GUIDE INSIDE
VOLUM E 23 / I S S UE 1 2 / M A RC H 2 1 , 2 0 1 9
A NEW FUNDING SOURCE FOR THE
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TWO MARLEYS
A MOTHER-DAUGHTER
A CASE FOR
PLAY IN BEND BOOK COLLAB LEGACY BEERS
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The Source Weekly 704 NW Georgia Ave., Bend, OR 97703 t. 541-383-0800 f. 541-383-0088 bendsource.com info@bendsource.com EDITOR Nicole Vulcan editor@bendsource.com
REPORTER/WEB EDITOR Chris Miller miller@bendsource.com REPORTER/CALENDAR EDITOR Isaac Biehl isaac@bendsource.com COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts FREELANCERS Josh Jardine, Teafly Peterson, Jim Anderson, Lisa Sipe, Jared Rasic
NEWS — On the Chopping Block: Afterschool Programs?
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FEATURE — Search and Rescue
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The president’s tentative budget proposes cutting federal afterschool funding. We explore which programs could be affected in Central Oregon.
SOUND — Mystic Marley
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CULTURE — Mother-Daughter Authors
p.23
CRAFT — A Case for Legacy Beers
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The next generation of Marley musicians is coming of age. We talk with Mystic Marley, daughter of Stephen and granddaughter of Bob, ahead of a show this week.
Bend author Kim Cooper-Findling already has several guidebooks (and a memoir) published. Now, she takes on fiction with the help of her teenage daughter. Craft breweries face a big challenge these days in satisfying drinkers’ desires for new beers. A Craft columnist—also a brewer—makes a case for returning to the oldies but goodies.
SYNDICATED CONTENT Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Brendan Emmett Quigley, E.J. Pettinger, Pearl Stark, Tom Tomorrow, Shannon Wheeler
On March 15, students in Bend high schools walked out of class to participate in the Youth Climate Action Walkout. Students at schools nationwide also participated. At Bend Senior High School, organizers say several hundred students took part in the walkout. Students are asking national leaders to transition to 100 percent renewable energy by 2030, to implement the Green New Deal and to offer compulsory, comprehensive education on climate change and its impacts through grades K to 8, among other demands. See the full slideshow at bendsource.com
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EXCLUSIVE THIS WEEK IN:
Governor Forms Oregon Wildfire Response Council
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Bend’s mayor among members of new council aimed at preventing and stopping wildfires Devastating fires and pervasive smoke are becoming something of a norm during Oregon summers. To address the issue, Gov. Kate Brown has formed a new statewide wildfire council. This week, Brown announced the formation of the Oregon Wildfire Response Council, tasked with reviewing Oregon’s model for wildfire preparedness, prevention and response.
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Local search and rescue teams rely on county funds and fundraising to ensure they can be there in an emergency. Chris Miller reports on the possibility of a new funding source that could benefit teams statewide.
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VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
REPORTER Keely Damara keely@bendsource.com
IN THIS ISSUE
COVER
OPINION
‘Tis the Season: Pothole, Bike and Pedestrian Woes
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is the season, with snow largely melted from city streets, when drivers begin to bemoan one consequence of a big winter storm: Potholes. While it can be a jarring experience to hit one unawares, we advise those wanting to complain to walk just a few minutes in another’s shoes. Drivers may encounter that occasional annoying pothole, but pedestrians, cyclists and those in wheelchairs continue to face even uglier onslaughts. Walk or bike a few blocks in your own neighborhood today and you’ll understand what we’re talking about. A few days ago, we witnessed how difficult it continues to be for non-drivers out there, when we saw a middle schoolage student trudging down the street along the top of a 4-foot bank of snow, on a busy arterial street, fairly well risking her life in order to get home after the school day. Unlike many Bend streets, the street on which she trudged actually did have sidewalks—only, no one had bothered to clean them off. The City of Bend has the authority to issue tickets for such an infraction, but didn’t issue any after this storm, city officials told us. Meanwhile, the cyclists who dare to bike around town right now still need goggles that block out dust, as cars speed by and kick up the cinders still left in the road— not to mention the piles of snow and debris still left in the bike lanes intended to give cyclists a safe place to ride. Those in wheelchairs, meanwhile, may still not have access to the bus stops nearest their homes—never mind wheeling down any sidewalks available. A host of issues are at hand here. One, in the wake of the winter storm, is property owners’ apparent disregard for City rules stating that property owners in commercial areas need to clear sidewalks within six hours of a storm. In other zones, it’s within one day. Issuing a few tickets to property owners on some of the busiest streets— such as the businesses along Greenwood Avenue or Third Street, for example— would likely get those business owners to
prioritize sidewalk clearing next time. Another way to address this is to call out the good actors. We commend Deschutes County’s Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee here, which announced its Safe Sidewalk Awards this week. Locals can nominate businesses and individuals making an extra effort to keep sidewalks safe. The due date for nominations is April 1. Get more info at deschutes.org/BPAC. Safe sidewalks are one thing—but then there’s the issue of navigating streets where sidewalks don’t exist. While the City of Bend requires them for new construction, homes in older neighborhoods are only required to install them when a homeowner applies for a permit that involves “dramatic improvements” to the home, typically consisting of additions that add 50 percent or more to the existing home. Some have argued that this policy only creates “sidewalks to nowhere,” and that the policy should be eliminated, or the funds homeowners pay be directed into a collective sidewalk fund that prioritizes certain streets. We agree that sidewalks to nowhere are not ideal—but having an occasional sidewalk still cuts down on pedestrian-vehicle encounters. Further, instead of rolling back the policy, the triggering events should be less dramatic. Perhaps anytime a homeowner does any type of renovation? This is as much an equity issue as it is a safety issue. A student shouldn’t have to live in a newer neighborhood in order to walk home safely. All Bend neighborhoods should have sidewalks allowing safe passage—and requiring them only when a home gets dramatic improvements isn’t going to get us there fast enough. We don’t want to see a pedestrian die to make this point hit home. Given the fact that some property owners don’t even prioritize clearing existing sidewalks, it’s clear Bendites have a long way to go to truly prioritize pedestrian safety—but as evidenced by the County’s Safe Sidewalks awards, there are multiple ways to encourage locals to do so.
O
HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY?
Letters
WILDFIRE
logging opens the forest stand to greater wind penetration and drying that can exacerbate climate heating effects. Disturbance of soils from logging roads/ and equipment results in the spread of weeds. Logging removes biomass and snags that are critical feeding and hiding places for wildlife. It reduces carbon storage for decades, thus contributing to greater climate heating. Indiscriminate thinning can remove trees which might have genetic resistance to beetles, drought, extreme cold, and even wildfire, thereby reducing the long-term health of our forest ecosystems. Rather than focus on logging the forest, we should be investing in protecting communities from the unavoidable wildfires — long term we need to address global climate change that is driving our increase in wildfire acreage burned. — George Wuerthner is an ecologist who has published 38 books including two addressing wildfire issues. He divides his time between Livingston, Mont., and Bend.
RENEW DOWNTOWN We have now been through a time when the snow forced us to use one lane of traffic in downtown Bend. We are all glad it is coming to an end, but wouldn’t it be nice if Wall and Bond were designed that way? Let’s re-design downtown Bend to have two lanes of traffic with one side of angle parking. That way the sidewalks could be widened to accommodate the snowbanks in the winter and the sidewalk diners in the summer, and still leave enough room for shoppers to meander the stores. Where would all the parking go, the business owners say? A parking structure on the vacant lot between Franklin and McMenamins is a good location. A parking structure on the current parking lot between Louisiana and the school building could accommodate quite a few more cars. Land is valuable, so using it to park a single car is wasteful. Thank you downtown business association for the better job this year of clearing the sidewalks. Greater thanks to the businesses that did the final touch-up to remove the ice that remained to confine shoppers
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Packed courtyard at The Commons captured by @forgetfuldexter! Tag @sourceweekly on Instagram to get your shot featured in Lightmeter.
to single passing and prohibited handicapped access. And thumbs down to the large pickups with the snowmobiles that extended 2 feet beyond the rear bumper into the lane of traffic, especially those in the parking structure. —Mathieu Federspiel
WOMAN OF THE YEAR THANK YOU
Letter of the Week:
I’m a black man living, skiing, and biking in Bend with my family since 2015, and I was shocked, surprised, and excited to see your cover photo of Erika McCalpine as your choice for Woman of the Year!! I brought it home to my family, I sent a photo of it to my folks, and I learned that I live in a community that is desperately trying to become something better than it was. I love this town, I love the mountains, and I have a lot of good friends here in Bend but it can still feel isolating to endure the constant attention of not looking like everyone else. Seeing Erika on the cover gave me a huge boost to my spirits and a tremendous sense of hope that Bend can move beyond the climate of hate and intolerance that permeates our culture. Thank you Source Weekly, you’re an important part of my life in Bend. —Rob Garrott
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SUNSET DINNERS
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Recent legislation and commentary from political figures Rep. Greg Walden appear to support more logging/thinning as a panacea for wildfire and forest health. It reminds me of the same approach that Medieval doctors took to illness. If a patient was sick, the solution was to “bleed” the “bad” blood from the individual. If the patient recovered, it was attributed to the removal of the tainted blood. If the patient died, well apparently not enough blood was removed. The problem with bloodletting as a cure for disease is twofold. First, illness was not due to “bad” blood. Secondarily, bloodletting often results in collateral damage including infections. You can’t cure a disease if you fail to identify the real cause. It is the same failure to identify the real problem related to protecting our communities from wildfire that drives the call for more thinning/logging. The reason we are seeing more acres burning has to do with climate heating, not fuels build up as often suggested. Every large fire across the West is the result of extreme fire weather conditions. These include drought, high temperatures, low humidity, and most importantly high winds. I do not know of a single exception. High winds blow fire through thinned stands and usually transport burning embers far beyond a fire front. Any fuel reductions are easily circumvented. Numerous scientific studies, as well as anecdotal observations, demonstrate that thinning/logging typically does not work under extreme fire weather conditions. A good example was the recent Camp Fire that destroyed 14,000 homes and resulted in 87 deaths in Paradise, California. The forest around Paradise had two previous fires in the past 10 years (a fuel reduction), much of the private lands had been clear-cut (another fuel reduction), and the Forest Service had done a “hazardous fuel reduction,” i.e., a thinning project by the community. None of these slowed the fire driven by 80 mile per hour winds, and there is evidence the opening of the landscape and promotion of more shrubs and grasses increased the rate of fire spread. Like bloodletting, there is collateral damage from thinning/logging. Thinning/
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NEWS
Regional Roundup
Editor’s Note: The Source Weekly is now a member of Oregon Public Broadcasting’s news content sharing service, which includes dozens of publications statewide. Look for stories from other members in the “Regional” section of our daily newsletter, Cascades Reader (sign up at bendsource.com/newsletters). Link to the full versions of the stories featured below on our News page at bendsource.com.
Oregon headlines, found this week in WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MARCH 21, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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In Oregon, New Sage Grouse Plans Allow For Continued Grazing
Snow helps, but doesn’t solve water problems
New bill in Oregon Legislature would freeze college tuition for 2019-21 biennium
The Trump administration Friday lifted restrictions meant to protect greater sage grouse across seven western states. In Oregon grazing restrictions are being removed in 13 locations that provide habitat for the imperiled birds. Ranchers are supporting the move, saying proper grazing will help sage grouse. But conservation groups said the controversial and imperiled birds need all the protection they can get. The revisions will be more far reaching in other western states than in Oregon. In other states, the federal government had not been allowing infrastructure development in key areas, but it will now give waivers and exemptions for oil and gas drilling in some cases. The plans no longer strictly steer oil and gas leases away from important sage grouse habitat. - Courtney Flatt, OPB
The recent snowfall in Central Oregon caused its fair share of problems for the community, such as power outages and slick roads, but it’s not all bad. Snowfall is vital to water supply for the upcoming irrigation season, and while Mike Britton, general manager for North Unit Irrigation District, said the snow by no means solved the water shortage problem, it did help in some ways. “I don’t want to give folks the false impression or comfort level that everything is OK now, because we are still really looking at what I consider drought conditions,” he said, mentioning it is really too early to tell the full impact that the snow will have on this year’s water forecast. “Wickiup is only 62 or 63 percent full. It’s not gaining very quickly and that is our main supply (of water),” he said. - Desiree Bergstrom, The Madras Pioneer
A bill facing the Oregon State Legislature could put a temporary freeze on rising tuition costs at state universities and colleges. House Bill 3381 would prohibit Oregon’s public universities and community colleges from increasing tuition during the 2019-21 biennium. The bill appropriates money from the state General Fund to the Higher Education Coordinating Commission in order to maintain current service levels. And it requires a report be made to the Legislative Assembly detailing the average student loan debt, the percentage of students who receive loans, the average amount spent annually on textbooks and the average amount spent annually on housing and food. - Natalie Pate, Salem Statesman Journal
NEWS
On the Chopping Block: Afterschool Funding
If approved, the president’s 2020 budget would eliminate federal contributions, creating a ripple effect for students and families
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I
f approved, the president’s 2020 budget proposal would eliminate federal funding for afterschool programs. It’s a cut that could impact 1.7 million children, according to Afterschool Alliance, an advocacy group that works to ensure that all youth have access to affordable, quality afterschool programs. The chief federal funding stream for afterschool and summer learning programs is 21st Century Community Learning Centers, a program created by Congress that “supports the creation of community learning centers that provide academic enrichment opportunities during non-school hours for children,” according to the 21St Century Community Learning Centers website. According to the budget released by the White House, the justification for the cuts states, “While research has demonstrated positive findings on the impact of afterschool programs overall, the subset of afterschool programs funded by 21st CLCC are not, on the whole, helping students meet challenging State academic standards.” The statement added that data strongly suggests that the 21st CLCC is not generating the benefits commensurate with an annual investment of more than $1 billion in limited federal education funds. Oregon received about $11.4 million in federal dollars in 2018 and is expected to get about $10.7 million in 2019 from 21st Century, according to the U.S. Department of
Education. As has been widely reported, families in Bend and Central Oregon are already experiencing a shortage of child care options. In Bend, most afterschool and summer programs are run by Bend Park and Recreation District, Camp Fire Central Oregon and the Boys & Girls Clubs of Bend—programs that don’t get any of that afterschool federal funding. In Jefferson County, it’s a different story. “This budget reduction would be a tremendous loss for our students and families,” said Melinda Boyle, director of curriculum and instruction for the Jefferson County School District. Boyle said the district received the federal grant from 21st Century this fall and is in its first year of operating the program. The district has three 21st Century learning centers that serve about 480 students: one at the Warm Springs K-8 Academy; one at Jefferson County Middle School; and one at Madras High School. Boyle said the kindergarten through 8th-grade programs include math and literacy enrichment, offering students classes ranging from robotics to calligraphy. The classes are taught by a wide variety of instructors, including staff teachers, Warm Springs Culture and Heritage Native Language teachers and community partners such as the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. The high school program is more of a tutoring program with high school teachers from all of the core subjects assisting students, Boyle said.
Thank you moms and dads for voting COPA pediatricians as the best in Central Oregon. Voted Best Pediatricians 2018 and 2019 Dr. Mary Rogers Dr. Megan Karnopp Dr. Jeff Meyrowitz
Tribal language teacher Dallas Winishut goes over the Ishishkiin (Wasco) alphabet at the Warm Springs K-8 Academy in 2017. The Academy is one of the three schools in the Jefferson County School District has a 21st Century Community Learning Centers afterschool program. Madras Pioneer
According to Afterschool Alliance, for every child now in an afterschool program, two or more are waiting to get in. Kids Inc.—in Bend, run through BPRD—provides before and afterschool care at Bend’s public elementary schools. Waitlists have been a reality in past years for parents trying to get their kids into an afterschool program. However, with BendLa Pine Schools changing start times for kindergarten to 5th-grade to 8am starting in the 2019-20 school year, BPRD plans to expand the capacity, and to change start times to accommodate the earlier release of students. Sue Boettner, BPRD recreation manager, said this year the capacity for programs at most schools is 60 students. At Elk Meadow and Ponderosa Elementary schools, the school district lets BPRD use more classroom space, opening up spots for about 20 more kids. Boettner said she thinks the expansion planned at each school could eliminate the need for waitlists next school year. In Jefferson County, Boyle said the 21st Century learning centers also collaboratively provide a Family University Program that offers classes for families in areas including Spanish, English Conversation, fitness classes and GED programs.
Afterschool Alliance said in a press release that it will work with lawmakers on both sides of the aisle to defeat the president’s proposed elimination of federal funds. “The president’s calls to zero out 21st CLCC ignore decades of research demonstrating the many ways afterschool programs help students succeed in school and in life,” Jodi Grant, executive director of Afterschool Alliance stated. “In each of the last two budget cycles, a Republican Congress rejected this proposal. But now, yet again, a program that is essential to students, families and communities across America is in danger of elimination.” At least one of Oregon’s lawmakers is opposed to the change. “Trump’s proposed elimination of federal funds for afterschool and summer learning programs marks as an outrageous assault on working families in Oregon and nationwide striving to ensure their children are safe and successful students,” Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said in an email to the Source. “I will fight this cruel scheme and its equally callous proposals to slash Medicare, Medicaid and other essential resources for seniors and American families.”
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VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
By Chris Miller
FEATURE
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WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MARCH 21, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
icture it: You and a buddy take off for a late afternoon snowmobile session, get a bit off trail and end up in the City of Bend’s watershed. You’re tired of shoveling snow, only to get stuck again and again. Your cell phone battery is running low and the weather is starting to dip into the teens. Friends and family put in a call to the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office, who contact DCSO’s Search and Rescue, a group of 120 or so volunteers who will wake up at all hours of the night and spend countless hours trying to get you back to safety. But these rescues come at a cost. Currently, the state of Oregon doesn’t fund any county SAR teams. All the money comes from county budgets and donations.
