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PLUS
GUIDES INSIDE
INDIE FILM’S GRANDE DAME
BEFORE BENDFILM, A CHAT WITH “HEDWIG’S” CHRISTINE VACHON
CELL TOWER OUTCRY
PARENTS BATTLE A TOWER NEAR LOCAL ELEMENTARY
HOPS+WATER
A MATCH MADE IN NON-ALCOHOLIC HEAVEN
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IN THIS ISSUE 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 / CALENDAR EDITOR Cayla Clark cayla@bendsource.com COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts FREELANCERS Jim Anderson, Magdalena Bokowa, Cari Brown, K.M. Collins, Jeremy Dickman, Teafly Peterson, Jared Rasic SYNDICATED CONTENT Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, E.J. Pettinger, Brendan Emmett Quigley, Jen Sorensen, Pearl Stark, Tom Tomorrow PRODUCTION MANAGER / ART DIRECTOR Darris Hurst darris@bendsource.com GRAPHIC DESIGNER Shannon Corey shannon@bendsource.com
EDITOR’S NOTE:
Being a voice for our community—and especially the underrepresented in our community—is what makes us tick here at the Source Weekly. You’ll see it in our coverage of race issues, diversity and equity in the outdoors, the housing crisis, commuting away from cars or any number of issues centered around social, environmental and economic justice… but we can’t do it alone. Partnerships with media outlets statewide, and across the nation, offer an even wider portal to the tales that deserve to be told. That’s why this week, we’re taking part in an annual tradition among the weekly press, publishing Project Censored, a compilation of some of the biggest stories you might not have heard this past year. Turn to our website for even more of the coverage—as our print edition only holds so many pages to publish this important information. – Nicole Vulcan
NEWS—Cell Tower Debate
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FEATURE—Project Censored
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Parents at Elk Meadow Elementary are opposed to a cell tower being built near their kids’ school—but they’re also calling for policy change. Magdalena Bokowa reports. Some of the biggest stories of the past year, which you might never have heard of. Take that, censorship!
On the Cover: Project Censored. Cover illustration by Anson Stevens-Bollen
CHOW—Hop Water!
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SCREEN—Indie Film’s Grande Dame
p.34
Call for Artists: If you're interested in being a SW featured artist, email: darris@bendsource.com.
This new addition to the Bend drinks scene is blowing us away. We chat with the founders of Oregon Hop Springs about their breakthrough product. Ahead of BendFilm, which kicks off this week, Teafly Peterson has a conversation with celebrated indie film producer Christine Vachon, who’s created “Boys Don’t Cry,” “Hedwig and the Angry Inch” and much more.
LEAFLET!
Our bi-annual cannabis guide is tucked inside this issue, featuring the latest on the vape crisis, a focus on consumer education, flower strains local budtenders love and so much more.
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WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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OPINION
Caring for your pets 7 days a week / Urgent Care
DOCTORS BYRON MAAS, LAUREN STAYER, ERIN MILLER, TABITHA JOHNSTON, MEGAN KINNEAR & GINNY KUNCH
A Temporary Ban on Flavored Vapes was the Right Move. But a permanent one? Not so fast.
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ov. Kate Brown’s Oct. 4 decision to temporarily ban all flavored vaporizer products was likely the right move. In light of two vape-related deaths in Oregon, and nearly two dozen nationwide, we still don’t know enough about the causes for consumers to make informed decisions about whether to continue vaping cannabis and/or nicotine products. In the long run, however, we’re going to need to see a lot more information before this editorial board is going to support the Oregon Legislature moving forward on a permanent ban, as Brown recommended in her executive order last week. Brown’s ban, done through executive order, will last six months. Then it’s up to Oregon legislators to decide whether they support banning flavored vape products in the state going forward. Here in Oregon, this issue can really be broken into two parts. One part stems from an effort—which existed long before this vape crisis—to keep e-cig products out of the hands of kids. The Oregon Health Authority and other public health experts have long been working to stop e-cigarette manufacturers from marketing their flavored products to people under the age of 21. That’s a valid concern—and for them, the advent of this current vaping crisis is somewhat advantageous, as it’s resulted in a ban that they likely would have supported, even without the deaths related to a mysterious lung illness. But the other part of this is the muddied information people are getting between the potential dangers of THC-containing products and those containing nicotine. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as of Oct. 1, the “latest national and regional findings suggest products containing THC play a role in the outbreak.” There are the people in our state who have found themselves quitting smoking, thanks
to the use of vaporizer products. For them, it might seem unfair to see a ban on the products they’ve used to quit a more harmful substance—when, at least in Oregon, the two people who died contracted their illnesses following the use of cannabis vaporizers, not nicotine ones. Still, it’s also fair to say that those using any of those products should get to know what’s in them—and so far, the information provided, if any, isn’t enough to discern whether a certain ingredient is deemed safe. “Users may not know what is in their e-cigarette or e-liquid solutions. Many of the products and substances can be modified by suppliers or users,” the CDC shared on its website. There’s the very real possibility that some of the chemicals found in both cannabis and nicotine vaporizers are actually causing the illnesses and deaths—but until researchers drill down and find out the answers, it seems unfair to move forward and permanently ban something that may not actually be deadly or dangerous. For now, we are going to operate on the assumption that state and federal health leaders will be forthcoming with any information they receive about the potential risks—or the opposite, the findings that a certain product is safe—before the debate about a permanent ban really heats up. Consumers deserve to have access to the full picture before they make a determination about whether to use a product, or whether to support a permanent ban. While government has a role in protecting people’s health, ultimately, informed consumers can, and should, oversee their own health-related decisions. Since the Oregon Legislature will ultimately decide whether to ban these products, now—and also at the point that we know definitively what’s causing the illnesses—is the time to share your thoughts on this issue with your local representatives.
HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY? Send your thoughts to editor@bendsource.com.
Letters
O NEW HIGH SCHOOL NAME
—Kaye Ballard
HOMELESS, HELPLESS? The homeless problem is beyond help so it seems. I lived in San Francisco, a city cited for being too liberal on homeless. Camps are found next to your home or in a park across the street. Many are screaming at themselves, waiting for free food and medication. Friends living in Portland have said, they love the area except one thing: The homeless are big problem. In Eugene I picked up the Weekly paper. The front page article announced, “No Place to Turn. Eugene’s mentally ill homeless are arrested, hospitalized, release and ignored.” In Bend, our small but growing town is getting to this same point. Homeless camps are found on the corner of Bond and Oregon Streets. Homeless young people are living on city property by Crows Feet Commons. When it’s icy and they slip, suing the city, are taxpayers liable? Tourists walk cross the street to get away only to find homeless on the public bench leaving no place to sit. They scrounge dumpsters all over town. Homeless beg at the Costco parking lot and at the stop on Bond and Franklin. In garbage ridden lots near Jackson’s Corner East, people are living in their vehicles. I saw a homeless man in a wheelchair parked in the middle of the street with a blanket over his head. Hours later, the man was still there. I saw similar by Worthy Brewing Company. Most residents in Bend can add to this list. I choose not to live in a town with a huge homeless “problem.” It is not a crime to “hang out” on the street, but on every bench, every corner, stopping me to ask for money? This situation certainly
@sourceweekly
can’t benefit anyone. We all know the problem, but What Is the Solution?
LIGHTMETER
5
—Ali Austin
BREWPUB CACOPHONY Businesses that hire live musicians but fail to turn off recorded music are being disrespectful of and rude to the musicians they hire. That is like inviting someone to play a guitar in your living room while you keep a radio on in the kitchen. Two unrelated songs playing simultaneously create cacophony, an unpleasant and discordant environment that does not encourage spending time or money in. Civilization has become so inundated with sound waves that many people have come to accept cacophony as normal and constant while disregarding its disharmonious effect on their subconscious moods and emotions. Some people may be able to consciously block it out, but I cannot believe that anyone enjoys cacophony. “One” is the maximum number of music programs that should be audible at any time because TWO CAN ONLY CREATE NOISE POLLUTION! Even though I have no background in the food and beverage industry, I doubt that a noisy environment could ever outsell a musical, one because a musical environment will never repel people who are complacent with noise but a noisy environment will always repel serious music lovers. It’s an easily remembered formula: less noise pollution, more money spent; more noise pollution, less money spent. To maximize customer satisfaction and the money they spend, managers of brewpubs, restaurants, and bars should turn OFF—not down—their recorded music while their paid musicians are playing their hearts out for their customers! Food and beverage managers PERMANENTLY drive musically oriented and sound-sensitive customers away by not doing so! —Eddie Kinnamon
RE: “LAST STAND IN THE SAND,” 9/18 Beach volleyball? Naw. Sand volleyball, we are in a desert. The beaches are miles away, but we make it happen. Volleyballs
Oh deer… We’re lovin’ this shot from @tylerherseyphotography. Tag @sourceweekly on Instagram to get featured in Lightmeter.
fly high, bodies dive and skin crisps in the sun. Most importantly, people connect. I’m among a large majority of players who hadn’t played much volleyball beyond, what we call “BBQ ball” or just simple “indoor.” I started playing down at the “Old Mill sand courts” about seven years ago. I was 22 and still in college at COCC. The warm sun rays, challenging game and inviting personalities pulled me to that sand. It was quick. Not my technique. Not my knowledge of the game. But my love for it all. The amazing spot (thank you to the Old Mill and the founders) where the sand courts sit has seen many bright-eyed, energizing humans. It’s like a step into a surreal world. Rising high in the sky, we’ve all seen them, those triple stacks stand over us like watch towers. The flag is also an excellent indicator for the wind’s speed and direction. With live music steps away and a centralized location the courts will truly be missed. Alright, although our Central Oregon land is full of juniper and sage, and devoid of saltwater and seagulls… We play beach volleyball. We look west to the Seaside Volleyball Tournament every year. Our group of sand sharks is small but if the grains combine with the surf we can keep welcoming new faces and form a beach in Bend.
Letter of the Week:
Thanks for the dispatch from the sand shark community, Chuck! Come on in for your gift card to Palate. —Nicole Vulcan
—Chuck Nix
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There’s been some talk lately about naming the new high school here in Bend. I’ve heard that there will be a voting process but I don’t really know who will be handling that. I think that our own Robert D Maxwell would be a great choice for a name. Robert D Maxwell was a Medal of Honor recipient in WWII. He was also a teacher at Bend High School and COCC. If you don’t know who he was then please Google him. He was an incredible person who deserves to be honored.
Letters must be received by noon Friday for inclusion in the following week’s paper. Please limit letters to 250 words. Submission does not guarantee publication. Opinions printed here do not constitute an editorial endorsement of said opinions. Letter of the week receives $5 to Palate!
NEWS
Searching for Whitopia WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Author Rich Benjamin brings his thought-provoking lectures to Bend By Cayla Clark
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kiing, mountain biking, Patagonia sweaters and an excess of pricey craft beer; there’s no doubt that Bend is steeped in a culture often associated with “whiteness.” According to data accumulated by the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, the racial composition of Bend in 2019 is 86.1% white. Rich Benjamin, an anthropologist, American culture critic and Scholar-in-Residence at Columbia University, explores the recent increase in pockets of extreme whiteness throughout America–pockets he’s labeled “Whitopias.” He observed that as the U.S. continued to grow in racial diversity, certain areas were rapidly becoming less and less multicultural. This shift sparked Benjamin’s interest, and he decided to explore the reasoning behind it. He spent over two years traveling 27,000 miles, delving into these oddly uniform sanctions and attempting to uncover why segregation—however unintentional—is still a favorite American pastime. In a recent interview with The New York Times, Benjamin explained the difference
between diversity and integration, and touched on the danger involved in exacerbating a lack of cultural assimilation. “People don’t realize that diversity isn’t the same as integration. Blacks and whites in New York, where I live, are as segregated today as in 1910,” he said in the article. “You can call me old-fashioned, but I’m an integrationist. A democracy can’t function at its optimum unless all members are integrated as full members. A community full of like-minded people tends to enforce their own view of the world and close off opposing viewpoints. You can go to parties in New York City where the liberal smugness is intolerable because they’re only hearing liberal viewpoints. On the Whitopian conservative side, it’s spinning out of control. Look at the tea-bagger movement, where people are concerned their taxes are going to be wasted on minorities and illegal immigrants.” He found that while the general attitude toward African Americans is becoming less hateful and less intolerant, it is slowly becoming more avoidant. If we successfully ignore it, it doesn’t exist, right?
