceptions, outside of our culture and outside of ourselves. Thu, Feb. 27, 2:45-5pm, Thu, March 5, 2:45-5pm and Thu, March 12, 2:45-5pm. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NW Tin Pan Alley, Bend. Contact: 541-241-2271. info@bendfilm.org.

Free Film Screening: Soufra Inspiring documentary of Mariam Shaar, a refugee in Lebanon. Against all odds she launches a successful catering company with a diverse team of fellow refugee women. Together they help to heal the wounds of war thru the unifying power of food. Feb. 29, 6:30pm. Bend Church United Methodist, 680 NW Bond St, Bend. Contact: 541-388-1467. info@bendbahai.org. Free. Mountainfilm on Tour Bringing a selection

of culturally rich, adventure-packed and inspiring films curated from the Mountainfilm Festival held in Telluride, Colorado. The show is a fundraiser for The Environmental Center. Feb. 28, 7-10pm and Feb. 29, 7-10pm. Tower Theatre - Bend, 835 NW Wall Street, Bend. Contact: 541-385-6908. info@envirocenter.org. $22/adv., $25/door.

Rick Silva Video Screening and Artist Talk Artist of current exhibition Rick Silvia West-

ern Fronts: Cascade Siskiyou, Gold Butte, Grand Staircase-Escalante, and Bear Ears will share another video work “Eclipsecore." Feb. 29, 11amNoon. At Liberty Arts Collaborative, 849 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: info@atlibertyarts.com. Free.

RuPaul’s Drag Race Viewing Party: Season 12 Yasss that’s right, better stay ready

honey because RuPaul’s Drag Race is back again with a whole new group! Every Thursday Feb. 28, 8-9pm. Recharge, 550 SW Industrial wy Ste 150, Bend. Contact: info@outcentraloregon.com. Free.

ARTS / CRAFTS

4th Friday Artwalk in Sisters Enjoy art, good company, refreshments, music, demonstrations and hors d’œuvres. See local artists and their fine art! Feb. 28, 4-7pm. Helen Schmidling, 252 W Hood Ave., Sisters. Contact: 541-549-9552. events@sistersartsassociation.org. Free. Acrylic Pour and Sip Come join us for

guided instruction to create your own acrylic pour masterpiece that you can take home. Sip wine during your creation! Saturdays, 6-8pm. Scott Dyer Fine Art, 2974 NE Waller Drive, Bend. Contact: 714-869-6780. scotthdyer@yahoo.com. $30.

DIY - Metal - Sheet Metal Art Full description at DIYCave.com! Thu, Feb. 27, 5:30-8pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $60.

DIY - Welding - Welding Workshop Full

description at DIYCave.com! Wed, Feb. 26, 5:308pm, Wed, March 4, 5:30-8pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $60.

Figure Drawing Salon Develop your skills at

our live model figure drawing salon, features a live nude model in a sequence of poses. Bring own easel and materials. Tuesdays, 7-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St., Suite 6, Bend. $15/door.

Acrylic Pour Painting! Fun for all ages.

Scott Dyer Fine Art. visit scottdyerart.com to see examples. Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. Hobby Lobby, 3188 N Hwy 97, Bend. Contact: 714-869-6780. scotthdyer@yahoo.com. $30.

Propagation Station Wall Hanging Class

Learn basic macrame and plant propagation skills in this fun class! March 5, 6:30pm. Nordic Construction, 154 Northeast Underwood Avenue, Bend. $29.

The Photographs of Piet Visser Visser’s

photographs have been in National Juried art shows, and his work has been seen in respected photo magazines and websites. Jan. 7-March 31, 8am-4pm. Fix & Repeat, 555 NW Arizona Ave., Bend. Contact: 458-206-0051. piet@piet.live. Free.

Warrior Friends: A Book in Real Life!

Head upstairs in the Library to see Local Artist, Sarah Root’s unique large-scale original illustrations from her children’s book “Warrior Friends”, soon to be released. Root plays with text and illustrations to bring her book to life and onto the walls of the library for all to experience. Through April 8. Deschutes Public Library-Downtown, 601 NW Wall Street, Bend. Free.

Watercolor Wednesday Demos, videos

and instruction. Bring your own subject photographs and supplies. Wednesdays, 10am-Noon Through Feb. 26. Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-6170900. jenniferware@rocketmail.com. $10 for non-members.

PRESENTATIONS & EXHIBITS Advanced Natural Beekeeping by Beekeeper Ron Lane The class is designed for those who have already been keeping bees. The main focus of the class will center on how to successfully winter bees in Central Oregon. March 4, 4:30-5:30pm. Central Oregon Locavore, 1841 NE Third St., Bend. Contact: 541-633-7388. info@centraloregonlocavore.org. $5/members.

Caldera Open Studios Open Studios is an exciting opportunity to connect with diverse artists from around the country as they share their work alongside young people from Caldera’s Youth Program. Sat, Feb. 29, 12:30-3:30pm and Sun, March 29, 12:30-3:30pm. Caldera Arts Center, 31500 Blue Lake Dr., Sisters. Contact: 541-595-0956. maesie.speer@calderaarts.org. Free. Central Oregon PubTalk EDCO’s Central

Oregon PubTalk is a happy hour aimed at bringing together different facets of the business community in one place to network, share ideas and further local businesses. Thu, Feb. 27, 5-7:30pm and Thu, March 26, 5-7:30pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend. Contact: 541-388-3236. info@edcoinfo.com. $26-$36.

Deschutes Land Trust Nature Nights: Restoring the Dignity of Rivers Join

Deschutes Land Trust and Dr. Susanne Brander of Oregon State University to explore the tiny world of microplastics, including how these miniscule particles are detected and their potential effects on the natural world. Feb. 26, 7-8:30pm. Tower Theatre - Bend, 835 NW Wall Street, Bend. Free.

Fashion of the Future A fashion show of

restyled and upcycled discarded clothing. Upcycled fashion reduces waste and is an answer to the environmental damage of the fashion industry. March 5, 6:30-7:30pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 541-312-1029. laurelw@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.

Know Future -The Electric Future of Cars, Bikes and Transit Learn about what

is available now and the role electric vehicles will play in the future. March 3, 6-7pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 541-312-1032. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.


EVENTS

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT

Submitted

Looking Beyond Our Differences: Seeing the Humanity in Each of Us Oregon

Supreme Court Justice Adrienne Nelson will talk about being the first person of color at her high school, being valedictorian and serving as the first African American on the Oregon Supreme Court . Please RSVP! March 3, 6-6:30pm. Wille Hall, Coats Campus Center, COCC Bend Campus, Bend, Bend. Contact: 541-383-7257. cgilbride@cocc.edu. Free.

19 VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Natural History Pub: Should I Stay or Should I Go Now? Join OSU-Cascades Asso-

ciate Professor Dr. Christian Hagen for a discussion of greater sage grouse population responses to wildfire in the Trout Creek Mountains, Oregon. March 2, 7-8pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-382-4754. info@highdesertmuseum.org. Free.

Pikas of Local Lava Flows Learn about pika

populations with an OSU-Cascades researcher. Corrinne Oedekerk is a graduate student at Oregon State University and a research assistant for OSU-Cascades. March 3, Noon-1pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. Contact: 541-312-1029. laurelw@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.

The Art of Ikebana The art of Japanese flower

arranging. The demonstration will cover ikebana and will feature material found in Central Oregon. Feb. 26, Noon-1pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-312-1029. laurelw@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.

The Greatest Good Lecture Series Pre-

sentations will be about 40 minutes with a Q&A to follow. Thu, Feb. 27, 5:30-6:30pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. Contact: 503-840-8170. amy.jensen@discovernw.org. Free.

Toastmasters of Redmond Meetings

Mondays, Noon-1pm, second Monday, 5:30-6:30pm. Redmond Church Of Christ, 925 NW 7th st., Redmond. Contact: 541-548-7474. Free.

THEATER A Burlesque Benefit Bend

Burlesque is gearing up for a donation based show with proceeds going to help a local non-profit. Doors at 7:30pm. Tickets will be available on a sliding scale online and at the door. Suggested donation $5-$500. Feb. 28, 8-11pm. The Capitol, 190 NW Oregon Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-639-7881. bendburlesque@gmail.com.

Artist Performance Featuring: Hand2Mouth Theatre Drop by during the installation

and join Hand2Mouth Theatre for nostalgic snacks, guest interviews, music, face masks, prank calls and a short work-in-progress performance. All are welcome. Feb. 27, 4-6pm. The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse, 13300 Hwy 20, Sisters. Contact: 541-638-7001. info@ thesuttlelodge.com. Free.

Improv for Life Learn unique improv skills for

stage improv and for life, which is also improvised! Limited seating. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 5:30-7:30pm. Through Feb. 27. COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend. Contact: 310-890-5610. rennytemple@gmail.com.

WORDS Author Event: Nigeria by Tom Wangler

Based on the author’s own experiences in Africa 45 years ago, Nigeria takes the reader on a thrilling ride through a mysterious African adventure. Feb. 29, 1-2pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. sara@roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.

Pacific Crest Middle School Book Launch Join Mrs. Withers and her sixth grade

class! Her students are publishing and printing books about the Inca, Aztec, and Maya civilizations. All proceeds donated to Save the Children. Feb. 27, 5-6pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. sara@roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.

Rediscovered Reads Book Club Please

join us! We will be discussing Queen of America: A Novel by Luis Alberto Urrea. Feb. 26, 6-7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. sara@roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.

Yas Queeeeen! Drag brunch with Poison Waters at McMenamins on Feb. 29, 11am!

Writers Writing Join the Writer’s Collective of Central Oregon and your fellow writers for quiet writing time at the Library. Enjoy the focus of a quiet space with the benefit of others’ company for motivation. Mondays, 9am-Noon. Deschutes Public Library-Downtown, 601 NW Wall Street, Bend Tuesdays, 10am-1pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-312-1063. paigef@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.

ETC. 2020 Women of the Year Awards Gala The Women of the Year Awards showcases

inspirational stories and extraordinary achievements by formally recognizing and celebrating the outstanding contributions of Central Oregon women. Feb. 28, 7-8:30pm. Eagle Mountain Event Center, 2221 NE Third St., Suite 100, Bend. Contact: 541-382-3221. admin@bendchamber.org. $40-$50.

Brunch with Poison Waters & Friends

What better way to start your weekend than with mimosas, laughter and sausages, and Drag Queen Brunch! 21 +. Includes brunch and show! Feb. 29, 11am. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend. Contact: 541-382-5174. $25.

Hollinshead Community Garden 2020 Lottery The Central Oregon Chapter of OSU

Master Gardeners™ announces a lottery for plots at Hollinshead Community Garden. Send an email with your name, phone number and email address to comga2014@gmail.com between March 1st and April 11th. Hollinshead Community Garden, 1235 NE Jones Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-548-6088. deschutesmg@oregonstate.edu. Free.

Preventative Walk-In Pet Wellness Clinic The Bend Spay and Neuter Project offers

vaccinations, deworming and microchips at our walk-in wellness clinic. First come first served. Visit bendsnip.org for a list of services. Saturdays, 10am-1:30pm. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson, Suite A1, Bend. $10/office visit.

VOLUNTEER American Red Cross Disaster Action Team Members Needed Volunteers respond to local disasters and connect with the affected individuals and families to begin a casework process, guiding them on their road to recovery. Ongoing. Red Cross Central and Eastern Oregon Chapter Office, 815 SW Bond St., Bend. Contact: 541-382-2142. volunteer.cascades@redcross.org.

Become a Big Brother or Big Sister in Redmond Looking for adult mentors willing to

spend a few hours a month sharing their interests. Ongoing. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon - Redmond, 412 SW Eighth St., Redmond. Contact: 541-617-4788. balbert@bbbsco.org.

pricing available. Wednesdays, 5-7pm. Through March 11. BendTECH, 1001 SW Emkay Dr, Bend. Contact: 541-382-4682. info@campfireco.org. $50-$125.

Visitor Center Ambassador Come share

teers are critical to the operations of our high-save shelter. Ongoing, 10am-5pm. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW Fifth St., Redmond. Contact: 541-504-0101. thrift@brightsideanimals.org.

your passion at the Bend Visitor Center! This is a daily reoccurring volunteer opportunity, with two daily shifts seven days a week. Feb. 19-Dec. 31, 9am-5pm and Feb. 22-July 31, 10am-4pm. Bend Visitor Center, 750 NW Lava Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-382-8048. kneumann@visitbend.com. Free.

Call for Volunteers - Play with Parrots!

Volunteer as WebMaster! Mustangs to the

Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond Volun-

Volunteers needed at Second Chance Bird Rescue! Located past Cascade Lakes Distillery, call for hours and location. Contact: 916-956-2153.

Community Dinner You can make food, or be a server, or both. RSVP by emailing Leslie Koc at lesliekoc@gmail.com. Fourth Thursday of every month. Bethlehem Inn, 3705 N Hwy 97, Bend. Contact: lesliekoc@gmail.com. Free.

Fences For Fido Help free dogs from chains! No experience is required. Sign up on Facebook: FFF Central Oregon Region Volunteers. More info can be found at fencesforfido.org. Ongoing. Happy Hour in the Garden We’ll be working

out in the garden and invite anyone to come volunteer alongside us. This event is family friendly, and you can drop in anytime. Tuesdays. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend. Contact: denise@envirocenter.org. No cover.

Herd U Needed A Home Dog Rescue

A local foster-based dog rescue group who specializes in rescuing herding bred dogs from overcrowded shelters and situations of abuse and neglect. Contact for details. Contact: volunteer@herduneededahome.com.

Make Your Mark at Bend Spay+Neuter! Compassionate, awesome people to join an incredible team. Ongoing. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson, Suite A1, Bend. Contact: 541-617-1010. volunteer@bendsnip.org.

Mentors Needed Heart of Oregon is a nonprofit that inspires and empowers positive change in youth through education, jobs and stewardship. Heart of Oregon Corps, 1291 NE Fifth St., Bend. Contact: 541-526-1380. info@heartoforegon.org. Teen Service Club Camp Fire’s Teens In Ac-

tion clubs are all about teens working together to make their community a better place. Sliding scale

Rescue seeks a WebMaster extraordinaire! Please contact Kate Beardsley to snag this opportunity. Mondays-Sundays, 8am-10pm. Mustangs to the Rescue, 21670 McGilvray Road, Bend. Contact: 541-330-8943. MustangstotheRescue.org.

Volunteer Drivers Needed Volunteer drivers needed Mondays-Fridays to transport veterans to the Bend VA Clinic and Portland VA Hospital. Must have clean driving record and be able to pass VA-provided physical and screening. Call Rick for more information. Contact: 818-674-3257. Volunteer Fundraiser Are you seeking a

rewarding volunteer opportunity? Mustangs To The Rescue wants you! Our 501 C3 organization is looking for an experienced, effective, and committed fund-raiser. Mondays-Sundays, 8am-10pm. Mustangs to the Rescue, 21670 McGilvray Road, Bend. Contact: 541-330-8943. MustangstotheRescue.org.