Search and rescue teams rely heavily on internal fundraising for their operations. But could a new state funding source be on the horizon? By Chris Miller
A state House bill Deschutes County’s SAR gets a budget of about $1.1 million per year, covering personnel costs, insurance, equipment and other operational costs, according to Lt. Bryan Husband, coordinator for Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office SAR. The rest of the funding currently comes from fundraising—but if House Bill 2503 passes during this year’s Oregon legislative session, that could change. The bill, sponsored by a bipartisan group, including Rep. Jack Zika (R-Redmond) and Cheri Helt (R-Bend) would direct the Oregon Office of Emergency Management to research and recommend state funding options for county search and rescue programs by 2021. “It would be a great asset to us in getting state funds,” Husband said. Husband said he believes the money will be tied to the number of missions each county’s SAR goes out on. He said DCSO SAR averages between 120 to 130 per year, with the summer being the busiest. Current fundraising tools The Deschutes County Search and Rescue Foundation started in 1992
with a goal of raising funds to support the DCSO SAR. In 2017, the foundation raised about $95,000. Most of the money goes toward equipment, but it also pays for training and meals on long missions. “So far this year we’ve committed to buy or help buy about $48,000 worth of items for Search and Rescue,” SAR Foundation Board President Dave Carroll said. “This year will provide funds for our drone team, our air operations team, to buy a very expensive camera they wanted that now gives night vision capabilities and all that sort of thing.” Carroll said the funds will also help modify a vehicle to make swift water rescues move more smoothly. He said most of the money the agency raises is from its fundraising activities and the occasional estate gift that comes in unexpectedly. “We did have a great year in 2018 for a couple of reasons. One, the bingo operation, has turned out to be far more successful than anyone’s wildest dreams,” Carroll said. “And we got a much larger-than-we’ve-ever-gottenbefore gift from an estate from somebody who passed away.” The bingo Carroll referred to is held at Silver Moon Brewing from 10:30am to 2pm each Sunday. According to Silver Moon, a portion of the bingo sales goes directly to the SAR foundation. Other local events also support search and rescue operations. On March 26, 10 Barrel Brewing is hosting its eighth-annual SAR fundraiser, in which all profits from food, beer retail and growlers from 5 to 9 pm will be donated to SAR. Also, through the end of March, the funds from its “Drink More Give More” T-shirts will be donated to SAR. Why volunteer? Dan Dawson, who’s part of the SAR’s Air Operations Team, said the average volunteer put in about 193 hours of volunteer time last year. A moderately active
DCSO Search and Rescue
Members of the DCSO SAR Air Operations Team practice flying a drone.
volunteer will put in about 200 to 400 hours, while some will put in nearly 700 hours, Husband said. “I grew up in a family that believed that you need to provide a positive value to society,” nine-year SAR veteran Kelly Patrick said. “And I’m retired and I have time. I gives me self worth. My psychic reward is that. I feel like I make a difference—part of it is selfish because it makes me feel better about myself.” Dawson said he’d always wanted to get involved, but his full time job back in California didn’t allow time for that. Now self employed, he’s found the time. “I like to volunteer and this was an area that I really liked—and then for that selfish aspect—it’s doing stuff I love to do. I’m flying drones, I’m in a helicopter, I’m doing the stuff I like to do. I’m increasing my skills and I love to teach and I love to help train people to increase their skills and this team lets me do that,” Dawson said. Husband has a few important points he shares with new volunteers. “Obviously, we want folks that want to be here to help their community and help folks out, but we also try and
get them to think about it alternatively too, because a lot of our missions that we go out on—and it’s for someone who really has made a bunch of bad decisions and sometimes, you know, they aren’t as grateful as you think they should be,” he said. “Or, they’ll spend hours and hours searching for somebody who turns up that they got out on their own and they went home and they didn’t call and tell anybody about it, or they’re down at the bowling alley.” With those points, Husband says he tries to get volunteers out of the “saving people” mentality—because that part of the job is rare. “It needs to be about the people you’re surrounded by here in SAR, and being part of a team, doing some pretty high level things as a team, and feeling that reward from that.” Dawson advises people to think of the team mentality, too—and the fun involved. “You love to ski, you love to go snowmobiling, and you take 20 of your friends to go do it with you for a cause,” Dawson said. “Gosh, it’s a great day.” The longest-serving volunteer As the SAR coordinator, Husband meets a lot of volunteers. He called
Not a life exchange With backcountry missions, rescues from high climbing peaks and river rescues being just part of what SAR does, there’s often an element of danger. Still, Husband said that he’s unaware of an SAR volunteer dying while on a mission. The teams train, and decisions are made, always with a mission to keep volunteers safe. “We’re not in the business of trading lives. We’re in the business of helping people, but not trading lives,” Patrick said. “Avalanche cases where you’ve got someone who’s been buried for a long period of time, but yet you still have all this other stuff that’s going to come down, we’re not going to put our people there where this is a recovery, this is not a rescue,” Patrick said. “It’s a tough decision, it’s probably the hardest decision anybody has to make, because you have family and people who say, ‘Why
aren’t you in there, why aren’t you getting them out?’ “As I said, we’re not in the business of trading lives, particularly if someone’s already gone,” Patrick continued. A baby rescue Both Patrick and Dawson said multiple-day missions have left indelible images in their minds, but there’s one demographic that gets everyone together: kids. “The missing baby in the forest,” Dawson said. “The response to that was huge, we got the firefighters out there walking a line search, we were flying drones, we had a helicopter coming in overhead… I mean, that’s just the perfect example of why we do what we do. It’s like, oh, there’s a kid out there? OK, let’s go. Change everything. All the plans go away. Let’s go.” The incident Dawson’s referring to happened on May 9, 2018, when a one-year-old boy was left overnight, allegedly by his father, in the forest land between China Hat Road and Tekampe/Sholes Roads. At about noon the next day, the boy was found naked and lying in the dirt about 1 mile from the family’s car. During the search, SAR activated DCSO detectives, patrol personnel, SAR ground and horseback searchers, drones and helicopters with thermal imaging. HB 2503—the bill that could eventually lead to state funds for local search and rescue operations— is currently in the Oregon House Committee on Veterans and Emergency Preparedness. Legislators held a public hearing Feb. 28 and referred the bill to the Joint Committee on Ways and Means.
Air Link provides the Air Operations Team with helicopter support. DCSO Search and Rescue
9 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
out one in particular, Leo Rank, who Husband believes has been volunteering longer than he’s been alive, starting out in the 1972 SAR academy. Husband said Rank was a Bend firefighter for his profession and did dive missions and swift water missions in his younger days, but now does logistics because he knows the equipment. “On a weekly basis he’ll spend a couple of hours just going through equipment and stuff, making sure everything’s set up and ready to go for us,” Patrick said. “He doesn’t do a lot of ground stuff anymore— although he wants to—but he’s just an incredible resource, has an incredible attitude and is willing to help anyone with anything.”
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MARCH 21, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 10
SOURCE PICKS THURSDAY
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STEVIE NICKS: IN YOUR DREAMS BEHIND THE SCENES WITH A LEGEND
TUESDAY
3/26
SUPER FIGHT MIC COMEDY SHOWDOWN
This marks the third year of Super Fight Mic! This is the first of four qualifying rounds. Comics get 10 minutes to earn the audience’s votes to propel them toward the final in May. With each contestant using some of their best material, there’s sure to be laughs all night long! Sign up /7:30pm, show/8pm. Craft Kitchen and Brewery, 62988 NE Layton Ave., Bend. No cover.
FIRESIDE SHOW: LAURA GIBSON + KELE GOODWIN FOLK-POP HEAVEN
TUESDAY
STEPHEN MARLEY &FAMILY MYSTIC MARLEY AFFAIR
Laura Gibson will perform and celebrate her 2018 album “Goners.” With her unique tone and knack for the written word, seeing Gibson perform these songs live will be a real treat. Accompanying her for the show is Kele Goodwin, whose last album, “Moonbug,” is another great example of sincerity in songwriting. If you’re a fan of folk music in the slightest, this is a must-see show. 7pm. The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse, 13300 Highway 20, Sisters. $12/adv., $15/ door.
The son of Bob Marley, Stephen, and his daughter, Mystic, take the stage together at Midtown. Stephen is an eighttime Grammy award winning artist. Mystic, on the other hand, just turned 21 this month—but because she’s young doesn’t mean she doesn’t have the skills. Her debut single, “Beatdown,” was released last year and is a powerful ballad showing off the true beauty in her voice. This is an opportunity to see one of music’s most talented and prominent families do what they do best. Doors/7:30pm, music/8:30pm. All ages. Midtown Ballroom, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $25/adv. At Ranch Records and online.
THURSDAY
SATURDAY
3/21
RECYCLED PERCUSSION AMERICA’S GOT TALENT VETS
These guys know how to please a crowd. With their high energy and playful ways on stage, it’s incredible to see how the group keeps finding new ways again and again to make music. Trust us when we say you’ve never seen anyone play a ladder quite like this. Yes, that’s right – a ladder. One of Recycled Percussion’s go-to instruments. 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. $22-$42.
FRIDAY
NIGHT BEATS PSYCHEDELIC GARAGE ROCK
3/22
3/23
GUEST CHEF DINNER: FENRIR SCANDANAVIAN DELIGHTS
Chef Ian Wilson brings delicious bites from mobile restaurant Fenrir. You’ll taste cuisine centered around micro-seasonality and fermentation sciences with an ode to food history. Paired with your dinner will be wines from sommelier Tyler Hauptman. 6pm. Suttle Lodge & Boathouse, 13300 Hwy. 20, Sisters. $100.
SUNDAY
3/24
MARVEL CINEMATIC UNIVERSE TRIVIA SUPERHERO KNOWLEDGE
BUMPER JACKSONS FUN LOVIN’ TUNES
The Bumper Jacksons are a dang good time. The group brings together an enjoyable mix of folk, country, soul and blues. If you’re looking to get your groove on, there might not be a better show than this one to do so. The Bumper Jacksons know how to tap into your happy side for a feelgood time. 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. $17-$32.
WEDNESDAY 3/27
BLACK MOUNTAIN & SOLO VIAJE NEW AGE ROCK
With the new trailer for “Avengers End Game” just releasing, what better way to get prepped for the next installment than brushing up on your Marvel movie knowledge?! Bend Comedy presents a night where super fans and new lovers of these box office smashes can come together to battle wits. 7-9pm. Jackson’s Corner Eastside, 1500 NE Cushing Dr., Bend. Free to play.
Black Mountain is what a quintessential rock band of today should be. While they’re moving toward new ground and sounds of today, they’re still reviving what made rock music such a powerhouse back in the day. The band’s upcoming album, “Destroyer,” drops May 24. 7pm-midnight. The Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $15.
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Formed in Seattle, Nightbeats was created by Danny Lee Blackwell and named after the Sam Cooke album of 1963. The band’s newest album, “Myth of a Man,” was released this January, combining R&B, rock, soul and blues. Expect smoky tones and trance-like grooves to take over the atmosphere. 9pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $12.
3/26
ANTONIO SANCHEZ & MIGRATION March 23
BUMPER JACKSONS
TANGO MASS
March 26
April 6
HOT CLUB OF SAN FRANCISCO April 7
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
This documentary takes a look into the making of Stevie Nicks’ 2011 album, “In Your Dreams.” Viewers will get a chance to see the creative process and atmosphere inside Nicks’ home studio. Along for the ride is documentarian and collaborator Dave Stewart. 7-9pm. Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Ct., Sisters. $12.50.
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SOUND
On The Road With Dad Mystic Marley is just getting started By Isaac Biehl
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MARCH 21, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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’ve never had someone sing for me on the phone before. That is, until I spoke with Mystic Marley. My mouth literally dropped when she started singing the words to the first song she ever wrote, at the young age of 11: “Today is a new day, tomorrow is a lie. Freedom is a word that we’ll be alright.” The daughter of Stephen and granddaughter of Bob Marley released her debut single, “Beatdown,” last year. It’s a powerful ballad showcasing the strength in Marley’s voice, and letting so much emotion shine through her words. Marley may have just turned 21, but music is literally in her blood. She says can’t really remember a time when music wasn’t a part of her life. She recalled a pivotal moment in which she sang “No Woman No Cry” at her grandmother’s funeral. Music is just something Marley always knew she wanted to do. We talked about her beginnings and what it’s like getting to tour with her dad for a second time. Source Weekly: You released your debut single, “Beatdown,” last year. What did that feel like for you? Mystic Marley: It was very special. I mean, I’ve been singing for a long time and just getting on track with my career. Releasing a song was very exciting and inspiring to keep pushing out music, so that’s what I’m working on now.
SW: What’s some of the best advice your dad has given you? MM: Definitely listen to yourself. Do things that reflect you well and don’t be greedy. Be inspired, you know? Those kind of things – dad things!” SW: What are some things you try to say in your songwriting? MM: To be who you are. It’s OK to f*ck up. It’s OK to do your thing regardless of who doesn’t agree with you or not. I definitely speak a lot about who you feel connected to on a higher level. To be positive and realistic.
Mystic Marley, daughter of Stephen and granddaughter of Bob, is currently working on her debut album.
SW: You mentioned connectivity. What’s your connection to music and what’s it like performing for you? MM: Oh my gosh. Performing is literally the icing on the cake. I love it so much. I love so many things about music. I love creating it, I love where it takes you – it literally takes you around the world. I’ve met so many amazing people and musicians through music.
your dad last time that you can use this time around? MM: So, I would go on the road a lot with my dad as a kid, and all of our siblings, and it was fun! And then I went last time and I was like ‘Yo, I am so bored and lonely! All I f*cking do is sleep!’ I was like ‘I need a tour pal!’ But nah, it was super easy going and nice. A lot easier than I thought it was going to be. I love being on the bus.
SW: What’s something that you learned from being on the road with
SW: What’s your favorite song of your dad’s?
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SW: You obviously come from a very talented family. Do you ever feel pressures from that or is it all positivity? MM: I don’t feel pressure. I feel like it’s a responsibility. It keeps you working hard and it’s definitely positive. It’s kind of an inspiration. It’s like a wheel—it just keeps going. You always find something to do to live up to what has been there before.
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MM: Ooh I’m going to get in trouble. “Someone To Love” is a really good song. Honestly – dad or not dad, he’s so gooood. It’s too hard for me to choose. I love the “Mind Control” album and acoustic album. They’re beautiful. Stephen and Mystic Marley
Fri., March 22. 7:30pm Midtown Ballroom 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend $25/advance at Ranch Records or online
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Danny Lee Blackwell leads Night Beats in a psychedelic mix of rock, blues, soul and R&B.
N
ight Beats is rock, blues, soul, and R&B all rolled into one psychedelic-influenced mix. Danny Lee Blackwell takes inspiration from his Texas roots, as he started out playing in garages with his friends in Dallas. It’s easy to hear the heavy influence from the psych-rock scene. Night Beats just released its latest album, “Myth of a Man,” in January. This album takes a step away from previous efforts, not bringing its usual high energy sessions, but going for a more classic and mellow sounding project, as there’s less of that early psychedelic feel throughout the 10 tracks. That’s not to say the album isn’t good, either. Night Beats has generally tried new things throughout their career. The range from the band’s 2011 self-titled album to now is quite impressive. The shift might also come with the changes that have occurred with personnel in the band. “Myth of a Man” is definitely more heavy on the soul, and well, can there ever really be too much soul? Get to know a little more about Night Beats with the Source’s Band Fact Sheet. Where they come from: Frontman Danny Lee Blackwell moved from Dallas to Seattle, Wash., to study comparative religion at the University of Washington. He named the project in honor of legend Sam Cooke’s 1963 album “Night Beat.” Originally joining
Blackwell was his childhood friend James Traeger and then Tarek Wegner eventually signed on to play bass. Members: Danny Lee Blackwell is the only permanent member. For touring he currently travels with a band consisting of Evan Snyder (drums), Sam Thornton (bass), Calvin Love (guitar) and Jaiq Styne (keys). Songs to start with: “Right / Wrong,” “One Thing,” “Sunday Mourning, “Outta Mind” and “Puppet On a String.” For fans of: 13th Floor Elevators, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, The Black Keys, The Murlocs, Holy Wave. Random Internet Dig Fact: Blackwell’s favorite western movie is “Giant” starring James Dean. The film was released in 1956 and won the Academy Award for Best Director. Social Handles: Facebook @thenightbeats.u.s Twitter @thenightbeats Instagram @thenightbeats Night Beats, Calvin Love and Patrimony Fri., March 22. 9pm Volcanic Theatre Pub 70 SW Century Dr., Bend bendticket.com $12/adv.
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
By Isaac Biehl
LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE
CALENDAR WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MARCH 21, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Tickets Available on Bendticket.com
The Astro Lounge Rockin’ Robin Karaoke
20 Wednesday The Astro Lounge Bingo with Janney to
benefit Oregon Wild Every Wednesday! $1 per bingo card. Winners take home half the pot, the rest goes to Bend Spay and Neuter Project! 6-8pm.; Bingo with Janney to support Oregon Wild. 6-8pm. 6-8pm. $1-5 per game.
Bend Brewing Company Jeshua Marshall
Acoustic originals and more from member of Larry and His Flask. 6-8pm.
Cabin 22 Locals Night w/ UKB Trivia It’s fun
and 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.
The Domino Room Spafford Electro funk ther-
apy. Doors, 8pm. Show, 8:30pm. All ages. 8pm-Midnight. $17.50/adv. at Ranch Records or online.
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your go-to karaoke tune? 9pm. Immersion Brewing Geeks Who Drink Pub
Trivia Test you knowledge at pub trivia night by Geeks Who Drink! Come early for hoppy hour priced apps and drinks. 6-8pm. No cover.
JC’s Bar & Grill Trivia Test your knowledge, or maybe just your ability to remember really random facts. Winning team also get to enjoy Happy Hour pricing every day at all hours until the following Wednesday! Ages 21+. 7pm.
Every Thursday. $5 Jamesons all night. Come and sing your heart out. 9pm-1am. No cover.; Sing your favorites on a rockin’ good system, every Thursday! 9pm-1am. No cover.
The Brown Owl Live Music by Pete Kart-
Cabin 22 KC Flynn & Friends KC Flynn will be
The Lot Eric Leadbetter Eric Leadbetter, of Jive
playing acoustic rock and country, along with a rotating lineup of local musicians. Every other Thursday, 7-9pm. 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, the Riverhouse music series focuses on 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? 9pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Sharlet Crooks Sharlet Crooks is made up of Corinne Sharlet, Zach Hinkelman and Jordan Korach. Growing up in Central Oregon Corinne Sharlet was steeped in the essence of the high desert. Her love for the expansive landscape only amplified with her time in Santa Fe, NM studying musical theater. 7-10pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Desert Howlers Blues rock. 7:30pm.
On Tap Bingo Night with Gigantic Brewing Join
Level State Beerhouse Bend Comedy Pub
Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy Open Mic All
Come sing your heart out every Wednesday night at Maverick’s! 9pm. No cover.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Strive Roots What is Roots Infused Power Groove? It’s the funky beat swirling in your hips, it’s the message of awareness and change demanding to be heard, it’s original soul with modern beats, it’s your new favorite genre of music. 7-10pm. No cover.
The Commons Cafe Griff Marshall w/ Special
Guest Lola Local musician and fishing guide Griff Marshall will be setting up in our front room for an evening of live music and fun with his daughter Lola as guest duet singer. 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.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke
Kourtni An evening of electronic music production, soulful vocals, experimental sounds, and self-realizing expression. 8-11pm. No cover.
sounes Come and enjoy a night of live music with singer/songwriter and storyteller Pete Kartsounes! 7-10pm. No cover.
us for bingo night with Gigantic Brewing! Free to play. We’ll be pouring Kolschtastic, Time Warp IPA, Corpse Reviver #2 Sour and The Deep Imperial Oat Stout. All ages welcome. 6-8pm. No cover.
Trivia Bend Comedy brings lively pub trivia to Level State Beerhouse every Wednesday! Free to play, prizes to win and all ages until 9pm!. 7pm. No cover.
The Capitol Jane Machine, One Mad Man,
performance types are welcome! Each performer will have 5 minutes. Signup by 7:20pm. Ages 21+ 7pm.
Spoken Moto Spoken Moto Presents: King
Ropes Join Groovasaur for a live recording of their performance at Spoken Moto! The Drum and Guitar Shop will be joining us to create a night of danceable jazz and funk fusion that will be recorded and distributed for free 7-9pm. No cover.