Johnny Alfredo, a 30-year-old North Carolina native, recently moved to Bend to pursue a career in marketing. He shared his experiences in Bend as an African-American male with the Source Weekly. “I found that at first, most of my struggles were internal,” he says.“Externally… I mean, everyone is so freaking NICE. I spent a lot of time trying to figure out why, rather than just accepting it.” However, Alfredo has noticed that some Bend locals treat him a bit differently. “It can be difficult to tell who’s genuine—are people being nice because they want to, or because they feel like they have to? I do think that people act differently towards me; I didn’t notice it until I started having one-on-one conversations. Some people are obviously uncomfortable talking to me.” Alfredo mentioned something familiar, but unexpected. “I was surprised to see Confederate flags… on bumper stickers, on belt buckles. That’s a Southern thing. I was used to seeing it in the South, but I didn’t think I’d see it here. I think that maybe people feel comfortable toting the flag in Bend because of the demographic.” Bend is a desirable place to live. But is the community actively (however subconsciously) working to avoid diversity? While it may not seem like a glaring issue, a severe lack of multiracial cohesion does pose a problem. According to Benjamin, by continuing to chase the ideal of
utopian homogeneity –a community disallows the essential personal and communal growth that comes with diversity. Bendites seem to agree with Benjamin’s viewpoint, or at least, interest has been piqued. The lecture at OSU-Cascades has completely sold out, and while the lecture being held at 10 Barrel East is first come, first served, it is expected to fill up soon after the doors open at 6:30pm. “People in Whitopia would say, ‘Hey, Rich, birds of a feather flock together. What’s the big deal?’ Our government and businesses across the country make decisions every day that perpetuate segregation,” Benjamin told The New York Times. “When you say homes need to be built on a 1-acre lot, when you say apartment renters can’t live in your community—these concrete policies are what contribute to segregation. It’s not in our biology, and it’s not natural. We’re a great country—we’ve overcome some thorny problems in our past, and we’re better than that.”
Searching for Whitopia: An Improbable Journey to the Heart of White America Mon., Oct. 21, Noon-1pm OSU-Cascades, Tykeson Hall, Bend. Mon., Oct. 21, 6:30-8pm 10 Barrel Eastside, Bend. For more information contact lizg@deschuteslibrary.org.
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NEWS Courtesy Stop Cell Towers at School s
Digital Divide
Parents contest cell tower completion near Elk Meadow Elementary
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By Magdalena Bokowa were diagnosed with various forms of cancer. Sprint, the operator, noted that the company didn’t move the tower due to the cancers—which have not been proven to be linked to the tower. At very high levels, RF waves can heat up body tissues the same way a microwave heats up food. Proponents against cell towers next to schools says that children are at a greater risk of feeling the effects of these RF waves, “because of the children’s unique makeup,” says Szabo, “Up to 10 times more.” A 2016, $25-million federally backed study showed links between rare brain and heart cancers and chronic exposure to the type of radiation emitted from cell phones and wireless devices. A 2004 study showed increased levels of rare brain and heart cancers in rats that were exposed to RF radiation for nine hours each day. In this case, the Bend City Council says its hands are tied because the appeal process has expired. The City did inform people of the land use permit, though only those within 750 feet of its location received the notice. Parents say they should have been notified and urge the Council to repeal and replace the city code which allowed for the permitting to go through without their approval. “We intend to take our cause to state and federal authorities,” says Paul Bacon, an Elk Meadow parent and media coordinator for SCTS, “but we don’t believe the City Council should be left out of the discussion entirely just because they feel they’ve done everything they can within the law.” Though Bend Mayor Sally Russell made it clear on Wednesday that the issue was out of their hands, Bacon and Szabo both feel that Russell and City Manager Eric King could
Parents Paul Bacon and Elizabeth Hanley Szabo are part of a movement to halt construction of a cell tower near their kids' school on the south side of Bend.
The SCTS group says that this is the broader issue and want changes at the state and federal levels. Bacon points to SB 283, signed by Gov. Brown this August, which declared an “emergency regarding wireless technology in schools, puts the entire state on notice that we have a likely health problem on our hands and we need to do everything we can to learn about and solve it.” He points to the overwhelming bipartisan support it saw, passing unanimously in the Senate. “There is no red or blue in this fight,” says Bacon. “This is a common cause in an otherwise bitterly partisan time of history.” Some European countries and municipalities, such as Belgium and France, have strict limits on electromagnetic waves, limiting the placement of wi-fi devices at schools. In some European districts, cell towers must be 1,500 feet away from schools. “My personal experience has been that whenever I tell someone that a cell tower is being built directly next to my kids’ elementary school, that person seems disgusted in some way or another,” says Bacon. The group plans to continue to fight to get the cell tower moved to a minimum of 1,300 feet away from the school and urges the City to “Mediate a solution to the Elk Meadow problem by bringing all interested parties together to find a way to move the subject tower a safe distance from our kids’ school.”
sway Verizon. “They are lawmakers,” says Bacon, “and they have the ability to change laws that are outdated or not working in society’s best interest. And we as their constituents have the right and the responsibility to let them know when we see something wrong. That is what’s happening here.” Meanwhile, staffers from the office of Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) plan to meet with parents to hear their concerns. “I would be happy to have our staff get with them right away and follow up because we all want safe communities,” Wyden stated. Cell towers are regulated by the Federal Communications Commission. City of Bend code lays out the general framework for the locations of these towers and encourages new towers to be placed in industrial or commercial areas, though federal law prohibits the City from completely banning them from residential zones. The FCC maintains the amount of RF energy from towers at ground level is thousands of times less than the limits for safe exposure set by federal law. Still, critics point out that federal safety rules were put in place in 1996, when signals largely radiated from remote towers that were off limits to the public sphere. The FCC maintains that it would be highly unlikely to be exposed to RF levels in excess of these limits just by being near a cell phone tower, especially if antennas are mounted high above ground level and the signals are transmitted intermittently, rather than constantly.
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VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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mpassioned parents and community members are intensifying their pleas to stop an 84-foot cell phone tower being constructed adjacent to Elk Meadow Elementary School. The Verizon tower, approved with a conditional use permit in September 2017, is under construction on a 1.6-acre section of private land and will provide 4G cell service by the end of the calendar year, according to Jeannine Braggs, Verizon spokesperson. Parents, however, are dismayed about the tower’s close proximity to the school and say that they were not notified of the permitting application. Many say they only found out when they noticed construction beginning in July. Last week, dozens of concerned community members, organized under the name Stop Cell Towers at Schools, descended on the Wednesday night Bend City Council meeting to voice their concerns over potential health dangers linked to radiofrequency radiation— the type of non-ionizing radiation used to send and receive cell signals. More than a dozen concerned members, mostly parents of children who attend Elk Meadow, used their 3 minutes of public comment time to present their case. Worries about radiation have been unflagging since the beginning of cellphone usage, though little research has been conclusive. Parents argue that it doesn’t matter. “Best-case scenario is that the research is inconclusive,” says Elizabeth Hanley Szabo, a parent to two Elk Meadow students. “And the worst-case scenario is research pointing to multiple forms of brain cancer, neurological issues, dizziness, tremors, depression and so on.... And I think that’s too big of a risk to put something so close to our children that may pose a risk.” In April 2019, a California tower was shut down after four students and three teachers
FEATURE
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Censored 2020: Through the Looking Glass Project Censored’s Top 10 Stories By Paul Rosenberg, Senior Editor
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very year, Project Censored scours the landscape for the most important stories that the mainstream corporate media somehow missed and every year the task seems to get a bit stranger. Curiouser and Curiouser, as suggested in the subtitle of this year’s volume of its work, Censored 2020: Through The Looking Glass, which includes its full list of the top 25 censored stories and more about the never-ending struggle to bring vitally important hidden truths to light. 1. Justice Department’s Secret FISA Rules for Targeting Journalists The federal government can secretly monitor American journalists under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, which allows invasive spying and operates outside the traditional court system, according to two 2015 memos from then-Attorney General Eric Holder. The memos were obtained by The Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University and the Freedom of the Press Foundation through an ongoing Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, which was reported on by The Intercept, whose parent company provides funding for both organizations, but was virtually ignored by the corporate media. The secret rules “apply to media entities or journalists who are thought to be agents of a foreign government, or, in some cases, are of interest under the broader standard that they possess foreign intelligence information,” The Intercept reported. “As Trevor Timm [executive director of Freedom of the Press] and others noted, FISA rules are “much less stringent” than the Justice Department’s media guidelines for obtaining subpoenas, court orders, and warrants against journalists,” Project Censored noted. “This is a huge surprise,” Victoria Baranetsky, general counsel with the Center for Investigative Reporting, told The Intercept. “It makes me wonder, what other rules are out there, and how have these rules been applied? The next step is figuring out how this has been used.” “Targeting journalists for surveillance, especially when trying to determine their
sources, has historically been limited by First Amendment concerns,” The Intercept noted. “(But in 2015) Holder instituted new guidelines that made the targeting of journalists in criminal cases a ‘last resort,’ and said that the Justice Department ordinarily needed to notify journalists when their records were seized, (following revelations) that the Obama administration had secretly seized phone records from the Associated Press and named a Fox News reporter as a co-conspirator in a leak case.” “The fact that these were kept secret during the Obama administration is cause for great concern,” Timm noted. “Now, President Trump has repeatedly stated his hatred for the media, and his (former) Attorney General Jeff Sessions has already tripled the amount of leak investigations since the Obama era (when they were already at an all time high). Has the Trump administration used FISA court orders to target journalists with surveillance? If so, when?” Project Censored cited three “concerning” questions the memos raise, according to Timm: First, how many times have FISA court orders been used to target journalists, and are any currently under investigation? Second, why did the Justice Department keep these rules secret when it updated its “media guidelines” in 2015? And, third, is the Justice Department using FISA court orders—along with the FBI’s similar rules for targeting journalists with National Security Letters (NSLs)—to “get around the stricter ‘media guidelines’”? FISA orders “allow the government to sidestep some of the Media Guidelines’ most important protections,” Knight Institute staff attorney Ramya Krishnan wrote at their website. “For example, the requirement that (1) the information sought be ‘essential to a successful investigation, prosecution, or litigation’; (2) the requester make ‘reasonable alternative attempts ... to obtain the information from alternative sources’; and (3) the government notify and negotiate with the affected journalist except in certain narrow circumstances.”