Volunteer Tutoring Be a volunteer tutor with

a 3rd grader who was referred by a teacher for extra help with math and reading. School district background check required. Contact Christine for details! Tuesdays, 2:30-4pm. Through May 19. Juniper Elementary School, 1300 NE Norton Ave., Bend. Contact: junipertutoring@gmail.com.

Volunteer with Salvation Army 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. Ongoing. Contact: 541-389-8888.

Volunteers Needed Help with daily horse

care. Duties include; corral cleaning, grooming, walking horses. Flexible days and hours. No experience required. Call Kate Beardsley to set up an appointment. Ongoing. Mustangs to the Rescue, 21670 McGilvray Road, Bend. Contact: 541-350-2406.


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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Do not operate a vehicle or machinery under the influence of this drug. For use only by adults twenty-one years of age and older. Keep out of the reach of children.

Join us in honoring and celebrating this year’s nominees and recipients of the 2020 Woman of the Year Awards. F e b r u a r y 2 8 t h at E a g l e M o u n ta i n E v e n t C e n t e r . Purchase your tickets in advance at bendchamber.org/bend-event/2020-women-of-the-year-awards/ Awards presented by the Bend Chamber & Source Weekly and sponsored by


Heal

Create

Hope

2020

Dream

Reflect Hope

Liberate

Reflect

Liberate

MARCH 5-8

dream

TOGETHER

Create

Hope

heal

Heal

Reflect

OFFICIAL GUIDE OFFICIAL EVENT GUIDE / MUSECONFERENCE.ORG / 1


2 / TOGETHER 2020 MUSE CONFERENCE


reflect heal hope dream create liberate

TOGETHER WELCOME

8TH ANNUAL MUSE CONFERENCE

MARCH 5-8, 2020

WORLD MUSE believes womxn and girls can change

to our eighth annual MUSE Conference hosted by WORLD MUSE, a nonprofit rooted in the belief

the world. Our year-round

that womxn and youth hold incredible potential to be catalysts for change. We host MUSE Conference each year as

programming includes MUSE

an opportunity to celebrate and support those who are creating positive social change in a variety of ways – as artists,

Conference, MUSE Clubs,

athletes, entrepreneurs, teachers, healers, local leaders, global activists, and movement builders. We believe equality,

and MUSE Maker Program

justice, and social change are issues that should bring us all together regardless of gender, age, ethnicity, religion,

which provides small seed

and socio-economic background. We are honored to be bringing so many powerful, diverse voices together on our

grants and mentoring to

MUSE Conference stage for our 8th year to reflect, heal, hope, dream, create, liberate. WORLD MUSE has seen

suppor t womxn and girls

enormous growth in our year-round programming the past decade. We now have MUSE Clubs in schools across

who are ready to create their

Central Oregon, our MUSE Makers Program has funded over $40,000 to social change projects created by womxn and youth, and our MUSE Community Events are allowing us to partner with local service providers to give our community the opportunity to be in dialogue around important issues. We believe much of this growth has been inspired by MUSE Conference. Thank you for being a part of it. And thank you for once again taking the time to gather together in support and celebration of positive social change. Together, we can do so much.

own social change projects. Throughout the year, we also offer special MUSE Events to encourage community connection, suppor t, and inspiration.

Muse On, Amanda Stuermer

theworldmuse.org

Founder WORLD MUSE

Women’s Health PT

Join us for a great meal or yoga class, our doors are open to ALL.

Support. Education. Empowerment.

Let us be your trusted healthcare provider to lead you back to full recovery. Our team specializes in women’s health physical therapy. Some services include:

Post-mastectomy/breast cancer rehabilitation

Pre- and post-partum therapy

Pelvic floor rehabilitation

Laura Cooper PT, DPT Physical Therapist, Director

Call us to see if physical therapy would help you. (541) 382-7890 | 61615 Athletic Club Dr. | Bend, OR 97702 therapeuticassociates.com/ACB

kitchen hours monday - friday 11am - 3pm yoga class schedule at sunnyyogakitchen.com

OFFICIAL EVENT GUIDE / MUSECONFERENCE.ORG / 3


THURSDAY, MARCH 5TH

MUSE ART SHOW

MUSE CHECK-IN Get your MUSE Pass, information, and program. Located at the MUSE Hub [849 NW Wall St.] 4:00 - 6:00 PM

MUSE attendees are invited to preview our exhibition featuring local and visiting female artists who are using their Art to give voice to current social change issues.

2020

5:30 - 7:30 PM AT THE TOWER THEATRE

TOGETHER

ART SHOW SPOTLIGHT WHO WE ARE

MUSE Youth Summit We will be screening

a short documentary produced by World Muse and Unlocked Films featuring local youth activists, followed by a Q&A with local youth and visiting climate crisis activists. 6:00 - 8:00 pm

FRIDAY, MARCH 6TH MUSE SALON SERIES Topical Discussions &

Interactive Presentations Located at the MUSE Hub [849 NW Wall St.]

8:30 - 9:30 AM Community Healing

This exhibit by The Immigrant Story (theimmigrantstory.org) explores the emotions of Muslim women in the aftermath of the horrific violence that took place aboard a Portland MAX train May 26, 2017. The six stories featured in this exhibit were documented by their team in 2017 and 2018. Wafa Almaktari, featured in the exhibit, will be with us Saturday to share her story live in The Tower Theater.

MUSE + BENDFILM SERIES

Honoring practice facilitated by Pixie Lighthorse.

MUSE is partnering with BendFilm to present:

10:00 - 11:30 AM LGBTQIA+2 101

Warrior Women : A documentary which details the life of Lakota activist and community organizer Madonna Thunder Hawk. Co-Director Elizabeth Castle will be in attendance. 5:30 PM at Tin Pan Theater

Interactive conversation led by Jamie Nesbit of OUT Central Oregon.

12:00 - 1:30 PM Healthcare in the High Desert Interactive conversation featuring a

variety of healthcare providers.

2:00 - 3:30 PM A River Runs Through

Interactive conversation covering environmental issues with a focus on water and the Deschutes River.

4:00 - 5:00 PM Community Action

Interactive conversation co-hosted by The Source Weekly and facilitated by Nicole Vulcan.

SALON SPOTLIGHT PIXIE LIGHTHORSE

MARCH 5-8

Pixie Lighthorse is an educator, author and wisdom keeper intimately tied to the earth. She writes books to help restore the bonds between people and nature and heal spiritual trauma. Her aim is to inspire broad spectrum regenerative practices that support the bodies, minds and spirits of the people.

4 / TOGETHER 2020 MUSE CONFERENCE

FILM SPOTLIGHT WARRIOR WOMEN

In the 1970s, with the swagger of unapologetic Indianness, organizers of the American Indian Movement (AIM) fought for Native liberation and survival as a community of extended families.

Warrior Women is the story of Madonna Thunder Hawk, one such AIM leader who shaped a kindred group of activists’ children - including her daughter Marcy - into the “We Will Remember” Survival School as a Native alternative to government-run education. Together, Madonna and Marcy fought for Native rights in an environment that made them more comrades than mother-daughter. Madonna Thunderhawk will be joining us on the MUSE stage Saturday for a panel discussion during our main conference program.


SATURDAY, MARCH 7TH MUSE CONFERENCE PROGRAM

MUSE TOGETHER

with local & visiting Change-makers MUSE HUB OPENS

9:00 AM

THE TOWER THEATRE DOORS OPEN

9:30 AM

MUSE CONFERENCE PROGRAM BEGINS

12:00 PM

MUSE CONFERENCE PROGRAM RESUMES

3:30 PM

MUSE CONFERENCE PROGRAM ENDS

4:00-5:00 PM

MUSE PRESENTER MEETUPS

Come Together for ongoing conversations 5:00-5:45 PM

MUSE SPECIAL AFTER THE SHOW Q&A

Valarie Kaur and Rev. angel Kyodo williams

7:30-9:00 PM FEATURING

Seventeen-year-old Margolin, a 2019 MTV EMA Generation Change winner, is often cited as a climate change activist — which is true. She is also a queer woman, a Latinx woman, and a Jewish woman, and a vocal advocate for those communities too.

LUNCH BREAK

1:30 PM

FEATURING

JAMIE MARGOLIN

MUSE + BENDFILM Special Film Screening

Climate Documentary “Youth Unstoppable”

7:30-9:30 PM

MUSE DINNER for All-Access Pass Holders

at Joolz Restaurant

FILMMAKER SPOTLIGHT

PERFORMER SPOTLIGHT KATHERINE PAUL

BLACK BELT EAGLE SCOUT

Katherine Paul is Black Belt Eagle Scout. She grew up on the Swinomish Indian Reservation in NW Washington state, learning to play piano, guitar and drums in her adolescent years. The very first form of music that Katherine can remember experiencing was the sound of her dad singing native chants to coo her to sleep as a baby. She grew up around powwows and the songs her grandfather and grandmother sang with her family in their drum group. This is what shapes how Katherine creates music: with passion and from the heart.

2020

TOGETHER

8:00 AM

YOUTH SPOTLIGHT

SLATER JEWELL-KEMKER OF YOUTH UNSTOPPABLE

Slater Jewell-Kemker

has been making films since she was six. An award winning filmmaker and climate activist, Slater has been featured in Forbes twice and selected by the Hollywood Reporter as one of 15 filmmakers under 30 to watch.

The film has been recently updated to show how youth have become the most powerful force in the international climate debate. You’ll see how they are shaping politics in the form of the Green New Deal, presidential campaigns, and climate emergencies being declared in major cities worldwide. One key moment in the update will be Slater and Greta speaking together at last year’s UN Climate Summit in Poland.

REV ANGEL KYODO WILLIAMS

Not that a Black, mixedraced woman Zen priest is ordinary to begin with, but Rev. angel Kyodo williams defies and transcends any title, descriptor or category you can imagine. Freed from ordinary ways of naming, she captures imaginations, expands visions, and gets straight to the heart of the work of liberation. Once called “the most intriguing African-American Buddhist” by Library Journal, and “one of our wisest voices on social evolution” by Krista Tippett, Rev. angel Kyodo williams is a maverick spiritual teacher.

MARCH 5-8

Youth Unstoppable has been documenting the rise of the global youth movement for 12 years, from it’s beginnings when the official UN process didn’t want to include youth at the table.

PRESENTER SPOTLIGHT

OFFICIAL EVENT GUIDE / MUSECONFERENCE.ORG / 5


FA C I L I TAT O R S P O T L I G H T

LILIANA CABRERA

2020

TOGETHER

As a Latina and openly gay woman, Cabrera is a natural conversation starter in a community sorely lacking diversity. She brings her unique perspective to everything she does, including serving as board chair of Let’s Talk Diversity Coalition in Madras, president of Latino Community Association, board member of World Muse and board member-at-large of OUT Central Oregon.

SUNDAY, MARCH 8TH Solidarity Workshop Facilitated by Kerri Kelly & liliana Cabrera 9:30-11:30 AM MUSE HUB Join us for a two part workshop where we will explore the practice of solidarity and skills needed to build resilient power across lines of difference. *Pre-registration is required for this event.

MUSE + BendFilm Series at Tin Pan Theater MUSE is partnering with BendFilm to present:

MARCH 5-8

11:30 AM Youth Unstoppable : Feature film documenting global youth movement. Slater Jewell-Kemker 2:00 PM Divided We Fall : Feature film documenting post-9/11 hate crimes. Valarie Kaur & Sharat Raju 4:30 PM Warrior Women : Feature film documenting life of Lakota activist. Elizabeth Castle & Christina D King

6 / TOGETHER 2020 MUSE CONFERENCE

PRESENTER SPOTLIGHT

VALARIE KAUR

A seasoned civil rights activist and celebrated prophetic voice “at the forefront of progressive change” (Center for American Progress), Valarie Kaur burst into American consciousness in the wake of the 2016 election when her Watch Night Service address went viral with 30+ million views worldwide. Her question “Is this the darkness of the tomb – or the darkness of the womb?” reframed the political moment and became a mantra for people fighting for change. Valarie now leads the Revolutionary Love Project to reclaim love as a force for justice in America. As a lawyer, filmmaker, and innovator, she has won policy change on multiple fronts – hate crimes, racial profiling, immigration detention, solitary confinement, Internet freedom, and more. She founded Groundswell Movement, Faithful Internet, and the Yale Visual Law Project to inspire and equip new generations of advocates. Valarie has been a regular TV commentator on MSNBC and contributor to CNN, NPR, PBS, the Hill, Huffington Post, and the Washington Post. A daughter of Sikh farmers in California’s heartland, Valarie earned degrees at Stanford University, Harvard Divinity School, and Yale Law School. She was named a “Young Global Leader” by the World Economic Forum. Valarie’s new book Revolutionary Love expands on her “blockbuster” TED Talk and hits the shelves in Spring 2020.


PROGAM SPOTLIGHT

MUSE CLUBS

Our Muse Clubs encourage and support youth to become social change leaders in their school and community. Our clubs reach youth in elementary, middle and high schools across Central Oregon. Please consider becoming a MUSE Member today to help support our efforts to provide free, accessible youth programming in local schools.

HEALTHY. LOCAL.

BREAKFAST & LUNCH CREATIVE. FRESH.

www.theworldmuse.org

BUYING A HOME IS ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT DECISIONS YOU WILL EVER MAKE. You want a Professional who is by your side every step of the way.

Terry Skjersaa

Principal Broker, CRS

Mollie Hogan

Principal Broker, CRS Third Generation Central Oregonian

541-383-1426

mollie@sgbend.com www.skjersaagroup.com

Jason Boone

Principal Broker, CRIS

Cole Billings Broker

OREGON REAL ESTATE LICENSEES

MUSE THANKS We’d like to extend a special thank you to the Bend Cultural Tourism Fund. The Bend Cultural Tourism Fund (BCTF) is a grant program dedica ted t o enhancing the local ec onomy through the promotion and cultivation of Bend’s cultural tourism programs. Grants alloca ted through the BC TF support art and culture based pr ojec ts and pr ograms that attract tourists to the C ity of Bend. Visit Bend es tablished the BC TF with the goal of attracting cultural tourists during the shoulder se asons and winter months – a time of year when the city ’s tourism industry struggles, yet a time when cultur al tourism organizations are most active. MUSE Conference is s upported in part by a grant from the Bend Cultur al Tourism Fund.