Strictly Organic Coffee Company Song-
writers’ open Mic w/ Victor Johnson Popular and welcoming venue for experienced and brand new performers to play their original material. 6-8pm.
Coulis, is set to play an array of classic rock, Americana, folk and blues. 6-8pm. No cover.
The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse
Fireside Show: Laura Gibson + Kele Goodwin The Suttle Lodge welcomes back Cabin 8 Artist-in-Residence alum, Laura Gibson, in celebration of her new album, “Goners.” Kele Goodwin opens. 7pm. $12/adv. $15/door.
Thump Coffee - NW Crossing Casey Parnell Singer/Songwriter/Producer Casey Parnell has been active in the Northwest Music scene for over a decade and is currently a guitarist in the award winning band Precious Byrd. 6-8pm. No cover. Tower Theatre Recycled Percussion Since Justin Spencer formed Recycled Percussion in 1995, the band has been unstoppable. Their junk rock music became a national phenomenon week after week during their smash hit performances on America’s Got Talent in 2009. 7:30pm. $22-$42. Volcanic Theatre Pub Metalachi w/ Ran-
chero On a hot summer night in Veracruz Mexico circa 1982, Consuela Espinoza stumbled out of her dilapidated shanty and into Rock N Roll history. All ages. Doors, 8pm. Show, 9pm.
Cabin 22 Victory Swig Rock. 7:30-10:30pm. No cover.
Checkers Pub The Substitutes Classic rock and fun! Let’s dance! 8-11:30pm. No cover.
Crow’s Feet Commons Apres Ski Series: Yak Attack Real, organic electronica. 6pm. No cover.
Crux Fermentation Project The Parnells The Parnells are bringing their country flare to Crux! 6-8pm. No cover. Dogwood Cocktail Cabin DJ Skinny Mrcls A night of Soul, Hip Hop and beyond with DJ Skinny Mrcls. 9pm-Midnight. No cover.
Lava Lanes Karaoke Night Come sing with us! 8pm-Midnight. No cover.
Midtown Ballroom Stephen Marley & Mystic Marley Stephen Marley is joined by his daughter Mystic for a performance by one of music’s most talented families. 7:30pm. $25/adv. at Ranch Records and online. Northside Bar & Grill James Dean and the Misfits Local, high-energy, female fronted rock band playing danceable covers from ‘70s-’90s. 8:30pm. $3.; Classic Rock 8:30pm. $3/cover.
River’s Place KC Flynn A locals favorite for nearly 20 years, KC Flynn is an Americana picker, grinner and sanger with a soulful resonance that’ll grab ya. 6-8pm. Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy Presents
Todd Armstrong & Elaine Johnson Comedians Todd Armstrong (VICELAND, IFC’s Portlandia) and Elaine Johnson perform at Seven Nightclub. 8pm. $8/adv., $10/door.
Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House The
Legendary Pat Thomas Pat is a one man band featuring easy listening country. -23, 7pm. No cover.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Night Beats Garage rock, psychedelic rock, soul, surf rock from Seattle. All ages. 9pm. $12.
22 Friday The Astro Lounge DJ It’s Fine DJ It’s Fine will be spinning for your dancing pleasure! 10pm-2am. No cover. Broken Top Bottle Shop Flipside - Eugene’s HiFi Funk All Stars This crew has honed their set with a weekly jam at the HiFi Music Hall and they are taking this show on the road! 7-9pm. No cover. The Brown Owl Bill Powers featuring Benji
Nagel Come join us for an evening of live music with Bill Powers and Benji Nagel. 7-10pm. No cover.
23 Saturday The Astro Lounge MC Mystic MC Mystic will be spinning for your dancing pleasure. 10pm2am. No cover.
The Belfry Brian ODell Band w/Anna Tivel A rock band with roots firmly grounded in funk, fusion, jazz, and folk. 8-11:30pm. $10. The Brown Owl Dennis McGregor & The
Spoilers Come enjoy a night of live music by Dennis McGregor & The Spoilers. 7-10pm. Free.
Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic
Checkers Pub The Substitutes Classic rock
Join us for open mic every Wednesday. 6pm.
and fun! Let’s dance! 8-11:30pm. No cover.
Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke Every
Craft Kitchen and Brewery Fill My Blank - Live Interactive Game Show Fill the blank in sentences with local comedians and special guests. Fundraiser for Street Dog Hero. Hosted by Katy Ipock. 8-9:30pm. $5 cover.
Wednesday night! 8pm. No cover.
Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill Texas Hold ‘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.
CTC Cascades Theatre Jazz at Joe’s Vol 73
The Lot Wednesday Open Mic Night Come
- Tony Monaco Jazz organ master Tony Monaco returns to the ever popular Jazz at Joe’s series! Tony will be joined by guitarist Dan Balmer and drummer Alan Jones. Purchase advance tickets at jazzatjoes.com. 7-9:15pm. $44.
share your heart, practice your lyrics and feel the support from this great community. Covers, originals, instrumentalists or poets. Hosted by local musicians like MOsley WOtta, Jeshua Marshall and others. 6-8pm. No cover.
Dogwood Cocktail Cabin DJ Vacay A night of Hip-Hop, R&B & Electronica with DJ Vacay. 9pm-Midnight. No cover.
21 Thursday
The Domino Room Genesis Prefunk Join in as
we funk the night up with a special preview of Genesis Arts and Music Festival 2019. UHF Productions is bringing you a bass hitting line up, local vendors and live painter. 7pm-2am. $17/adv, $20/door.
7th Street Brew House Bow Wow Bingo Benefitting the BrightSide Animal Center in Redmond. 6:30pm.
Don't miss the unique stylings of Metalachi at the Volcanic Theatre Pub on Thursday, 3/21. Submitted
Submitting an event is free and easy. Add your event to our calendar at bendsource.com/submitevent
LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT Submitted
Hoodoo Ski Area Night Rider Snow Jam The
adventure begins when you board the bus at AVID Cider Company at 10 am en route to Hoodoo. Your bus ticket includes an all-day lift ticket so you can enjoy turns into the evening at Central Oregon’s only destination for night skiing and riding. Try some fantastic Avid Cider Co. beverages and dance under the stars to sweet tunes spun by a live DJ on the Hoodoo patio. 10am-10pm. $67.
Join us for open mic every Wednesday. 6pm.
River’s Place Bingo! with Oblivion Brewing Co. Free to play and prizes to win! 6-8pm.
Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke Every Wednesday night! 8pm. No cover.
Join us for a night of dancing, $1 Jello-O shots in Silipint shot glasses(while they last!) as well as Silipint pint glasses for sale that get you $1 off drinks the rest of the night. DJ Deena Bee from Portland will be on the tables turning some Funky Hip-Hop & Electro all night. 9pm-Midnight. No cover.
The Lot Wednesday Open Mic Night Everyone
from brave amateurs to seasoned professionals. Come share your heart, practice your lyrics and feel the support from this great community. Covers, originals, instrumentalists or poets. Hosted by local musicians like MOsley WOtta, Jeshua Marshall and others. 6-8pm. No cover.
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Rockin’ Robin
Karaoke Rockin’ Robin takes our stage, running Bend’s #1 karaoke show. 8pm-12:30am. No cover.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Steve’N’Seagulls at
Lava Lanes Karaoke Night Come sing with
Volcanic Steve ‘n’ Seagulls is a Finnish country band, playing bluegrass versions of well-known hard rock and metal songs. 9pm-Midnight. $20.
us! 8pm-Midnight. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill James Dean and the
On Tap Joe Schulte Joe Schulte, of the Moon Mountain Ramblers, will be joining us for an evening of roots folk and bluegrass! All ages welcome. 6-8pm. No cover. Riff Cold Brewed Coffee - Taproom Live
Music: Alex Winters Born and raised in Oklahoma, current Bend, OR resident Alex Winters has been making music for more than 15 years in bands, orchestras, and as a solo artist. 5-7pm. No cover.
The Parlor The Parlor’s Anniversary Party!
It’s our One Year Anniversary since moving in to The Parlor on Galveston Ave. Please come to our open house and enjoy discounts on services booked, raffles, food by Westside Taco Co. and Dump City Dumplings, local beer and beverages, Wildflower Mobile Boutique and Dyad Adornment. Bring a Friend! 5-9pm. No cover.
Tower Theatre Antonio Sanchez & Migration Virtuoso drummer, composer, and five-time Grammy winner debuts with his band fresh off the release of their new album, "Lines in the Sand." 7:30pm. $22-$42.
Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House The
Legendary Pat Thomas Pat is a one man band featuring easy listening country. March 22-23, 7pm. No cover.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Blue Lotus w/ Spyn Reset Join us for an all night party featuring 2 west coast rock n roll bands, who each bring their own flare to high energy guitar riffs, individualized song writing and stage presence. All ages. 8:30pm. $8/adv., $10/door.
24 Sunday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
The Domino Room Them Coulee Boys Folk, bluegrass, punk, Americana. Doors, 7:30pm. 8pm. $10. 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. 4-7pm. No cover.
Jackson’s Corner Eastside Marvel
Cinematic Universe Trivia Assemble a team or go at it alone, test your knowledge against our fun and entertaining rounds. Prizes to win! 7-9pm. Free.
River’s Place Trivia - Sunday Funday UKB
Trivia is hosting our Sunday Funday of Trivia. Free to play and prizes to win. Happy hour during trivia. 4-6pm. No cover.
The Capitol Rockin’ Robin Karaoke Sing some hits for fun — happy hour all night! 8pm.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Strawberry Girls, Tang & Pedestria Strawberry Girls is a 3-piece progressive instrumental rock band from Salinas, CA. Tang — a Central Oregon based band
Steve 'N' Seagulls at the Volcanic Theatre Pub on Wednesday, 3/27.
— is one raunchy riff from being your feel good hit of the summer and a polyrhythm away from stealing your girl. Pedestria is an instrumental prog band from Bend, Oregon. 8-11pm. $8/adv.
25 Monday The Astro Lounge Astro Open Mic Chase Elliot, of Cadence, hosts open mic. Come hang out with some of the best local artists in Bend. Sign up at 7pm. 8pm-Midnight. No cover. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
26 Tuesday Craft Kitchen and Brewery Super
Fight Mic - Comedy Competition Super Fight Mic is back for it’s 3rd year! This is Central Oregon’s only competitive open mic. Comics battle for audience votes and a place in the final round! Sign up begins at 7:30pm. 8-9:30pm. No cover.
Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise Classic
rock. 6-9pm. No cover.
JC’s Bar & Grill Bingo Join us every Tuesday for bingo, hosted by the High Desert Food and Farm Alliance. 7pm. No cover.
Juniper Golf Course and The View Tap and Grill Jazz Dinner Feat. Just Three Guys
Enjoy a prime rib dinner with free jazz by Just Three Guys Jazz Band. 5-8pm. $14.99/dinner.
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Acoustic Jam Night with Scott Fox Scott Fox hosts our Tuesday Night Acoustic Jam night. Listen to some of our better musicians in town. 7:30-9:30pm. No cover. Northside Bar & Grill Carol Rossio Jazz vocalist. 6pm.
The Platypus Pub Tuesday Night Trivia
(and a board game?) Join Quizhead Games for one of the best trivia nights in town. Easily in the top 50. Probably. Make it a habit and join in the trivia board game, T20, and win even more sweet prizes. 8-10pm. Free.
The Commons Cafe Storytellers Open Mic Our weekly open mic at the Commons — we do have some poets, and actual storytellers on occasion, but it’s an open mic like any other, mostly singers and musicians! Sign up starts at 5pm. 6-8pm.
The Lot Trivia Tuesday Bring your team or
join one. Enjoy the heated seats, tasty eats and your favorite local pints at this fun trivia hot spot. A rotating host quizzes you in six different categories. 6-8pm. Free.
Tower Theatre Bumper Jacksons
Bumper Jacksons are hot and sweet, painting America’s story from the streets of New Orleans
to Appalachian hollers. Unafraid to scrap together new sounds from forgotten 78’s, the Bumper Jacksons elegantly balance paying homage to the traditions while fashioning their own unique, playful style. 7:30pm. $17-$32.
27 Wednesday
28 Thursday 7th Street Brew House Bow Wow Bingo Benefitting the BrightSide Animal Center in Redmond. 6:30pm.
The Astro Lounge Rockin’ Robin Karaoke
Rockin Robins karaoke every Thursday. $5 Jamesons all night. Come and sing your heart out. 9pm1am. No cover.; Sing your favorites on a rockin’ good system, every Thursday! 9pm-1am. No cover.
The Astro Lounge Bingo with Janney to benefit Oregon Wild Every Wednesday! $1 per bingo card. Winners take home half the pot, the rest goes to Bend Spay and Neuter Project! 6-8pm. 6-8pm. $1-5 per game.
Cabin 22 KC Flynn Flynn will be playing acous-
Bend Brewing Company Barringer & Baker
Currents at the Riverhouse Riverhouse Music Series Highlighting local Central Oregon talent, the Riverhouse music series focuses on genres ranging from bluegrass, acoustic, indie, blues, jazz, singles and duos. 7-9pm. No cover.
Acoustic Americana, fiddle and guitar. 6-8pm.
Cabin 22 Locals Night w/ UKB Trivia 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.
The Domino Room Black Mountain & Solo Viaje Black Mountain teach us that you don’t have to be afraid of the past to move bravely into the future, defining what it is to be a classic rock band in the new millennium. All ages. 7pm-Midnight. $15. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your
go-to karaoke tune? 9pm.
Immersion Brewing Geeks Who Drink Pub Trivia Test you knowledge at pub trivia night by Geeks Who Drink! Win fun prizes and challenge your friends, or enemies, on obscure knowledge while enjoying craft beer and delicious food from our pub style kitchen. Come early for hoppy hour priced apps and drinks. 6-8pm. No cover. JC’s Bar & Grill Trivia Test your knowledge, or maybe just your ability to remember really random facts. Winning team also get to enjoy Happy Hour pricing every day at all hours until the following Wednesday! Ages 21+. 7pm.
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 Bend Comedy brings lively pub trivia to Level State Beerhouse every Wednesday! 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 and entertaining rounds. 7pm. 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
Band Of Comerados Band of Comerados plays acoustic music that makes you feel good. 7-10pm. No cover.
tic rock and country, solo this week. Every other Thursday, 7-9pm. No cover.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
The Domino Room Old Salt Union w/ Danny Barnes Old Salt Union is a string band founded by a horticulturist, cultivated by classically trained musicians, and fueled by a vocalist/ bass player who is also a hip-hop producer with a fondness for the Four Freshmen. 8-11pm. $12. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your go-to karaoke tune? 9pm. Location TBA Year Of The Fist, Poolside Lepor Society, and Chupa Cobra One of Oakland’s raddest punk trios, Year of The Fist, are gonna shred the stage with local heavy hitters Poolside Lepor Society and Chupra Cobra at The Broken Bottle. All ages. 7pm. $5.
Northside Bar & Grill Dark & Grey Classic and alternative rock covers. 7:30pm.
On Tap Bingo Night with Pelican Brewing Join us for Bingo Night with Pelican Brewing! Free to play. We’ll be pouring the new Pelican Pilsner, seasonal Dirty Bird NW IPA and the Father of All Tsunami’s Stout. 6-8pm. 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.
Spoken Moto Non Profit Tunes Benefit A monthly benefit for: Sara’s Project. Featuring: Frank Borowinski, Fiona Christoe, Todd & Travis Surplus. 7-9pm. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Songwriters’ open Mic w/ Victor Johnson Popular and welcoming venue for experienced and brand new performers to play their original material. 6-8pm. The Capitol Nariko Ott Comedy hosted by
Sean Gettings Nariko Ott, winner of Portland’s Funniest Person contest in 2016, is performing in Bend! Sean Getting Actor/Comedian will host this show. 8-10pm. $5.
Thump Coffee - NW Crossing Bill Powers Bill Powers is a singer songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. 6-8pm. No cover.
15 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill Texas Hold ‘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.
Immersion Brewing Spring Break Kick Off
Misfits Local, high-energy, female fronted rock band playing danceable covers from ‘70s-’90s. 8:30pm. $3.; Classic Rock 8:30pm. $3/cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MARCH 21, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 16
EVENTS
CALENDAR MUSIC Banjo Jam Ragtime, swing, country, folk and
bluegrass. Third Thursday of every month, 5:307:30pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. Contact: Leroy: 541-604-6564.
Bella Acappella Harmony Chorus
Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice A traditional bagpipe and drum band
with members from the Central Oregon area. Experienced pipers and drummers are welcome to attend, along with those interested in taking up piping or drumming who would like to find out what it would take to learn and eventually join our group. Mondays, 5:30-7pm. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St., Bend. Contact: 541-633-3225. pipersej@yahoo.com.
Community Orchestra of Central Oregon Rehearsals COCO welcomes all
musicians to come have fun with us. A variety of players. A variety of music. No auditions. Annual negotiable fee. Wednesdays, 6:30-9pm. Mountain View High School Auditorium, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend. Contact: 541-306-6768. cocomusicmakers@gmail.com.
NPT Benefit for United Way of Deschutes County Come support United Way
of Deschutes County in an evening of Song in the Round with Todd & Travis Surplus, Fiona Christoe and Frank Borowinski. Families welcome. March 28, 7-9pm. Spoken Moto, 310 SW Industrial Way, Bend. Contact: 541-390-0921. bendsongexchange@gmail.com. No cover.
Open Hub Singing Club Modern “paper-
less” singing in the aural tradition. Group singing is the most ancient and primal technology of belonging. All voices welcome! Mondays, 6:458:30pm. First Presbyterian Heritage Hall, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. $5-15 suggested donation.
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.
Argentine Tango Class & Practica No partner needed. Four-week fundamentals class begins the first Wednesday of every month, 6:30-7:30pm. Followed by intermediate lesson at 8:15pm. Wednesdays, 6:30-7:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. Contact: 907-299-4199. admin@centraloregontango.com. $5/class. Argentine Tango Milonga Learn to tango!
All levels. No partner needed. Fourth Saturday of every month, 7:30-10:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. Contact: 907299-4199. $5/class.
Bachata Turn Patterns Learn fun turn
pattern combinations with Latin Dance Bend. Dance partner not required but encouraged. 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.
Beginning Cuban Salsa. Learn fun steps that can be danced solo, with one partner, or within a circle. No partner necessary. Thursdays, 5:30-6:30pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-3256676. info@LatinDanceBend.com. $12/class, $40/4-class series. Bend Ecstatic Dance Come explore free form movement, connection, and self-expression, guided by rich, diverse soundscapes. Visit: BendEcstaticDance.com or FB Bend Ecstatic Dance. Tuesdays, 7pm. Bend Masonic Center, 1036 NE Eighth St., Bend. $10-12 sliding scale.
Capoeira for Beginners Discover the joy
of capoeira in a judgement-free class that will explore the multiple dimensions of this unique Afro-Brazilian martial art form of freedom.
Condition your body and mind with the Capoeira Bend community every Thursday. New students are welcomed the first Thursday of each month. Thursdays, 6:15-7:15pm. Capoeira Bend, 63056 Lower Meadow Drive, Bend. $15/ drop-in or $50/month.
Intro to Latin Dance - Level 1 Dance
partner not required but encouraged. Tuesdays, 5:30-6:20pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: info@LatinDanceBend.com. $12/drop-in.