The corporate media virtually ignored these revelations when they occurred. The subsequent media interest in FISA warrants targeting Trump campaign adviser Carter Page “has done nothing at all to raise awareness of the threats posed by FISA warrants that target journalists and news organizations,” Project Censored observed. They ended with a quote from Krishnan, summarizing the stakes: “National security surveillance authorities confer extraordinary powers. The government’s failure to share more information about them damages journalists’ ability to protect their sources, and jeopardizes the news gathering process.” 2. Think Tank Partnerships Establish Facebook as a Tool of U.S. Foreign Policy In the name of fighting “fake news” to protect American democracy from “foreign influences,” Facebook formed a set of partnerships with three expert foreign influencers in 2018, augmenting its bias toward censorship of left/progressive voices. In May 2018, Facebook announced its partnership with the Atlantic Council, a NATO-sponsored DC think tank to “monitor for misinformation and foreign interference.” “It’s funded by the U.S. Department of State and the U.S. Navy, Army and Air Force, along with NATO, various foreign powers and major Western corporations, including weapons contractors and oil companies, (including Chevron, ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell),” noted Adam Johnson, writing for the media watch group FAIR. He went on to say: When a venture that’s supposedly meant to curb “foreign influence” is bankrolled by a number of foreign countries— including the United Arab Emirates, Britain, Norway, Japan, Taiwan and South Korea— one would think that would be worth noting. Nor should U.S. government money be exempt from the “foreign” qualifier with its suggestion of malicious influence; to most of Facebook’s 2.2 billion users, after all, the United States is a foreign country. What’s more, Project Censored noted, its conservative-leaning board of
directors includes former CIA directors, retired U.S. generals and hawkish former state department officials like Henry [“Secret War In Cambodia”] Kissinger and Condoleezza [“Iraq Weapons of Mass Distruction”] Rice. These are not exactly people most journalists would want as editorial overseers. “The U.S. government reserves the right to run unattributed propaganda on Facebook, and there’s much evidence they have,” FAIR noted, parenthetically. “Needless to say, the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab hasn’t done any work in this space.” It went on to note that the major news outlets covering the story said nothing about any of the above conflicts of interest. “Instead, they issued repackaged press releases on the partnership, never examining the motives of the D.C. think tank, its funders, or the broader premise that ‘fake news’ and ‘foreign meddling’ were something in need of combating.” Such uncritical recycling of press releases is nothing more than propaganda. “Much like ‘counter-espionage’ is another name for espionage, ‘counter-propaganda’ efforts are just propaganda efforts,” FAIR noted, Then in September, Facebook announced it would also partner with two Cold War-era U.S. government-funded propaganda organizations: the National Democratic Institute and the International Republican Institute. “That these two U.S. government creations, along with a NATO offshoot like the Atlantic Council, are used by Facebook to distinguish real from fake news is effectively state censorship,” noted Alan MacLeod, writing for FAIR. “The [National Democratic Institute] undermined the Sandinista government of Nicaragua in the 1980s, and continues to do so to this day, while the IRI claimed a key role in the 2002 coup against leftist President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela.” “In the name of fighting the scourge of ‘fake news,’ Facebook altered its proprietary algorithms in ways that significantly reduced traffic to progressive websites such as Common Dreams and Slate,”
the Atlantic,” was advanced by an alliance of some 500 indigenous groups from nine countries, known as COICA — the Coordinator of the Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon Basin, who called it, “a sacred corridor of life and culture.” “We have come from the forest and we worry about what is happening,” declared Tuntiak Katan, vice president of COICA, quoted in The Guardian. “This space is the world’s last great sanctuary for biodiversity. It is there because we are there. Other places have been destroyed.” Khalil Bendib
It cited two New York Times stories, one in January 2019, which made no mention of the proposal, and a March 2109 op-ed that included just one sentence, “noting simply that Bolsonaro’s election ‘calls into question the fate of their proposal,” and linking to The Guardian’s November 2018 report. 4. U.S. Oil and Gas Industry Set to Unleash 120 Billion Tons of New Carbon Emissions Three months after the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned that we have just 12 years to limit catastrophic climate change, Oil Change International released a report that went virtually ignored, warning that the United States was headed in exactly the wrong direction. The report, Drilling Towards Disaster, warned that rather than cutting down carbon emissions, as required to avert catastrophe, the United States under Donald Trump was dramatically increasing fossil fuel production, with the United States on target to account for 60% of increased carbon emissions worldwide by 2030, expanding extraction at least four times more than any other country. “Between 2018 and 2050, the United States is set to unleash the world’s largest burst of CO2 emissions,” the report
release or its findings, including its prediction of 120 billion tons of new carbon pollution or its five-point checklist to overhaul fossil fuel production in the US.” The checklist includes: 1. Ban new leases or permits for new fossil fuel exploration, production, and infrastructure; 2. Plan for the phase-out of existing fossil fuel projects in a way that prioritizes environmental justice; 3. End subsidies and other public finance for the fossil fuel industry; 4. Champion a Green New Deal that ensures a just transition to 100% renewable energy; and 5. Reject the influence of fossil fuel money over U.S. energy policy. “[Instead of paying attention to the report, corporate media’s carbon emissions coverage] has focused more narrowly on President Trump’s proposal to amend existing emissions standards for passenger cars and light trucks and to establish new standards for future cars and trucks,” Project Censored noted. “[But] framing carbon emissions in terms of pollution from cars and trucks does not convey the extent of the problem. Instead, this frame effectively excludes from coverage the scope of new fossil fuel Khalil Bendib
smaller purges that have been unfolding in front of our eyes over the last year, all in the name of fighting ‘fake news’ and so called ‘Russian propaganda.’” He also noted: “Many of the pages and accounts taken down have been political (often leftist), anti-war, independent journalists and media outlets that are known to go against the grain of mainstream media outlets. Anti-Media (antimedia. com), a reputable source of independent journalism, saw its page with over 2 million followers taken down overnight with no concrete explanation as to why.” “There has been very little corporate news coverage of Facebook’s partnerships with U.S. government propaganda organizations,” Project Censored noted. “CNN, Fox News, and NBC News have provided offhand coverage, with only the most basic information, but none have framed Facebook’s actions in terms of censorship.” 3. Indigenous Groups from Amazon Propose Creation of Largest Protected Area on Earth When news of unprecedented wildfires in the Amazon grabbed headlines in late August, most Americans were ill-prepared to understand the story, in part because of systemic exclusion of indigenous voices and viewpoints, highlighted in Project Censored’s number three story — the proposed creation of an Amazonian protected zone the size of Mexico, presented to the UN Conference on Biodiversity in November 2018. The proposal, which Jonathan Watts, writing for The Guardian described as “a 200m-hectare sanctuary for people, wildlife and climate stability that would stretch across borders from the Andes to
The Guardian went on to note: The organisation does not recognise national boundaries, which were put in place by colonial settlers and their descendants without the consent of indigenous people who have lived in the Amazon for millennia. Katan said the group was willing to talk to anyone who was ready to protect not just biodiversity but the territorial rights of forest communities. In contrast, The Guardian explained:. Colombia previously outlined a similar triple-A (Andes, Amazon and Atlantic) protection project that it planned to put forward with the support of Ecuador at next month’s climate talks. But the election of new rightwing leaders in Colombia and Brazil has thrown into doubt what would have been a major contribution by South American nations to reduce emissions. And it went on to note that Bolsonaro had said he would only stay in the Paris climate agreement if given guarantees of Brazilian sovereignty over indigenous land. A follow-up story at Common Dreams, quoted another COICA representative, Juan Carlos Jintiach, saying Bolsonaro’s comments “are concerning because they nurture a disturbing tendency in different parts of the world, where almost three-fourths of environmental defenders assassinated in 2017 were indigenous leaders.” Project Censored noted that: “Although the corporate and independent press have covered rightwing president Jair Bolsonaro’s intent to undermine indigenous rights in order to open Amazonian land for development, this coverage has almost entirely ignored COICA’s proposal to create the world’s largest protected area.”
also warned. “U.S. drilling into new oil and gas reserves – primarily shale – could unlock 120 billion metric tons of CO2 emissions, which is equivalent to the lifetime CO2 emissions of nearly 1,000 coal-fired power plants.” “To limit catastrophic climate change, governments must manage the decline of the fossil fuel industry, and do so over the next few decades,” the report noted. “The United States should be moving first and fastest in this direction, (both because it’s) the world’s largest oil and gas producer and third-largest coal producer (and because) [i]t also has the resources and technology at hand to rapidly phase out extraction while investing in a just transition that guarantees a ‘Green New Deal’ for affected workers and communities currently living on the front lines of the fossil fuel industry and its pollution.” References to the report “have been limited to independent media outlets,” Project Censored noted. “Corporate news outlets have not reported on the report’s
exploration, production, and extraction that led Oil Change International to characterize the potential for massive new carbon emissions as an ‘existential emergency’ for U.S. lawmakers.” 5. Modern Slavery in the United States, Around the World An estimated 403,000 people in the U.S. were living in conditions of “modern slavery” in 2016, according to the 2018 Global Slavery Index, or GSI, about 1% of the global total. The GSI defines “modern slavery” broadly to include forced labor and forced marriage. “[But the United States plays an outsized role] because the U.S exacerbates the global slavery problem by importing products, including laptops, computers, mobile phones, garments, fish, cocoa and timber, at risk of being produced through forced labor,” reported by Edward Helmore for The Guardian in July 2018, when the report was released. Continued on page 11
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Project Censored noted. “Without formal warning, Facebook shut down leftwing, Venezuela-linked Facebook pages such as TeleSur English and Venezuelanalysis (although both were reinstituted after protests about their removal).” In October 2018, Jonathan Sigrist, writing for Global Research, described one of the greatest Facebook account and page purges in its troubled history: “559 pages and 251 personal accounts were instantly removed from the platform…. This is but one of similar yet
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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WE’D LIKE TO INVITE YOU TO THE GRAND OPENING OF WESTGATE!
Join us as we introduce Westgate, Bend’s newest residential community with panoramic mountain views! We’d like to invite you to the Grand Opening of Empire Construction & Development’s newest subdivision, located off of NW Shevlin Park Road in the coveted area of Summit West! We will be showcasing each of the 75 planned lots, ranging from 2.5 to 5 acres and starting at $595k. Guests can enjoy craft beer from Cascade Lakes Brewing Co., select local food trucks and guided golf cart tours of the property. We will have 8 booths, representing the 8 phases of development, stationed around the loop of the property, providing earnest information and handing out fun Westgate swag! Our Welcome Tent will be teeming with knowledgeable Westgate staff, ready to answer any questions you have and share all that Westgate has to offer. We hope you can join us!
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October 12th
11am - 4pm 62600 McClain Drive, Bend Beer provided by
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www.WestgateBend.com Empire Construction and Development LLC is the developer of Westgate and is solely responsible for the content of this advertisement. This advertisement is informational only and subject to change. It is not an offering to residents of NY, NJ, CA or CT or where otherwise prohibited by law. Empire Construction and Development LLC and the property owner, Rio Lobo Investments, LLC, received master plan and tentative plan approval for Westgate from Deschutes County in file number 247-19-00500-MP and 247-19-000501-TP. No lot in Westgate may be sold until final plat approval is obtained and the final plat is recorded.
report listed the U.S. as ‘a world leader’ in addressing forced labor in supply chains, while CBS News reported that ‘the U.S. does better than most countries in tackling the issue.’” 6. Survivors of Sexual Abuse and Sex Trafficking Criminalized for Self-Defense On Jan. 7, outgoing Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam granted clemency to Cyntoia Brown, who had been sentenced to life in prison in 2004, at age 16, for killing a man who bought her for sex and raped her. Brown’s case gained prominence via the support of A-list celebrities and Haslam cited “the extraordinary steps Ms. Brown has taken to rebuild her life.” But despite public impressions, Brown’s case was far from unique. “There are thousands of Cyntoia Browns in prison,” organizer Mariame Kaba, co-founder of Survived and Punished, told Democracy Now! the next day. “We should really pay attention to the fact that we should be fighting for all of those to be free,” Kaba said. “When you look at women’s prisons, the overwhelming majority, up to 90 percent of the people in there, have had histories of sexual and physical violence prior to ending up in prison.” “In contrast to the spate of news coverage from establishment outlets, which focused on Brown’s biography and the details of her case,” Project Censored wrote, “independent news organizations, including The Guardian, Democracy Now!, Rolling Stone and Mother Jones, stood out for reporting that cases like Brown’s are all too common.” Kaba also wrote The Guardian story referred to, Project Censored noted: Tracing back to myths that arose in the 19th century during slavery , Kaba noted in her The Guardian article that black women “have always been vulnerable to violence” in the US and “have long been judged as having ‘no selves to defend.’” Today, she wrote, self-defense laws that are “interpreted generously” when applied to white men threatened by men of color are often interpreted “very narrowly” when women of color and gender non-conforming people invoke them in domestic violence and sexual assault cases. Later in January, Kellie Murphy’s Rolling Stone story quoted Alisa Bierria, another Survived and Punished co-founder, and highlighted several other cases prominent in alternative media coverage. In May, Mother Jones reported on the legislative progress that Survived and Punished and its allies had achieved in advancing state and federal legislation. “The bills in Nevada, Arkansas, Hawaii and Congress, which are based on model legislation and use similar language, would do away with mandatory minimum sentencing requirements for child sex trafficking victims who perpetrate crimes against their abusers,” Olivia Exstrum reported for Mother Jones. “Currently, state and federal laws don’t give special consideration to such cases, meaning juvenile victims who commit the most serious crimes, like murder, are often tried in adult court with the possibility of decades behind bars.”