OFFICIAL EVENT GUIDE / MUSECONFERENCE.ORG / 7


M U S E S P O N S O R S THANK YOU S U S TA I N I N G PA R T N E R S

P R E S E N T I N G PA R T N E R S

S U P P O R T I N G PA R T N E R S

P E P P E R FA M I LY FUND

H U B + B I P O C L O U N G E PA R T N E R S

E V E N T PA R T N E R S

Y O U T H S U M M I T PA R T N E R S

C O M M U N I T Y PA R T N E R S

BELLATAZZA, BLEDSOE WINERY, GATHER NUTS, THE HAVEN, HUMM KOMBUCHA, JOOLZ RESTAURANT, LAKE CREEK LODGE, WILD FOLK FLOWER APOTHECARY, WREN & WILD, 3RD STREET BEVERAGE

M E D I A PA R T N E R S

SPECIAL THANK YOU

L O D G I N G PA R T N E R S

WORLD MUSE MEMBERS & VOLUNTEERS FOR THEIR GENEROUS SUPPORT

Let’s Muse Together 10/10

8 / TOGETHER 2020 MUSE CONFERENCE

Enjoy 10% off your purchase and we will donate 10% to Muse Club during Muse Conference weekend.


EVENTS

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT

GROUPS & MEETUPS A Course in Miracles This is a course in mind training. Contact for location. Saturdays, 10:30am. Contact: 760-208-9097. lmhauge4@gmail.com.

ACA and other Dysfunctional Families

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 stop

drinking, we can help. Call Alcoholics Anonymous. Hotline: 541-548-0440. Or visit coigaa.org.

Alzheimer’s Association Caregiver Support Group Support groups create a

safe, confidential, supportive environment, and educate participants about dementia while helping them develop skills to solve problems. First Tuesday of every month, 12-1:30pm. Sisters City Hall, 520 E Cascade Ave., Sisters. Contact: 800-272-3900. Free.

Alzheimer’s Association Caregiver Support Group Support groups create a safe,

others, we can learn and grow using real-life experiences to become more compassionate. Tuesdays, 5:30-7pm, Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm and Thursdays, 5:30-7pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way, #200, Bend. Free.

Edgar Cayce - A Search for God An

intelligent research. All denominations. Sundays, 12:30-2:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-900-3879. Free.

Emotions Anonymous Through weekly meetings, members discover they aren't alone. Wednesdays, 9:30am and Thursdays, 10:30am. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St., Bend.

strategy game of “Go." Call Mike for more info. Sundays, 1-4pm. Market of Choice, 115 NW Sisemore St., Bend. Contact: 541-385-9198.

Cancer with Compassion Support Group South Bend Join those with the shared experience

of cancer. Led by cancer survivor, author and retired pastor. Second Thursdays, 1pm-2:30am and Fourth Thursday of every month, 1-2:30am. Cathie P. Young, 20485 Outback, Bend. Contact: 949-279-1246. cancerwithcompassion@gmail.com. Free.

Mama Nurture Circle This is a circle for

Marijuana Anonymous Meeting Know

Third and First Mondays, 10:30am-12:30pm. Barnes and Noble, 2690 NE Highway 20, Bend.

Garage Night The Pine Shed is the perfect place to talk shop, and tell all of your buddies about your winter projects! Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Spoken Moto, 310 SW Industrial Way, Bend.

GEN Z Perspective: Mental Health and Wellness Hear from young adults about how

Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers

Bend “GO” Club Learn the ancient, abstract

Come and find out how you can create a more awesome life. Bring a journal! Thursdays, 6:45-8pm. Through Feb. 27. Deschutes Public Library-Downtown, 601 NW Wall Street, Bend. Contact: 914-9802644. meadowlarkcoaching@yahoo.com. Free.

French Conversation Table All are welcome!

Basics of Solar Workshop The nonprofit

leadership skills. Wednesdays, Noon-1pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend.

Life and Relationship Coaching Meetup

mothers, which is part open processing, part guided discussion and part short meditation. Tuesdays, 6:30-8:30pm. The Hive, 205 NW Franklin Ave., Bend. Contact: rootedandopen@gmail.com. Free.

mental wellness is viewed among peers and what adults can do to support rising generation. March 5, 8-9:30am. Riverhouse on the Deschutes Convention Center, 3075 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-633-7163. info@cityclubco.org. $25-$45.

Bend Chamber Toastmasters Develop your

Life after Birth Join a community of pregnant and postpartum mothers. Tuesdays, 2-3pm. St. Charles Center for Women’s Health, 340 NW 5th Street, Suite 101, Redmond. Contact: 541-526-6635. tlclay@stcharleshealthcare.org. Free.

Euro Nights Car Meet All European car enthusiasts! First Sunday of every month. 6pm. Round Table Clubhouse, 2940 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-325-2114. aaron@bendubs.com. Free.

confidential, supportive environment and help participants develop methods and skills to solve problems. Fourth Wednesday of every month, 5:307pm. Mosaic Medical Prineville Clinic, 375 NW Beaver Street, Prineville. Contact: 800-272-3900. Free. Solar Oregon will answer your questions about how solar works, share information about incentives available, and help you take the first step to adding solar on your home, business, or farm. Everyone is welcome! March 2, 6-8pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend. Free.

tion of life and spirituality. Tuesdays, 6:30-7:30pm. The Hughes’ Home, 4497 SW Salmon Place, Redmond. Contact: shughes79@gmail.com. Free.

welcome. For info, call Sue. Mondays, 6-9pm. Round Table Clubhouse, 2940 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-610-3717. ossz55@yahoo.com.

Italian Conversation Group Relaxed atmo-

sphere. Saturdays, 9:45-11am. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend.

you need to quit, but can’t? Help is here. Share experience, strength, and hope with each other. Thursdays, 7-8pm. Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 Northwest Wall Street, Bend.

Mommy & Me Breastfeeding Support Group Calling all new moms and babies! An

International Breastfeeding Certified Lactation Consultant from St Charles will be there, as well as a myriad of volunteers and guest speakers. See Facebook for details! Tuesdays, Noon-2pm and Thursdays, 1-3pm. Various Locations. Contact: 541706-2902. nktimm@stcharleshealthcare.org. Free.

Not Alone - Mental Health Support Group A faith-based support group for anyone

experiencing mental health challenges. Our semi-structured format includes sharing and encouragement in a confidential and safe setting. Thursdays, 5:30-7pm. Antioch Church Office, 566 NE Clay St - 2nd Floor, Bend. Contact: 703-8636927. martita.marx@gmail.com. Free.

Overeaters Anonymous Meeting Mondays

Japanese Group Lesson Beginners and

intermediate students for Japanese for all ages. Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Wabi Sabi, 143 SW Century Dr #120, Bend. Contact: 541-633-7205. $10.

& Thursdays, Noon-1pm. Saturdays, 9:30am-11am. United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St., Bend. | Wednesdays, 4-5pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave., Redmond. Ongoing. Contact: 541-306-6844.

Leap into the Stars on the SCP Redmond Rooftop With the help of Oregon Obser-

People Not Politicians - Redistricting in Oregon Learn what the League is doing to reform

vatory at Sunriver staff, view the moon, Venus and the Orion Nebula. Feb. 28, 6:30-7:30pm. The Rooftop at SCP Redmond, 521 SW 6th St, Redmond. Contact: lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.

redistricting into a fair process for all Oregonians. Feb. 29, 3-4:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-1032. Free.

Let’s Talk – Open Discussion on Life & Spirituality All views welcomed on the intersec-

the theme of the week changes. Contact Vocal Seniority or Indivisible Bend for more info. Bring

Resist! Rally Weekly resistance protest,

Seed Swap & Save Spring Olson from the

Central Oregon Seed Exchange will lead a short lesson on the how, what and when of saving seeds in Central Oregon, followed by a community seed swap and raffle. Tickets required. Proceeds benefit the Central Oregon Seed Exchange. Feb. 28, 6-7:30pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr., Bend. Contact: 541-647-6970 ext 220. lisa@worthygardenclub.com. $6-10.

Socrates Cafe Conversations all welcome. Contact John at 503-803-2223 with any questions. Second and Fourth Thursday of every month, 6pm. The Commons Cafe, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend. Contact: 503-803-2223. Free. Soul Drumming for Womxn Join Shireen

Amini for this 4-week hand drumming class series, for anyone woman-identifying person. Course can be taken in its entirety or on a drop-in basis. This class will empower you with the skills to express soulfully through rhythm and with ways to utilize the drum as a sacred wellness tool. Wed, March 4, 5:30-7pm, Wed, March 11, 5:30-7pm, Wed, March 25, 5:30-7pm and Wed, April 1, 5:30-7pm. The Sanctuary, 339 SW Century Dr. #203, Bend. Contact: 310-467-0867. shireen.amini@gmail.com. $100.

Spanish Club Spanish language study and conversation group. All levels welcome. Call for more info. Thursdays, 3:30-5:30pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-749-2010.

Oregon Communicators Toastmasters Meeting Step out of your comfort zone - enhance

your leadership and communications skills in a friendly, supportive environment. Attend in person or online. https://zoom.us/j/246410212. Meet and greet at 6:15pm. Thursdays, 6:30-7:30pm. La Pine Community Health Center - Meeting Room, 51600 Huntington Road, La Pine. Contact: 541-408-7610. oregon.communicators.club@gmail.com. Free.

Veterans’ Coffee Club Meet up with fellow vets for coffee, snacks, and conversation. Cosponsored by Crook County Veteran Services. Located at the south end of the main library. Wednesdays, 9am-Noon. Crook County Library, 175 NW Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville. Contact: 541-447-7978. library@crooklib.org. Free. Women’s Cancer Support Group For the newly diagnosed and survivors of cancer. Call for info. Thursdays, 1-3pm. Mountain Laurel Lodge, 990 SW Yates Drive, Bend. Contact: Judy: 541-728-0767. Pixabay

Caregiver Support Group Support groups

create a safe, supportive environment and a chance for participants to develop informal mutual support and social relationships. First Tuesdays, 12-1:30pm. Sisters City Hall, 520 E Cascade Ave., Sisters. Contact: 800-272-3900. Free.

Celebrate Recovery A Christ-centered, 12-

step recovery program for anyone struggling with hurt, pain or addiction of any kind. Visit celebraterecovery.com for more info. Ongoing.

Central Oregon Hub Bridge Club A hub for Duplicate Bridge players in Sisters, Madras, Prineville, Bend, and Redmond. Open to all players. Thursdays, 12:30-3:30pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave, Redmond. Contact: 541516-8653. COHBridge@bendbroadband.com. $5. Central Oregon PubTalk EDCO’s PubTalk is

a happy hour aimed at bringing together different facets of the business community in one place. Fourth Thursdays, 5-7:30pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend. Contact: 541-388-3236. events@edcoinfo.com. $26-$36.

COCC Construction Training Information Session Launch your career! This

information session will cover all the details about the Construction Trade Core Concepts class. 18+. March 5, 4-5pm. Redmond COCC Campus Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Lp., Redmond. Contact: 541-383-7270. ceinfo@cocc.edu. Free.

your signs, bring your attitude—and we’ll bring the bullhorn! Contact info@thevocalseniority.org for more info. Tuesdays, 11:30am-12:30pm. Peace Corner, Corner of NW Greenwood Avenue and NW Wall Street, Bend.

New moms and moms-to-be, join a community that meets Tuesday from 2-3pm at St. Charles.

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A twelve step program where members share their experience, strength and hope about growing up in an alcoholic or other dysfunctional family. Wednesdays, 6-8pm and Fridays, 1011am. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. Free.

Compassionate Communication / NVC Practice Groups Through practicing with


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kids and enjoy our beautiful West Side shopping district! We host players, learners, and traders at these weekly Pokemon card games, now in our beautiful new party nook. All attendees supervised by highly skilled Poke-Masters to ensure fair play and fun! Wednesdays, 2:30-4:30pm. Wabi Sabi, 143 SW Century Dr #120, Bend. Contact: 541-633-7205. wabisabibend@gmail.com. Free.

Art Club Art Club is a unique after school

program to develop one of the most valuable skills for life - creativity - for ages 5-11. Thursdays, 4-5:30pm. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend.

Backpack Explorers – Wildlife Care

Children ages 3-5 and their caregivers investigate science, art, music, stories, and culture in a fun, hands-on manner. Don backpacks filled with exciting artifacts while journeying through the Museum’s nature trails and exhibits. Foster artistic expression in your little one and take home activities to continue the learning. Members receive 20% off. Feb. 26-27, 10-11am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-382-4754. info@highdesertmuseum.org. $15/child.

Backpack Explorers: Cool Chemists What happens when you mix two things together? Be a chemist in our lab. Try to swirl colors together and make solutions that fizz and bubble. March 4, 10am and March 5, 10am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-382-4754. $15.

Come Dance With Me Academie de Ballet’s

Classique’s Early Childhood Ballet Program enhances children’s imagination with dance. This “Mommy and Me” format allows children that may need their parents to remain with them. Your preschooler will love this delightful start to ballet! Wednesdays, 10:45-11:15am. Through June 17. Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-382-4055. dance@abcbend.com. $46/month.

Kids Yoga Namaspa hosts the longest running kids yoga classes in Central Oregon. Children ages 3-8 years take class with a certified teacher while parents practice in a separate room. Classes include calming breath, mindful games, sun salutations, inspiring story time and a healthy snack! Thu, Feb. 27, 4pm, Tue, March 3, 4pm, Thu, March 5, 4pm, Tue, March 10, 4pm, Thu, March 12, 4pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-550-8550. info@namaspa.com. $5-$6. Little Artist Playgroup Nurture your little’s developing brain through rich sensory experiences and messy play during our drop-in class for ages 1.5Y-5. Tuesdays, 10:30-11:15am. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend. Middle School Informational Night Come find out more about our Middle School Program at Bend International School. We are a K-8, tuition-free public charter school. Wed, Feb. 19, 5:30 and 6:15pm and Tue, March 3, 3:45 and 4:30pm. Bend International School, 63020 OB Riley Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-797-7038. meera@bendinternationalschool.org. Free. Mom & Baby Yoga Mothers with babies through early walkers are invited to stretch, strengthen, relax and have fun in a child friendly environment. Moms will focus on shoulder opening, easy yoga sequences and postnatal core-building while spending time bonding with their babies and connecting with fellow new moms. No experience necessary. Tuesdays, Noon-1pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. $17/drop-in. Paws to Read Reluctant readers, come have

fun and read with a dog! Ages 6-11 years. Online registration is required. Thu, Feb. 6, 4pm, Fri, Feb. 14, 4pm, Thu, March 5, 4pm and Thu, March 19, 4pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 541-330-3760. Free.

Creative Story Time Bring your little for this

Rockets Make a pool noodle rocket. Ages 6-11.

DIY - Kids Skill Building Series (Wood/ Welding/Craft) Full class descriptions at DI-

SAT & ACT Prep Course In addition to reviewing the basic verbal and mathematical skills assessed on the SAT test, students learn test-taking strategies specific to scoring well on these exams. Wednesdays, 4-6pm. Debbi Mason, 1860 NE 4th Street, BEND. Contact: 541-848-2804. flourishbend@aol.com. $500.

story time in which we’ll read a different book, followed by an art-making experience inspired by the story. Perfect for ages 1.5Y-5. Wednesdays, 10-10:45am. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend.