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.
Lindy Hop Class Come join us for Lindy Hop
Lessons every Sunday night with Agan Swing Dance and Sara Lee Conners. Beginner lesson from 7-8pm and Intermediate lesson from 6-7pm. Partner not required. Sundays, 6-8pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. $10/drop-in.
Odissi Indian Classical Dance Whether you are a dancer, yogini, or both, or neither, there is something for everyone in this dynamic & multi-layered practice. Tuesdays, Noon-1pm. Naji’s Midtown Yoga, 369 NE Revere Ave., Bend. Contact: tenley@templetribalfusion.com. Salsa Turn Patterns Learn fun turn pattern combinations with Latin Dance Bend. Dance partner not required but encouraged. 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 experience 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.
Square Dance Lessons Learn to square dance with the Bachelor Beauts Square Dance Club! Thursdays-Sundays, 6-8pm. Pine Forest
Public (ROCK) Choir Sing Bend is calling
on Central Oregonians to celebrate and share in the awesomeness of singing with our Public (ROCK) Choir! The group is designed to provide a fun, non-threatening environment, so people of all skill levels can participate. Mondays, 6-8pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Bend. First time is free, $10/members, $16/ non-members.
FILM EVENTS #5 Unity Film Festival: He Named Me Malala Join us to watch He Named Me Malala
(2015 - 87 minutes), an intimate portrait of Malala Yousafzai, who was wounded when Taliban gunmen opened fire on her and her friends’ school bus in Pakistan’s Swat Valley. March 24, 2:30-4:30pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 541-213-8357. bendbahai@gmail.com. Free.
The Human Element, a James Balog film Through the 4 elements of Nature—earth,
air, fire, water—the film explores the lives of everyday Americans on the front lines of Climate Change. March 20, 6:45-8:15pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-389-0785. juniper.group@oregon. sierraclub.org. Free.
Stevie Nicks: In Your Dreams In 2010, Stevie Nicks embarked on the recording of a new solo album, In Your Dreams, produced by former Eurythmics mastermind Dave Stewart. With cameras in tow, documentarian Stewart and diva Nicks set up shop in her home studio and reveal their collaborative creative process. March 26, 7-9pm. Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, Sisters. Contact: 541-549-8833. inquiries@ sistersmoviehouse.com. $12.50.
ARTS / CRAFTS 4th Friday Art Stroll in Sisters Beau-
tiful art, good company, refreshments, music, demonstrations, hors d’œuvres, plus additional sponsoring restaurants and food venues for during and following the stroll. Fourth Friday of every month, 4-7pm. Fourth Friday of every month, Downtown Sisters, Hood Avenue., Sisters. Contact: 541-549-9552. events@sistersartsassociation.org. Free.
Art at Dry Fields Enjoy our 22 rotating
ciders, beers and kombucha and view artwork by 33 Central Oregon artists. On display: Jan. 29-March 30. Tuesdays-Fridays, Noon-9pm. Through March 30. Dry Fields Cider, 611 NE Jackpine Court, Suite 3, Redmond. Contact: 971800-0215. artinfo@bendbroadband.com. Free.
Bend Photo Tours - Supermoon Rising Photo Workshop Full moons are amaz-
ing… but Supermoons are mind blowing! This particular moon is the last of three supermoons for 2019. We will head out to The Badlands for a clear view of the rising moon, and optimal views of the massive moon! March 21, 7-10pm. The Bend Tour Company, 550 SW Industrial Way, Bend. Contact: 541-640-1089. bendphototours@ gmail.com. $199.
Wednesday Night Kirtan Devotional group singing. It is yoga for the heart that connects us with our divine, inner nature and the one Spirit that unites us all. Wednesdays, 7-9pm. Bend Community Healing Center, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 133, Bend. $10.
Call to Artists Red Chair Gallery is looking for one 2D and one 3D artist. All 2D painters will be considered. 3D artists for first consideration will be in woodworking, metal, fabric or anything of an unusual nature. Please pick up a membership packet at the gallery. Fridays. Red Chair Gallery, 103 NW Oregon Ave., Bend.
Submitted
NIGHT BEATS
MAR 23
Parallel 44 Presents
MAR 24
MAR 22
Joint East Bend Public Library for a showing of "He Named Me Malala" on Sunday, 3/24.
MAR 23
West African Drumming Mondays, Level 1 students will learn traditional rhythms, and experience the brain-enhancing, healing and joyful benefits from David Visiko. On Thursdays, Level 2 & 3 students will build on your 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.
Grange Hall, 63214 Boyd Acres Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-382-7014. dance@bachelorbeauts.org. $5/first class, $75/15 additional lessons.
at Vocanic Theatre Pub
BLUE LOTUS & SPYN RESET at Volcanic Theatre Pub
Ceramics Workshops Thursdays, 6-9pm. Through May 30. Tumalo Art Farm, 66405 Cline Falls Road, Bend. Contact: 541-241-6145. tumaloartfarm@gmail.com. $50.
BRIAN ODELL BAND at The Belfry
STRAWBERRY GIRLS
at Volcanic Theatre Pub
17 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Seeking women and girls who love to sing and harmonize. Bella teaches and performs fourpart acappella harmony and welcomes singers with high and low voices, all levels, ages 15 and above. Meet upstairs in the Great Room. Tuesdays, 6:30-9pm. Aspen Ridge Retirement, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend. Contact: 541-728-9392. bellaacappellasai@gmail.com. $35/membership.
DANCE
SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 10AM-2PM Lunch Provided – La Pine, Oregon
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MARCH 21, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
18
To Register: Alexandra Coogan, LMFT 541-213-8230
BAR & GRILL We host
BINGO every
FIRST TUESDAY OF THE MONTH
In support of the High Desert Food and Farm Alliance 642 NW Franklin , Downtown Bend @JCs_Bar_Bend jcsbend.com
EVENTS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT Chinese Brush Painting w/ Michelle Oberg Classes will include traditional tech-
niques of painting with ink and watercolor on rice paper. For more information and a supply list contact Michelle at michelleoberg39@gmail. com or 541-504-0241. Fri, March 1, 1-3pm and Fridays, 1-3pm. Through March 29. Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-504-0241. michelleoberg39@gmail. com. $5/members; $10/non-members.
learn to cut steel with a torch then try your hand at Mig Welding and take your creations home with you. Two students minimum per booking. Kids 13+ welcome. No Welding Experience Needed! Fri, Jan. 18, 5:30-8pm, Fri, Feb. 1, 5:30-8pm, Fri, Feb. 22, 5:30-8pm, Fri, March 8, 5:30-8pm and Fri, March 22, 5:30-8pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: (541) 3882283. info@DIYcave.com. $55.
DIY Open Forge This is not a class, but, a
4-hour open play under steward supervision. For formal instruction and certification, please sign up for Forge Basics Workshops. Ages 16+. Learn more and sign up at DIYcave.com. Sun, March 10, Noon and Sun, March 24, Noon. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-3882283. info@diycave.com. $20.
Figure Drawing Salon Develop your skills
at our live model figure drawing salon hosted by Workhouse studio members Christian Brown and Abney Wallace. This drop-in salon features a live nude model in a sequence of poses. All levels are welcome but no instruction is provided. Participants are encouraged to bring their own easel and materials. Tuesdays, 7-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St., Suite 6, Bend. $15/door.
If Trees Could Dream This is a show
of sculpture, bas-relief, and painting by Ted Gladu of Tumalo. The works are created of locally harvested material and are intended as analogs for our relationship with nature in the built environment. Feb. 23-March 28, 9am-6pm. COCC Barber Library, 2600 NW College Way, Bend. Contact: 541-350-4950. www.iftreescoulddream.com. Free.
New Artists Red Chair Gallery announces the addition of two new local artists: oil painter John Runnels and potter Dori Kite. Come see John’s iconic scenes of aspen trees and Dori’s vibrant platters and wall art at Bend’s Best Art Gallery voted by the Source. Fridays. Through March 29. Red Chair Gallery, 103 NW Oregon Ave., Bend. Rick Bartow: Things You Know but Cannot Explain See one of Oregon’s most
celebrated indigenous artists’ works showcased at the High Desert Museum, in a stunning retrospective. (See details on special events in this week’s Artwatch) Jan. 26-April 7, 10am-4pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: info@highdesertmuseum.org.
SageBrushers Art Society Exhibit: Sue McLaughlin Schoolhouse Produce
is pleased to exhibit watercolor paintings by SageBrushers Art Society member Sue McLaughlin. Come enjoy this lovely exploration of texture in landscapes, still lives, and florals, as you fill your kitchen with healthy food. March 1-31, 10am-6pm. School House Produce, 1430 SW Highland Avenue, Redmond. Contact: 541-617-0900.
SageBrushers Art Society: “Mixer Wednesday” Featuring paintings in oil,
acrylic, watercolor, and collage in a range of individual styles including impressionism, expressionism, symbolism, and abstraction. The show will also feature drawings on paper. Wednesdays-Fridays-Saturdays, 1-4pm. Through April 24. Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend. Free.
SageBrushers Art Society: Mixed Media Show Sagebrushers Art Society
showing rotating works by the 100+ members. Included are beautiful paintings in acrylic, oil and watercolor, as well as outstanding photography. March 1-27, 10am-4pm. Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road, Bend. Contact: 541-617-0900. Free.
nue Art features large format landscape photography by Scott Cordner and alternatively glazed ceramic work of Peter Roussel. Cordner prints his own images, and hand crafts his frames. Roussel’s unusually textured ceramics are made using textures from nature, such as horse hair. March 22, 4-7pm. Hood Avenue Art, 357 W Hood Ave., Sisters, Sisters. Contact: 541-719-1800. info@hoodavenueart.com.
Sophisticated Color Harmony Made Easy with David Kinker All mediums are
welcome. Lecture, acrylic painting demonstration, and hands on individual instruction. Bring your own supplies. Thursdays, 9:30am-Noon and 6-8:30pm. Through March 28. Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend. Contact: 541 383 2069. dkinker@bendbroadband.com. $35.
PRESENTATIONS + EXHIBITS AnalogueTintypes Pop-up Shop Pop-up Shop with Analogue Tintypes. March 26, 4-10pm. Velvet, 805 NW Wall St., Bend. No cover. April Gallery The Red Chair April Gallery focuss-
es on new work by Joren Traveller, and “Speaking of Clay” Wall art by gallery artists. Reception, April 5, 2019 5:30-9:00pm. Wednesdays. Through March 29. Red Chair Gallery, 103 NW Oregon Ave., Bend. Contact: thewayweart229@gmail.com.
Circumnavigating Crater Lake: Winter Backcountry Ski Trip Please join Oregon
Wild for this month’s Wild Wednesday! Circumnavigating Crater Lake in the winter is a fun and ambitious way to experience Oregon’s only National Park. Come hear about a recent trip on splitboard and skis. March 27, 6-7:30pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Bend. Contact: 541-382-2616. jd@oregonwild.org. Free.
Figuratively Speaking WOMEN ARTISTS
after hours. Explore the Museum’s newest exhibits and revisit your favorites. March 23, 5-8pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-382-4754. info@highdesertmuseum.org. Free.
Nature Nights: Living in the Human Age ENVIRONMENTAL CONSCIOUSNESS Den-
nis Dimick, National Geographic picture editor, will join the Deschutes Land Trust for a night of visuals that help showcase the ever-growing human footprint. These images are sure to leave their mark. March 20, 7-8:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-330-0017. rebekah@deschuteslandtrust.org. Free.
Nesting Bald Eagles of Smith Rock
Nature photographer George Lepp shares the insights and images he’s gathered from more than 500 hours of observation and photography of the eagle nest sharing still photos and video of the nesting cycle. March 21, 6:308:30pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend. Contact: 559-940-0427. lindasuebertsch@gmail.com. Free.
Oregon Communicators brings you Wisdom from the Sea with James Evanow Captain James Evanow - Sea Captain,
leader, speaker, author and business coach. James is both entertaining & inspirational. Join us in person or online at https://zoom. us/j/246410212. Meet ‘n Greet at 6pm. March 21, 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.
Photographing the Black Hole at the Center of the Galaxy Dr. Larry Price will
guide us as we–and the scientific world–try to understand what seeing the invisible might reveal. March 26, 7-8pm. The Belfry, 302 Main St., Sisters, Sisters. Contact: 541-912-0750. scienceinsisters@gmail.com. $5 donation, students and teachers free.
An art exhibition featuring five female artists. Each artis’s work is focused on things they value most, including memories, relationships, personal strengths, and their heroes. Featuring Paula Bullwinkel, Anna Fidler, Jennifer Hirshfiield, Lauren Ida and MV Moran. Opening Celebration on April 5. March 13-May 25. At Liberty Arts Collaborative, 849 NW Wall St., Bend. Free.
Sky Hunters! Raptors take flight overhead in this intimate demonstration. Experience these powerful predators like never before as our wildlife curators showcase the birds’ agility and grace. Sat, March 23, 1:30-2pm and Mondays-Sundays, 11-11:30am. Through March 30. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-382-4754. info@ highdesertmuseum.org. $5, Members receive a 20% discount.
“Fragile Legacy: Rare Views of Early Central Oregon” Exhibit The exhibit fea-
Understanding Alzheimer’s and Dementia Join us to learn about the impact
tures 60 photographic images hand printed from their original glass plate negatives and taken between 1908 and 1930 around Central Oregon. Sept. 21-March 31. Deschutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend.
Giving the Noose the Slip: Female Murderers in Oregon, 1854-1950 History
Pub Encore examines how legislative shifts in the all-male courts and penal system reflected the changing roles of women as citizens. March 27, Noon-1pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 541-312-1032. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
KonMari Method Presentation by Melissa Jean of Tidy+Flourish Melissa
Jean, of Tidy+Flourish, is the first Certified KonMari Consultant in Oregon. She coaches people through the KonMari Method™ to tidy their belongings and live their ideal life with intention and gratitude. March 23, 3-4pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. sara@roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.
Love Knows No Borders Rev. Scott Rudolph will be speaking on his trip to the US- Mexico border to learn more about the Crisis at the Border. In Tijuana he spoke with asylum seekers at the camps and learned more about why they came to the USA. March 28, 6:30-8pm. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend. Contact: 541-388-1793. Free.
Museum and Me A quieter time for children and adults with physical, intellectual and/or social disabilities to enjoy the High Desert Museum
Stupid F#%*ing Bird In this edgy, funny, and compassionate reboot of Anton Chekhov’s famous Seagull, Aaron Posner has created a strong, energetic ensemble piece, a hilarious and moving meditation on love, life, and art. Sundays, 2pm and Thursdays-Saturdays, 7:30pm. Through April 7. CTC Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $16/ adults, $13/seniors + sudents.
WORDS Author Event: Dick Linford Have you hear
river raft guide stories before? Join us for an author talk with Dick Linford, co-owner of ECHO and legendary raft guide. March 21, 6-7:15pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. sara@ roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.
An Evening of Cowgirl Poetry and Music with Jessica Hedges and Trinity Seely Through music and poetry, Jessica
Hedges and Trinity Seely will share stories of their lives on working ranches. March 21, 6:30-8pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-382-4754. info@ highdesertmuseum.org. $15, Members receive 20% discount.
Mystery Book Club Please join us for
Mystery Book Club. We will be discussing The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton. March 20, 6pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. No cover.
Quiet Writing Time with Writer’s Collective of Central Oregon The Writers
Collective of Central Oregon is holding weekly writing meetups through the winter. Meet fellow writers, buckle down and shove off that writer’s block! (Does not meet on MLK Day or President’s Day) Mondays, 10am-1pm. Through June 3. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-1063. writehere@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
Rediscovered Reads Book Club
Please join us for Rediscovered Reads Book Club. We will be discussing Larose by Louise Erdrich. March 27, 6pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. jenny@roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.
Write Here: Writers Writing - Flash Fiction Workshop Less is more with
of Alzheimer’s; the difference between Alzheimer’s and dementia; stages and risk factors; current research and treatments available for some symptoms; and Alzheimer’s Association resources. March 28, 1-2pm. Madras St. Charles, Metolius Conference Room, 470 NE A St., Madras. Contact: 800-272-3900. Free.
flash fiction! Learn to write succinctly and make every word count. Flash fiction is defined as stories that are fewer than 1,000, 500, or sometimes even 250 words. Registration Required. March 24, 1-3pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-1063. paigef@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
Upper Snake River Tribes take on a Changing Climate Join us for the third
Writers Writing - Quiet Writing Time with WCCO Join the Writer’s Collective of
installment of the Bend High Desert Speaker Series with Jason Kesling, Environmental Program Director of the Upper Snake River Tribes Foundation. Jason will share his experience and insight into how the Upper Snake River Tribes are taking-on current environmental threats. March 26, 7-8:30pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr., Bend. Contact: 541-330-2638. caelin@onda.org. Free.
THEATER Auditions: “The Butler Did It” Sunriver Stars is holding auditions for their spring production, “The Butler Did It,” a comic mystery. Roles for men and women both young and senior. Meet in Room 208, across the street from Sunriver Brewing. March 26, 6-8pm. Village Properties, 56835 Venture Ln., Sunriver. Contact: 541-593-4489. slms@bendbroadband.com. Embrace your Inner Foolishness See
Eric, Heather, Susan, Shane and maybe Shaun make fools of themselves as they enact stories based on audience suggestions! March 22, 7-9pm. The Capitol, 190 NW Oregon Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-749-0314. susandolan185@msn.com. $10.
Central Oregon and your fellow writers for quiet writing time. We’ll chat and say hello for a few minutes before we get down to work on our own stuff. Tuesdays, 10am-1pm. Through March 26. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-312-1032. lizg@ deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
ETC. Hollinshead Community Garden Lottery To register for the lottery, email your
full name, phone number and address by Friday, April 5, 2019. March 1-April 5, 8am-5pm. Hollinshead Community Garden, 1235 NE Jones Rd., Bend. Contact: comga2014@gmail.com. Free.
Northwest Crossing Community Garden Lottery For lottery instructions, go
to https://www.gocomga.com/gardening-news. To register for the lottery, email your full name, phone number by Monday, April 15, 2019. March 1-April 15, 8am-5pm. NorthWest Crossing Community Garden, Corner of NW Crossing Dr. and Discovery Park Dr., Bend. Contact: gocomga@gmail.com. Free.
19 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
DIY Date Night - Weld Together You’ll
Scott Cordner and Peter Roussel Featured Artists Fourth Friday at Hood Ave-
Bali Yoga Retreat
7 DAYS A WEEK · URGENT CARE
NAMASPA YOGA COMMUNITY
WITH SUZIE NEWCOME & BRANDY BERLIN FROM
9 DAYS NOV 8-16
2019
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20
Caring for your pets
5 LOCATIONS FROM SANUR TO CANDIDASA
Healthy Adventures Await!