“A growing body of research has shown that the trauma that arises from being sex trafficked can affect decision-making, especially in young people,” but that, historically, “that trauma has not been well understood and hasn’t been taken into account when deciding the cases of victims who commit crimes,” Mother Jones went on to note. “Corporate news organizations provided considerable coverage of Cyntoia Brown’s clemency,” Project Censored noted. “However, many of these reports treated Brown’s case in isolation, emphasizing her biography or the advocacy on her behalf by celebrities such as Rihanna, Drake, LeBron James, and Kim Kardashian West.”
days, or even hours,” ProPublica stated. In the case of Alex (a 13-year-old from Honduras) used to highlight systemic problems, the police investigation lasted 72 minutes, and resulted in a three sentence report. There was surveillance video showing two older teenagers grabbing him, throwing him to the floor and dragging him into a bedroom. But ProPublica reported, “An examination of Alex’s case shows that almost every agency charged with helping Alex — with finding out the full extent of what happened in that room — had instead failed him.” “Because immigrant children in detention are frequently moved, even when an investigator wanted to pursue Khalil Bendib
It went on to cite examples from The New York Times and NBC News that did take a broader view, but failed to focus on sex trafficking or sexual violence. “Reports that did link Cyntoia Brown’s case to broader patterns of sexual violence and sex trafficking were often filed as opinion pieces, rather than news stories,” Project Censored noted. singling out “one exceptionally detailed piece, written by Andrea Powell and published by NBC News.” Powell is the founder and executive director of Karana Rising, a nonprofit that supports survivors of human trafficking, and made several points similar to Kaba’s, so there is some awareness of the larger story in corporate media culture. But it hasn’t crossed over from opinion pieces to news coverage. 7. Flawed Investigations of Sexual Assaults in Children’s Immigrant Shelters “Over the past six months, ProPublica has gathered hundreds of police reports detailing allegations of sexual assaults in immigrant children’s shelters,” ProPublica reported in November 2018. “[The shelters] have received $4.5 billion for housing and other services since the surge of unaccompanied minors from Central America in 2014 [and the reports reveal that] both staff and other residents sometimes acted as predators.” “Again and again, the reports show, the police were quickly — and with little investigation — closing the cases, often within
a case, the child could be moved out of the investigating agency’s jurisdiction in a just few weeks, often without warning,” Project Censored noted. “When children are released, parents or relatives may be reluctant to seek justice, avoiding contact with law enforcement because they are undocumented or living with someone who is.” Then, in February 2019, Axios reported, “Thousands of allegations of sexual abuse against unaccompanied minors in the custody of the U.S. government have been reported over the past 4 years, according to Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) documents given to Axios by Rep. Ted Deutch’s office.” This included 4,556 complaints received by the HHS’ Office of Refugee Resettlement, and 1,303 complaints received by the Department of Justice. Project Censored noted that there had been some corporate news coverage, including CBS News and The New York Times, “However, in contrast with ProPublica’s coverage, these reports have not highlighted shortcomings in investigations of alleged sexual abuse or the lack of support for survivors after the abuse.” There's more! Head over to bendsource.com for the final three in this Top 10 List—and also look for more coverage from the Project Censored 2019 series.
11 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Continued from page 9 Because forced marriage accounts for 15 million people, more than a third of the global total, it’s not surprising that females form a majority of the victims (71 percent). The highest levels were found in North Korea, where an estimated 2.6 million people — 10% of the population — are victims of modern slavery. The GSI is produced by the Walk Free Foundation, whose founder, Andrew Forrest, called the U.S. figure, “a truly staggering statistic, (which) is only possible through a tolerance of exploitation.” “Walk Free’s methodology includes extrapolation using national surveys, databases of information of those who were assisted in trafficking cases, and reports from other agencies like the UN’s International Labour Organization,” explained The Guardian, to compile its figures. There are problems with this, according to others working in the field, The Guardian noted. There’s no universal legal definition, and tabulation difficulties abound. But the GSI addresses this as an issue for governments to work on and offers specific proposals. “The GSI noted that forced labor occurred ‘in many contexts’ in the US, including in agriculture, among traveling sales crews, and—as recent legal cases against GEO Group, Inc. have revealed—as the result of compulsory prison labor in privately owned and operated detention facilities contracted by the Department of Homeland Security,” Project Censored noted. “It also points out that migrants — especially migrant women and children — are “particularly vulnerable (in the United States) due to a variety of factors including immigration status, lack of familiarity with U.S. employment protections, and because migrants often work in jobs that are ‘hidden from the public view and unregulated by the government.’” Newly restrictive immigration policies have further increased the vulnerability of undocumented persons and migrants to modern slavery. In addition, GSI report on the United States cited three legislative priorities: Enact federal legislation criminalizing forced marriage. Raise the minimum age for marriage, with or without parental consent to 18 in all states. Extend legislation prohibiting criminalization of child victims of trafficking to all states. And called for specific improvements in victim support and to address risk factors. For example: Enforce core labor laws and labor standards for most vulnerable workers, including undocumented or seasonal workers in the United States from Latin and Central America. Project Censored notes the 2018 GSI “received limited coverage” in the corporate media, citing the New York Times, CNN and CBS News. The Times featured the case of a former North Korean slave now attending Columbia University, “leaving details about the prevalence of slavery in the U.S. to the article’s later paragraphs. CNN noted that the
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 12
SOURCE PICKS THURSDAY
10/10
SUNDAY
10/13
SISTERS FOLK FESTIVAL PRESENTS: CHE APALACHE ROLLING STONE ‘ ARTIST YOU NEED TO KNOW’
EDUCATIONAL PRESENTATION
Join Historian and Paranormal Investigator Rocky Smith for a presentation of history, folklore Pixabay and the paranormal. Smith will share some spine-chilling ghost stories from his years of experience exploring the most haunted locations in Central Oregon. 7-8 pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Free.
THURSDAY
A four-man Latingrass string band, based in Buenos Aires, with members hailing from Argentina, Mexico and the U.S. The cross-genre bands formed in order to honor music, enjoy music and bridge the gap between North and South American styles, creating a unique and powerful vision of truly “American” music. 7pm. The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters. $15/adv., $20/door.
SATURDAY
10/12
Submitted
Catchy melodies, heartfelt lyrics and a soulful saxophone blend with a penchant for funky beats and campfi re singalongs, giving Trevor Ras a unique style – one that lands comfortably between Van Morrison, Jack Johnson, Ed Sheeran and Crosby, Stills and Nash. All ages welcome. 7-10pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend. No cover.
10/10-10/13
THESE SHINING LIVES COMMUNITY THEATER
Based on the true story of four women in the 1920s, this play follows Catherine Donohue and her coworkers in a watch factory, as they paint the hour markings onto different-sized watch dials using a glow-in-the-dark radium compound. The play focuses on the danger women in the workforce faced in the 1920s, and exposes the lack of concern many companies had (have) for the well-being and safety of their employees. Thu., 7:30pm, Fri., 7:30pm, Sat., 7:30pm, Sun., 2pm. Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 Greenwood Ave., Bend. $25/adult, $21 seniors/students.
FRIDAY
IMMERSION BREWING’S PRETZEL FEST 2019 PRETZELS, BEER, LIVE MUSIC
It’s back! Immersion Brewing is at it again with its 2nd Annual Pretzel Fest. Party on the back patio, “The Arizona Mullet,” as they celebrate everything pretzels. What goes great with pretzels? Beer, of course. What goes great with beer? Live music, compliments of local old country, Delta blues and roots rock n’ roll artist Joseph Balsamo. 1-7pm. Immersion Brewing, 550 SW Industrial Way, Suite 185, Bend. Free.
SATURDAY
COMEDY AT PORTER STAND-UP COMEDY
TUESDAY
10/15
ZACH NUGENT BAND W/COSMIC EVOLUTION JAM SESSION
After touring with brilliant minds such as Melvin Seals and the Jerry Garcia Band, Zach Nugent has become a highly sought-after shredder that wellknown jam bands love to play with. Cosmic Evolution just so happens to be one of those bands. 21+. 8pm2am. The Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $15.
WEDNESDAY
10/16
Submitted
DANIEL MONROE PSYCHIC MEDIUM “HELLO FROM HEAVEN” PORTLAND CLAIRVOYANT
Joe Lewis fi rst picked up a guitar while working at a pawn shop in Austin, Texas. Shortly thereafter, Lewis immersed himself in the local Red River blues/garage scene, performing and recording with Austin luminaries such as the Weary Boys and Walter Daniels. 9pm-midnight. Volcanic Theater Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $20.
Pixabay
10/12
10/11
BLACK JOE LEWIS ‘TELL ‘EM WHAT YOUR NAME IS’ TH 10 ANNIVERSARY TOUR FUNKY LIVE SHOW
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Bringing the laughter back to Redmond! Catch some of Central Oregon’s favorite comedic personalities as you sip on some of Porter Brewing Co.’s fi ne English ales. Show features local stand-up comedians Johnny Alfredo, Steve Harber, Dillon Kolar and Connor Satterfi eld. Hosted by Bend’s Queen of Comedy, Katy Ipock. 6-8pm. Porter Brewing Co., 611 NE Jackpine Ct #2, Redmond. $7.
10/10
TREVOR RAS FREE CONCERT
THURSDAY-SUNDAY
10/11
Daniel Monroe, an extremely gifted and well-known psychic medium from the Portland area, has the ability to hear and see what most people can’t. Those who have worked directly with Monroe have labeled him “extremely gifted,” “the real deal,” and “life changing.” 7-9:30pm. Volcanic Theater Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $20-$30.
TAKE ME TO THE RIVER NEW ORLEANS LIVE October 22
NOSFERATU October 28
Submitted
LOS LONELY BOYS ROCK TRIO
This American/Chicano rock trio of blood-brothers, originally from San Angelo, Texas, comes to Bend to share its unique musical style. The band draws inspiration from brown-eyed soul, country, Texas blues, rock and roll and Tejano, playing a style all their own: “Texican Rock 'n’ Roll.” 7:30PM. The Tower Theater, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. $45, $55 & $65.
TOM PAXTON AND THE DONJUANS November 6
KELLER WILLIAMS “PETTYGRASS” November 10
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
KNOW HORROR – OREGON GHOST STORIES SPOOKY
FRIDAY
10/10 – 10/16
Colon Hydrotherapy!
FALL MEMBERSHIP DRIVE 2019
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Its really not that scary!
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Are you passionate about gardening in Central Oregon? Willing to share your time & knowledge locally? Consider training to become an OSU Master GardenerTM volunteer. Classes on Wednesday at the OSU/Deschutes County Extension in Redmond January 15th - March 18, 2020, 9 am - 4 pm Cost is $275, and application deadline is January 3rd, 2020. (partial scholarships available) For more information go to our website at: https://extension.oregonstate.edu/mg/central/how-join or call OSU Extension at 541-548-6088
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S
SOUND
Oregon’s Best
The Oregon Music Hall of Fame’s 13th annual induction ceremony is this Saturday By Isaac Biehl
Musicians This year’s musician inductees include Eugene-born Mark Lindsay, who is officially a two-time inductee—having previously entered with his band Paul Revere and the
Heritage Awards Dick Berk was originally from San Francisco and forged his beginnings in New York City. Berk would eventually move to Oregon around 1980 and continued on with his band The Jazz Adoption Agency, playing at many spots in Hillsboro. The second recipient of the Heritage Award is Paul Knauls, dubbed the “Mayor of Northeast Portland.” Knauls was an owner of multiple nightclubs, such as The Cotton Club, that hosted a variety of talented musicians and brought a new culture to the city. Courtesy Matador Records
Joanna Bolme with Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks.