Ycave.com! Thu, March 5, 4:30-6:30pm and Thu, April 2, 4:30-6:30pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $120.

Submitted

Afternoon Pokemon Cards Drop off the

Online registration is required! March 4, 1:30-3pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-617-7097. Free.

ARTWATCH

Afternoon Pokemon card play, Wednesdays at 2:30pm at Wabi Sabi!

SAT/ACT Booster Session Learn exam

format and strategies that will help you land a good score on either of these tests. Hour long sessions from 5-6pm and 6-7pm. Please register at flourishbend@aol.com. Drop-in allowed if all seats are not reserved! March 1, 5-7pm. Brew Dr. Teahouse, 835 NW Bond St., Bend. Contact: 541-848-2804. www.bendtutor.com. $25.

Teen Lab A weekly rotating series of activities.

See online calendar for full descriptions. Ages 12-17. Wed, Feb. 26, 3-4pm, Wed, March 4, 3-4pm, Wed, March 11, 3-4pm and Wed, March 18, 3-4pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-617-7087. Free.

Toddler Move + Make Join us for a morning of play including yoga poses, fun breathing exercises and art-making. Perfect for ages 1.5Y-5. *Please note you must register for this class ahead of time (no drop-ins). Thursdays, 9-9:45am. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend.

Twinkle Toes Learn the basics of Tap! This

beginner class for ages 5-8 will be tapping their toes and learning the basic steps of tap. Class is designed for beginner tap dancer with little or no experience. Drop in available! Fridays, 4:30-

Weekend Pokemon Cards We love it when you play Pokemon games and activities here! We have cards to borrow and professional Pokemasters to help keep the action fair. Third Saturday of the month we go an extra hour for our Tournament! Saturdays, 10am-1pm. Wabi Sabi, 143 SW Century Dr #120, Bend. Contact: 541-633-7205. wabisabibend@gmail.com. Free. Wildheart Spring Homeschool Term For

kids ages 6-12, also open to non-homeschooled kids! Spring Class Themes include a level one and two of each: “Fire Building Techniques”, “Local Animals”, “Primitive Skills”, “Nature Art”, and “Edible and Medicinal Plants”. $444 through Feb. 1! Tuesdays, 10am-3pm. Through May 12. Skyliners Lodge, 16125 Skyliners Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-625-0273. info@wildheartnatureschool.com. $467.

Youth/Adult Slackline This class will be a

combination of basic poses, transitions, floor exercises, stamina drills and games. All ages and levels welcome. Class cards and memberships available. Tuesdays, 5-6pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. $18/youth drop-in (17 and under), $20/adult drop-in.

By Teafly Peterson Future Filmworks

Small Grants Aim to Do Big Things Deschutes Cultural Coalition’s awards spur cultural education Sometimes it only takes a little bit to inspire and create something bigger. The small grants awarded by the Deschutes Cultural Coalition may not exceed $3,000, but the organizations receiving the money have big ideas for it, making for some interesting upcoming events and creative opportunities. One of the goals for the grant money is to provide cultural education in Deschutes County. This year, money went to Bend Experimental Art Theater (BEAT) to expand its programming into

5:30pm. Through June 19. Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-382-4055. dance@abcbend.com. $62/month.

Representatives from local arts groups accepted grants from the Deschutes Cultural Coalition.

schools, the Tower Theatre Foundation to host performance art matinees for students, and Opera Bend, which will bring an original performance to high school students. New Oregon Arts and Letters also received a grant to continue its Tea and

Poetry program at the Sisters Farmers Market. Doesn’t that sound amazing? Live poetry and art while you buy vegetables. Also, KPOV received a grant to help teach podcasting. Other recipients include BendFilm, Central Oregon Community College’s Afrocentric Studies

Club, High Desert Chamber Music, High Desert Museum, Sisters Art Association and the Sunriver Music Festival. The Arts and Culture Alliance of Central Oregon is the fiscal sponsor of the grant, which is funded by Oregon Cultural Trust. The ACA also oversees other initiatives that have helped grow the offerings of art in our community. “I am proud of the collaborative effort to bring such projects and programs to central Oregon,” says Jasmine Halsey-Barnett, the community coordinator for the ACA. “Arts can be such a conduit for much-needed discussions on hard topics. Also, the work that our local arts and culture nonprofits do to bring their educational programming to schools is very noteworthy.” Arts and Culture Alliance of Central Oregon artsandcultureco.org/


CH

CHOW

LITTLE BITES

Future Gardening: Dining Room to Table

By Nicole Vulcan

Sam Gehrke Photography

Tech hits the dirt with less space, more veggies

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A

wheel filled with lettuce and herbs rotates and glows in my dining room. It’s there because my partner backed the Kickstarter for OGarden, a technology-driven indoor gardening system from Quebec that got funded in six minutes. “I thought it would be fun to grow stuff in the house,” he explained. “It seemed to be a more hands-off and compact system with some cool technology. Plus, I liked their mission to reduce the amount of square footage we need to grow our food.” Even though the Kickstarter funded fast, fulfillment took forever. We initially received regular updates, then every few months we’d hear about delays. After almost two years, it was crickets. We filed a complaint to Kickstarter, letting them know the seller was unresponsive. A week later we received a shipping notification. The following week the OGarden arrived. All the components were crammed inside the cabinet the wheel sits on. As we unwrapped each piece, we were surprised that the materials—plastic and chipboard—seemed so cheap. Once assembled it was clear: the OGarden photographs beautifully, but it’s not very high quality. For example, our cabinet doors don’t line up at the top so when we close the right door it scrapes to shut. Using a three-week cycle, the OGarden is set up to grow plants in four stages. One set is in the germination cabinet beneath the wheel, where seeds planted inside compressed peat discs are automatically watered and given light. After 21 days, when they are about 2 to 3 inches high, they move above into the wheel. The wheel has automatic watering and lighting as well. You almost always have plants ready to harvest while new seeds are getting ready to replace them.

Lisa Sipe

Immersion Brewing took home Best Small Brewery.

Central Oregon Breweries Win at Oregon Beer Awards

Central Oregon brewers took home a host of awards at last week’s Oregon Beer Awards. Best New Brewery went to Boss Rambler Beer Club of Bend, while Sunriver Brewing got a nod for its Excellence in Brewing Operations, representing Oregon’s Central region. Small Brewery of the Year went to Bend’s Immersion Brewing. And 23 Central Oregon beers won individual awards, including:

What goes around comes around with the OGarden greens grower.

Good times with the OGarden The technology and idea behind the OGarden are cool. It’s fairly handsoff, only needing water every seven to 10 days and requiring about five minutes of maintenance a week. Using LED lighting and 120 watts of electricity, it consumes a low amount of energy while not taking up much space (15 inches by 29 inches by 52 inches). Swapping out one crop to the next is super fun. It’s very satisfying to make dinner, walk over to the OGarden and snip a few sprigs of fresh thyme or grab some greens to add to a meal. The initial investment in the OGarden is expensive, retailing at $995 but frequently found on sale for $695. The biodegradable, compressed peat discs with fertilizer are $59.95 for 90 discs, and a typical 500-seed packet is $3.25—so Lisa Sipe

If the lettuce don't get you, then the lighting will; small wheel grows graceful greens.

once you own the unit, growing vegetables is relatively inexpensive. Telling it like it is The OGarden has some limitations, particularly with the peat discs. With a maximum height of 2.5 inches there isn’t a lot of room for roots. Plants that can keep producing, like peppers or tomatoes, don’t have space to expand their roots. Also, the watering system is very temperamental and once plants get to a certain size the amount of water they get cannot keep up. The peat discs dry out, become hydrophobic and the plant dies. This limits the types of plants you can grow. Ideally the plants you choose should be ready to harvest in 45 days maximum (there isn’t a lot of choice in that range). We’ve had the best luck with herbs and lettuces. Because we live in a dry climate and the OGarden is open, it can’t hold humidity or heat, making the plant growth slightly stunted. For comparison we have a 24-inch by 48-inch by 60-inch enclosed grow tent with compact florescent lights in our dining room. It produces lettuce twice as big because it has a greater soil depth and can retain heat and humidity. Plants can be left in longer and allowed to grow to maturity. However, it uses 360 watts of electricity and takes up more space. Even with those complaints we’re still glad we have the OGarden. Watching a ring of vegetables grow around a tube of light is pretty badass. If you have kids, they may love learning about gardening, too. Harvesting fresh, tender greens in the middle of winter from your living room and making a salad is simply delicious.

Gold Medals • American Sour Beers: The Beer Formerly Known as La Tache by The Ale Apothecary • Barrel-Aged Beers: Home at Port by Deschutes Brewery • Best Golden, Blonde or other Light Ale: The Arena by Immersion Brewing • Best Stout: Revive by 10Barrel Brewing • Classic UK Styles: RedeuX by 10 Barrel • Dark Hoppy Beers: Cinder Beast by Sunriver Brewing Silver Medals • American Pale Ales & Other Sessionable Hoppy Beers: Rippin by Sunriver Brewing • Barrel-Aged Beers: Vino de Grano by 10 Barrel • Classic North American Styles: Twheat by 10 Barrel • Coffee and Smoke Beers: C4K by 10 Barrel • Experimental Beers: Gindulgence by 10 Barrel • Fruited Mixed-Culture Beers: Old Stoner by 10 Barrel • Hazy or Juicy Pale Ales: Saturn Gold by Worthy Brewing • Mixed Culture Beers: In the Pocket by Crux Fermentation Project • Pastry or Dessert Beers: Haole at the Moon by Sunriver Brewing • Rare Historical & Other Traditional Beers: Mad Dogs of Glory by Bend Brewing Company Bronze Medals • Best Pilsner: Sol Power Pilsner by Worthy Brewing • Dark Hoppy Beers: Ring the Alarm by Immersion Brewing • Flavored Beers: Cocoa Cow by Sunriver Brewing • Fruit Beers: Incredible Pulp by Boneyard Beer • American Sour Beers: Bangarang by Silver Moon Brewing • Emerging IPA or Experimental Hoppy Beer: Cloudy & Rowdy by Deschutes • American IPA: Alluvial IPA by Sunriver Brewing

VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

By Lisa Sipe


FOOD & DRINK EVENTS Submitted

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Girl Scout Cookies? Monkless Belgian Ales? Yes, please! Enjoy a pairing at Monkless on Feb. 29 at 5pm!

FOOD EVENTS Chef Dinner with El Sancho Experience

the culinary skill and exquisite flavor crafted by the talented chefs of El Sancho. Join us for a 5-course, Argentine & Chilean inspired menu, paired with wine from Elixir Wine Co’s South American portfolio. $90 for just food - no wine! March 1, 6-9pm. Elixir Wine Group, 11 NW LAVA RD, BEND. Contact: 541-388-5330. info@elixirwinegroup.com. $120.

Dinner with Philip Krajeck at the Suttle Lodge Philip Krajeck’s restaurant, Rolf &

Daughters, has earned accolades from the likes of Esquire, Bon Appétit, Eater, Star Chefs and many more for his seasonal cooking, and especially his pastas. Bon Appétit wrote, ”Krajeck was simply put on earth to make pasta,” and we can’t wait to try it! Feb. 29, 7-9pm. The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse, 13300 Hwy 20, Sisters. Contact: 541-638-7001. info@thesuttlelodge.com. $95.

Growing Vegetables in Central Oregon

Yes, you can have a successful vegetable garden in Central Oregon and OSU Master Gardeners will teach you how. This two-hour free class covers Central Oregon climate, soil amendments, site selection, season extenders and other techniques, and recommended vegetable varieties to grow here. March 5, 5-7pm. OSU Extension Service Classroom, 3800 SW Airport Way, BLDG#3, Redmond. Contact: 541-548-6088. deschutesmg@oregonstate.edu. Free.

Interactive Chocolate Cooking Demo

Guests will learn the secrets of making delicious foods with chocolate as the main ingredient. Presented by Kings Estate Winery. Sat, Feb. 1, 3pm, Sat, Feb. 15, 3pm, Sat, Feb. 22, 3pm and Sat, Feb. 29, 3pm. Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Dr., Sunriver. $19.

Locavore Learning Series: Sausage 102 Continue in the basics of preparing and grinding meat, walk through common areas of trouble, and go through the process of casing and linking the sausage. Feb. 27, 4:30-5:30pm. Central Oregon Locavore, 1841 NE Third St., Bend. Contact: 541633-7388. info@centraloregonlocavore.org. $5/members, $8/non-members.

Prime Rib Night Come experience our leg-

endary prime rib all the locals have been bragging about. Earlier reservations are recommend-

ed as we serve our legendary prime rib until it is all gone. Don’t miss out! Saturdays-Sundays, 4:30pm. Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House, 64619 W. Highway 20, Tumalo. Contact: 541-382-2202. tfcsmanagement@gmail.com. $32.95-$37.50.

Ranch & Table Pairing Series- Monkless Belgian Ales Join us for a cocktail

hour followed by a three-course tasting menu, featuring craft beers from Monkless Belgian Ales. Chef Doug MacFarland and special guests Nick Martin & Aaron Fass will be on hand to describe the dishes and pairings. Feb. 29, 5-10pm. Brasada Ranch, 16986 SW Brasada Ranch Rd, Powell Butte. Contact: 541-526-6870. advconcierge@brasada.com. $90.

BEER & DRINK EVENTS Bingo at the Lodge! Bingo every Thursday night, starts at 7pm. Benefitting First Story: A Cause Worth Building. $1/Card, $2/Blackout and cash prizes - families welcome! Thursdays, 7pm. Cascade Lakes Lodge, 1441 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-388-4998. lauren@cascadelakes.com. $1.

DarkFest I: Dark Beer Festival At Beer Stop DarkFest is a dark beer festival

featuring rare and delicious stouts and barrel aged beers. Tasting packages include 5oz glass! Feb. 29, Noon. Beer Stop, 2498 S. Highway 97, Redmond. $25.

Dinner with Philip Krajeck at The Suttle Lodge Philip Krajeck has earned

four James Beard nominations—all before his 35th birthday—and hasn’t slowed down a bit. His restaurant, Rolf & Daughters, has earned accolades from the likes of Esquire, Bon Appétit, Eater, Star Chefs and many more for his cooking, and especially his pastas. Mark Bolton will be joining him. A portion of ticket sales will be going to Central Oregon’s Caldera Arts. Menu to be announced. Feb. 29, 7pm. The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse, 13300 Hwy 20, Sisters. $35-$95.

Leap Day: Smokin’ Saturday Come

celebrate this extra Saturday with Smokin’ food and beer specials! Smoked ribs, brisket and salmon specials. Plus the release of our small batch Rauchbier- Smoke Show! Feb. 29,

11am-10pm. Cascade Lakes Lodge, 1441 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-388-4998. katie@cascadelakes.com.