DOCTORS BYRON MAAS, LAUREN STAYER, ERIN MILLER, MARIE STANLEY & TABITHA JOHNSTON
360 NE QUIMBY AVE 382-0741 BENDVETERINARYCLINIC.COM
$1,945
This well-packed yoga & meditation retreat offers up the perfect blend of the must-sees with free time to get off the beaten path — where the people you’ll encounter are just as likely to be memorable locals as other travellers. HIGHLIGHTS • Relax on stunning beaches • Uncover the unique culture of Ubud • Explore Hindu temples • Marvel at the power of active volcanoes • Two invigorating and relaxing yoga classes a day (Baptiste Power, Evoke Energy Yin, Nidra & Meditation) led by Namaspa Yoga Community owners and Tier 3 Certified Baptiste Teachers Suzie Newcome and Brandy Berlin FOR MORE INFORMATION
email: Retreats@Namaspa.com web: Namaspa.com/Bali_Retreat_2019
Dana Mann, MD Interventional Radiology
3
Daymen Tuscano, MD Diagnostic Radiology and Breast Imaging
Kai Kinder, MD Body Imaging and Women’s Imaging
We are proud to welcome three new fellowship trained and board-certified physicians to Central Oregon Radiology. Each new doctor brings their own specialty to CORA’s range of capabilities.
NEW EXPE RT RADIOLOGISTS JOIN CORA
CORA continues to serve the Central Oregon community, bringing state-of-the-art technology and innovative techniques. These 3 new doctors will join our 22 specially-trained physicians and 160 professionally-trained staff.
centraloregonradiology.com | 541.382.6633
SAVE $200 WHEN YOU PREPAY BY MAY 1
EVENTS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT Oh Yess a Monthly Night OUT Hosted
by OUTCentralOregon. Let’s giggle and greet, support and cavort, it’s time to see each other, come together and get a little silly. DJ Twink + DJ Daddy. 21 and over. March 21, 7-11:30pm. Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. No cover.
Plant Shop Pop-Up Indoor Plant Shop
Preventative Walk-In Pet Wellness Clinic No appointments necessary, 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 Become a Big Brother or Big Sister in Redmond It doesn’t take much to make a big difference in the life of a child! Looking for caring adult mentors who are willing to spend a few hours a month sharing their interests and hobbies. Ongoing. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon - Redmond, 412 SW Eighth St., Redmond. Contact: 541-617-4788. balbert@bbbsco.org.
Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond
Looking for volunteers to receive donations, sort, and price items. Volunteers are critical to the operations of our high-save shelter and contribute directly to the care of our animals by ensuring our donations are processed. Ongoing, 10am-5pm. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW Fifth St., Redmond. Contact: 541-504-0101. thrift@brightsideanimals.org.
Call for Volunteers Volunteers needed at
Second Chance Bird Rescue! Friendly people needed to help socialize birds to ready for adoption, make toys, clean cages and make some new feathered friends! Do you play a musical instrument? Come and practice for the birds! Located past Cascade Lakes Distillery, call for hours and location. Contact: 916-956-2153.
Charlene Schulz & After School Buddies Charlene Schulz of After School
Buddies presents how to become a mentor to adolescent girls at this Soroptimist meetup. March 28, Noon-1pm. Deschutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend. Contact: president@sibend.org. Free.
Fences For Fido Help free dogs from
chains! We are seeking volunteers on Mondays to come out and help us build fences for dogs who live on chains. No experience is required. Sign up on Facebook: FFF Central Oregon Region Volunteers. More info can be found at fencesforfido.org. Ongoing.
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. In need of foster families and volunteers to assist with monthly adoption events and fundraising efforts. Contact for details. Contact: volunteer@herduneededahome.com.
Make Your Mark at Bend Spay+Neuter! Compassionate, awesome people to join an incredible team, whether you volunteer in the clinic, festivals or helping with our community cat population. Ongoing. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson, Suite A1, Bend. Contact: 541-617-1010. volunteer@bendsnip.org.
Mentors Needed Heart of Oregon Corps 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: John: 541-526-1380. john.griffith@heartoforegoncorps.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
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.
GROUPS + MEETUPS “Advice for Future Corpses (and Those Who Love Them)” Book Discussion Group Friends of Hospice will be
discussing Sallie Tisdale’s book “Advice for Future Corpses (and Those Who Love Them).” Described as a “travel guide” to the end of life, this text should spur great conversation! This discussion will be facilitated by former Hospice Nurse Cheryl Adcox. RSVPs required. March 28, 5:30-7pm. Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend. Contact: 541-410-3918. events@ friendsofhospiceoregon.org. Free.
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 Call Alcoholics Anonymous. Hotline: 541-548-0440. Or visit coigaa.org.
BALANCING THE SEXES: Man, We Can Do This! In honor of International
Women’s Month, our March forum will focus on the benefits of gender balance professionally, societally and economically in Central Oregon – and how we all can play a part. Lunch included. March 28, 11:15am-1pm. Riverhouse on the Deschutes Convention Center, 3075 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-633-7163. info@cityclubco. org. $25/members, $45/non-members.
Bend Chamber Toastmasters Develop
and grow your public speaking and leadership skills, whether you’re an executive, stay-at-home parent, college student or retiree. Wednesdays, Noon-1pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend.
Bend “GO” Club Learn the ancient, abstract
strategy game of “Go” in a group setting. Call Mike for more info. Wednesdays, 2:30-5pm. Market of Choice, 115 NW Sisemore St., Bend. Contact: 541-385-9198.
Caregiver Support Group - Bend Senior Center Support groups create a safe,
confidential, supportive environment or community and a chance for participants to develop informal mutual support and social relationships. They also educate and inform participants about dementia and help participants develop methods and skills to solve problems. Third Thursday of every month, 5-6:30pm. Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road, Bend. Contact: 800-272-3900. Free.
Caregiver Support Group - Community Presbyterian Church Support
groups create a safe, confidential, supportive environment or community and a chance for participants to develop informal mutual support and social relationships. They also educate and inform participants about dementia and help participants develop methods and skills to solve problems. Third Wednesday of every month, 2-3:30pm. Community Presbyterian Church, 529 NW 19th St., Redmond. Contact: 800-272-3900. Free.
Cascades East Transit’s Open House Event Please join us in our second round of
meetings for the Regional Transit Master Plan to help prioritize future transit expansion projects. March 20, 3:30-6:30pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-548-9534. dhofbauer@coic.org. Free. Please
join us in our second round of meetings for the Regional Transit Master Plan to help prioritize future transit expansion projects. March 21, 3:307pm. Brooks Hall at Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-548-9534. dhofbauer@coic.org. Free.
Celebrate Recovery Celebrate Recovery is
a Christ-centered, 12-step recovery program for anyone struggling with hurt, pain or addiction of any kind. This is a safe place to find community and freedom from the issues that are controlling our life. Mondays, 6:30pm. Faith Christian Center, 1049 NE 11th St., Bend. | Wednesdays, 7pm. Redmond Assembly of God, 1865 W. Antler Ave., Redmond. | Thursdays, 6:30pm. High Lakes Christian Church, 52620 Day Road, La Pine. | Thursdays, 6:30pm. Westside Church, 2051 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend. | Fridays, 7pm. Redmond Christian Church, 536 SW 10th St., Redmond. Visit celebraterecovery.com for more info. Ongoing.
Central Oregon Homebrewers Organization A fun group of people, dedicated
to improving our craft. Educational sessions, group brewing, competitions, and other beer-related events. Third Wednesday of every month, 6:30-9pm. Aspen Ridge Retirement, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend.
Central Oregon PubTalk EDCO’s Central
Oregon PubTalk, held the fourth Thursday of the month, 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. Fourth Thursday of every month, 5-7:30pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend. Contact: 541-388-3236. events@edcoinfo.com. $26-$36.
Compassionate Communication / NVC Practice Groups Through practic-
ing with others, we can learn and grow using real-life experiences to become more compassionate with ourselves and others. Some NVC experience necessary. Tuesdays-Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm and Wednesdays, 4-5:30pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way, #200, Bend. Free.
Death Cafe Bend Death Cafes are participant
led discussions about any and all issues related to death and dying. We talk about whatever you want to talk about. Please come join us for a rich and meaningful discussion. Refreshments will be served. Wednesdays, 7-9pm. Through March 27. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 208-571-0042. cheryl@deathdoulahandinhand.com. Free, donations accepted.
Emotions Anonymous EA provides a warm and accepting group setting in which to share experiences without fear of criticism. Wednesdays, 9:30am and Thursdays, 10:30am. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St., Bend. Garage Night The Pine Shed is the perfect place to talk shop, and tell all of your buddies about your winter projects! Come on down for a pint and be ready to share what you’ve been working on! Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Spoken Moto, 310 SW Industrial Way, Bend. Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers
welcome. For info, call Sue. Mondays, 6-9pm. Round Table Clubhouse, 2940 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-610-3717. ossz55@yahoo.com.
Green Drinks Join The Environmental Center for March Green Drinks at Wren & Wild, a clean beauty retail store that just found their sweet spot in the heart of downtown Bend. Please RSVP in advance! Space is limited. March 21, 5-7pm. Wren & Wild, 112 Northwest Minnesota Avenue, Bend. Contact: 541-385-6908. lauren@ envirocenter.org. Free.
Italian Conversation Group Conversational Italian group in a relaxed atmosphere. Saturdays, 9:45-11am. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. Japanese Group Lesson We offer group
lessons for both beginners and intermediate students for Japanese for all ages. Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-633-7205. $10.
Marijuana Anonymous Meeting. Share experience, strength, and hope with each other. Thursdays, 7-8pm. Serenity Lane, 601 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. Newcomers Club of Bend Monthly Luncheon Newcomers Club of Bend welcomes new and long time women residents of Central Oregon, presents a variety of fascinating programs and activities that inform, entertain and involve its members in the life of the community. Check our website: newcomersclubofbend.org to learn more. Payment due one week before luncheon. Fourth Tuesday of every month, 11am1pm. Bend Golf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Dr., Bend. Contact: 541-213-2115. ncob. president18@gmail.com. $25.
Oregon Innovative Marketing Networking Event Join our March networking
event as we explore Bend Tour Company’s lively warehouse space. Dig out from the snow and dig into some much-needed conversation with colleagues. Apps & drinks provided. March 20, 5-7pm. The Bend Tour Company, 550 SW Industrial Way, Bend. Contact: 704701-4532. oinnovativemarketing@gmail.com. $10/RDVP, $15/door.
Overeaters Anonymous Meeting A
fellowship of individuals who, through shared experience, strength and hope, are recovering from compulsive overeating. Mondays & 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.
Resist! Rally Weekly resistance protest,
the theme of the week changes. Contact Vocal Seniority or Indivisible Bend for more info. Bring 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.
Socrates Cafe Group Exchange thought-
ful ideas and experiences while embracing the Socratic Method. Second and Fourth Thursday of every month, 6-8pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend.
Spanish Club. 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.
St. Charles Rehabilitation Center Stroke Support Group This is a support
group for stroke survivors as well as their families and friends. Please join the monthly meeting for support and education in an honest, open and supportive environment. Fourth Tuesday of every month, 3-4pm. Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend. Contact: blwiese24@gmail.com.
Support Group - Women Survivors of Sexual Abuse Confidential support group for women survivors of sexual abuse. The primary focus of the group will be to develop a support system to share and work through issues related to sexual abuse. Call or text Veronica for more info. Actual days, times, location TBD. Ongoing. Private Residence in Bend, RSVP for address, Bend. Contact: 503-856-4874.
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.
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.
21 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Somewhere That’s Green pop-up. Wed, March 27, 11am-6pm, Thu, March 28, 11am-6pm, Fri, March 29, 11am-6pm, Sat, March 30, 11am-6pm and Sun, March 31, 11am-6pm. Found Natural Goods, 1001 NW Brooks st., Bend. Contact: 541760-4961. john@somewheregreen.com. Free.
able to pass VA-provided physical and screening. Contact: Paul: 541-647-2363.
FAMILY & KIDS’ EVENTS Absolutely Incredible Kid Day® Celebration An afternoon of ice skating. For
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MARCH 21, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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SCORE
an Adoption Discount up to 100% Slam dunk
25% discount March 23—April 8 hsco.org
youth up to 18 years old, must be accompanied by an adult and arrive by 5:30pm. Limit first 200 kids to arrive. March 21, 4-6pm. The Pavilion, 1001 SW Bradbury Way, Bend. Contact: 541382-4682. info@campfireco.org. Free.
Art Club Ages 5-11. Thursdays, 4-5:30pm. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend.
Celebrate “Wolf in the Snow” Create
art pieces to celebrate 2018 Caldecott Winner, “Wolf in the Snow”. Ages 6-9 years. March 23, 2pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 541-330-3760. Free.
Creative Story Time Perfect for ages 1.5Y5. Wednesdays, 10-10:45am. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend. Creativity Lab for Preschoolers Ages 3-6 yrs w/caregiver. Tuesdays-Fridays, 11amNoon Through May 31. Base Camp Studio, 2531 NE Studio Rd, Bend. Contact: hello@basecampstudio.org. $10. DIY Kids Bridge Engineering Kids will learn great skills including how geometry affects bridge design and function. Use code TS10 to save 10% off. March 20, 5:30pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: (541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $79.
Targeted Individuals of Central Oregon Stop organized stalking and multi-person harassment.
Dyslexia - Assistive Technology Tools
The High Desert ESD joins Decoding Dyslexia to share assistive technology tools and reading supports available for students in Central Oregon. March 20, 6:30-8pm. Samara Learning Center, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. Contact: 541550-0744. centraloregon@decodingdyslexiaor. org. $5 donation suggested.
Connect, heal, take action! Facebook.com/tiCentralOregon Email: ticobend@nym.hush.com
Go Fly a Kite After School Club Design,
every year since we opened!
build and fly your own kites! Open to all K-3rd graders and centrally located at Amity Creek Magnet School. Wednesdays, 2-4pm. Through April 17. Amity Creek Magnet School, 437 NW Wall Street, Bend. Contact: 541-382-4682. info@ campfireco.org. $78.
Intro to Dungeons & Dragons Learn about DnD and start building a character. Ages 12-17 years. March 22, 4-5pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-617-7087. Free. Kids Camp: Art Around the World
Learn and create art around the world. Ages 6-9 years. Online registration is required. Wed, March 6, 2:30-3:30pm, Wed, March 13, 2:303:30pm, Wed, March 20, 2:30-3:30pm and Wed, March 27, 2:30-3:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541617-7097. Free.
LEGO Block Party Kids + 1 gazillion LEGOs = fun. All ages. Wed, Feb. 27, 2:30-4pm and Wed, March 27, 2:30-4pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 541-330-3760. Free.
Little Artist Playgroup For ages 1.5Y-5.
541.385.RIBS
Tuesdays, 10:30-11:15am. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend.
2670 N Hwy 20 Near Safeway
Mom & Baby Yoga No experience necessary. Tuesdays, Noon-1pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. $17/drop-in.
Redmond:
343 NW 6th Street
541.923.BBQ1 NEW HOURS
Tuesday - Sunday, 11am - 9pm
www.baldysbbq.com
River Art Workshop Create river-inspired art and submit it to the Honoring Our Rivers Project. All ages. March 27, 1:30-4pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-312-1050. Free. Science Storytime Stories and science with hands-on experiments. Ages 3+ years. Mon, Feb. 25, 10:30am and Mon, March 25, 10:30am.
Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-617-7097. Free.
Spring Break Art Camp Join us for Spring Break Art Camp. Monday: Nature Printing; Tuesday: Wild Builders; Wednesday: Rainbows; Thursday: Nature Painting; Friday: Birds & Bugs. March 25-29, 9am-3pm. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend. Spring Break Camp Not heading out of town for Spring Break? Join Camp Fire for a worldly exploration with one week of No School Day Camps. Open to grades K-6. March 25-29, 9am-3:30pm. Samara Learning Center, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. Contact: 541-382-4682. info@ campfireco.org. $55/day. Spring Break Camp with Wildheart Nature School Day camps for ages 5-12.
Themes include: Monday - Witches and Wizards | Tuesday - Hobbit and Faerie Hunters | Wednesday - Survivors | Thursday - Unicorn Whisperers | Friday - Mythic Mermaids and Mermen. March 25-29, 9am-3:30pm. Skyliners Lodge, 16125 Skyliners Rd., Bend. Contact: 541 728 3409. info@wildheartnatureschool.com. Before Feb. 15: $57/day, After Feb. 15: $67/day.
Starflight After School Club The club meets weekly to guide youth through Camp Fire’s age-specific, growth mindset-based national curriculum. Open to all K-3rd graders. Mondays, 3:30pm. Through April 15. Amity Creek Magnet School, 437 NW Wall Street, Bend. Contact: 541.382.4682. $60. Storytime - Music, Movement & Stories Movement and stories to develop
skills. Ages 3-5 years. Tue, Feb. 12, 11:15am, Thu, March 21, 11:15am and Thu, March 28, 11:15am. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-617-7097. Free.
The Autism Treatment Center of Bend Parent Workshop ATC of Bend offers its inaugural Qigong Sensory Treatment Massage workshop. Full series includes this workshop plus advanced training and eight treatment sessions for their children. March 23, 9am12:30pm. Autism Treatment Center of Bend, 750 NW Charbonneau, Bend. Contact: 503-9179835. rosi@AutismTreatment.Center. 480.
Tiny Explorers: Ribbon Play The program is targeted at new families with infants and toddlers, from birth to 3 years old. March 28, 10-11am. Hillside Park, 2050 NW 12th Street, Bend. Contact: 541) 383-5592. katie@ childrensforestco.org. Tiny Explorers: Tiny Birds Nest The program is targeted at new families with infants and toddlers, from birth to 3 years old. March 21, 10-11am. Sawyer Park, 62999 O.B. Riley Road, Bend. Contact: (541) 383-5592. katie@ childrensforestco.org. Toddler Move + Make Perfect for ages
1.5Y-5. No drop-ins. Thursdays, 9-9:45am. ARTdogChildren’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend.
Wildheart’s Homeschool Spring Trackers Club 2019 Open to Non-Homes-
choolers. Ages 6 – 12. “Local Animals” – 4/2 | “Advanced Camouflage” – 4/9 | “Map/Compass” – 4/16 | “Waterways/Riparian Zones” – 4/23 | “Cycle of the Seasons Spring Celebration 4/30 | “Botany” 5/7 | “Wild Tea Making” 5/14. Tuesdays, 10am-3:30pm. Through May 14. Skyliners Lodge, 16125 Skyliners Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-728-3409. info@wildheartnatureschool. com. Early Bird: 10 classes/$467.
Youth/Adult Slackline. All ages and levels welcome. Tuesdays, 5-6pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. $18/youth drop-in (17 and under), $20/ adult drop-in.
C
A Mother-Daughter Collaboration
Author Kim Cooper Findling teams up with her teen daughter on a new novel, set on the Oregon coast
23
By Nicole Vulcan
Source Weekly: Can you describe the book for our readers? Kim Cooper Findling/Libby Findling: A girl on the eve of her 14th birthday encounters crazy weather in her small Oregon Coast hometown. She realizes that the weather is affecting her family alone, and has been for decades, and that she must solve a mystery and reverse a curse. “The Sixth Storm” is a fast-paced read about strong girls, family secrets and spectacularly bad weather. SW: How did this collaboration come about? KCF: One stormy night when Libby was 10, Libby said, “What if weather patterns represented people changing?” It blew my mind and I wrote it down immediately. I knew we had to do something with it. SW: How did you share the load of work? Did one person largely take the reins in terms of the actual writing, versus shaping the narrative, for example?