Submitted
Raiders. 3 Leg Torso, Little Sue, Michael Allen Harrison, Michael Hurley, Pond, Joanna Bolme and John Mazzocco round out the list. Bolme, in particular, has left prints all over the Portland music scene— from playing in Calamity Jane, to Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks and her work alongside the late and great Elliot Smith.
Album of the year goes to The Decemberists.
Industry Don Macleod did wonders for the Portland community when he opened up Music Millennium in 1969—and the independent record store is still open today. Macleod was also the co-founder of Burnside Records and the Intergalactic Trading Company, which handled vinyl mail orders. Gary Houston has been creating art and illustrations for the Portland art & music scene for decades with his illustration company Voodoo Catbox. If you’ve spent enough time in Portland or even gone to see a show you’ve probably seen one of his handcrafted show posters—they’re truly works of art. Larry Crane is the founder of Jackpot! Studio, which was an integral part to the growing Portland music scene in the late ‘90s, which he worked on closely with Elliot Smith. Crane has worked with some of the best artists out of Oregon and the country, varying from Sleater-Kinney, R.E.M.,
Spoon, Eddie Vedder and more. Crane is also the editor of Tape Op magazine. Artist of the Year - Ural Thomas Born in Portland in 1939, Ural Thomas was in the doo-wop group The Monterays. From there Thomas was involved in many national works, getting to open for the likes of The Rolling Stones, Stevie Wonder and more. He’s still jamming in 2019 with his current band, Ural Thomas and The Pain. Album of the Year - “I’ll be Your Girl” by The Decemberists Released in 2018, “I’ll Be Your Girl” is the eighth album from the indie rock icons. Totally synthed-out and a bit off the rails with its variety of sound direction, The Decemberists really tried to step into some new territory on this project. Fall feels like the perfect time of the year to revisit this album.
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VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
F
ormed in 2003, the Oregon Music Hall of Fame was created with the intent to help preserve and memorialize the various bands, artists and industry players that have left a great mark on the state of Oregon with their music. To qualify for the OMHOF, an artist needs to either have been born in Oregon and worked in the industry for at least 20 years or have worked those 20 years after moving to Oregon. This year there are 13 new inductees— all of whom are more than deserving to gain a spot amongst their celebrated peers. Here’s a quick breakdown of the categories and the new members entering the hall.
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WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 16
Band Fact Sheet: Che Apalache
S
Latin American roots group comes to Sisters with a special brand of bluegrass
17
Hearth Media
SAVE 20%-50%
Che Apalache’s latest album, “Rearrange My Heart,” was released in August.
C
entral Oregon bluegrass fans are in for quite a treat on Oct. 11, as Che Apalache brings its version of “Latingrass” to Sisters. The band comes all the way from Argentina, touring the U.S. The four-piece band delivers its unique sound with a grand mix of cultural influences that will definitely impress. Presented by the Sisters Folk Festival, Che Apalache takes the stage at
The Belfry for the band’s fourth show on its current run. Learn more about the group and its magical strings with this Band Fact Sheet. Che Apalache
Fri., Oct. 11, at 7pm The Belfry 302 E Main Ave., Sisters $15/adv., $20/door
BAND
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Purchase discount gift certificates online at perks.bendsource.com
on your favorite loca l businesses
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
By Isaac Biehl
LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE
CALENDAR WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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>
Tickets Available on Bendticket.com
old guitar when he was 12 and has been hooked ever since. 6:30pm. No cover.
9 Wednesday The Astro Lounge Bingo w/ Janney to ben-
efit Oregon Wild Every Wednesday! Winners take home half the pot, the rest goes to Oregon Wild! 6-8pm. $1-5 per game.
Cabin 22 Locals Night w/ UKB Trivia It’s fun
and free to play! Enjoy Central Oregon pint specials, all day, all night! 7pm.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your
go-to karaoke tune? 9pm.
10 Thursday 7th Street Brew House Bow Wow Bingo
Great food, wonderful brews and a whole lot of fun! Cards are $1 each for the first 2 games (or 6 for $5) and $2 each for the last 2 games (or 6 for $10). 6-8pm. No cover.; Benefitting the BrightSide Animal Center in Redmond. 6:30pm.
The Astro Lounge Rockin’ Robin Karaoke Sing your favorites on a rockin’ good system, every Thursday! 9pm-1am. No cover.
Immersion Brewing Geeks Who Drink Pub Trivia Win fun prizes and challenge your friends, or enemies, on obscure knowledge while enjoying craft beer and delicious food from our pub style kitchen. 6-8pm. No cover.
AVID Cider Co. Taproom Bingo Night 5 rounds free with purchase of beverage. Don’t miss out on fun prizes! All ages welcome until 9pm. Every other Thursday, 6:30-8:30pm. No cover.
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Rockin’ Robin
and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
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 pub trivia to Level State every Wednesday! Free to play, prizes to win and all ages until 9pm! Assemble a team or go at it alone. 7pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern Wed Night Open Mic Bring your
instruments and your friends, or just come on by and support the local music scene. Goes to Last Call or last musician. 21 and over. 6pm. No cover.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke
Come sing your heart out every Wednesday night at Maverick’s! 9pm. No cover.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Brothers Reed The brothers family blend of folk encapsulates the grit and humor of Midwest life with the swagger and serenity of the west coast. Their style evokes finger picking folk singers of the 60’s and 70’s with a contemporary and boundless edge. All ages. 7-10pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic Join us for open mic every Wednesday. 6pm.
River’s Place Bingo! Have fun, win cash prizes and support a local non-profit organization. 6-8pm. Cards $1-$5.
Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke Every 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.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down 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.
River’s Place She’s with Me Linda Quon, Boo
Rigney and Laurie Hamilton sing in harmony and play guitar, banjolele and harmonium. They sing bluegrass, Americana, folk and many original tunes. 6-8pm. Free.
Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy Open Mic
All performance types are welcome! Each performer will have 5 minutes. Signup by 7:20pm. Ages 21+ 7pm.
The Lot Paul Eddy Pacific Northwest native
and Bedell Artist Paul Eddy is one busy musician. Whether performing solo, with the The Beatles cover band Juju Eyeball, or the retro C&W band Long Tall Eddy (he lived in Austin TX for 18 years!), you’ll always get his best. 6-8pm. No cover.
11 Friday The Belfry Sisters Folk Festival Pres-
at Pronghorn Join us for an evening of exquisite art, live music, fine wine and complimentary refreshments! Enjoy the company of local, talented artists including Chad Copeland, Tom Boatright and Katherine Taylor! 5-7pm. No cover.
Lava Lanes Karaoke Night Come sing with us! 8pm-Midnight. No cover.
Heller Highwater Trio Heller Highwater Trio singing and playing all your favorite songs. Great vocal harmonies and guitars. Come eat, drink, and be entertained. 7-10pm. No Cover.
Northside Bar & Grill FunBobby Classic rock, pop and 80s dance music. 8:30pm. $3.
Pronghorn Resort First Annual Art Show
at Pronghorn Join us for an evening of exquisite art, live music, fine wine and complimentary refreshments! Enjoy the company of local, talented artists including Chad Copeland, Tom Boatright and Katherine Taylor! Noon-6pm. No cover.
Riff - Craft Food & Beverage Taproom BendFilm Festival After Party The BendFilm Festival Friday Night After Party is a filmmaker
Submitted
Said Fun jazz-inspired vocal/guitar duo. It’s a toe-tapping, finger-snapping good time! 7-9pm. No cover.
Kurt’s early musical influences were the some of Country Music’s pioneers. The Carter Family, Jimmy Rogers, Hank Williams, and Johnny Cash all had an influence on his musical path. He picked up his dad’s old guitar, which he still plays, when he was 12 and has been hooked ever since. 7pm. No cover.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Black Joe Lewis ‘Tell Em What Your Name Is’ 10th Anniversary Tour While working at a pawn shop in Austin, Joe Lewis first picked up the guitar. Shortly thereafter, Lewis immersed himself in the local Red River blues/garage scene, recording and performing with Austin luminaries such as the Weary Boys and Walter Daniels. 9pm-Midnight. $20.
12 Saturday The Belfry The Brian Odell Band The Brian Odell Band is a rock band with roots firmly grounded in funk, fusion, and folk. They artfully combine acoustic guitar, violin, electric guitar, drums, bass, & vocals in their original music & select covers for a truly unique sound! 8-11pm. $10. Mark your calendars for a great night of music! Let’s eat, drink, dance & have fun! 8:30-11:30pm. No cover.
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.
Craft Kitchen and Brewery Comedy at Craft! We are taking over Craft Kitchen and Brewery again for another night of amazing local comedy! Hosted by Katy Ipock. Featuring: Ben Moore, Chuck Bronson, Dillon Kolar, and Cole Robeson. 8pm. $10 Online/$15 at the door.
The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse
Fireside Show: Joan Shelley w/ Marisa Anderson Joan Shelley will blow you away with her country folk stylings, and Marisa Anderson will do the same with her incredible guitar technique. 7pm. $15.
High Desert Museum Thorn Hollow String Band Hear some toe-tapping tunes from our pioneering house band! Dancing encouraged. Second Saturday of every month, 11am-2pm. Museum admission.
Tower Theatre Jake Shimabukuro Almost everyone in Hawaii has strummed a ukulele at one time or another. At the age of 14, Jake Shimabukuro realized that he was doing something a little different with the four-stringed instrument – OK, a lot different. 7pm. $37-$62.
Hub City Bar & Grill DJ Sharky DJ music and dancing brought you by DJ Sharky. 9pm. No cover.
Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House Kurt Silva
The Blacksmith Restaurant She Said, He
Checkers Pub Derek Michael Marc & friends
The Lot Wednesday Open Mic Night Come
Kurt’s early musical influences were the some of Country Music’s pioneers. He picked up his dad’s
JGirl Comedy early Fridays from Bend Comedy, doors at 7pm Featuring Open Format Dance music with a fun Party vibe. VIP and bottles available. Contact: 541-760-9412 or email: sevenbend@gmail.com 9pm-2am.
Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House Kurt Silva
Mark your calendars for a great night of music! Let’s eat, drink, dance & have fun! 8:30-11:30pm. No cover.
Niblick and Greenes at Eagle Crest
Pronghorn Resort First Annual Art Show
Seven Nightclub This weekend with UltraD-
Checkers Pub Derek Michael Marc & friends
McMenamins Old St. Francis School Trevor Ras Catchy melodies, heart-
New Orleans style jazz. 7:30pm. No cover.; Local jazz funksters B Side Brass Band bring the horns to The Northside for a great night on New Orleans music! 21 and over. 7:30-10:30pm. Free.
raiser Otino Waa Children’s Village, a Central Oregon based non-profit, has cared for suffering orphans and vulnerable children in Northern Uganda through rescue, rehabilitation and education. This fundraiser will be hosted by Otino Waa co-founder, Bob Higgins, and will feature music by The Parnell’s, silent auction, Traeger raffle and hors d’oeuvres. 6-9pm. $10.
Thump Coffee - NW Crossing Paul Eddy Come on out and enjoy Paul’s music, paired with our awesome food! 7-9pm. No Cover.
Hub City Bar & Grill DJ Chuck Boogie Live music from DJ Chuck Boogie. 9pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill B Side Brass Band
Riverhouse on the Deschutes Covention Center Otino Waa’s 15th Annual Fund-
ents: Che Apalache Four-man Latingrass string band based in Buenos Aires, with members from Argentina, Mexico and the United States. The cross-genre band exists to enjoy music, to honor it and to create a vision of a truly “American” music. 7pm. $15 adv./$20 door.
Humm Kombucha Taproom Jay Eyestone of Bad Pacifist Join us for music by Jay Eyestone of Bad Pacifist, happy hour drinks, ping pong, and awesome food from Manzanita Grill food truck! 6-7pm. Free.
felt lyrics and soulful saxophone blend with a penchant for funky beats and campfire sing-alongs, giving Trevor Ras a unique style. All ages. 7-10pm. No cover.
and festival fan favorite! Join us for craft cold brew coffee, cocktails and beer. Live music from DJ bPollen. 8:30-11pm. No Cover.