Local’s Night Come on down to Bevel

Craft Brewing for $4 beers and food specials from the food carts located out back at The Patio! Tuesdays, 3-9pm. Bevel Craft Brewing, 911 SE Armour Rd. Suite B, Bend. Contact: 541-97-BEVEL. holla@bevelbeer.com. Free.

Locals Day at Riff Whether you’re an early bird or a night owl, join us Tuesdays for an all day local’s night. $2 off coffee, beer, cocktails, wine and shareable dishes. Tuesdays, 9am-8pm. Riff Craft Food & Beverage Taproom, 555 NW Arizona Ave, Suite 30, Bend. Free. Locals Night at Porter Brewing! We offer a full menu of cask-conditioned ales, wine, cider and non-alcoholic beverages. The food truck will also be serving up some fantastic cuisine! Wednesdays, 4-7pm. Porter Brewing, 611 NE Jackpine Ct #2, Redmond. Free.

Moms and Groms Moms, it’s simple. Show

up with your grom(s) to socialize and drink a beer (or two) with other awesome Bend moms while the kiddos make new friends. All moms get $1 off drinks from 3-5pm. Call it a play date...with beer! *Dads welcome too. Wednesdays, 3-5pm. Boss Rambler Beer Club, 1009 NW Galveston Ave., Bend. Free.

Monkless Belgian Ales & Girl Scout Cookie Pairing We sat down with

several boxes of cookies and undertook difficult tasting research in order to bring you the most delicious pairing list possible! Indulge yourself with a pairing flight of Girl Scout Cookies & Belgian Ales at Monkless! Feb. 27, 4pm. Monkless Belgian Ales Brasserie, 803 SW Industrial Way, Bend. Contact: 541-203-0507. aaron@monkless.com. $15.

Oregon Craft Beer Month at McMenamins: IPAs February is Craft Beer

Month in Oregon and it’s time to celebrate! We’re having tasting events at all of our Oregon breweries throughout the month, meet the brewer and tour the brewery. $5 specials on McMenamins beers! Feb. 24-29. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend. $5.

Palate Trip If you’ve ever wondered, “Where can I sample craft beer and amazing wine in Bend, Oregon?” we’ve got the answer. Come

on down to Newport Avenue Market and take your palate on a trip every Friday! Check our Friday morning timeline post each week to learn what brews and wines we’ll be tasting. Cheers! Fridays, 3:30-5:30pm. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave., Bend.

Pup Crawl at 10 Barrel Eastside Have a howling good time at Humane Society of Central Oregon’s 9th Annual Pup Crawl. Join us and help homeless animals. $10 custom glass and beverage of choice. 100% of the money raised benefits the animals. Feb. 27, 4-7:30pm. 10 Barrel Eastside, 62950 NE 18th St, Bend. Contact: 541-330-7096. info@hsco.org. $10. Pup Crawl at Deschutes Brewing Tasting Room Have a howling good time at

Humane Society of Central Oregon’s 9th Annual Pup Crawl. Join us and help homeless animals. $10 custom glass and beverage of choice. 100% of the money raised benefits the animals. Feb. 29, 3-6pm. Deschutes Brewery Tasting Room, 901 SW Simpson Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-330-7096. info@hsco.org. $10.

Pup Crawl at Worthy Brewing Have a howling good time at Humane Society of Central Oregon’s 9th Annual Pup Crawl. Join us and help homeless animals. $10 custom glass and beverage of choice. 100% of the money raised benefits the animals. Purchase during any Pup Crawl night. Feb. 28, 4-7:30pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr., Bend. Contact: 541-330-7096. info@hsco.org. $10. Sunday Funday Happy Hour & Trivia

Join us for a day of fun and awesome food! March 1, 4pm. River’s Place, 787 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend. Free.

Taco Tuesdays Join us every Tuesday $2.50

tacos! With many different varieties to choose from that all pair well with our beers on tap! Treat yourself to one of our three signature margaritas. Tuesdays, 4-10pm. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-388-8331. info@silvermoonbrewing.com.

Whiskey Wing Wednesdays When you

just can’t make it until Friday, we have your back! Come down and order our signature Starship Wings and choose from six different quality whiskeys for a pour for only $5! Wednesdays, 11:30am-10pm. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-388-8331. info@silvermoonbrewing.com.


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In search of a delicious cocktail, courtesy of Mother Nature

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M

aybe it happens after a u-pick berry outing or a mushroom hunting trip in which you finally discover a stash of morels. However it comes on, foraging can be addictive. If you’ve ever surfed or skimboarded, you know what it’s like to watch the waves curling toward you, deciding whether they’re worth catching. When you do ride one, the adrenaline pushes you back to more wave watching, because an even better wave could be coming. I could stand in the ocean all day—just as I can wander through the forest all afternoon, searching for edible plants. Utilizing those forest finds in a cocktail is my favorite way to celebrate the bounty of nature. I found someone else in the community who fancies foraged cocktails. Alyson Brown, behind the skincare brand Wild Folklore, is a flower alchemist who celebrates a flower-infused lifestyle beyond the vase. Currently she’s working on a cocktail book with 50 different flowers— some foraged—expected to publish in the fall. She has some great tips on how to responsibly forage and drink what you find. Before you go First, educate yourself before heading out. “Research what edible plants and flowers grow in your area,” recommends Brown. Know what you’re looking for, where to find them and possible preparation methods. Do research online or with books such as “Pacific Northwest Foraging: 120 Wild and Flavorful Edibles from Alaska Blueberries to Wild Hazelnuts” by Douglas Deur, or “Foraging Oregon: Finding, Identifying, and Preparing Edible Wild Foods in Oregon” by Christopher Nyerges. The latter is available at the Deschutes Public Library. Use protection “Know 100% what you are looking for,” advises Brown. Education is protection from mistaking one plant for another. For example, water hemlock is one of the most violently toxic plants growing in North America, Brown warns. “It can kill you and seep into your skin. It looks like Queen Anne’s lace or can be mistaken for yarrow. Its big white umbrellas can look like other flowers.”

Courtesy Alyson Brown

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The Into the Woods cocktail.

Lead with respect Brown has a few ground rules for foraging. “If it’s the only flower in that location, don’t pick it.” She also advises, “don’t take everything so they can reseed and regrow.” For example, if she picks wild roses, she leaves some of the petals behind for the pollinators. Some plants are rare, or endangered, so be respectful and don’t pick them. With knowledge and a few rules, the forest is a wonderland of edible plants. “If you can get your hands on huckleberries,” says Brown, “they make great drinks.” She also likes Oregon grape flowers—the state flower, since “they almost taste and smell like honey.” Oregon grape berries, when combined with sugar in a simple syrup, become sweet and tart. With spring burgeoning, the pine trees are beginning to grow again, and their new growth, called spruce tips, can be foraged into a cocktail. Brown likes to use the spruce tips to infuse vodka and make a simple syrup for her “Into the Woods” cocktail.

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INTO THE WOODS 1 1/2 oz fir-infused vodka 1/2 oz green chartreuse 1 oz green juice (pineapple, celery, spinach, kale) 1/2 oz fir simple syrup (1:1 water, sugar + 4 sprigs of fir) 3 muddled and juiced kumquats Slice kumquats in half and juice into a shaker. Lightly muddle the skin with the juice. Add vodka, chartreuse, green juice and simple syrup and shake over ice until the shaker is chilled. Pour over crushed ice and garnish with kumquats, Oregon grape flowers and pineapple leaves. For fir-infused vodka instructions, visit wildfolklore.com.

In partnership with and benefitting

25 VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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1917: From director Sam Mendes comes a war movie unlike any you’ve seen before. Crafted to look like the entire film is done in one shot, “1917” is easily the most intense war film since “Saving Private Ryan” or “The Thin Red Line.” See this on the biggest and loudest screen you can find. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX, Odem Theater Pub

and I’m like, “Yes, please. I’ll take three more, please.” Kevin Hart does the greatest Danny Glover impression and Danny DeVito is a national treasure…what more do you need? There’s a scene with DeVito climbing down a ladder that made me snot laugh. This movie is a delight. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX

KNIVES OUT: “Clue” is one of the best movies

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BAD BOYS FOR LIFE: It’s shocking the producers didn’t wait until the fourth installment to use this title, but at least we have another one of this ridiculous franchise to enjoy. This one is actually surprisingly serious, focused more on aging and mortality than one would think for a movie like this. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX, Sisters Movie House

VOLCANIC

BIRDS OF PREY: An absolutely bonkers comic

mas present than seeing Greta Gerwig’s take on “Little Women.” With a cast featuring the finest women actors of their generation, this should be the definitive take on the material. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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MARCHFOURTH

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FILM SHORTS By Jared Rasic

MAR 17

book movie featuring Margot Robbie as psychotic anti-hero Harley Quinn. For everyone who thought “Joker” was an original comic book movie, “Birds of Prey” shows audiences how weird DC Comics can get with their movies. Way too much fun. Regal Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX, Redmond Cinema

BRAHMS: THE BOY II: Movies about evil dolls are pretty popular right now, but I definitely never expected to see a sequel to “The Boy,” which had a twist ending designed to eliminate the need for sequels. CALL OF THE WILD: Based on the beloved novel

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by Jack London, this new adaptation has Buck the dog as a completely CGI creation. The movie is very pretty to look at and has some lovely moments, but Buck never quite escapes from the uncanny valley. Regal Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema

DOLITTLE: This movie bounces between being

classy and stupid so quickly it’s bound to give you whiplash, but it’s definitely not as bad as critics would have you believe. Downey gives it his all and there’s something refreshing about the film’s lack of pretension. Still, there are a lot of fart jokes. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX

DOWNHILL: This is an American remake of the

fantastic Swedish/French film “Force Majeure” which follows a family on vacation having troubles. After a false avalanche, the dad ditches his wife and kids as he runs to safety, completely losing his family’s faith in him. The remake won’t be as good as the original, but Will Ferrell and Julia Louis-Dreyfus are always fun to watch. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX, Redmond Cinema

FANTASY ISLAND: Based on the TV show that

ran from 1977 to 1984, this version of “Fantasy Island” turns everything into a Monkey’s Paw-type situation where everyone’s wishes turn horrifying and deadly. Changing existing intellectual property into a horror movie is a great idea. Can we get a horror-movie version of “Love Boat” or “Charlie’s Angels” please? Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX

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THE GENTLEMEN: Ever since “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels,” Guy Ritchie has been making very specific British crime comedies, but “The Gentlemen” is easily his best since 2000’s “Snatch.” Even as the originality of these movies has worn off over the years, Ritchie’s frenetic direction keeps them worth watching. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX JUMANJI: THE NEXT LEVEL: Everyone’s

complaining that this is just more of the same

LITTLE WOMEN: I can’t imagine a better Christ-

MIDNIGHT FAMILY: An absolutely riveting

documentary about a family that runs a private, for-profit ambulance in Mexico City. This will pin you to your chair for an hour and a half as you watch the Ochoa family rocket through the streets trying to be the first ambulance to arrive at horrific scenes. Tin Pan Theater

ONCE WERE BROTHERS: Arguably, the greatest rock documentary of all time is Martin Scorsese’s look at the final performance of The Band, “The Last Waltz.” Here we have a different look at the group, this time focused on the early days of the band from the point of view of Robbie Robertson. As a fan of their music, this documentary is unmissable. Tin Pan Theater. PARASITE: The Oscar winner for Best Picture and Best Foreign Film comes back to theaters in a black and white edition to deeply unsettle everyone who missed it the first time. The smartest, funniest and most shocking movie you will see all year. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX, Tin Pan Theater THE PHOTOGRAPH: Two of my current favorite

actors to watch are Issa Rae and Lakeith Stanfield, so a romance that’s just about the two of them falling in love sounds perfect. Following the trials and tribulations of multiple generations of a family, “The Photograph” takes what could have been a generic romance and makes something timely and powerful. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX

SONIC THE HEDGEHOG: A live-action mov-

ie about a really fast alien who looks like a hedgehog and the evil doctor who wants to run experiments on him. This should be terrible, but somehow it’s charming and surprisingly not annoying... as far as movies about alien hedgehogs are concerned. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX, Redmond Cinema

STAR WARS: THE RISE OF SKYWALKER: The ninth and “final” film in the Skywalker Saga sees Rey, Finn and Poe take on Kylo Ren and the First Order for all the marbles. Remember, no matter who lives or dies, the real winner is Disney. Every single time. Always Disney. Our new benevolent overlords. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX THE WOMAN WHO LOVES GIRAFFES: A moving documentary about Anne Innis, a biologist who traveled to South Africa in the 1950s to study giraffes in the wild. Now at 86, the film retraces her steps and solo journey to South Africa. Sisters Movie House

STREAMING THIS WEEK “HUNTERS”

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Al Pacino leads a team of Nazi hunting spies in North America during the late 1970s. Do you need more? Fine! It’s dark and funny and shocking while being obscenely addictive and you get to see Nazis getting destroyed. All good things.

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ever made and “Knives Out” makes it look basic. With a perfect cast featuring Chris Evans, Jamie Lee Curtis, Daniel Craig and a dozen more, this movie will melt your brain and then rearrange the pieces incorrectly. A new classic. Old Mill ScreenX & IMAX

Now Streaming on Amazon Prime courtesy IMDb


SC

the Source Be With You SCREEN May Podcasts, shows and other stuff you shouldn’t miss this month By Jared Rasic

In Pod We Trust: Lately the news is mostly awful. We know this to be true—but what happens when you want to stay current with events but are either too exhausted, riddled with anxiety or just plain busy to put in the time to be informed and depressed? “What a Day” has you

covered. It’s a 15-minute long podcast that makes keeping up with the news feel less joyless than it would otherwise. Hosts Akilah Hughes and Gideon Resnick keep it light and high energy without dumbing anything down. There’s something so relatable about “Dead Eyes” that, even in its specificity, it feels universal and heartbreaking. Connor Ratliff is an actor on “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” whose career almost came to an abrupt end when he was fired from “Band of Brothers” during what would have been his big break. People get fired all the time, especially in Hollywood, but what makes his story unique is that he was fired by America’s dad, Tom Hanks, for having dead eyes. The podcast is Ratliff’s attempt to come to grips with that and it’s unmissable.

Courtesy Amazon Studios

27

Al Pacino and Logan Lerman team up to track down Nazis in Amazon’s “Hunters.”

Courtesy Netflix

If you’re in the mood for something fictional, “Hit the Bricks” is a sequel to “The Wizard of Oz,” set 100 years after Dorothy Gale arrives in the magical land. With an original score, a beautiful script and immersive voice acting, “Hit the Bricks” is so good that it’s easy to imagine this being the future land of Oz.

Laysla De Oliveira in Netflix’s “Locke and Key,” based on comics by Stephen King's son, Joe Hill.