SW: Libby, what’s it been like growing up in a home where your mom is a writer? Do you think that influenced your creativity—or in other words, how did having a creative parent shape you? LF: When a parent is creative, it’s natural for the kids to be creative, too. I was always surrounded by creativity in different forms, and my mom always encouraged me to write and tell stories. She’s always sparking my creativity. SW: Libby, what types of other creative outlets do you have? LF: I’ve been acting since the 2nd grade and I’ve been in 18 plays. I like drawing and all kinds of art. I love music, too. I’m in band class, and I’m trying to write songs and want to learn to play the guitar. SW: Is the main character based on someone in your lives? KCF: Skye isn’t based on one single person, but making her a Capricorn was a purposeful decision. The entire book takes place in the week leading up to her birthday, during a stormy season, so a January birthday made sense. But beyond that, I’ve been close to a lot of Capricorns in my life, and am very familiar with their strengths and weaknesses. In other words, I knew how to mess with Skye, which is what you always want to do to your protagonist!
ARTWATCH
Unexpected Places to Find Art
Trains: Traveling street art exhibits rains: You may see them as ruthless interrupters of traffic flow. You may curse them as they wake you in the middle of the night with their long horn blasts. Me, though, I love them. For me, trains are a reminder that there are places outside our little bubble. They don’t remind me of this because they’re carrying freight from one place to the next, however. Rather, I see them as a parade of galleries, displaying the artwork of renegade artists from all over this large country. For many artists, trains are a canvas—a place they can create a work of art under the cover of darkness, only for it to be rolled out in the daylight for many people to see. These works of art are sometimes memorials to other
T
Submitted
KCF: We did all the concepting and character development together in verbal brainstorming sessions. Then I’d write a chapter, bring it back to Libby, and she’d “fix it,” as she says.
Libby Findling and Kim Cooper Findling say an offhand comment about storms and feelings was the spark for “The Sixth Storm.”
SW: Kim, how did this process differ from writing the other books you’ve written? KCF: I’d never written fiction. I never thought I would write fiction! Libby was my inspiration and my muse. The story consumed me, and writing it was a blast, but whipping it into a final product was much more difficult than I expected. Overall, experientially, compared to my past books, writing fiction was much more like memoir and essay than travel writing. It was sinking deep into self and story.
in Oregon differ creatively, or in how you depict the state? KCF: Well, writing the setting was the easy part! That came very naturally to me. And as a non-fiction writer you’re always striving for the truth, and suddenly I was allowed to make things up. But I think this story is still a very accurate portrayal of Oregon. All of my books have been love letters to Oregon in some form. I grew up on the Oregon Coast, and writing a book about teenagers in a stormy rural beach town was a homecoming.
SW: Kim, much of the work you’ve done in the past has been guidebooks and travel writing based on Oregon. How did writing a fictional tale based
SW: Where can readers pick up a copy? KCF: Dudley’s Bookshop, Roundabout Books, West Coast Provisions and online. Thanks for reading!
By Teafly Peterson artists, past or incarcerated. They’re sometimes political. Often, they’re simply the drawings and musings of young artists who feel they don’t have another avenue for being heard. It’s one way that trains continue to connect us to each other. “I love the idea of trains as mobile art galleries, from other cities, with art that you don’t have to pay to see—and as a voice for minorities and marginalized people,” shares Jason Lovejoy, a local artist whose work is currently on display outside of Cosmic Depot as part of the High Desert Mural Festival. To be clear, painting trains or even walking around the train yard to look at paintings on trains is illegal, so I don’t suggest it. But we’re incredibly lucky to have a clear line of sight to these works of art parading through town on a daily basis. And for those of you who think of it as nothing more
This is just one of the many pieces of traveling art passing through Central Oregon each day. Jason Lovejoy
than someone destroying property or making things unclean or unsightly, I ask you this: Don’t trains do that already on their own? Next time you’re
stuck at a train crossing, rather than cursing the train in front of you, shift what you’re seeing. Look at the art. What do you see now?
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
I
t’s not every day that a mom and daughter put their heads together to collaborate on a writing project—and it’s even less common when the pair resides in Central Oregon. Kim Cooper Findling is the author of “Bend, Oregon Daycations: Day Trips for Curious Families,” among other guidebooks and a memoir. Now, she’s teamed up with her teen daughter, Libby Findling, to release “The Sixth Storm,” a novel set on the Oregon coast. I reached out to the mother-daughter writing team to find out more about their collaborative process.
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Food Fast, Without the BS LITTLE BITES By Lisa Sipe
Life & Time keeps burgers and fries real
Eating real food on the go can fit into busy schedules when food is ready within minutes.
I
t was boot camp, the suburban kind, in early 2000. At the end of week one, our instructor, talking about the importance of eating real food, grabbed a crumpled fast food bag, pulled out a burger and fries and said, “I’ve had these for two years.” The food looked almost new, with no mold. Our group gasped, ready to embrace the unprocessed food lifestyle. A quick internet search today debunks the notion that the food didn’t mold because it was over-processed; instead, it was because the burger and fries dried out quickly and couldn’t mold—the same reason beef jerky doesn’t. Fast forward a decade, when Garret Wales conceives of a fast-casual restaurant similar to McDonald’s or Burger King—but built around real, organic food with a healthy twist. Wales was busy growing 10 Barrel at the time, before the company sold to AB InBev. He shared the idea with partner Mike Moore, but neither did anything about it until three years ago when they stepped away from 10 Barrel. “Between the two of us, we have five kids,” said Wales about the the Life & Time philosophy. “It’s the lifestyle we try to follow, the way we like to feed our families. We thought there had to be a desire for it. Convenience is king today.” Life & Time’s menu includes burgers, chicken sandwiches, salads, bowls, smoothies and soups. Breakfast includes burritos, bowls, a breakfast muffin and avocado toast. Many people wonder how they can make a burger healthy. Wales admits healthy’s a relative term. “We’re all about real food, no sugar, no processing,” said Wales. “Nothing to make food last longer on the shelf. Getting as organic as possible. Knowing that
everything you are eating is a real food product, there is no bullshit in it.” The newly built building on Bend’s Century Drive is open and inviting, with lots of natural light and plenty of seats to dine in. It also has a drive-thru. I tried a spicy crispy chicken sando with sweet potato fries and a dragon fruit smoothie. The chicken was cooked perfectly and tasted delicious, but I definitely needed more hot sauce to make my sandwich truly spicy. The fries were cut thin, crispy and sweet; good on their own but even better with ketchup or Life & Time super sauce. My hot pink smoothie with dragon fruit, raspberries, blueberries, pomegranate juice and almond milk was refreshing and not overly sweet. My friend ordered the Beyond Meat plant-based burger with hand-punched, organic Kennebec potato fries. She enjoyed the vegan burger and the way it
looks like real beef, but wished for fries cut thin, like my sweet potato fries. On another visit, I ordered a crispy Thai bowl with ahi poke, quinoa, mint, basil, candied peanuts, carrots, cabbage, veggie slaw, broccolini and honey lime tamari sauce. I thought it was pretty incredible and enjoyed the pop of flavor from the fresh herbs. My dining partner appreciated how the spices weren’t heavy, so you could still taste the vegetables and tuna. We didn’t dine with little ones, but the kids’ menu includes chicken strips, peanut butter and jelly, a turkey sandwich, veggie or chicken teriyaki bowls and smoothies. Prices are affordable, from $2 to $6. Wales said, “We sell kids’ food at cost, make no money, but it’s in line with our mission,” which includes doing their best to keep healthy food affordable. “A lot of people debate about what is healthy,” said Wales, “but there is no debate over processed sugar. It’s a massive epidemic in this country and causing a lot of health issues. The major culprit is soda. There is no room for that in this concept at all.” Instead of soda, you’ll find flavored bubbly waters, kombucha and Zevia, a zero-calorie soft drink sweetened with stevia. Wales says, “You don’t have to be a health food freak to dine here. We’re not for freaks. It’s just about eating real food that tastes great.” My past boot camp instructor would be happy to know such a place exists. Life & Time 320 SW Century Dr., Ste. 100, Bend 541-797-0168 lifeandtime.com
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Ready, Set, Slurp!
Can you down oysters like a boss? Each Friday night in March, Anthony’s is hosting an Oyster Slurp Off for guests dining at the restaurant. Participation is free and sign up starts at 5:30pm. Competitors decide if they want to dress their oysters with cocktail sauce or lemon— but let’s be honest, at that speed will taste really be an issue? The first person to slurp a dozen oyster wins dinner for two at Anthony’s.
Oyster Slurp Off
Fridays in March. 5:30pm Anthony’s at the Old Mill District 475 SW Powerhouse Dr., Bend 541-389-8998 anthonys.com Free for dinner guests
The Art of Parisian Macarons Simplified
If you’ve tried baking macarons at home, you already know the challenge of developing the signature foot around the almond flour cookie. Chef Morris is teaching the secrets of baking Parisian macarons at The Kindred Creative Kitchen. Students will make beautiful almond and chocolate macarons. This class is just before Easter so you can use your new-found skills to wow holiday guests with pastel macarons.
Macarons
Thu., April 11. 5:30-8:30pm Kindred Creative Kitchen 2525 NE Twin Knolls Dr., Ste. 2, Bend 541-640-0350 thekindredcreativekitchen.com $75
Fermentation 101
If your lips pucker and eyes twitch when you eat vinegar-based pickles and condiments, fermentation may be a better option for you. In the Fermentation 101 class, taught by Wendee Daniels through My World Registry, students learn how to lacto-ferment foods such as sauerkraut, vegetables and ketchup without vinegar. This process creates more mild flavors and allows the maker to control the sourness while maintaining the valuable nutrients in the food.
Fermentation 101
Lisa Sipe
The Life and Time menu includes a crispy chicken sandwich, a Beyond Meat burger, sweet potato fries and a selection of bowls.
Thu., Apr. 4. 5:30-7pm My World Registry Location to be determined Myworldregistry.com $55
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Lisa Sipe
By Lisa Sipe
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MARCH 21, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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FOOD & DRINK EVENTS BEER & DRINK
Crux Fermentation Project
Market of Choice is hiring!
Curtain Closer Quintuple Release
Kissed by a hint of raspberries & warmed by the embrace of Cocao Nibs, Curtain Closer is a decadent experiment by the mad scientist of Monkless. Get your first taste of our 12% Quintuple aged on Raspberries and Cocao Nibs! March 27, 3-8pm. Monkless Belgian Ales, 20750 High Desert Lane, Bend. No cover.
Not Cho’ Grandma’s Bingo Ready for
Pizza & Beer Pairing on Thursday, 3/28.
FOOD Drink Tanks Launch Party Join us for a Saturday morning full of games and live music as DrinkTanks shows off their new products. First 24 get a free DrinkTanks cup! Live band, corn hole, growler balancing, growler holding contest, flip jug, cup stacking contest. All ages. March 23, Noon-4pm. Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St., Bend. Free. Guest Chef Dinner: Fenrir Fenrir is a semi-Scandinavian restaurant in the PNW that used to operate in Inner SE Portland, Oregon. They focus their cuisine around micro-seasonality, fermentation sciences, and the unification of food history and food science. March 23, 6pm. The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse, 13300 Hwy 20, Sisters. Contact: 541-638-7001. info@thesuttlelodge.com. $100. Meet Your Farmer at Joolz Featuring Crooked River Bison Meet Your Farmer dinners consist of a locally sourced, gourmet meal hosted by and prepared by rotating local restaurants. During dinner you will be treated to a presentation by the evening's featured farmer. March 28, 6-8pm. Joolz, 916 NW Wall St. $55/member, $60/non-member.
Are you ready for a change? Do something you love on the Market of Choice team, working in a fun environment with people who are passionate about food!
• Competitive wages • Medical, dental & vision insurance • 401(k) savings plan • Paid time off and holiday pay • Opportunities for growth and advancement Apply online today! marketofchoice.com/careers
M RKET OF CHOICE Family-owned, independent Oregon grocer for 40 years!
115 NW Sisemore St. | Bend
NOW OPEN IN MADRAS! 141 SE 5TH Street 10AM-9PM 7 DAYS A WEEK
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the best bingo experience of your life? Check out the bingo vibe on The Moon! We’re doing things a bit different around here. Get together with your friends and play for a chance to win money! Each week we average $1,000 in cash giveaways! Games start at $1 and work towards $5 as the day goes on. Sundays, 10:30am. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend.
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.
Pints for Parkinson’s Kick Off Party
The Brian Grant Foundation (BGF) will host a Pints for Parkinson’s Kick Off Party, launching a month-long fundraiser throughout the month of April. 35 bars and breweries in Bend and Portland will sell “Pints Passports” with proceeds benefiting BGF. March 28, 6-9pm. Boneyard Pub, 1955 NW Division St., Bend. $25/pint passport.
Pizza & Beer Pairing Dinner The mouthwatering menu includes 3 pizza varieties, salad and a dessert pizza all expertly paired with a range of our favorite beers, including the return of Sugar Daddy. bit.ly/ cruxpizzadinner March 28, 6pm. Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St., Bend. Contact: olga@cruxfermentation.com. $60 (includes dinner, paired beers, & gratuity).
CRAFT Are One-Offs
Killing YearRound Beers?
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Zach Beckwith
By Zach Beckwith
Long forgotten year-round beers can get lost in a sea of one-off cans.
to pivot quickly in this environment. They spent decades perfecting the flagship beers that provided the bedrock of the modern American brewing industry and are now being asked to crank out exhausting iterations of the same tired trends. The fate of many historically important American beers has become so tenuous that a recent online campaign, dubbed #flagshipfebruary, was launched to encourage people to revisit fledgling flagship beers. A flagship is a brewery’s best-selling beer, but not always its most loved. I encourage people to explore beyond the flagship and “what’s new” to the dwindling number of year-round beers available. Year rounds may not earn you a new UNTAPPD badge, but they’ll more often than not deliver a beer that’s been thoroughly vetted. Brewers and bartenders come to know their year-round beers intimately and always have an opinion or a favorite, so don’t be afraid to ask; you may learn something. At its base, the act of crafting something is a process of continual learning. You learn a fraction as much making a beer the first time as you do making it for the 12th. New beers will always be an important part of a thriving beer culture, but as the pendulum has swung so far toward favoring newness over quality, we can only hope it will eventually swing back.
RESTAURANT
GUIDE
A
s a brewer, the question I get asked most often is, “What are you working on next?” Apparently, the old Hollywood axiom that "an actor is only as good as their last picture" rings just as true for brewers. People no longer seem to think about the beer they’re drinking; they’re too busy thinking about the next one. The result is that brewers are forced to push out hundreds of new beers a year to try to stay relevant. The craft beer revolution’s founding principle was quality over quantity, yet in the age of the one-off, that essential truth is facing its greatest challenge. Think of your favorite musician. Now imagine they release 100 new songs every year. How many would be instant classics? The best beers and the best songs are labored over and tinkered with. A new beer comes out like a person does—as a work in progress. Only over successive years and batches does the character become full and rounded. The recent, stunning closure of Portland’s original brewery, Bridgeport Brewing, and the continued production declines of Oregon legacy breweries such as Widmer Brothers, Full Sail, and local pioneer Deschutes are largely attributed to the prevalent promiscuous culture. Large breweries, able to harness the economies of scale and invest heavily in quality control, consistency and people, are ill-suited
The always anticipated RESTAURANT GUIDE will be dishing up a fresh batch of restaurant reviews, foodie
AD DEADLINE APRIL 4
features, hot trends and more! In addition to the mouth watering coverage, we will be announcing our picks for “Rookie Of The Year”, “Restaurant Of The Year” and ”Food Cart Of The Year!” Turn the heat up, advertise your business in The Source Weekly’s 2019 Restaurant Guide!
ON STANDS APRIL 11
FILM SHORTS By Jared Rasic Captive State
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MARCH 21, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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ALITA: BATTLE ANGEL: If you’re looking for fast-paced action layered throughout a fairly cool sci-fi story, this is your jam. If you expect a film to have a beginning, middle and an end… avoid at all costs. A huge disappointment from Robert Rodriguez and James Cameron. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Odem Theater Pub APOLLO 11: A fitting tribute to the 50-year
anniversary of man’s first steps on the moon, this documentary brings historical archives as well as never-before-seen footage to the big screen. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
CAPTAIN MARVEL: The 21st installment
of the Marvel Cinematic Universe is another charming and action-packed ride. Since this is an origin story, the film can be a bit formulaic at times, but the chemistry of Sam Jackson and Brie Larson is delightful enough to keep things light. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema
CAPTIVE STATE: A dark and dour thriller set in
Chicago a decade after the worldwide occupation of alien invaders. One of the most original looks at how our government would act in the face of angry aliens and (BONUS) a remarkable performance from John Goodman make this one worth catching. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
CLIMAX: If a 90-minute-long anxiety attack sounds like fun, this is your movie. Someone spikes the party punch with LSD and everyone has a bad trip and starts trying to kill each other. There’s never been anything quite like this. See full review on p29. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX FIGHTING WITH MY FAMILY: A surprisingly heartfelt look at siblings obsessed with auditioning for the WWE. From the mind of Stephen Merchant, the co-creator of the British “Office,” this is a lovely look at family and wrestling. Odem Theater Pub FIVE FEET APART: Haley Lu Richardson and
Jughead from “Riverdale” star as two plucky kids with cystic fibrosis who fall in love but can’t get too close. For people who thought “The Notebook” was too happy. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
GREEN BOOK: A well-intentioned but tone-
deaf look at friendship and racism in the 1950s. While the movie isn’t terrible, there are too many missed opportunities to give the movie a pass. But it won the Best Picture Oscar, so what do I know?!? Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema, Odem Theater Pub
HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORLD: A wonderful send-off to
Hiccup, Toothless and the land of Berk. If this
STREAMING THIS WEEK
makes a billion, they’ll surely make more in the series but, as it stands, this is the best final film in a trilogy we’ve received in a very long time. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema, Sisters Movie House
ISN’T IT ROMANTIC: From the creative team
behind the deconstructed horror comedy, “The Final Girls” comes a deconstruction of the romantic comedy. Rebel Wilson stars as a cynic who hits her head and wakes up living inside a cheesy PG13 romantic comedy. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
RUBEN BRANDT, COLLECTOR: A super trippy adult cartoon about a psychiatrist who starts picking up his criminal patients’ bad habits. A very strange and fascinating tour though the minds of some brilliant animators. Tin Pan Theater STAN & OLLIE: A surprisingly lovely movie
about the life and friendship of Laurel & Hardy. With powerhouse performances from Steve Coogan and John C. Reilly, this is easily one of the best biopics in recent memory. Tin Pan Theater
THE KID: I’m ignoring the Rotten Tomatoes score on this dark and gorgeous Western, with Ethan Hawke as Pat Garrett and Dane DeHaan as a psychotic Billy the Kid. Oh, and Vincent D’Onofrio offers his directorial debut. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX THE LEGO MOVIE 2: The Second Part: The first Lego movie was the best ever cartoon based on a plotless series of connectable building blocks, and this one is a good one, too. The voice actors are charming and the story hits all the right nostalgia buttons, so prepare to get some more ridiculous songs stuck in your head. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Odem Theater Pub THE UPSIDE: An American remake of the lovely French film, “The Intouchables,” starring Kevin Hart and Bryan Cranston as a paraplegic and his new caretaker. If you’ve seen the far superior “The Intouchables” then you can avoid this one altogether, unless you’re a Kevin Hart completist. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Odem Theater Pub WONDER PARK: It seems like a cartoon
about an adorable little girl and a bunch of animals running around an imaginary theme park should have been done already, but here we are. The trailer is a blast and it’s hard to go wrong with movies about holding on to your imagination, so consider us excited. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema
WRESTLING: A profoundly moving documentary about four high school kids on the wrestling team at a failing school in Alabama. One of the best documentaries of the last several years, “Wrestling” is an unforgettable little movie.