Catch Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears on Fri., Oct. 11 at Volcanic Theatre Pub.
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.
Submitting an event is free and easy. Add your event to our calendar at bendsource.com/submitevent
LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
Submitted
Lava Lanes Karaoke Night Come sing with us! 8pm-Midnight. No cover.
Wednesday night! 8pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern The Blondeau Band A southern
Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill Texas Hold
rock band with a tendency to wander as they rock out. 9-11:59pm. No Cover.
‘em Poker Join us for Poker Night upstairs at The Saloon! First hand dealt at 7pm, so grab a seat early! 7pm. $20 buy in.
Midtown Ballroom Clutch, Red Fang,
The Capitol Sundodger/Leadbetter Band
Mos Generator 8pm.
Caitlin Jemma Open studio party at the new Mud Lake Studios! Featuring new works and installation art by Kaycee Anseth and music by the lovely Caitlin Jemma. 7-10pm. Free.
The Lot Wednesday Open Mic Night Come
Nativity Lutheran Church Central Oregon
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.
Mastersingers: Let My Love Be Heard A varied feast for lovers of great choral music will be served up at “Let My Love Be Heard,” the annual fall concert by the Central Oregon Mastersingers. The event will mark the ensemble’s opening concert of the 2019-2020 season. 7:30-9pm. $20.
Tower Theatre - OR Los Lonely Boys “Los Lonely Boys are an American Chicano rock power trio from San Angelo, Texas. They play a style of music they call “Texican Rock n’ Roll." 7:30pm.
Niblick and Greenes at Eagle Crest
Heller Highwater Trio Heller Highwater Trio singing and playing all your favorite songs. Great vocal harmonies and guitars. Come eat, drink, and be entertained. 7-10pm. No Cover.
Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House Kurt Silva
Kurt’s early musical influences were the some of Country Music’s pioneers.. He picked up his dad’s old guitar, which he still plays, when he was 12 and has been hooked ever since. 6:30pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill FunBobby Classic rock, pop and 80s dance music. 8:30pm. $3.
River’s Place The Ballybogs We will celebrate being halfway to St. Paddy’s Day with some great Irish music. Cozy up inside the taphouse with a creamy stout and dream of spring. 6-8pm. Free.
Seven Nightclub This weekend with UltraDJGirl Comedy early Fridays from Bend Comedy, doors at 7pm. Featuring Open Format Dance music with a fun party vibe. VIP and bottles available. Contact: 541-760-9412 or email: sevenbend@gmail.com 9pm-2am.
Tumalo Feed Co. Steak House Freddie
Gateley The Tumalo local known as Freddie Gateley is a multi-instrumentalist and vocalist who has been performing his music since age 11. Though rooted in bluegrass and americana, his music also spans rock, jazz, and blues. 7pm.
Velvet Brian Stumpf Brian performs his
original music on acoustic guitar with an array of covers ranging from jazz standards to country sing-alongs. 8-10pm. No Cover.
Vic’s Bar & Grill HWY 97 Classic Rock! 8-11pm. No cover.
13 Sunday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
The Domino Room Tubby Love &
Amber Lily All Ages. Tubby Love’s physical, spiritual, and musical transformation has been a testimony to the power of human evolution. 8-11:45pm. $12.
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.
Nativity Lutheran Church Central Oregon Mastersingers: Let My Love Be Heard A varied feast for lovers of great choral music will be served up at the annual fall concert 3-4:30pm. $20. Porter Brewing Co. Comedy at Porter Come catch some of Central Oregon’s favorite comics at Porter Brewing Co.! Featuring: Johnny Alfredo, Steve Harber, Dillon Kolar, and Conner Satterfield. Hosted by Katy Ipock. 18+. 6-8pm. $7. River’s Place Sunday Funday Trivia + Happy Hour Come by to enjoy Happy Hour and play at River’s Place Taproom and Food Cart Yard. 4-6pm. Free to play.
Tubby Love comes to the Domino Room on Sun., Oct. 13.
Sisters Saloon Sisters Saloon Open Mic
Night Open Mic at Sisters Saloon hosted by Bend musician, Victor Johnson. Covers and originals, all ages welcome. . Free.
Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill Paul
Eddy Bedell Artist and local troubadour fills your cup with memories and forgotten gems. Every other Sunday, 3-5pm. No cover.
14 Monday The Astro Lounge Open Mic hosted by The
Harris Blake Band Chase Elliot hosts open mic. Come hang out with some of the best local artists in Bend. Sign up at 7pm. This is a great opportunity to showcase what you got! 8-11:59pm. No cover.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
On Tap The Bluegrass Collective A weekly
gathering of local bluegrass musicians, sharing their passion for bluegrass with those in attendance. 6-8pm. No cover.
The Lot Bingo For a Cause Ah, bingo...the dot
blotters, the anticipation of yelling out and the opportunity to support local non-profits in a fun and interactive way. 50/50 split each round between the bingo winner and the rotating local non-profit organizations. 6-8pm. No cover.
15 Tuesday The Astro Lounge Tuesday Trivia Priz-
es, drink specials and a mental challenge. 8-10pm. Free.
Cabin 22 Tequila Taco Tunes-Day West Side
Open Mic Night collects local musical talent, paired with $6 House Altos Margaritas & Famous Pork Verde Tacos and Hosted by Bend’s beloved Eric Leadbetter. . No cover.
Craft Kitchen and Brewery Comedy Open
Mic Come watch local comics work on new material and people try stand up comedy for the first time. Sign up at 7:30. Starts at 8pm. 7:30-10pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern Dinirium: Acoustic Metal
Featuring Danny Shaw This local metal band is a mighty mix of influences like Tool, Pantera and Megadeth. 9pm. No Cover.
The Platypus Pub Tuesday Night Trivia (and a board game?) Join Quizhead Games for one of the best trivia nights in town. Probably. 8-10pm. Free.
The Commons Cafe Storytellers Open Mic We have poets, storytellers, 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.
16 Wednesday The Astro Lounge Bingo w/ Janney to
benefit Oregon Wild Every Wednesday! Winners take home half the pot, the rest goes to Oregon Wild! 6-8pm. $1-5 per game.
17 Thursday 7th Street Brew House Bow Wow Bingo
Join us for bingo benefiting BrightSide Animal Center! Cards are $1 each for the first 2 games (or 6 for $5) and $2 each for the last 2 games (or 6 for $10). 6-8pm. No cover.; Benefitting the BrightSide Animal Center in Redmond. 6:30pm.
The Astro Lounge Rockin’ Robin Karaoke Sing your favorites on a rockin’ good system, every Thursday! 9pm-1am. No cover.
AVID Cider Co. Taproom Trivia Night Trivia categories change weekly. Gather your friends and come up with your best team name for a chance to win AVID swag! Every other Thursday, 6-7:30pm. Free.
Bend Senior Center Alley Cats Dance Band This 12-piece Jazz dance band plays popular early and recent songs for your dancing pleasure. 1-2pm. Free. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Come on down
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
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your go-to karaoke tune? 9pm.
Cabin 22 Locals Night w/ UKB Trivia It’s fun and
free to play! Enjoy Central Oregon pint specials! 7pm.
and sing your favorite tune! 9pm-1am.
go-to karaoke tune? 9pm.
Immersion Brewing Geeks Who Drink Pub
Trivia Win fun prizes and challenge your friends on obscure knowledge while enjoying craft beer and delicious food. 6-8pm. No cover.
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Rockin’ Robin
Humm Kombucha Taproom She’s With Me Live music, happy hour drinks, ping pong, and awesome food from Manzanita Grill food truck! 6-7pm. Free. Niblick and Greenes at Eagle Crest
Karaoke Rockin’ Robin takes our stage, running Bend’s #1 karaoke show. 7-11pm. No cover.
Lindy Gravelle Country-rooted singer, songwriter and pianist performs originals and covers. 5:30-8:30pm. No Cover.
Level State Beerhouse Bend Comedy Pub
Northside Bar & Grill Eric Leadbetter Band
Trivia Bend Comedy brings lively pub trivia to Level State Beerhouse! Free to play, prizes to win and all ages until 9pm! Assemble a team or go at it alone. 7pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern Wed Night Open Mic Bring your
instruments and your friends, or just come by and support the local music scene. Goes to Last Call or last musician. 21 and over. 6pm. No cover.
Domino Room Zach Nugent Band w/ Cosmic Evolution After touring with brilliant minds such as Melvin Seals and Jerry Garcia Band, Zach Nugent has become known as a sought after shredder. 21+. 8pm-2am. $15.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Acoustic Jam Night with Scott Fox Scott Fox hosts our Tuesday Night Acoustic Jam night. 7:30-9:30pm. No cover.
River’s Place Bingo! Have fun, win cash priz-
Come sing your heart out every Wednesday night at Maverick’s! 9pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic Join us for open mic every Wednesday. 6pm.
es and support a local non-profit organization. 6-8pm. Cards $1-$5.
Classic Rock, Hard Rock and Alternative 7:30pm. No cover.
River’s Place Drift Drift plays original music... melodic, moody, dreamlike and haunting. Lyricist Mark Quon fronts the band on guitar and vocals. Terence Neal plays guitar and harmonizes with John Allen on bass. 6-8pm. Free.
Seven Nightclub Bend Comedy Open Mic
All performance types are welcome! Each performer will have 5 minutes. Signup by 7:20pm. Ages 21+ 7pm.
The Lot Appaloosa This local Americana band plays new folk and old country music in a rootsy, raw and authentic configuration. Their unique blend of melody and easy harmonies gives this bands lyrics an interesting, fun and toe-tappin’ vibe. 6-8pm. No cover.
19 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Sundodger’s Fall Tour stops in Bend where the Seattle band will be performing songs from their latest LP “Bigger Waves” as well as new tracks from their upcoming album. Joining will be Bend’s Leadbetter Band. 8pm. $10.
Mud Lake Studios New Studio Party with
Red House Concerts Red House Concerts presents Corinne Sharlet Portland based Bend native Corinne Sharlet’s unique style of Americana whisks the listener away to a sonic world brimming with Eastern European-flavored musicality. Accompanied by local dobro phenom, Benji Nagel. 6-9pm. $20 suggested donation.
Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke Every
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Your One Stop Adult Fun Shop! ONLINE SHOPPING NOW AVAILABLE! visit www.prettypussycat.com 1341 NE 3rd Street, Bend 541-317-3566
EVENTS
CALENDAR MUSIC Accordion Club of Central Oregon Meeting This small and welcoming group is a
Dec. 17, 5:30-7pm. Sisters Art Works, 204 West Adams, Sisters. Contact: 541-633-6025. dawnsong03@gmail.com. $10-$20 | No one turned away for lack of funds.
Piano Recital by Stephen Lewis Pianist
Banjo Jam Ragtime, swing, country, folk
Public (ROCK) Choir Singing for the rest
and bluegrass. Third Thursday of every month, 5:30-7:30pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. Contact: Leroy: 541-604-6564.
Bella Acappella Harmony Chorus
Award-winning Bella Acappella seeks women and girls who love to sing and harmonize. Bella teaches and performs four-part acappella harmony and welcomes singers with high and low voices, all levels, ages 15 and above. Meet upstairs in the Great Room. Tuesdays, 6:309pm. Aspen Ridge Retirement, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend. Contact: 541-728-9392. bellaacappellasai@gmail.com. $35/membership.
of us! Come sing your face off with our live rock band. No experience needed - we lead you through the whole night of Rock/Pop favorites - no hymns. Mondays, 6-8pm. Through June 9. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Bend. Contact: 541-728-3798. singbend@gmail.com. $0 to $16 range w/memberships.
Radical Songbook This is a radio show
featuring Songs of solidarity, rebellion and social significance, plus conversations of social significance with Central Oregon activists. Contact: Michael Funke, funkeredfinn24@gmail. com, with song requests. Fridays, 10am-Noon. KPOV, 501 NW Bond St., Bend. Free.