Now Streaming Netflix is having a solid month of releases with the suspenseful first season of the “Stranger Things”-esque “Locke and Key” which follows a family starting over after a tragic death in their ancestral home, filled with weird and magical keys. Based on the series of comics written by Stephen King’s son Joe Hill, the show is much creepier

than the description would have you believe. Netflix is also about to drop the much-anticipated second season of the sci-fi mind bender, “Altered Carbon,” the teen horror/comedy hybrid “I Am Not Okay with This” and a brandnew Pete Davidson comedy special, so I think the streaming giant just got my subscription dollars for another month. So far, the real find this month has been the Amazon Prime Original Series “Hunters,” which follows Al Pacino as the leader of a group of rag-tag Nazi hunters in late-‘70’s NYC. It’s bizarre, violent, funny and deeply disturbing all at the same time, while feeling like the spiritual successor to Tarantino’s “Inglorious Basterds.” Watch the first episode and you’ll be forced to binge the rest.

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VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

F

irst spring is always something to behold in Central Oregon. Usually nestled snugly in between first and second winter, it’s a lovely few weeks of blue skies, cold nights and possible random snowfall that makes the weather here so truly unpredictable. In case you’re an indoor kid and need a few more things to binge between now and second spring, I’ve got you covered with a few delectable ideas for podcasts and shows.


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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Bring your pup for a walk up Pilot Butte on Tuesday at 8am, or a Thursday run at Spoken Moto at 6pm.

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ATHLETIC EVENTS

Old Mill. Tuesdays, 5am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: colton.gale@gmail.com. Free.

Bend Area Running Community (BARC)

Saturday Coffee Run Wish you had a

Join us for a 3.5-mile loop through the Old Mill and along the Deschutes River! No registration required. All paces welcome. Mondays, 5:30pm. AVID Cider Co., 900 SE Wilson St., Bend. Contact: bendarearunningfraternity@gmail.com. Free.

Bend Babes Brew & Running Crew

Women of Bend, if you like to run in the woods and celebrate with post-run beers and food, then join us! Each week we meet at a different trail, decide as a group how far to run (usually 40-50 minutes), and then meet at a brew pub for post-run drinks and dinner! All paces welcome! Thursdays, 5:30pm. City of Bend, contact for more info, . Contact: b3runningcrew@gmail.com.

Chicks in Bowls Ladies’ Night Seed of Life

Skateboard Company and Bearings Skateboard Academy have joined forces to provide a ladies night! Ideal for every level of skater and open to all ladies! Wednesdays, 7-9pm. Bearings Skateboard Academy, 615 SE Glenwood Drive, Bend. $10.

CORK Thursday Run Join us for a run from

3-5 miles. Stay afterward for a drink and food. All ability levels welcome along with friendly on leash dogs. Thursdays, 6-7:30pm. Spoken Moto, 310 SW Industrial Way, Bend. Free.

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FootZone’s 10k Training Group Safely

build up to a 10k, learn about different workouts, nutrition, running form, warm ups, cool downs and gear! Feb. 29, 8-10am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-317-3568. michelle@ footzonebend.com. $80-$90.

FootZone’s IntroRUN 5K Training Group Learn the basics of running, start a consistent fitness program, and make new running buddies! Learn about running form, breathing, warm ups, nutrition and gear. Feb. 29, 8-10am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-317-3568. michelle@footzonebend.com. $80-$90.

Hump Day Run Celebrate getting over the

mid-week hump with runners of all paces. We’ll run 3-5 miles down to the Old Mill and back. Bring a few bucks if you want to get a beer after! Wednesdays, 6pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: michelle@footzonebend.com. Free.

Plant-Powered Runners Sunday Run

Social runs each Sunday, starting at various parks, trails and veg-friendly restaurants around Bend. Sundays, 9-11am. Bend, RSVP for address, Bend. Contact: emily.mccloskey@gmail.com. Free.

Redmond Running Group Run All levels

(541) 322-2154 555 NW Arizona Avenue, Suite 25

welcome. Find the Redmond Oregon Running Klub on Facebook for weekly run details. Saturdays, 8am. City of Redmond, Redmond, Or., Redmond. Contact: rundanorun1985@gmail.com.

Rise and Run Early riser? This group is for

you! FootZoner Colton Gale will leads this run. All paces are welcome; 3-5 mile routes will usually take advantage of snow-free and lit paths in the

running posse to make your weekend run fly by? Marla Hacker will facilitate this group, which welcomes all paces for a 3-5 mile run on Saturdays. Bring a few bucks for coffee at a local shop afterwards with your new running buddies! Saturdays, 9am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: michelle@footzonebend.com. Free.

Tuesday Performance Group Maximize your time with focused, intense efforts. All ages and abilities welcome. Sessions led by accomplished trail runner Max King. Tuesdays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: max@footzonebend.com. Free. Walk Up Pilot Butte Join JessBFit for this breathtaking walk up Pilot Butte. Stick around after the walk to learn how to use the pull-up bar station at the trail head for strength training and stretching. Tuesdays, 8-9am. Pilot Butte State Park, Pilot Butte State Park, Bend. Contact: 503-446-0803. jess@jessbfit.com.

OUTDOOR EVENTS Bird Surveyor Training: Willow Springs

Become an official bird surveyor for the Deschutes Land Trust! Bird surveyors record species and number of birds at our Preserves. Feb. 26, 10am. Free.

Growing Vegetables in Central Oregon - Redmond Learn how to grow your own food.

Yes, you can have a successful vegetable garden in Central Oregon and OSU Master Gardeners will teach you how! March 5, 5pm. OSU/Deschutes County Extension Service, 3800 SW Airport Way, Bldg. 3, Redmond. Free.

Latino Outdoors - Shevlin Park Outing Let’s go outside... vamos afuera! Feb. 29, Noon. Shevlin Park, 18920 Shevlin Rd., Bend. Free.

Trails & Treats Join Brasada Trails this winter for trail rides to Spirit Rock, where you’ll roast s’mores over the open fire pit and sip hot cocoa while enjoying the breathtaking views as far as the eye can see. 18% service charge. Saturdays, 1-3pm. Through March 21. Brasada Ranch, 16986 SW Brasada Ranch Rd, Powell Butte. Contact: 541-526-6870. advconcierge@brasada.com. $160. VertFest Ski/Split Mountaineering Race & Backcountry Festival VertFest

is annual Backcountry Festival to raise funds to support the efforts of the Central Oregon Avalanche Center. It’s a full Saturday of uphill skinning and downhill shredding, free demos, clinics, bonfire, s’mores and festivities! Feb. 29, 8am-3:15pm. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Drive, Bend. Contact: info@coavalanche.org. $15-$35.

Women Who Explore - Burma Road Loop Hike Come join us as we hike the stunning

Burma Road Loop at Smith Rock State Park! Feb. 29, 10am. Smith Rock State Park, 9241 NE Crooked River Dr., Terrebonne. Free.


O

OUTSIDE

Chasing The Sun

GO HERE

In Central Oregon, nearly any time is a good time for a climb

By Nicole Vulcan

Submitted

By Isaac Biehl

29

Clint McKoy, Unsplash

VertFest celebrates the trudging up as much as the gliding down

Smith Rock State Park is a popular climbing destination all year round, but during the winter it supplies climbers with some of the best conditions in the area.

U

sually this is a strange time of year for the rock-climber population. It’s still pretty cold out, and often, there’s that pesky snow and ice to deal with. But this year? Winter has almost been too ideal for climbers. “We’ve been lucky with a winter like this. This winter has been prime conditions,” says Mike Rougeux, climbing director with the Bend Endurance Academy. “Even today, you might want to go to more shadier spots than sit in the sun.” Places like Smith Rock State Park— the birthplace of American sport climbing—are at a good position and temperature in late winter, and Rougeux says even many of the bouldering spots around Bend have been pretty climbable as well. But if there was a winter like last year’s, when feet of snow dropped late in the season, what practices do climbers follow to still be on their game?

While it might seem obvious, the team at Bend Rock Gym says the first rule of winter rock climbing is to travel somewhere warm. Numb hands and feet don’t typically make for fun climbing, so if traveling to a warmer climate isn’t an option, they advise bringing loads of insulating layers and hand warmers. The big shiny thing in the sky is a climber’s best friend—so follow it. You typically don’t want to be somewhere that the sun can’t hit, or a place where it won’t be at very long. Ideally climbers will be able to maintain good body heat, and the sun will give that a little boost while heating up the rock face as well. “I’m not saying this just because we live in Bend, but you have to have a puffy,” laughs Rougeux. “You don’t want to re-warm up every time if you’re belaying. You want to maintain blood flow and body heat.” So a killer puffy jacket, solid layers, and even hand warmers can become crucial for a winter climb. Rougeux tells me

that some people will even bring out a small propane heater to have at the base of the rock. Black Diamond also makes a chalk bag that has battery-powered heat to take on the climb. And as long as it’s sunny and not windy, with weather like Central Oregon has been enjoying this week, climbers should be in the clear. For beginning climbers who are looking to still keep practicing year-round but aren’t winter-climb savvy, the Bend Rock Gym will be emptier than usual this time of the year as the experienced climbers will be outside with the nice weather. But if you are looking to get out when it’s a bit colder, be sure to keep those extremities warm. “If you can get to a position and shake out, put a hand on the back of your neck. The body tends to keep all of the main organs warmer than your hands,” says Rougeux. “Even just shaking out your arms and hands, because most of the time they’re above your chest. This helps increase blood flow.”

Before you dive full-force into the magic that is spring, take at least one last weekend to fully bask in the beauty of winter (or just toggle back and forth between winter and spring sports, like lots of Central Oregon outdoor enthusiasts do). Mt. Bachelor’s VertFest, which celebrates the love of backcountry snow sports, is “fast becoming the largest national backcountry festival in America,” according to Mt. Bachelor. Saturday’s activities include the uphill skinning and downhill skiing race on Bachelor’s Cone, as well as clinics and demos—and of course, beer. Plus, the funds raised go to support the Central Oregon Avalanche Center. Racers and clinic participants should register online at skireg.com/vertfest2020, with race packet pickup Friday at Crow’s Feet. Races start at 10am Saturday; clinics, including Intro to Backcountry Skiing and Splitboarding and a Companion Rescue Clinic take place Saturday morning and evening. VertFest 2020

Sat., Feb 29. Races start at 10 am Mt Bachelor mtbachelor.com/event/vertfest-2020/ Race registration $25/$35 adults; Youth $15. Clinics $30 Jon Tapper

Are you a local athlete with an exceptional story to tell? Tell it to the readers of the Source! Share your awesome tales with us, and we’ll consider sharing them with our 60,000+ monthly readers. Email your stories of athletic excellence to editor@bendsource.com.

Get your vert on this Saturday.

VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

What goes up must come down - fast.


REDUCE : IDEAS & INSPIRATION

Women’ s ISSUE MAKE EVERY - COMING MARCH 5 Ad Deadline Feb 28

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Year after year, the Women’s Issue continues to shake things up and leave a powerful impression on our readers. This year the Source Weekly and The Bend Chamber of Commerce have partnered to bring you the

Advertise in the Women’s Issue and let the community know how you connect and reach the modern woman and her community. advertise@bendsource.com 541.383.0800

“Women of the Year”,

recognizing some of the incredible movers and shakers in our community.

THREAD COUNT Rethink about it! It can take 1,500 gallons of water to manufacture just one T-shirt and jeans -- as much water as you’ll drink in 13 years! Help keep textiles out of the landfill by checking out a second-hand shop or by buying only well-made clothes that’ll last. Too many clothes? Swap with friends and donate what you can’t wear or trade.

RethinkWasteProject.org

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an environmental center program


N A T U R A L

O

W O R L D

Homes for Birds and Bats

Don’t let Central Oregon’s housing shortage affect wildlife, too By Jim Anderson Jim Anderson

ensure they’d be saved for cavity nesters. Not too many years back I was driving past one of the old sales and sure enough, those wildlife trees were still standing. The wonderful people I worked for at the Deschutes District helped to get me a permanent appointment working for the USFS, but the day that appointment came in the mail, I got a phone call from my old spider teacher and good pal, Vince Roth, who ran the American Museum of Natural History’s research station in Arizona. I told him about the permanent appointment papers from the USFS I was holding in my hands. “Forget that,” he said. “You gotta come down and run the Ramsey Canyon Hummingbird Preserve. The Nature Conservancy just took control of it and they have no idea what to do with it.” “But Vince…” I tried to say, over and over. But he just kept hammering away with the need for me to take on Ramsey Canyon, and he finally won. I thanked all those wonderful people in Bend for the effort they went to getting me that permanent appointment, and really felt pretty bad about not following through, but Vince was a pal like no other, and Ramsey Canyon sounded pretty exciting. And my wife Sue and I had a blast! Anyway… the vanishing of cavity nesting substrate also increased when steel fence posts appeared on the market. All those old wooden fence posts that woodpeckers pounded holes into were gone, and one bird in particular, the eastern bluebird, almost went extinct because of it. What saved them was nesting box builders from the Atlantic to the Mississippi river.

Look out world, here I come! Nestling American kestrel about to fledge right under Ellyana Long’s nose. Nesting box by Jim Anderson.

If you sold your table saw, or if you’ve cut your fingers off one at a time using it, knock on the door of a person you know who loves doing wood working projects, and enlist their help in building nesting boxes for birds and shelters for bats. There’s nothing like having a bluebird nesting box in your backyard. If you have an outdoor cat, put a Bird-be-safe collar on it so it doesn’t target the birds. A swallow nesting box will be a welcome asset if you live near a mosquito-producing body of water. You can also put up a bat shelter and have bats fluttering about at night, helping with the mosquito reduction business. If you live in the Camp Sherman neck of the woods, or the west side of Bend, put up a nesting box for a northern pygmy owl; you’ll have a wonderful

opportunity for them to move in and positively ruin your afternoon nap with all their tooting. Those ambitious little owls are capable of catching, killing and eating pine squirrels and other critters that size. Building and erecting nesting boxes is a great way to help wildlife prosper, and for you to have the satisfaction of seeing your handiwork create immediate and long-lasting positive results. To get plans, pick up my “ECAS Natural Selection Nesting Box & Bat Shelter” booklet when you come to the next East Cascades Audubon Society Birder’s Night on the Third Thursday of the month at the Bend Environmental Center. Or email me ( jimnaturalist@ gmail.com) for the PDF digital version. Now get busy!