LOVE, DEATH & ROBOTS: From the creative teams behind “Fight Club” and “Deadpool” comes this mind-blowing anthology show featuring multiple short, animated films focused on robots, violence and sex. This one is definitely not for kids, but everyone else will find this as one of the darkest visions of the future since “Black Mirror.” Now Streaming on Netflix
SC
at the Disco SCREEN Panic "Climax" offers free anxiety with ticket price By Jared Rasic filmmaker is unparalleled as he moves the camera (which he operates himself) with a ferocious assurance unseen since the early days of David Fincher. All of Noé’s films are centered around one big idea that gets hammered into the viewer’s soul throughout the running time. “Climax” is no different. If “Enter the Void” was Noé’s take on “The Tibetan Book of the Dead,” then “Climax” is his look at the Book of Revelation in “The Bible.” Noé looks at civilization as something hanging by the thinnest of threads; when we crack the veneer of humanity, the lizard brain we carry begins to attack. The dancers start out the film with a breathtaking one-shot dance sequence that shows the beautiful things we can create together when we collaborate. By the end, some of them are dead, disfigured and destitute, while others are still smiling; still twirling as the blood soaks through their dance shoes. For some, the LSD acted as a release of their inhibitions, while others found the ugliness inside themselves and tried to cut it out. This film is a nightmare. I went with a friend to see it and the theater
It’s all fun and games until someone spikes the punch.
which can do all that awful crap to me all at once. But that’s just me. You might not like this.
was empty when we got there. Halfway through (before the bad trip even started), my friend couldn’t stand the movie anymore and took off, leaving me alone to watch everything go to hell. By the time I walked out of the theater I was disturbed, sick to my stomach, deeply uncomfortable and in love with cinema,
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H
Courtesy of IMDb
ow uncomfortable do you like being? Like, on a scale that starts with your exes becoming lovers, to a slow-motion car accident where everyone is making eye contact with you? That’s this movie. A 90-minute crash in which you see the accident up ahead, you know it’s coming and are absolutely powerless to stop it. You can’t even warn anyone. “Climax” tells the story of a French dance troupe rehearsing for an upcoming show in a remote and empty building. The first half of the film follows the characters as they dance, gossip, drink homemade sangria and share their love and joy with each other. The second half is a car battery exploding in your face as everyone slowly begins to realize that the sangria was spiked with LSD. They all have the worst night of their entire lives. Filmmaker/provocateur Gaspar Noé has made some of the most disturbing films ever made, starting with the repugnant “Irreversible” to the haunting “Enter the Void,” to his most recent exercise in graphic imagery, “Love.” His sensibilities as a storyteller are juvenile at times, but his technique as a
Climax
A ¯
Dir. Gaspar Noé Grade: AOld Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
“I am pro vaccinations but we don’t do flu shots” “I am pro vaccinations but we don’t do HPV.” “I am pro vaccinations but we space them out.” “I am pro vaccinations but we skip the Chicken Pox.” “I stopped vaccinating due to a family history of autoimmune disorders.”
VACCINE MANDATES no options. no choice.
ONE DAY THE GOVERNMENT WILL MAKE A DECISION YOU DON’T AGREE WITH, AND IF YOU HAVE GIVEN AWAY YOUR FREEDOM TO MAKE CHOICES FOR YOURSELF AND YOUR FAMILY, IT WILL BE TOO LATE. Call Oregon Senators and Representatives to tell them to vote NO on HB 3063 This bill is being rushed though the Oregon legislature. Oregoniansformedicalfreedom.com
Paid for by Oregonians for Medical Freedom PAC
OUTSIDE EVENTS ATHLETIC EVENTS ACA Whitewater Kayak Instructor Development Workshop Get certified to teach
SUNRIVER JOB FAIR
Wednesday • March 27 • 10am - 12pm
PRINGLE HALL at SHARC How to Write a Resume & Prepare for an Interview Class from 9am - 10am
Now Hiring
Lifeguards (certification classes available) Front Desk/Customer Service • Retail & Customer Service Positions Restaurant - All Positions • Hospitality Recreation Attendants & Guest Services For more information: www.sunriversharc.com/jobfair lesliek@srowners.org HOSTED BY SUNRIVER OWNERS ASSOCIATION
kayaking this spring. The main benefit to taking the course is improving your understanding of paddling technique and theory, so you can paddle and teach more effectively. Offering an ACA certification and an ACA re-certification. Re-cert dates are 3/28-3/29. Mon, March 25, 8:30am-5pm, Tue, March 26, 8:30am-5pm, Wed, March 27, 8:30am5pm, Thu, March 28, 8:30am-5pm and Fri, March 29, 8:30am-5pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6, Bend. Contact: 541-317-9407. topher@tumalocreek.com. $550/ certification, $250/re-certification.
Bend Area Running Community (BARF) Join us for a 3.5-mile loop through
the Old Mill and along the Deschutes River! No registration or membership 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 “Solsk8s” and Bearings Skateboard Academy have joined forces to provide a weekly ladies night! This park is ideal for every level of skater and open to all ladies - whatever wheels you choose to shred (skateboard, blades, rollerskates, etc.)! 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.
Dedicated to healthier pets for over 25 years. Nutrition is our thing. Come talk to us today!
WE DELIVER!
Hump Day Run Celebrate getting over the
mid-week hump with runners of all paces. During the winter, we’ll typically 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.
Redmond Running Group Run All levels 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 Old Mill. Tuesdays, 5am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: colton.gale@gmail.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 Fall Foliage Tour on the Deschutes River Explore the Upper Deschutes River on
our special Fall Foliage Deschutes River Tour! Enjoy this pristine and tranquil section of the river during the peaceful autumn season. Observe the changing colors, listen for bird songs and look for signs of beaver. Wed, March 20, 10am-2pm, Sun, March 24, 10am2pm and Wed, March 27, 10am-2pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6, Bend. Contact: 541-317-9407. topher@tumalocreek.com. $65.
Running Performance Workshop Run
with proper form, train effectively and develop endurance and speed. Plus more tips, tricks and etiquette. Presented by professional running coach Jim Partridge. March 23, 5-6:30pm. Boss Sports Performance, 1305 SE Amour Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-389-2677. Free.
Ski with a Ranger Discover Your Forest, in
collaboration with the Deschutes National Forest and Mt. Bachelor Ski Area, will begin their annual interpretive snow tours. All interpretive programs focus on the ecology, geology and wildlife of the Cascades. Participants are responsible for having lift tickets and appropriate equipment, as well as basic riding skills. Saturdays-Sundays, 2-3pm. Through March 31. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Drive, Bend. Contact: (541) 383-4771. Free with lift ticket.
Snowshoe with a Ranger Join a US
Forest Service Naturalist for free 90-minute interpretive tours. Tours available weekends, holidays (except Christmas and New Year’s Day) and school vacations. Ages 11+. Saturdays, 10am and 1:30pm and Sundays, 10am and 1:30pm. Through March 31. Mount Bachelor Ski Resort - West Village, 13000 SW Century Dr., Bend. Contact: 541-383-4055. karen.gentry@ discovernw.org. Free. FootZone Bend
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Saturday Coffee Run Wish you had a 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.
Join the Insiders today and save!
Join FootZone Bend for their Rise and Run on Tuesdays at 5am
N A T U R A L
O
W O R L D
Thinking OUTSIDE Wild Local students learn about the importance of wildlife corridors By Jim Anderson and National Wildlife Federation education programs. The week was geared toward environmental science and conservation initiatives, including lessons which cover science, social studies, language arts, visual arts and math. It was a full-spectrum approach to learning. The Think Wild facility also made it possible for the students to travel to the High Desert Museum and discuss wildlife diversity with museum staff. After returning to school, students took on the task of assembling several nesting boxes that will be installed in locations where they will hopefully be used by the mountain chickadees found around Cascades Academy. But the nesting box project wasn’t “just” about building a structure for birds. As soon as one box was done, two students took it aside and used it as a base for creative art. While maintaining and reinforcing the original intent of the structure, students added art forms that made it fit in better with the natural environment. It was a delight to see. The students who took part in these programs not only learned about their wildlife neighbors, but also had the opportunity to express their thoughts, using their own art talents, with the help of community members who have “been there, done that.” Teacher Eklund noted, “It is very satisfying for me to have the opportunity to work with these students on wildlife issues. These students are ready to make a positive difference in the world, and by focusing on important wildlife issues in Central Oregon, the kids are able to use this knowledge to make a real difference!”
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Catering Available!
541.382.2929 * 1326 NE 3rd St. Bend Fall & Winter Hours: 9:30am - 9pm * OPEN 7 DAYS PhoVietAndCafe.com
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get invited to lots of places to speak, but my favorite locations are schools. The bright young minds of kids who ask great questions keep me young, despite my 91 years. A recent Monday morning, found me in the classroom of Anne-Marie Eklund at Cascades Academy in Tumalo. We were joined by Michelle van Hilten, program administrator of Think Wild. The topic of discussion: Human/wildlife interaction—Think Wild’s primary area of interest. Think Wild’s new/old facility, starting up on the east side of Bend, will— beginning in the spring, according to its website—provide a full wildlife support system and wildlife animal hospital for all of Central Oregon. In the meantime, van Hilten is going from school to school with various educational tools, introducing students to an ecological approach to wildlife needs. During my visit, I told a few stories about my early days of growing up on a farm in Connecticut, including the time I shot a Great Horned Owl, and my grandfather’s reaction to this misdeed. In that discussion with my grandfather, I learned lifelong rules and the values of wildlife conservation. During the recent school visit, I shared those values with the students. In addition, van Hilten led a discussion about the need for wildlife corridors to eliminate conflicts between humans and migrating wildlife, such as mule deer. Curriculum and lessons for the school’s “Think Wild Week” were a combination of Project Wild K-12 curriculum and data, Leave No Trace education
Students Katie and Sophia show their nesting boxes. Behind them, from left, are Michelle van Hilten, program administrator for Think Wild, and Anne-Marie Eklund, science teacher at Cascades Academy. Jim Anderson
In all the years I have been dealing with nature and kids, I’m always so pleased when the Big Picture comes into focus in a child’s mind, and he or she
says (or sends me a slam-bang beautiful photo) of a unique moment in nature, “Hey Mr. Anderson (circa 1965) or Jim (circa 2019), how about this?"
REAL ESTATE
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Exquisite home from Greg Welch Construction near Discovery Park in NWX. Vaulted great room w/lots of natural light. 3 Beds, 2 Baths. Corner lot, lovely rear patio, landscaped & fenced. Attached two $699,950 car garage.
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FIND YOUR PLACE IN BEND
www.otiscraig.com Terry Skjersaa
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Jason Boone
Principal Broker, CRIS
Mollie Hogan
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Cole Billings Broker
otis@otiscraig.com Skjersaa Group | Duke Warner Realty 1033 NW Newport Ave. Bend, OR 97703
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26695 Horsell Road, Bend • $1,299,500 2070 Sq Ft. Remodeled farm house located on 67.9 acres with 39.7 acres of COI irrigation. 1344 SqFt building for Office/Recreation/Studio. 4502 SqFt shop/RV/Toy/Boat storage & indoor gardening. With Mountain Views.
3364 NW Dogwood Ave, Redmond • $284,995 Priced to sell. Large .14 acre lot in quiet neighborhood. Open floorplan 1235 Sq ft. Fully Landscaped with sprinklers and12X12 covered patio. Air Conditioning installed with Gas Heat lightly lived in, and move in ready.
REAL ESTATE LISTINGS
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TAKE ME HOME
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REAL ESTATE
Sticky Wickets When Purchasing a Property with a Government-Backed Loan FHA, VA and USDA Property Guidelines
• Leaky or defective roofs and roofs with a life expectancy of less than three years • Peeling paint, especially in homes built prior to 1978
• Loose handrails or steps • Missing or inoperable appliances • Major plumbing issues and leaks • Exposed wiring and junction boxes • Inoperable HVAC and heating systems • Foundation or structural defects • Evidence of standing water in crawl spaces or basements • Rotting window sills, eaves and support columns • No pressure relief valves or expansion tanks on water heaters • Bedrooms that don’t allow for egress • Exterior doors that don’t properly close and open • Active and visible pest infestation • Unpainted downspouts and broken rain gutters • Leaning or broken fences • Wood to earth contact Other things to consider when looking for property when using a government-backed loan, are non-permitted additions or remodels. If a property has a non-permitted addition, or garage conversion as an example, the lender may require that the addition/conversion be brought up to code and permitted. This can get very expensive, very quickly. A seller may choose not to bring the property up to government-required standards; as such it’s best to go into the property search with eyes wide open. Conversely, as a seller, these items should be disclosed to the listing broker in order to determine the target buyer. Knowledge is power, and when armed with a solid understanding of the loan programs in play, it can save time, money and potential heartache.
HOME PRICE ROUND-UP
Photos and listing info from Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service
<< LOW
20047 SW Mount Hope Lane, Bend, OR 97702 3 beds, 2 baths, 1,148 square feet, 0.1 Acres lot Built in 2005 $290,000 Listed by: Sunriver Realty
MID>>
141 SW Roosevelt Avenue, Bend, OR 97702 5 beds, 2 baths, 1,956 square feet, 0.17 acres lot Built in 1935 $599,000 Listed by Alpine Real Estate
<< HIGH
2966 NW Meldrum Court, Bend, OR 97703 3 beds, 2.5 baths, 2,819 square feet, 0.67 acres lot Built in 2018 $1,098,000 Listed by Hasson Company
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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overnment-backed home loans, such as FHA, VA and USDA, are great options for eligible buyers. These loans offer low rates, low down payment options and can make it a bit easier for first-time buyers or buyers with credit issues. All that said, the rules on property condition can get tricky. Because these loans offer low or no down payment options, these programs require the property meet more stringent condition requirements. The reason for the stricter condition requirements is to protect the lenders’ interest in the property as collateral. Essentially, the lender needs the property to be in reasonably good condition so it can be sold, should the borrower default on the loan. Knowing the requirements and guidelines of government backed loans is helpful prior to a home search, helping buyers quickly eliminate properties not eligible. As a seller, discussing the guidelines with your broker will help determine what repairs may be necessary prior to actively marketing the property. It will also help sellers determine their target markets and buyer pool. With an FHA, VA or USDA loan, the appraiser determines whether the property inspection meets the Department of Housing and Urban Development ‘s minimum requirements for fire, life and safety. The following provides a fairly comprehensive guideline on what to watch for on a prospective property to purchase and also repairs to be made prior to listing a property:
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You’re in a relationship, not a coma. That said, your worries are understandable. There’s been a belief, even amongst some researchers, that crushing (on somebody other than one’s partner) is the gateway to cheating -- as well as lower commitment and lower relationship satisfaction. Obviously, crushy thoughts about, say, a co-worker can lead to a hookup (or more) in a way that matter-of-fact thoughts — “Why does he have four chargers?” — do not. However, it turns out that researchers failed to make a distinction—between having a crush (an attraction to a person other than one’s partner) and having a high degree of what’s called “attention to alternatives” (basically, eyeballs ever on the prowl for “attractive alternatives” to one’s current partner). In research by doctoral student Charlene F. Belu and psychologist Lucia F. O’Sullivan, 80 percent of the participants reported having a crush on somebody other than their partner while in a committed relationship. Only a small subset (17 percent) of those participants “reported they would leave their romantic partners for their crush if the opportunity arose,” suggesting that for many, their crushes “are not considered true viable alternative partners.” The researchers found people’s crushes to be “of relatively long duration, although not as long as the length of ” a person’s “current romantic relationship.” This “duration ... suggests that one’s crush endures in parallel to one’s primary relationship.” They even speculate that having a crush may even help sustain a relationship, by (mentally) “providing some variety to help cope with monotony” that’s a natural part of long-term relationships but “without the risks inherent to infidelity.” So, getting back to you, as long as your relationship’s satisfying and the only sex vacations you take with your crush are in your mind, you’re probably okay. In short, “I only have eyes for you” sounds lovely but is probably only realistic if you wear special headgear
whenever you leave the house—such as one of those stylish black bags favored by kidnappers and executioners.
Who’ll Stop The Reign?
Out of nowhere, a male friend started criticizing me, telling me that I need to change careers to make more money. He does have a successful business (started with seed money from his extremely wealthy family). But I didn’t ask for his advice, and besides, I love my job, and I’m working on what I need to do to move forward. So I ended up snapping at him. He got mad and insisted that he just wants the best for me. —Steamed Criticizing someone does not make them want to change; it makes them want to google for listicles like “10 Foolproof Tricks For Getting Away with Murder.” To understand your friend’s spontaneous outburst of unsolicited advice, consider that human communication is strategic—just like that of our earth-dwelling colleagues, from apes to insects. Honeybees, for example, do a little dance to tell their fellow bees where the nectar is; they don’t just go all twerky for no reason. Back here in Humanland, evolutionary scientists Vladas Griskevicius and Douglas Kenrick find that seven “deep-seated evolutionary motives” — emerging from survival and mating challenges our ancestors faced — “continue to influence much modern behavior.” These evolved motivations still driving us today are 1) evading physical harm, 2) avoiding disease, 3) making friends, 4) acquiring a mate, 5) keeping that mate, 6) caring for family, and — ding-ding-ding! — 7) attaining status. Yes, status. There’s a good chance that a dispenser of unsolicited advice has the best of intentions—like “I just want to help you...uh...help you (and others who hear about my help) think more highly of me!” (He then becomes the expert, the career seer, the swami of success.) But whatever this guy’s motive, you have no obligation to donate your attention to his cause. The best time to set boundaries is before they’re needed. Or needed again. Gently inform your friend that you truly appreciate his desire to help but the only advice that works for you is the solicited kind. Should he wish to, uh, solicit your solicitation, he can ask: “Would you be open to hearing...?” If you accept, it might help you keep an open mind if you focus on what you two have in common— for example, a relative who proclaimed, “When I die, all of this will be yours!” Unfortunately, your grandma was making a sweeping gesture toward her salt and pepper shaker collection. Amy Alkon
Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave. Suite 280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (advicegoddess.com).
© 2019, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved.
ASTROLOGY By Rob Brezsny
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In the animated kids’ film Over the Hedge, ten talking animals come upon a massive, towering hedge they’ve never seen. The friendly group consists of a skunk, red squirrel, box turtle, two opossums, and five porcupines. The hedge perplexes and mystifies them. It makes them nervous. There’s nothing comparable to it in their previous experience. One of the porcupines says she would be less afraid of it if she just knew what it was called, whereupon the red squirrel suggests that from now on they refer to it as “Steve.” After that, they all feel better. I recommend that you borrow their strategy in the coming weeks. If a Big Unknown arrives in your vicinity, dub it “Steve” or “Betty.”