Ready? Set... Sing! The Harmoneers are
Community Orchestra of Central Oregon Rehearsals COCO welcomes all
Sis, This Island Earth, & Night Heron
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 takes to 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.
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.
Pipe Band is looking for experienced players to join and perform with the group. We are a volunteer not-for-profit society dedicated to the preservation, performance, and enjoyment of Scottish style bagpipes and drums in Central Oregon. If you are interested in joining please contact us. Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Through Dec. 30. Abilitree, 2680 Twin Knolls Dr., Bend. Contact: info@deschutescaledonian.org.
High Desert Harmoneers Local Chorus of
25 years looking to expand. Four part Acapella Barbershop Harmony for men and women. Talented director, lots of fun, and help in improving the quality of your voice. Reading music is not a requirement as we have learning CD’s available. Thursdays, 6:30-9pm. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE 9th., Bend. Contact: 541-241-4315. Free.
This Island Earth is celebrating Oregon Spirit’s 10 year anniversary with their last Bend show of the year along with Oakland based Sis, and Portland’s Night Heron! Oct. 9, 7-10pm. Oregon Spirit Distillers, 740 NE First St., Bend. Contact: contact@thisislandearthisalive.com. No cover.
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.
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: 541760-3204. DjembeDave@yahoo.com. $15/class.
Bachata Turn Patterns Taken Bachata
Level 1 or have a good understanding of the basics? 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: 541-325-6676. info@LatinDanceBend.com. $12/class, $40/4-Class package, $65/monthly unlimited.
Beginning Cuban Salsa Learn to dance Cuban style salsa! On the Drake Park stage. Moves are taught in a “rueda” (wheel), called Rueda de Casino. Learn fun steps that can be danced solo, with one partner, or within a circle. No partner necessary. Wednesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend. Contact: 541-325-6676. info@LatinDanceBend.com. Free. Beginning WCS lesson & Dance Beginning west coast swing lesson, followed by a dance. Fridays, 7pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541401-1635. Cooperdancecompany@gmail.com. $10/lesson, $5/dance.
at Volcanic Theatre Pub
BRIAN O’DELL BAND at The Belfry
Bend Ecstatic Dance Dance your own dance
in your own way in a supportive community of kindred spirits. Come explore free form movement, connection, and self-expression, guided by rich, diverse soundscapes. Visit: BendEcstaticDance.com or FB Bend Ecstatic Dance. Tuesdays, 7pm. Bend Masonic Center, 1036 NE Eighth St., Bend. $10-12 sliding scale.
Bend Your Wrist – Vogue Dance Workshop This workshop series is an
introduction to the art of vogue. From education points, learning the elements of vogue, building confidence and ultimately presenting it in a form of unimaginable expression, you will become one with what it means to “feel it!” Sundays, 1-3pm. Through Nov. 10. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 443-413-0271. info@outcentraloregon.com. $10. Submitted
TUBBY LOVE & AMBER LILY
W/STACIE DREAD & MYSTIC at The Domino Room
OCT 17
Open Hub Singing When we sing together we practice courage, trust, listening and feeling. We give ourselves healthy oxytocin and endorphins. Open Hub is non-audition, aural tradition singing group. All voices welcome. Our music is modern, accessible and beautiful. Mondays, 6:458:30pm. Through Dec. 16. Heritage Hall, 230 NE 9th Street, Bend. Contact: 541-633-6025. openhubsinging@gmail.com. $12/drop in, First time free. Oct. 12, 3-4:30pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St., La Pine. Contact: 541-312-1063. paigef@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
THE NIGHT LIGHT SHOW
Open Hub Singing in Sisters At Open
Hub Singing we believe singing is our birthright and a vital “technology of belonging.” We are a non-audition learn-by-ear community singing group. All voices are wanted! Shower belters and sink-hummers alike. Our songs are relevant, beautiful and accessible. Find examples at openhubsinging.com/song-library Tue, Oct. 15, 5:30-7pm, Tue, Nov. 5, 5:30-7pm, Tue, Nov. 19, 5:30-7pm, Tue, Dec. 3, 5:30-7pm and Tue,
BLACK JOE LEWIS & THE HONEYBEARS
OCT 13
The Deschutes Caledonian Pipe Band Practice The Deschutes Caledonian
offering free singing lessons to the public. Open to man, women and kids of high school age or older. It will be a five week session meeting on thursdays. Music and learning CD’s will be provided. Come and join in camaraderie, while learning to sing! Thursdays, 7-8:30pm. Through Oct. 10. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-4256. highdesertharmoneers@gmail.com. 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 (recommended after 4 weeks of fundamentals). Wednesdays, 6:30-7:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. Contact: 907-299-4199. admin@centraloregontango.com. $5/class.
OCT 12
Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice A traditional bagpipe and drum band with
B E N D T I C K.C OEMT
at Lululemon
Stephen Lewis will perform solo on Fri., Oct. 11 at COCC.
LOCAL TICKETING POWER
21 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Stephen Lewis will present a solo piano recital. Music of Chopin, Scriabin, Brahms and Mozart. Presented by OMTA and COCC Fine Arts/Communication Department. Oct. 11, 7:30-9:30pm. Wille Hall, Coats Campus Center, COCC Bend Campus, Bend, Bend. Contact: 408-206-2714. jstrekkie@gmail.com. Free.
Adult Intermediate Level 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.
OCT 11
fun place to play your accordion or listen to accordion music. We play music ranging from jam book favorites to popular, classic and seasonal pieces. Optional performance opportunities. All playing levels welcomed. Visit fisarmonicats. wordpress.com for more info. Second Saturday of every month, 10am-Noon. Aspen Ridge Retirement, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend. Free.
DANCE
GOOD DAY CAFE SERVING BREAKFAST & LUNCH TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 8AM - 3PM 143 E. HOOD AVE. SISTERS, OR 541-904-4051
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
22
BEDOUIN JOIN US ON THE DECK
OCTOBER 11,12 & 13 10 AM TO 5 PM
$25 JEANS AND UP TO 75% OFF SELECT ITEMS 143 E HOOD AVE - SISTERS
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INSIDE INSIDE INSIDE
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FREE INDOOR BLOCK PARTY. KID FRIENDLY.
CONNECTING PEOPLE TO PLACE BY CONDENSING THE BEND CENTRAL DISTRICT INTO BITE-SIZED PIECES FOR ONE SPECIAL NIGHT. A CHANCE TO REIMAGINE THE BCD AS A PLACE THAT PROMOTES PEOPLE’S HEALTH, HAPPINESS, AND WELL-BEING OVER BEER, CRAFT COCKTAILS, FOOD, GAMES, AND INTERACTIVE DISPLAYS.
METAL ARTS SHOW
FINE JEWELRY, CRAFT JEWELRY, SCULPTURE, HAND FORGED STEEL AND COPPER 29 LOCAL ARTISTS
OCTOBER 19-20, 2019
GENEROUS SPONSORS HOSTED BY THE VISIONARY BOARD
COMAG - LIBERTY
DOORS OPEN SATURDAY AT 11:00 TO 9:00 SUNDAY 10:00 TO 6:00 FREE ADMISSION THERE WILL BE TWO $100 DOOR PRIZE GIFT CERTIFICATES FOR ARTIST OF YOUR CHOICE
WWW.BCDINITIATIVE.ORG
849 N.W. WALL STREET
EVENTS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT Unsplash
East Coast Swing Valerie will show you everything you need to know for this fun, ballroom style of swing. No partner required. Wednesdays, 6-7pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-401-1635. Cooperdancecompany@gmail.com. $10/class, $40/month.
sional will be available to help answer questions if needed. Oct. 16, 5:30-8:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-1032. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
Intro to Latin Dance - Level 1 In this beginner level class you will learn salsa & bachata basics and simple turns while also paying attention to partner connection through lead and follow technic. 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.
In Marrow Northwest Trading Post hosts an art installation and community ancestor altar for the month of October. The “In Marrow” collage series by Kaycee Anseth will be on display, and the artist invites the public to participate in creating a space of reflection and connection in harvest time. Oct. 5-31, 10am-5pm. The Northwest Trading Post, 50 se scott st., suite #5, Bend. Contact: kaycee.anseth@gmail.com. Free.
Intro to Temple Tribal Fusion® TTF®
seamlessly fuses modern Tribal Belly Dance with traditional Sacred Dances, resulting with alluring and mystical storytelling…a modern genre of Temple Dance with strong yoga & fitness foundation. www.templetribalfusion.com/dance-empower-bend Mondays. Through Nov. 15. Seksé Fit, 550 SW Industrial Way. Suit 154, Bend. see website for prices.
Level 1 West Coast Swing For this class,
you should know the 4 basic patterns of west coast swing. We will go over more patterns and techniques in level 1. Thursdays, 6:30-7:30pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-401-1635. Cooperdancecompany@gmail.com. $12/class, $40/month.
Level 2 West Coast Swing This class goes over concepts of west coast swing as well as a few more patterns. Really dive into what west coast swing is while learning core concepts. Contact Jenny Cooper for questions, 541-4011635. Thursdays, 7:30-8:30pm. The Space, 2570 NE Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 110, Bend. Contact: 541-401-1635. $30/month.
Odissi Indian Classical Dance Synergize your Body-Mind-Energy & Develop your Strength-Agility-Grace. Odissi is highly sensual,fluid, strong and detailed. We unite Feminine and Masculine Principles within our bodies. For details & prices: www.templetribalfusion.com/ odissi-dance-bend Fridays. Through Nov. 15. Seksé Fit, 550 SW Industrial Way. Suit 154, Bend. Salsa Turn Patterns Taken Salsa Level 1
or have a good understanding of the basics? 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: 541-325-6676. 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.
Community Learning Workshop: BendFilm Deep Dive This workshop discusses four independent films featured in the BendFilm festival, led by Tony Russell, associate professor of English at Central Oregon Community College. Various times, Oct. 10 through Oct. 13. Oct. 10-13. OSU-Cascades Campus, 1500 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-706-2101. Most workshops are $79 plus a $35 application fee.
David Suzuki on Climate: The Future Trajectory Canadian environmentalist David
Suzuki talks climate, capitalism, curbing growth, where we’re headed as a species. Life creates the things we need to survive; our responsibility is to protect those things—the foundation of the way we live. Oct. 16, 6:458:15pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-316-1191. juniper.group@oregon.sierraclub.org. Free.
Second Sunday Movie Night Each month a feature film with a spiritual theme will be shown. Popcorn provided, conversation about the film afterward. 1/13 - “Amazing Grace” (2006). Second Sunday of every month, 6pm. St. Helen’s Hall Trinity Episcopal, 231 NW Idaho St., Bend. Free.
There is No “Planet B”: Tracking Earth’s Changing Climate from Space
Fleets of NASA satellites capture images and data about Earth’s ocean, land and atmosphere. But can humans act on the powerful information we learn from them? Join oceanographer, educator and former NASA science administrator Michael Freilich to learn about the spaceborne tools that monitor our planet and what they tell us about our changing planet. Oct. 14, 6:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. $7.50, students free.
Square Dance Lessons Learn to square
ARTS / CRAFTS
FILM EVENTS
Acrylic Pour and Sip Come join us for guided instruction to create your own acrylic pour masterpiece that you can take home. Sip wine as you create! Canvas, paint, aprons and guided instruction provided. Saturdays, 6-8pm. Scott Dyer Fine Art, 2974 NE Waller Drive, Bend. Contact: 714-869-6780. scotthdyer@yahoo.com. $30.
dance with the Bachelor Beauts Square Dance Club! Thursdays-Sundays, 6-8pm. Pine Forest Grange Hall, 63214 Boyd Acres Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-382-7014. dance@bachelorbeauts.org. $5/first class, $75/15 additional lessons.
16th Annual BendFilm Festival Desig-
nated as one of the “Top 25 Coolest Film Festivals in the World,” the 16th Annual BendFilm Festival is happening! 70 films, 30 musical acts and parties every night! Special guests include: Ron Shelton, Alan Hunter, Cheryl Strayed, Shawn Levy, Dan Egan and many more! Find film schedule & guide on bendfilm.org. Thu, Oct. 10, Noon-10pm, Fri, Oct. 11, 10am-11pm, Sat, Oct. 12, 10am-11pm and Sun, Oct. 13, 10:30am-9pm. Various Locations, See event website for venue details, Central Oregon. Contact: info@bendfilm.org. Film tickets: $5-$12.