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31 VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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K, good people, now’s the time! Head out to the nearest housing construction project, and if they’re using plywood (not particle board), ask the builders to put leftovers aside. Bring a box of donuts, give it to the builders and bring the plywood home to build bird house nesting boxes. I’ve been building nesting boxes for well over 40 years, and in that period of time I have never had a builder say no. Most of them have even been kind enough to help me load the stuff into my pickup. This is not only a good way to save the excess wood from the landfill, but your opportunity to really put your personal effort into supplying a much-needed portion of wildlife habitat that has gone missing. Back in the ‘50s and ’60s, when the logging/forestry industry took it upon itself to become forest fire rangers and denounce all the dead standing trees in the forest as lightning rods, it was the beginning of the end for cavity nesters. What really finished off the snags (dead trees) back in those “good old days” was when Brooks-Scanlon started selling “Brooks Wood,” beautiful pine boards cut from snags. The U.S. Forest Service made a huge attempt to right that wrong with the “Wildlife Tree” project, in which it had folks in federal prisons make 4x4-inch aluminum wildlife signs that wildlife biologists placed on standing snags, announcing them to be absolutely essential as nesting and shelter for wildlife, saying “Do Not Cut.” In the ’70s, when I was working for USFS, one of my jobs was walking portions of timber sales, searching out snags and placing wildlife signs on them to


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TAKE ME HOME

REAL ESTATE

By Abbie + Rick Sams Licensed brokers, Team Sams at Fred Real Estate Group

Growth + Rising Costs vs. Affordable Housing Healthy and happy cities are dependent on affordable options cities to thrive and remain desirable. In a recent report, the National Association of Realtors’ Chief Economist Lawrence Yun highlights the correlation between housing affordability and decreasing job growth. Yun states that as inventory continues to decline and affordability worsens, workers and companies are less incentivized to do business in that place. NAR states that 81 out of 174 U.S. metropolitan areas have seen a decline in housing affordability rankings and 34 of these areas are seeing job growth fall faster than the national average. Some local organizations are tackling this problem head on. Among them is Kôr Community Land Trust, which is spearheading efforts to develop perpetually affordable homes. Its flagship community, five energy efficient, 1,100-square-foot cottages, will begin construction next month. Habitat for Humanity is another longtime friend to those for whom home ownership has been out of reach. The local chapter will soon begin construction on nine smaller, highly efficient homes. Larger homebuilders and real estate developers usually aren’t interested in tackling this issue because of the low profit margin, so the solution will rely on community involvement. Kôr Community Land Trust and Habitat for Humanity are largely supported by individual donations and volunteers. The solution to the need for affordable housing will likely have to rise from a local-level grassroots movement. Discussing ways to create and support affordable housing in Bend is a great conversation to start having with local lawmakers or friends and family.

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VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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he pace of growth in Central Oregon is simply staggering, drawing people from all over the U.S. because of the high desirability. Homebuyers moving here refer to Central Oregon home prices as “affordable” compared to where they’re coming from—mostly metropolitan areas where sales prices have soared. Zillow states that median home prices in San Francisco are nearly $1.3 million, the Seattle area fetches $720,000 and Los Angeles is coming in around $760,000. In contrast, last month, Bend’s median single-family home sale price was $450,000. Those who are new to Bend are pleasantly surprised to see how far their dollar goes here. Increasing home prices are great for current homeowners building equity, and manageable for many buyers who come from high-priced markets, but the rising prices have pushed homeownership just out of reach for any prospective buyers on a tight budget. Affordable housing is defined as housing that costs 30% or less of a household income. Nationally and locally, wages aren’t keeping up with rising housing costs. The lack of affordable housing greatly affects many everyday people who are key service providers in a community, such as teachers, cops, nurses and firefighters, as well as most of the restaurant and hospitality employees. Affordable housing improves the quality of life for communities by leading to better health, financial stability, adequate jobs, security and population diversity—all incentives for burgeoning cities to reinvest in housing options for all. Affordable housing is also necessary for


A SIAN N EW Y EAR C ELEBRATION Sunday March 1, 2020 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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A BENEFIT EVENT FOR 4:00pm - 6:30pm Bend Senior High School Auditorium 230 NE 6th St.

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Hosted by Z21’s Mike Allen TICKETS

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... “Draft,” or maybe a “Cold One.” Some refer to it as “Brewski,” “Suds,” or “Cerveza.” Whether you reach for an “Oat Soda,” a “Barley Pop,” or just a regular old “Beer” — most can agree that Central Oregon is a special place for that curious concoction that makes everything better. Advertise in the Source Weekly’s Beer Issue and give readers the haps on your taps!

SCIENCE ADVICE GODDESS Grisly Bare

I hooked up with a really good friend a few times. We both agreed to forget about it to preserve our friendship, but he’s been really distant. I don’t want to be the one to reach out and say something. How do I get things back to normal? —Upset Woman Sure, they say a really good friend is someone who knows everything about you -- though, ideally, stopping short of how your sex face is a ringer for a pug having a seizure. Chances are, this stretch of awkward silence between you has two interconnected causes: 1. “Eek, too much naked!” with somebody who isn’t a romantic partner, and 2. The fog of uncertainty over what sort of relationship you and he now have. Problem 1, “Eek, too much naked!” comes out of how, when you two “just friends” hooked up, you abruptly and unwittingly vaulted across the boundaries of friendship into romantic territory. Major features of a romantic relationship -- an intimate relationship -- are vulnerability and openness. We look to find someone we can trust with our most embarrassing flaws and deepest fears, along with other stuff we don’t put out to the world with a bullhorn: “Hey, everybody on this bus, let’s have a chat about what I like in bed!” Sex tends to feel less like sexual overshare after the fact if it was preceded by some starter romance -- talking flirty, lite touchyfeely, making cartoon heart eyes at each other. This stuff signals a transition to a deeper relationship (or at least sincere hopes of one). However, when we get naked without any romantic prep, our feeling weirded out -- overly exposed -- probably comes out of our evolved motivation to protect our reputation: our public image, the sort of person others perceive us to be. Back in the harsh, 7-Eleven- and Airbnb-free ancestral environment that shaped the psychology still driving us today, our social survival and, in turn, our physical survival were dependent on whether people believed we were a good person and somebody good to keep around. Welcome to the origins of our longing for privacy -- to keep some info about ourselves out of the public eye (everyone we don’t have intimate relationships with) and to manicure the info we do release. Social psychologist Mark Leary refers to this as “impression

management.” Others’ evaluations of us affect how we’re perceived and treated, so, Leary explains, we’re driven to “behave in ways that will create certain impressions in others’ eyes.” Regrettably, it’s difficult to keep up the role of steely image manager while naked and barking like a coked-up elephant seal. Moving on to problem 2, the fog of uncertainty over what sort of relationship you and this guy now have, getting naked together is also a defining act of sorts -- or rather, a possibly redefining one. Before you two had sex, your relationship was clearly defined as a friendship. There’s comfort in this sort of clarity. It’s like a sign over a business. When we see “Laundromat,” we know what to expect, and it isn’t Thai takeout or stripper poles, watereddown $20 drinks, and Amy Alkon loose glitter. Right now, there’s probably an uncomfortable question looming over the two of you: Does one want more of a relationship -- a romantic relationship -- than the other’s up for providing? Psychologist Steven Pinker explains that people get uneasy when they’ve had one type of relationship with somebody -- say, a friendship -- and they aren’t sure whether that person wants a different type of relationship. A changed relationship has changed terms and behaviors that go with it, and they need to know which set they’re supposed adhere to. And sure, you do say you both agreed to ditch the sex to preserve the friendship, but people say lots of things, because it’s not like a dude in some control room somewhere gives us an electric shock whenever we tell a lie. Ask yourself whether you might want more than a friendship. If so, figure out whether you want it enough (and whether it’s possible enough) to risk making it too uncomfortable to remain friends -- which could happen. If friendship is really all you want, you don’t have to “reach out and say something.” In general, guys don’t want to talk about it; they just want life to go on. And there’s your answer. Start asking this guy to do “just friends” things, like hanging out with you and other amigos. To stay on the clothed and narrow, schedule these outings at “just friends” times -- in unsexy bright daylight -- and in “just friends” locations: places you’d get arrested if you stripped down to “Yo... check out the wild birthmark that looks like Lawrence of Arabia crossing my girlparts on a camel!”

Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon,

advertise@bendsource.com | 541.383.0800

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

© 2020, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved.


ASTROLOGY By Rob Brezsny PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): If you’re like most

ARIES (March 21-April 19): You may sometimes reach a point where you worry that conditions are not exactly right to pursue your dreams or fulfill your holy quest. Does that describe your current situation? If so, I invite you to draw inspiration from Spanish writer Miguel de Cervantes (1547–1616), who’s regarded as one of history’s foremost novelists. Here’s how one observer described Cervantes during the time he was working on his masterpiece, the novel titled Don Quixote: “shabby, obscure, disreputable, pursued by debts, with only a noisy tenement room to work in.” Cervantes dealt with imperfect conditions just fine. TAURUS (April 20May 20): “True success is figuring out your life and career so you never have to be around jerks,” says Taurus filmmaker, actor, and author John Waters. I trust that you have been intensely cultivating that kind of success in the last few weeks, Taurus—and that you will climax this wondrous accomplishment with a fl ourish during the next few weeks. You’re on the verge of achieving a new level of mastery in the art of immersing yourself in environments that bring out the best in you.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): I would love for you to become more powerful, Gemini—not necessarily in the sense of influencing the lives of others, but rather in the sense of managing your own affairs with relaxed confidence and crisp competence. What comes to mind when I urge you to expand your self-command and embolden your ambition? Is there an adventure you could initiate that would bring out more of the swashbuckler in you?

CANCER (June 21-July 22): For my Cancerian readers in the Southern Hemisphere, this oracle will be in righteous alignment with the natural flow of the seasons. That’s because February is the hottest, laziest, most spacious time of year in that part of the world—a logical moment to take a lavish break from the daily rhythm and escape on a vacation or pilgrimage designed to provide relaxation and renewal. Which is exactly what I’m advising for all of the earth’s Cancerians, including those in the Northern Hemisphere. So for those of you above the equator, I urge you to consider thinking like those below the equator. If you can’t get away, make a blanket fort in your home and pretend. Or read a book that takes you on an imaginary journey. Or hang out at an exotic sanctuary in your hometown. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Leo author Walter Scott (1771–1832) was a pioneer in the genre of the historical novel. His stories were set in various eras of the Scottish past. In those pre-telephone and pre-Internet days, research was a demanding task. Scott traveled widely to gather tales from keepers of the oral tradition. In accordance with current astrological omens, Leo, I recommend that you draw inspiration from Scott’s old-fashioned approach. Seek out direct contact with the past. Put yourself in the physical presence of storytellers and elders. Get first-hand knowledge about historical events that will inspire your thoughts about the future of your life story. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Over a period of 40 years, the artist Rembrandt (1606–1663) gazed into a mirror as he created more than nine-

ty self-portraits—about ten percent of his total work. Why? Art scholars don’t have a definitive answer. Some think he did self-portraits because they sold well. Others say that because he worked so slowly, he himself was the only person he could get to model for long periods. Still others believe this was his way of cultivating self-knowledge, equivalent to an author writing an autobiography. In the coming weeks, I highly recommend that you engage in your personal equivalent of extended mirror-gazing. It’s a favorable time to understand yourself better.

35 VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

of us, you harbor desires for experiences that might be gratifying in some ways but draining in others. If you’re like most of us, you may on occasion get attached to situations that are mildly interesting, but divert you from situations that could be amazingly interesting and enriching. The good news, Pisces, is that you are now in a phase when you have maximum power to wean yourself from these wasteful tendencies. The coming weeks will be a favorable time to identify your two or three most important and exciting longings—and take a sacred oath to devote yourself to them above all other wishes and hopes.

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LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): From author Don DeLillo’s many literary works, I’ve gathered five quotes to serve as your guideposts in the coming weeks. These observations are all in synchronistic alignment with your current needs. 1. Sometimes a thing that’s hard is hard because you’re doing it wrong. 2. You have to break through the structure of your own stonework habit just to make yourself listen. 3. Something is always happening, even on the quietest days and deep into the night, if you stand a while and look. 4. The world is full of abandoned meanings. In the commonplace, I find unexpected themes and intensities. 5. What we are reluctant to touch often seems the very fabric of our salvation. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “I remember a time when a cabbage could sell itself just by being a cabbage,” wrote Scorpio author Jean Giraudoux (1882–1944). “Nowadays it’s no good being a cabbage—unless you have an agent and pay him a commission.” He was making the point that for us humans, it’s not enough to simply become good at a skill and express that skill; we need to hire a publicist or marketing wizard or distributor to make sure the world knows about our offerings. Generally, I agree with Giradoux’s assessment. But I think that right now it applies to you only minimally. The coming weeks will be one of those rare times when your interestingness will shine so brightly, it will naturally attract its deserved attention. Your motto, from industrialist Henry J. Kaiser: “When your work speaks for itself, don’t interrupt.”

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Spring iss u

e

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): When he was 29 years old, Sagittarian composer Ludwig Beethoven published his String Quartet, Op. 18, No. 4. Most scholars believe that the piece was an assemblage of older material he had created as a young man. A similar approach might work well for you in the coming weeks, Sagittarius. I invite you to consider the possibility of repurposing tricks and ideas that weren’t quite ripe when you first used them. Recycling yourself makes good sense. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Are there parts of your life that seem to undermine other parts of your life? Do you wish there was greater harmony between your heart and your head, between your giving and your taking, between your past and your future? Wouldn’t it be wonderful if you could infuse your cautiousness with the wildness of your secret self? I bring these questions to your attention, Capricorn, because I suspect you’re primed to address them with a surge of innovative energy. Here’s my prediction: Healing will come as you juxtapose apparent opposites and unite elements that have previously been unconnected.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): When he was 19, the young poet Robert Graves joined the British army to fight in World War I. Two years later, the Times of London newspaper reported that he had been killed at the Battle of the Somme in France. But it wasn’t true. Graves was very much alive, and continued to be for another 69 years. During that time, he wrote 55 books of poetry, 18 novels, and 55 other books. I’m going to be bold and predict that this story can serve as an apt metaphor for your destiny in the coming weeks and months. Some dream or situation or influence that you believed to be gone will in fact have a very long second life filled with interesting developments.

Homework: Try to identify which aspect of your life needs healing more than any other aspect. FreeWillAstrology.com

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The Spring Issue of Bend Nest will have local parents shouting hooray! Readers can look forward to fun and informative features on • Summer Camps • College Prep • Celebrating Mother’s Day • Springtime Family Events • Best of the Nest Winners

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HEALTH & WELLNESS EVENTS 37 VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Sunstone Recovery offers a family support group every Tuesday at noon. Heal together, learn together, grow together.

Bhakti Church Using guided meditation,

breathwork, mudra and chanting we will gather in circle to dive deep into the heart space of “Bhakti." First Sunday of every month, 7-8:30pm. Sol Alchemy Temple, 2150 NE Studio Rd., Bend. Contact: lalotheelf@gmail.com. $10 donation.

Breath Awareness Meditation Breath fo-

cused meditation that works to build “felt sense awareness” within the breath. Wednesdays, 12-12:30pm. Through July 1. Sunstone Recovery, 625 NW Colorado Ave., Bend. Free.

Can We Talk? A Workshop for Couples If you and your partner are curious about working through conflicts with greater ease, honesty and compassion, then Compassionate Communication is for you. Suggested donation - lower prices available. Feb. 29-March 1, 9am-12:30pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way, #200, Bend. Contact: 530-867-3198. denise@compassionatecenter.org. $130/couple.