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): I urge you to locate a metaphorical or very literal door that will give you access to a place that affords you more freedom and healing and support. Maybe you already know about the existence of this door—or maybe it’s not yet on your radar. Here’s advice from Clarissa Pinkola Éstes that might help. “If you have a deep scar, that is a door,” she writes. “If you have an old, old story, that is a door. If you love the sky and the water so much that you almost cannot bear it, that is a door. If you yearn for a deeper life, a full life, a sane life, that is a door.”
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Musician Carole Kaye is the most famous bass guitarist you’ve never heard of. Over the course of five decades, she has plied her soulful talents on more than 10,000 recordings, including gems by Frank Zappa, Stevie Wonder, Frank Sinatra, Simon and Garfunkel, and the Beach Boys. Twenty-seven-time Grammy winner Quincy Jones has testified that Kaye has written “some of the most beautiful themes I’ve ever heard in my life” and that she “could do anything and leave men in the dust.” I trust this horoscope will expand the number of people who appreciate her. I also hope you’ll be inspired to become more active in spreading the word about the gifts that you have to offer the world. It’s high time to make sure that people know more of the beautiful truth about you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “When you want happiness, what are you wanting?” asks aphorist Olivia Dresher. The repeat of an event that made you feel good in the past? A sweet adventure you’ve thought about but never actually experienced? Here’s a third possibility. Maybe happiness is a state you could feel no matter what your circumstances are; maybe you could learn how to relax into life exactly as it is, and feel glad about your destiny wherever it takes you. In my opinion, Leo, that third approach to happiness will be especially natural for you to foster in the coming weeks. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): There are old traditions in many cultures that pay special attention to the first brick or stone that is laid in the earth to initiate the construction of a future building. It’s called a cornerstone or foundation stone. All further work to create the new structure refers back to this original building block, and depends on it. I’m pleased to inform you that now is a favorable phase to put your own metaphorical cornerstone in place, Virgo. You’re ready to begin erecting a structure or system that will serve you for years to come. Be sure you select the right place for it, as well as the best building materials.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Born under the sign of Libra, Ivan Kharchenko (1918–1989) was a military officer and engineer for the Soviet army. His specialty
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): There was a time, less than a century ago, when pink was considered a masculine color and blue a feminine hue. In previous eras, many European men sported long hair, wore high heels, and favored clothes with floral patterns. Franklin D. Roosevelt, one of America’s most prominent twentieth-century presidents, sometimes wore skirts and feather-bedecked hats as a child. With these facts as your keystone, and in accordance with astrological omens, I encourage you to experiment with your own gender expressions in the coming weeks. It’s prime time to have fun with the way you interpret what it means to be a man or woman—or any other gender you might consider yourself to be.
Woman of the Year Carol Stiles – Head Start Lifetime Achievement Pamela Hulse Andrews – Cascade Publications, Inc. Entrepreneur of the Year Dana Barbato - InvestiPro
35 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
ing weeks, everything that needs to happen will indeed happen only if you surprise yourself on a regular basis. So I hope you will place yourself in unpredictable situations where you won’t be able to rely on well-rehearsed responses. I trust that you will regard innocence and curiosity and spontaneity as your superpowers. Your willingness to change your mind won’t be a mark of weakness but rather a sign of strength.
was disarming explosive devices before they detonated. Over the course of his career, he defused an estimated 50,000 bombs and mines. Let’s make him your patron saint for the coming weeks. Why? Because I suspect you will be able to summon a metaphorical version of his power: an extraordinary capacity to keep volatile situations from blowing up. You’ll be a virtuoso at waging peace and preventing strife.
2018 RECIPIENTS
ARIES (March 21-April 19): During the com-
Community Hero Kristin Lingman - AirLink Young Hero (Ages 14-17) Heather Davenport – Mtn. View High School Young Hero (Ages 18-21) Isabelle Rice – Mtn. View High School
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): According to estimates by population experts, about 109 billion humans have been born on planet Earth over the millennia. And yet I’m quite sure that not a single one of those other individuals has been anything like you. You are absolutely unique, an unmatched treasure, a one-of-a-kind creation with your own special blend of qualities. And in my prophetic view, you’re ready to fully acknowledge and celebrate these facts on a higher octave than ever before. It’s high time for you to own your deepest authenticity; to work with extra devotion to express your soul’s code; to unabashedly claim your idiosyncratic genius. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): We don’t know as much about European history between the sixth and ninth centuries as we do about other eras. Compared to the times that preceded and followed it, cultural and literary energies were low. Fewer records were kept. Governments were weaker and commerce was less vigorous. But historians don’t like to use the term “Dark Ages” to name that period because it brought many important developments and activities, such as improvements in farming techniques. So in some ways, “Lost Ages” might be a more apropos descriptor. Now let’s turn our attention to a metaphorically comparable phase of your own past, Capricorn: an era that’s a bit fuzzy in your memory; a phase about which your understanding is incomplete. I suspect that the coming weeks will be an excellent time to revisit that part of your life and see what new evidence and insights you can mine.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Why do some American libraries ban certain books, ensuring they’re unavailable to local readers? The reasons may be because they feature profanity or include references to sex, drug use, the occult, atheism, and unusual political viewpoints. Marjane Satrapi’s Persepolis is one of the most frequently censored books. Others are Maya Angelou’s I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Beloved, by Toni Morrison, and The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini. In my astrological opinion, these are exactly the kinds of books you should especially seek out in the coming weeks. In fact, I suggest you commune with a variety of art and ideas and influences that are controversial, provocative, and intriguing.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): At the age of 97, Piscean cartoonist Al Jaffee is still creating new material for the satirical Mad magazine, where he has worked since 1964. There was one 63-year stretch when his comic stylings appeared in all but one of Mad’s monthly issues. I nominate him to be your role model during the next four weeks. It’s a favorable time for you to access and express a high degree of tenacity, stamina, and consistency.
Homework: What’s the thing you lost that should stay lost? What’s the thing you lost that you should find? FreeWillAstrology.com.
April 4
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HEALTH & WELLNESS EVENTS Community Healing Flow A gentle 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. By donation.
engage your attention to learn “how” you move. Through the process of learning one discovers how to move with less effort and more ease. Enliven your posture and mobility! Mondays-Sundays, 9-10am. Through June 27. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. Contact: 541-815-5292. $10 per class.
Free Barre Class! Please bring a yoga mat. Barre is a combination of pilates, ballet, yoga and strength training. Mondays, 8:30-9:30am. Through May 20. Terpsichorean Dance Studio, 1601 NW Newport Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-4102826. info@synchronicitywellnesscenter.com. First class free; $9/drop-in.
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.
Guided Meditation for Relaxation with Christine Frazer Join us for a free
guided meditation class led by Christine Frazer. The focus will be on relaxation now that we are past the busy holiday season. All classes in January are free, but we are accepting donations for the non-profit Saving Grace. Thursdays, 6:45-7:30pm. The Blissful Heart ~ Crystal Sanctuary, 45 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-233-7815. cccfrazer@gmail.com. Free, donations accepted.
Gyrokinesis The Gyrokinesis Method is a
tradition of Judith Lasiter Tuesday Morning Slow Flow in the tradition of Kripalu Yoga Compassionately taught by Suzanne E-RYT Kripalu School of Yoga and Health. www.BendCommunityHealing.com Mondays, 5:30-6:45pm and Mondays-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, 5pack intro/$40.
Tai Chi Taiji classes with Dr. Rob Neilson at Hawthorn are in the Yang style of Taiji. The movements practiced are appropriate for people of all ages, and stages of physical fitness. Tuesdays, 8-9am. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend. Contact: robsneilson@ gmail.com. Free. and older are invited to participate in this class. Open to the public. Mondays, 3:15-4:15pm. Through May 13. Touchmark at Mt. Bachelor Village, 19800 SW Touchmark Way, Bend. Contact: 541-383-1414. $10 a class.
ties you Love? Can you no Longer “Power Through” pain? Correct your posture and flexibility to become pain free, learn what elite athletes and Olympic contenders have found relief with for 45 years: a revolutionary way to use your body in gravity. http://www. theVancestance.com Mondays-Thursdays, Noon-2pm and Mondays-Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Through May 2. The Vance Bonner Studio, 21173 Sunburst Court, Bend. Contact: 541-330-9070. $180/12-week series.
Headstand, Handstand, Take a Stand with Petit Davina Practice shifting per-
Tidying Up: KonMari Method™ Course This seven-week course will
workshop, explore your dreams for wisdom and guidance. Learn how to remember and record them, their metaphoric symbols and language, and simple techniques for expanding the dream for deeper insight. March 28, 1-4:30pm. Blissful Heart ~ Yoga Barn, 29 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-280-7699. mariawattier@msn.com. $45.
Qigong Plus Qigong is a movement medi-
tation that enhances one’s own ability to heal, maintains health and opens new pathways to being, using breathing, sound, movements, concentration, massage, meditation. Sunday class by appointment only until Spring. Signed for hearing impaired. Contact Dawn Song, text or email only. Sundays, 12:301:30pm and Wednesdays, 1:30-3pm. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend. Contact: 541-207-7266. dawnsong03@gmail.com. Donations Accepted.
This issue will be packed full of great articles, tips and locations for pet care and places to play!
The Vance Stance/Structural Reprograming Is Pain Preventing Activi-
The World We are Creating: A Furturist’s View of the World Presentation
Introduction to the World of Dreams with Maria Wattier In this
This special edition is brought to you by
Tai Chi for Better Balance Those 50 years
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, 10:45-11:45am. The Blissful Heart ~ Crystal Sanctuary, 45 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. Contact: 760-271-3272. angela@blissful-heart.com. $15/class, first class is free.
spective to stand firmly in your being and to get upside down! Let’s explore what it means to take a stand. We will flow with intention and warm our bodies up for inversions. Learn to safely get upside down while staying in integrity with your body. March 23, 2-4pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-550-8550. namaspayoga@gmail. com. $20/investment.
Central Oregon’s first glossy magazine dedicated entirely to our animal friends!
and dialogue by Dr. Ruth Miller, futurist and metaphysician. She shares many signs of an emerging culture from around the world created outside of the mainstream. The World We Are Creating looks at the choices we are making, and how those will play out in the years ahead. March 23, 1-4pm. LightPath, 507 NW Wall St, Bend. Donation.
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MARCH 21
On the Stands:
APRIL 4
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N U R N O M L A S
provide you with detailed instructions and coach you through the five categories of the KonMari Method™. No drop ins. Thursdays, 6:30-8pm. Through May 2. Unity Community of Central Oregon, 62855 Powell Butte Hwy, Bend. Contact: 541-480-1681. tidyandflourish@gmail.com. $75.
Transcendental Meditation Intro Talk Presentation on history, scientific
research, benefits and structure of the Transcendental Meditation (TM) program. Mon, March 25, 6-7pm. Downtown Bend Public Library - Hutchinson Room, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-633-7722. mwebster@tm.org. Free.
Vin/Yin Yoga Mondays-Thursdays, 3pm. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St., Bend. Contact: 541-420-1587. By donation.
Yoga for strong bones This 45-minute
class is open to anyone 50 years old and up. Mondays, 11:15am-Noon Through May 13. Touchmark at Mt. Bachelor Village, 19800 SW Touchmark Way, Bend. Contact: 541-383-1414. $10 a class.
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.
BEND, OR
APRIL 7th 2019
5k · 10k · HALF MARATHON
REGISTER AT www.runsalmonrun.com HEALTH PLANS
37 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement Functional movement lessons
Restorative and Gentle/Slow flow YOGA Monday Evening Restorative in the
smokesignals@bendsource.com
Hannah Rehberg Follow @tokyo_starfish to find out more...
KNOW YOUR BUDTENDER
Cannabis Headlines Nationwide Courtesy YouTube
By Josh Jardine
David Irving quits football on Instagram Live.
N
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.
www.tokyostarfish.com
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MARCH 21, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
38
SMOKE SIGNALS
ews you may have missed while doing your “pot weed.”
NFL player quits while smoking a joint Dallas Cowboy defensive end David Irving went onto Instagram Live this month to announce he was quitting the league at age 25. He then verbally took the NFL out behind the woodshed and beat it mercilessly with a freshly cut, nasty looking switch from the Truth Tree. Irving was in the midst of his third drug-related suspension when he told viewers that his motivation for quitting included his belief that cannabis was a safer choice than what the NFL pushes upon players. ESPN reported on Irving saying, “It’s funny, you know, some people: ‘Oh, you’re addicted to weed, you’re addicted to this and that,’” he said. “I mean, shit, if I’m gonna be addicted to something, I’d rather be addicted to marijuana, which is medical—it’s a medicine; I do not consider it a drug—rather than Xanax bars or the hydros or the Seroquel and all that crazy shit that they feed you.” He added, “I go through a lot of pain. I don’t miss games unless it’s physically impossible for me to play. ...Nothing helps better. ...It’s much better than that opiate shit. ...I’d rather use something natural.” Since his announcement, Irving reports he’s fielded numerous offers and opportunities, including many from the cannabis industry. New Jersey tokers paying too much On March 7, authorities at a Philadelphia shipping port discovered 614 pounds of cannabis hidden in a shipping container originating from Puerto Rico,
bound for New Jersey. While it was one of the largest cannabis seizures in Port of Philadelphia history, the “estimated street value” of what authorities found is worth a quick breakdown. Per High Times, officials found 252 bricks of cannabis under the floorboards of the shipping container, with an estimated street value of $2.5 million. That works out to $4,071.66 per pound, or $254.48 per ounce. It’s possible that there exists a sizable market of people looking for Puerto Rican bricked weed on the streets of New Jersey, but perhaps not at $250 an ounce. I checked the website Budzu, which collects and compiles prices from user submissions by state and city, and then calculates prices in four pricing categories (dispensary medical, dispensary recreational, street medical and street recreational) by quality (low, medium, high) and by weight (gram to a pound). Recent street prices were listed as low as $2,400 a pound for Blueberry—most likely fresher than the Puerto Rican floorboard weed—and it hadn’t been squashed into 2-pound bricks. That estimated street value of $4,000 per pound? A stretch. Cannabis Tracking spray? Nope. In January, a Colorado senate bill proposed that all cannabis plants be marked with a “chemical tracking agent” to assist law enforcement in tracking all cannabis and hemp plants. Never mind that there exists an effective seed-to-sale tracking system in place, NO ONE WANTS WEIRD SPRAYS ON THEIR WEED, WEIRDO. This truly horrible idea was soundly rejected by both growers and lawmakers but is now being revived by the state’s sole facility for cannabis research, the Institute for Cannabis Research at Colorado State University-Pueblo. ICR was created by state legislators in 2016 but has lost considerable favor with many of its supporters and investors in both public and private sectors. According to The Denver Post, a donor who gave ICR $250,000 now says, “They’ve got all this money coming in...hiring people and giving themselves salaries, but no syllabus, no attempt at enrollment. An institute without any education and without any research students or any students there is a hollow institution.” According to Merry Jane, ICR has five staff members, but no students. ICR has revealed that its technology involves introducing an isotope into the plant which would remain traceable through its lifecycle. So, please enjoy some foreign isotope with your cannabis! The process and technology to do all this would be patented, and presumably profited greatly upon, by ICR.
THE REC ROOM Crossword
“Rate Change”
By Brendan Emmett Quigley
Pearl’s Puzzle
Difficulty Level
★★★★
We’re Local!
© Pearl Stark mathpuzzlesgames.com/quodoku
Fill in every row, column, and 3x3 box with each of the letters exactly once.
G R A I N
L U S T
The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote:
-
“I prefer to forget both pairs of glasses and pass my declining years ________e women and grandfather clocks.” - Ogden Nash
ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S PUZZLES
ACROSS 1 “War on Poverty” pres. 4 Amount of goo 8 Key with 4 sharps: Abbr. 12 Punch but good 14 State of confusion 16 Beast ___ 17 Physics unit 18 Game building 19 Whiny brat’s sound 20 Just-add-water pills? 23 Overact 25 Takes in 26 Needlefish 27 Cleaner named after a Trojan War hero 31 Religious ceremony 35 Assns. 37 Ottoman Empire officer 39 Skip on, as activities 40 Ode stanza rapped by Wu-Tang’s GZA? 43 Now, in Nicaragua 44 Morales of Netflix’s “Ozark” 45 Magazine whose name is a pronoun 46 Smartphone feature 48 Art dealer Glimcher 50 Wednesday’s cousin 51 Candy vehicle of the ‘70s 53 Dustin’s X-rated role 55 Show that changes all of comic Kaling’s costars? 61 Treat whose name is outlined in blue 62 Film selections? 63 Comment after a spectacular faceplant 66 “Leave the premises” 67 Gambler’s gambit 68 Gray grp.? 69 Listening devices 70 It has a cap and can sometimes be replaced 71 Ultimate degree
DOWN 1 Drugs on blotters 2 Gonzo journalism precursor Nellie 3 Event that seniors typically don’t attend 4 Exam where your rich parents might bribe to raise to the max score of 800: Abbr. 5 Turkish cabbage 6 Rural farm workers 7 Hits close to home? 8 Highest-paid actress of 2017 9 Drop anchor 10 Maroon 5 douchebag Levine 11 Actress Malone 13 Fine fellow 15 Writing material 21 Continental divide? 22 German poet Heinrich 23 Female arachnid’s pouch 24 Senator McSally 28 Rasta’s god 29 “A Death in the Family” writer James 30 African language with a clicking “X” sound 32 Baseball player who can play many positions 33 Mom and Pop, e.g. 34 Get beat by 36 Sensitive topics? 38 Way off in the distance 41 Deprive of water 42 Tom Collins ingredient 47 Maker of the VCS game system 49 Crossword bird 52 Type of sweater 54 1998 Sarah McLachlan hit 55 Nearly all 56 Black-and-white mammal 57 Bring in 58 One with control of their faculties 59 Metz miss: Abbr. 60 It might be uncharted territory 64 Boxer’s scrap 65 Autobahn speedometer meas., or what letters are swapped in each theme answer
“St. Patrick's Day is the fourth biggest drinking day in America. It's not the biggest. It's right behind New Year's Eve, Fourth of July, or any Secret Service party.” - David Letterman
39 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 12 / MARCH 21, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
©2017 Brendan Emmett Quigley (www.brendanemmettquigley.com)
Questions, comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark at pearl@bendsource.com
$99 LOCALS ESCAPE
We love our locals and this offer is just for you! Come out in March and April for a spring escape and stay for just $99/night! This rate includes taxes and resort fee. Click "Offers" at SunriverResort.com for details.
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This package for two starts at $129 per person and includes two $99 full-day lift tickets. After a day on the slopes, enjoy a discounted Sports Enthusiast Massage and some Après Ski drinks and Happy Hour specials at the Lodge.
Relax and unwind with our Spa-Cation package! Book a room at Sunriver Resort starting at $99 per person and get a free 50 minute massage, facial or manicure-pedicure at Sage Springs Club & Spa!
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Click "Offers" at SunriverResort.com for details.
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SunriverResort.com