Capoeira Bend Winter Beginner Series Capoeira is a Brazilian martial and cultural art form of freedom that brings self-improvement and joy to your life. Ages 14+. Register! Wednesdays, 7-8pm. Through Feb. 26. Fitness 1440 Bend, 1569 NE 2nd Street, Bend. Contact: 541-678-3460. ucabend@gmail.com. $30.

Community Healing Flow A flow class by

donation, which go to a local charity each month. Fridays, 4-5:15pm. Bend Community Healing Center, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 133, Bend.

Connect With and Heal Your Chakras Series Education of each Chakra and how they

work together. Gain awareness of your own energy and how to move Sundays, 1-2:30pm. Namaspa Yoga, Redmond, 974 SW Veterans Way Suite 5, Redmond. Contact: namaspayoga@gmail.com. $120/series, $30/class.

Family Birthing Center Tour Our Bend

Family Birthing Center holds a free onsite tour every Sunday. Please register before the event date! Sun, March 1, 2 and 2:45pm, Sun, March 8, 2 and 2:45pm. St. Charles Bend, 2500 Northeast Neff Road, Bend. Free.

Foundation Training (FT) Foundation

Training helps you create habits to relieve pain and optimize performance. Feel amazing with these time-tested biomechanically designed movements. Dr. Mike will help you modify to your needs, age and fitness level to get results fast. Mondays, 9-10am and Thursdays, 5:30-6:30pm. Through March 12. Bend Wellness Center, 2445 NE Division St, Ste 101, Bend. Contact: 541-797-7743. info@bendwellnesscenter.com. $15.

Gentle Morning Yoga This free all-levels

yoga class was designed to get you through your week. All equipment available to borrow. Wednesdays, 8:30-9:30am. OutsideIN, 845 NW Wall St, Bend. Contact: 541-317-3569. Free.

Gyrokinesis The Gyrokinesis Method is a

movement method that addresses the entire body. This class will benefit all levels of fitness and is a great modality to help improve range of motion, coordination, flexibility and mobilization of the joints to make every day movements easier! BYO mat. Thursdays, 9:30-10:45am. The Blissful Heart ~ Crystal Sanctuary, 45 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. Contact: 760-271-3272. angela@blissful-heart.com. $15/class, first class is free.

Introduction to Movement Signature Projects We’ll introduce you to Movement

Signature Projects and follow with basic classical meditation. Learn skills for deeper and more restful sleep, to reduce anxiety and to sharpen your intellect. Mondays, 5:30-7pm. Movement Signature Projects, 1740 NW Pence Ste. 6, Bend. Contact: 541-647-8023. Free.

Essential Tibetan Buddhism An informal talk offering a general introduction to Tibetan or Vajrayana Buddhism, led by Natural Mind Dharma Center director Michael Stevens. First Mondays, 7-9pm. Natural Mind Dharma Center, 345 SW Century Drive, Suite 2, Bend. Contact: info@naturalminddharma.org. Free.

Make Your Own Smudge Fan Workshop A smudge fan is used to waft sage or

FA meeting FA is a 12 step group for recovery

March Meditation Challenge! Starting

from food addiction. Saturdays, 9-10:30am. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St., Bend. Contact: 831-435-0680. foodaddicts.org. Free.

other herbal/resin smoke into and around your home or self to clear any negative or stuck energy. All materials provided! March 1, 3:30-5:30pm. Nature’s Bling, 133 SW Century Drive Suite 202, Bend. Contact: 541-640-0888. $40.

2/17 until 3/5 you can sign up for Blissful Heart Center’s upcoming meditation challenge! The student to take the most classes in the month of March will win TWO months of unlimited med-

itation! Just come to a class to sign up! March 1, Noon-Midnight. The Blissful Heart ~ Crystal Sanctuary, 45 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-595-3288. halie@blissful-heart.com.

Meditation Classes Come experience

our meditation classes. First class is free! For the full schedule, please go to: https://www. blissful-heart.com/calendar/ Mondays, 7-8pm, Tuesdays, Noon-1pm, Wednesdays, 7-8pm and Thursdays, Noon-1pm. Blissful Heart Wellness Center, 45 NW Greeley Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-595-3288. halie@blissful-heart.com. Free.

Qigong Plus A gentle movement meditation

that enhances one’s own ability to heal, maintains health and opens new pathways to being, using breathing, sound, movements, concentration, massage, meditation. It is easily learned so the effects are quickly recognized. Signed for those with hearing loss. Text Dawn for location. Mondays, 3:30pm. Location TBA. Contact: 541-207-7266. dawnsong03@gmail.com. donation.

Recovery Yoga This is a yoga movement practice themed around the principles of recovery and is accessible to all levels. Each class will incorporate gentle movement, guided meditation and breath work. This practice provides an opportunity to connect with oneself and community. Fridays, Noon-1pm. Through July 3. Sunstone Recovery, 625 NW Colorado Ave., Bend. $11. Restorative and Gentle Flow Yoga

Compassionately taught by Suzanne E-RYT Kripalu School of Yoga and Health. Mondays, 5:30-6:45pm and Tuesdays, 9:30-10:45am. Bend Community Healing Center, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 133, Bend. Contact: 240-498-1471. info@bendcommunityhealing.com. First class free, 5-pack intro/$40.

Sunstone Family Circle: Family Education and Support Group This group

focuses on living with and loving someone with substance use and/or mental health health challenges. Exploring a variety of topics related to recovery in a safe setting encourages empathy, productive discussions and an opportunity to develop supportive relationships and a sense of community. Tuesdays, Noon-1pm. Through June 30. Sunstone Recovery, 625 NW Colorado Ave., Bend. Free.

Tai Chi For Health Instructor Maureen Benet. Certified by Dr. Paul Lam. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 8-9am. OREGON TAI CHI, 1350 SE Reed

Mkt Rd Ste 102, Bend. Contact: 541-389-5015. First class free.

Taiji Daoist Internal Martial Arts for Body, Breath and Mind Does not focus

on fighting, instead teaches control over body, breath and mind. Taiji has many physical benefits & is a life long path to holistic wellness. Tuesdays, 8-9am. Through Dec. 29. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend. Free.

Thursday Weekly Walk Join walkers

of all speeds in this beginner-friendly group. Get acquainted with some walking routes in Bend, learn how to track your walks on your smartphone, meet some friendly new people and prepare for taking your walks out onto the trails. Thursdays, Noon-1pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-317-3568. michelle@footzonebend.com. Free.

Vin/Yin Yoga Mondays-Thursdays, 3pm. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St., Bend. Contact: 541-420-1587. By donation.

Women’s Sexual Abuse Survivors Support Group Confidential support group

for women survivors of sexual abuse. Call or text Veronica. Tuesdays, 6:30-8pm. Private Residence in Bend, RSVP for address, Bend. Contact: 503-856-4874. vleeramos@gmail.com. Free.

Yoga An hour of yoga with Shawn Anzaldo. BYO yoga mat. Thursdays, Noon-1pm. Princess Athletic, 945 NW Wall St., Suite 150, Bend. Free.

Yoga Basics All Levels yoga class. You learn

proper alignment and techniques to create greater awareness and the benefits of each pose to practice safely. $5 class in February! Wednesdays, 6:30-7:30am. Cooper Dance Studio, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Dr #110, Bend. Contact: 312-420-0924. bloomingbeingyoga@gmail.com. $10.

Yoga for Inflexible Men A men’s-only yoga class that focuses on flexibility, balance, and muscle tone. $5 classes in February. Saturdays, 9-10am. Cooper Dance Studio, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Dr #110, Bend. Contact: 312-420-0924. bloomingbeingyoga@gmail.com. $10. Zen Discussion & Meditation A weekly

lay-led Dharma discussion and meditation (zazen). Open to all. Does not meet 12/24 or or 1/31. For more info, contact Tom. Mondays, 6-8:30pm. St. Helen’s Hall - Trinity Episcopal, 231 NW Idaho St., Bend. Contact: 541-382-6651. Free.


smokesignals@bendsource.com

SMOKE SIGNALS Why the Black Market Persists 38 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

www.tokyostarfish.com

Tokyo ambassador Brian Zager /@bkzgrfx

GET YOUR Do not operate a vehicle or machinery under the influence of this drug. For use by adults 21 years of age and older. Keep out of the reach of children.

Even with vape-related illnesses strongly linked to unregulated products, price and other factors keep some in the shadows By Josh Jardine

T

he rapidly growing cannabis industry has a complicated relationship with a competing market segment, often described with a loaded term: the Black Market. “Black Market” references exchanges in which seller and buyer deal in illegal goods and/or avoid taxes and regulations by conducting their business “in the shadows,” hence the “black market.” It’s both an example in which “black” is used to denigrate (black sheep, black mark) with an association of negative attributes, and an example of subtle racism. The preferred term is “unregulated marketplace.” Due to the ongoing situation around E-cigarette, or Vaping, Product Use-Associated Lung Injury—or EVALI—the unregulated marketplace is under intense scrutiny. As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has announced, the vast majority of the vape cartridges which caused health issues for users were obtained from the UM and cut with ingredients such as Vitamin E acetate. (Don’t buy untested cartridges!) Lack of testing, and producers driven by profit over safety, are an ugly truth of purchasing outside the regulated system. Illegal large-scale outdoor grows can also result in pesticides and worse making their way into waterways. The unpleasant aspects of the UM were present everywhere long before regulated programs, and continue to exist and in some markets, thrive. In California, for every dollar spent in the regulated market, three is spent in the UM. This isn’t welcome news to those who obtained their cannabis business licenses, who continue to pay exorbitant taxes and deal with myriad challenges not imposed on any other industry in the world. So why are people still scoring in the shadows? Price: Without the costs of licensing and operating a business, products are available for lower prices, excluding tax. The “exit bag” is a zippered plastic sack; “testing” means you smoked a joint with the grower, and the savings are yours. Convenience: Cities and municipalities that have banned the production and sale of cannabis can create “dispensary deserts,” leaving residents with the sole option of traveling hundreds of miles to the nearest licensed dispensary. With a mere 591 licensed dispensaries in the entire state of California as of September

2019, the spread means over 70% of the state is such a desert. Potency: For some edible consumers, a high tolerance level can make potency limits expensive when buying the dose needed to offset chemo sessions or chronic pain. Illicitly acquired cannabis butter allows far more affordable dosing. Corporate Cannabis Chads: I strongly suspect I don’t share the same values as the C-Suite at MedMen, and would rather see my cannabis dollar go to a friend, indeed, who grows wicked weed, than to those who advocated against giving medical marijuana patients the ability to grow for themselves, such as is the case in New York. My weed-growing friend also believes that trying to hurt medical marijuana patients sucks, so yeah, I’m gonna go ahead and buy their (superior) weed instead. I know exactly where my money is going: their pocket. It’s the essence of supporting small craft producers and shopping within the community. People of Color: In parts of Los Angeles, despite promises of social equity to help people of color enter the industry, new business licenses— including those intended for social equity—are frozen while the City investigates its own processes around the social equity program. For some, accessing cannabis through someone in the neighborhood through the unregulated marketplace makes more sense, on numerous levels. Respect the OGs: State Adult Use recreational programs are built upon the backs of medical programs, and both programs are born the unregulated marketplace. This was the original “cannabis industry,” and didn’t come with the multi-million-dollar golden parachutes the modern cannabis CEO might encounter. It did come with the constant threat of arrest, jail time, or worse, for the “crime” of something that is now enriching people like John Boehner. The people who smuggled, sweated and struggled deserve enrichment as much as he does, to say the least. There are far more benefits than drawbacks to purchasing tested products from a licensed dispensary—but doing otherwise isn’t to be viewed as a failing. The best way to reduce/ eliminate the UM is to welcome its members into the fold with amnesty, licensing support and other programs. There’s room for us all.


THE REC ROOM Pearl’s Puzzle

Crossword

“AND ANOTHER THING"

Difficulty Level

★★★

e re Local

Pearl tar mathpu lesgames com uodo u

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

D E M O N

F A C T

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

“Yesterday in Egypt, archaeologists discovered the burial site for the 50 children of Ramses II... Fifty children! What I want to know is, who decided to ______r this guy?” — Conan O’Brien

ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S PUZZLES

ACROSS 1. “Mind. Blown” 5. Key-changing tool for guitarists 9. Feminine suffix 13. Audience, in a phrase 14. Suez Canal ship 15. Grooming brand that sounds like a word meaning “bullwark” 16. Rescue op 17. Pub employee who gets people to spend freely 18. Big test 19. Hazing event 22. The Knicks play there, for short 23. “Quit ___ jibberjabber!” 24. Singleton 25. Neither 26. Netflix and ___ 28. Physique 30. Awards similar to Nebulas 32. UFC’s president White 33. Barbecue application 34. Gun, at the gym 35. Request to a bartender, and what happens once here, and twice in 19- and 55-Across 40. They’ve mastered faster than light speed travel, seemingly 41. Michigan State football coach Tucker 42. Upholstery problems 44. Writhing killer 47. Montreal hockey player, fondly 48. Took first place 49. Your pick of 50. John of London 52. Detroit labor grp. 54. Texas sch. 55. Specific deets 59. “E! News” host Parker 60. “Mi hombre!” 61. “The Two Towers” soldiers 63. “Moses and ___” (Schoenberg opera) 64. Did some of the dishes 65. In need of getting some sun 66. Church members 67. Did so well as to warrant a chef’s kiss 68. Glasses, jokily

DOWN 1. Very insignificant 2. “Great Expectations” spinster 3. Citrus-flavored soda 4. PC text letter format 5. Leftover Cuban, say 6. Landed 7. “I’ve nothing more to say” 8. Crease-resistant dress material 9. Water holder 10. Getting ready for an uplifting trip? 11. “Right! I knew I forgot it!” 12. Big name in glue 14. Award given out by the American Theatre Wing 20. “I’m outta here,” in texts 21. ___ jacket 22. Golden Arches co. on Wall Street 27. Anthony Davis, e.g. 29. 2020 Best Spoken Word Album winner 31. Soccer shorts company 33. “How the Other Half Lives” author Jacob 34. Alternative to ProtonMail 36. “And others” 37. Polished up, as an app 38. Dryer collector 39. Inner circle, in astronomy 43. Letter run that’s a man’s name 44. Quick siesta 45. Available for work 46. “I’m outta here” 47. Capturer of some embarrassing comments 48. “Jojo Rabbit” setting, for short 51. Capital city originally called Bytown 53. “Sunday Night Baseball” analyst, for short 56. Indian flat breads 57. “Zomg!” 58. Sports car roofs 62. Activity for busy people?

“Presidency, n. The greased pig in the field game of American politics.” — Ambrose Bierce

39 VOLUME 24 ISSUE 09 / FEBRUARY 27, 2020 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

©2020 Brendan Emmett Quigley (www.brendanemmettquigley.com)

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


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