BendFilm Festival Thu, Oct. 10, 5:30-
8:30pm, Fri, Oct. 11, 10am-10:30pm, Sat, Oct. 12, 10am-9:45pm and Sun, Oct. 13, 10:30am7:45pm. Various Locations - Bend, Bend, Bend.
Learn How To Do Acrylic Pour Painting! Paint, Canvas, Apron, and Guided Instruc-
Learn to Knit at Fancywork Yarn Shop, Thu. 5:30-7pm.
Acrylic Pour Painting Class Acrylic Pour Painting Class Paint, Canvas, Apron, and Guided Instruction included to help you create your masterpiece. Great for Kids Birthdays and Company Team Building Events. Fun for all ages. Call Scott 714-869-6780 to book your reservation. Scott Dyer Fine Art. visit scottdyerart.com to see examples. Fridays, 4-5:30pm. Michael’s Arts and Crafts, 63485 N Hwy 97, Bend, OR 97701, Bend. Contact: 714-869-6780. scotthdyer@yahoo.com. $30. 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.
Central Oregon Pinners & Weavers Guild Annual fiber exhibit of handspun and handwoven items. Demonstrations on Oct. 12. Tuesdays-Saturdays, 10am-6pm. Through Oct. 29. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. Contact: 541-388-4773. douville@bendbroadband.com. Free.
DIY Date Night - Weld Together Learn
more about classes at the DIYcave by visiting our website. Use code TS Weekly to save 10% off. Fri, Sept. 13, 5:30pm, Fri, Sept. 27, 5:30pm, Fri, Oct. 11, 5:30pm and Fri, Oct. 25, 5:30pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $55.
DIY Intro to Soldering Rings Learn more about classes at the DIYcave by visiting our website. Use code TS Weekly to save 10% off. Fri, Sept. 6, 6pm, Thu, Oct. 10, 6pm and Wed, Nov. 6, 6pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $65. DIY Kids Welding Learn more about classes
at the DIYcave by visiting our website. Use code TS Weekly to save 10% off. Thu, Sept. 26, 4:30pm and Thu, Oct. 17, 4:30pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $50.
DIY Metal Forge Basics Learn more about
classes at the DIYcave by visiting our website. Use code TS Weekly to save 10% off. Tue, Sept. 10, 5:30pm, Tue, Oct. 15, 5:30pm and Tue, Nov. 12, 5:30pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $99.
DIY Open Forge Learn more about classes at the DIYcave by visiting our website. Use code TS Weekly to save 10% off. Sun, Sept. 8, Noon-Sun, Sept. 22, Noon-Sun, Oct. 13, Noon-Sun, Oct. 27, Noon and Sun, Nov. 10, Noon. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $20. DIY Sheet Metal Art Learn more about classes at the DIYcave by visiting our website. Use code TS Weekly to save 10% off. Tue, Sept. 10, 5:30pm, Tue, Sept. 24, 5:30pm, Tue, Oct. 15, 5:30pm, Tue, Oct. 29, 5:30pm and Tue, Nov. 12, 5:30pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $60. DIY Welding Workshop Learn more about
classes at the DIYcave by visiting our website. Use code TS Weekly to save 10% off. Wednesdays, 5:30pm. Through Nov. 20. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $60.
DIY Wood Lathe Pen Turning Learn more about classes at the DIYcave by visiting our website. Use code TS Weekly to save 10% off. Sun, Sept. 15, Noon-Sat, Oct. 12, Noon and Sat, Nov. 9, Noon. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. $55. The Downtown Sewing Study Bring your
fresh or unfinished project to work alongside others at DPL’s monthly sewing circle A skilled profes-
tion included to help you create your masterpiece. Great for Kid’s Birthdays and Company Team Building Events. Fun for all ages. Call Scott 714-869-6780 to book your reservation. Scott Dyer Fine Art. visit scottdyerart.com to see examples. Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. Hobby Lobby, 3188 N Hwy 97, Bend. Contact: 714-869-6780. scotthdyer@yahoo.com. $30.
Learn to Knit Get started on the path to creating your own treasured handknits! This class will give you a solid foundation of the fundamentals of knitting. Topics include casting on & binding off, knit and purl stitches, reading simple patterns, fixing mistakes and more! Never-before knitters and those needing a refresher welcome. Thursdays, 5:30-7pm. Fancywork Yarn Shop, 200 NE Greenwood Avenue, Suite 2, Bend. Contact: 541-323-8686. hello@fancywork.com. $5. Plein Air Approach with David Kinker
Improve your creative outcomes by learning to approach painting as a process. All mediums are welcome. Lecture, acrylic painting demonstration, and hands on individual instruction. Thursdays, 8:30am-Noon and 6-8:30pm. Through Oct. 31. Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend. $35/class. (Non-SageBrushers members add $5/class.).
Sagebrushers Art Society All Media Showing Bend Senior Center is showing art
by the 100+ members of the SageBrushers Art Society. Come visit the new Senior Center and enjoy beautiful paintings in acrylic, oil and watercolor, as well as outstanding photography. Showing through October 24. Fridays, 7:30am-4pm, Saturdays, 9am-3pm and Mondays-Thursdays-Saturdays, 7:30am-7pm. Through Oct. 24. Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road, Bend. Free.
SageBrushers Art Society present Watercolor “Personal Favorites / Personal Best” SageBrushers Art Society
presents “Personal Favorites/Personal Best Watercolor at SageBrushers”. Come and enjoy the featured selections of the society’s watercolor artists. Wednesdays-Fridays-Saturdays, 1-4pm. Through Oct. 31. Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend. Free.
Sagebrushes Art Society presents Kendra West and Bette Butler The Wine Shop is showing the work of SageBrushers Art Society members Kendra West and Bette Butler. Both artists will be showing works in watercolor, including glowing landscapes and still life. Mondays-Saturdays, 5-7pm. Through Nov. 30. The Wine Shop & Tasting Bar, 55 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. Free.
School House Produce Art Schoolhouse Produce is showing the work of Bend artist Kathleen Kaye during October. Kathleen’s luminous watercolor landscapes, inspired by a love of the natural world, form a perfect backdrop for fall’s garden bounty. Oct. 4-31, 9am-6pm. School House Produce, 1430 SW Highland Avenue, Redmond. Contact: 541-504-7112. Free.
23 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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.
EVENTS Second Saturday Art Reception Come
enjoy light appetizers and a glass of wine or beer while viewing the creations of some of Centrals Oregon’s most talented artists, many of whom will be on hand. Second Saturday of every month, 4-6pm. Through Dec. 16. Artists’ Gallery Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Dr. Suite 19, Sunriver. Contact: 541-593-4382. sunriversister@yahoo.com. Free.
Watercolor Wednesday with Jennifer Ware-Kempcke Demos, videos and instruc-
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
24
NOW OFFERING
GROUP CLASSES
tion. Bring your own subject photographs and supplies. For more information contact Jennifer at jenniferware@rocketmail.com Wednesdays, 10amNoon Through Oct. 30. Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend. Contact: jenniferware@rocketmail.com. $10 for non-members.
Wise Women Emerging Workshop Women gather to explore, create & share soul wisdom via mixed media collage journaling. All supplies provided. Second Saturday of every month, 1-5pm. Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend. Contact: 541/610/2677. swany139@hotmail.com. $10-$20, plus $12 for journal.
CORE45
This 45-minute core intensive Private Group Class utilizes primarily the Terra-core™️ to ignite and strengthen your core while delivering a full body workout at the same time! This class is semi-private, personalized and instructed by a Certified Personal Trainer so all fitness levels are welcome! Monday’s 8:30am - 9:15am Wednesday’s 9:15am - 10:30am
SCOTT’S CLASSES: (45 MIN)
PTSD (Progressive
Training Simply Done)
Range of motion, building power/strength; curve adaptation and longevity. Full body workout with emphasis on glutes, core and cardio. Friday at 6:30 AM
Mind Muscle Connect Slash your workout times; double your gains! Turn on your fat burning harmonies and build muscle! Emphasize posture; strength; glutes; core and balance. Full body w/ stretch. Wednesdays 12PM – 30 mins
JULIA’S CLASSES (45 MINS)
PiYo – Pilates/Yoga
PiYo LIVE is designed to build strength and improve flexibility using only your body weight. You’ll perform a series of yoga and pilates inspired moves that work every muscle without putting unnecessary stress on your
joints. These dynamic, flowing sequences, set to fun, energizing music, will get your heart pumping and your muscles burning! Tuesday/Thursdays @ 8:30
TurboKick –
The ultimate cardio-kickboxing experience, Turbo Kick LIVE is perfect for both beginner and experienced fitness enthusiasts! This workout combines cardio kickboxing with body-sculpting HIIT moves choreographed to the hottest music mixes. Feel unstoppable in the class that’s high-energy and super addicting! Ready to become a total knockout? Tuesday/Thursdays @ 9:30
JOSIAH’S CLASSES (45 MINS):
“Live, love, lift”:
Start you day off with a win! This class is a combination of strength and Cardio with a little bit of mobility sprinkled throughout. Learn the fundamentals of movement, get your heart rate up and boost your fat burning potential for the rest of the day all while having a blast with your fellow early risers. Tuesdays/Thursday @ 7AM
“Functional brunch”: Whether you’re a bit of a late riser or you just dropped the little ones off at school, this is the perfect opportunity for you to do something for yourself! This class will be a fun mix of different types of functional movements great for any range of athlete. Always expect to see something new and be ready to challenge yourself because this class will be everything but boring. Monday/Wednesday @10:45AM
2900 NW CLEARWATER DRIVE, STE 102
STEELEBODIESBEND.COM CELL 321-945-3419
in American culture. Oct. 12, Noon-1pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 541-312-1032. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
Know Horror: The Allure of Terror Community Librarian Chandra van Eijnsbergen delves into our love of horror. Join us for a talk about the meaning and importance of horror books and come away with a list of terrifyingly wonderful books to read. Oct. 16, Noon-1pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 541-312-1063. paigef@deschuteslibrary.org. Free. Out of Hiding Art Exhibit Sarah Root’s unique large-scale drawings of animals were created using only colored pencil. These drawings were inspired by the artist’s work with children with learning differences and the power of the natural world. Mondays-Fridays. Through Nov. 30. LivBend Realestate, Bend Magazine, 974 Riversdie Blvd., Bend. Contact: sarahdroot@gmail.com. Free. Remodeling Workshops Join us for a
PRESENTATIONS & EXHIBITS
morning of design inspiration! Learn how you can improve the functionality of your home with smart design and elegant details. Event hosted by Chad Terry. Oct. 12, 10am. Neil Kelly, 190 NE Irving Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-382-7580. Free.
‘The Shack’ Author Wm. Paul Young Talk Wm. Paul Young, Christian writer, speaker,
Second Saturday at WAAAM Air and Auto Museum Watch airplane operations up
and author of the ‘The Shack,’ is popular inspirational speaker, who considers himself to be a simple man of faith. Young will share some of his life experiences. Oct. 12, 1-3pm. Sunriver Christian Fellowship, 18143 Cottonwood Road, Sunriver. Contact: 800-838-3006. sunrivercf@ gmail.com. $25, plus fees..
close and explore the museum’s antique airplane and car collection. Activities 10am-2pm, lunch 11am-1pm. Free parking. Second Saturday of every month, 9am-5pm. Through Jan. 11. Western Antique Aeroplane and Automobile Museum, 1600 Air Museum Rd., Hood River. Contact: 541-308-1600. info@waaamuseum.org. $16/adults, $7/kids.
2019 Trauma Informed Care in Oregon Statewide Conference Come together
Star Dome Planetarium Show & Night Sky Viewing Enjoy a guided tour of space in
with individuals, families, youth, providers and communities to learn more about the trauma informed care movement throughout the state. Oct. 16, 9am and 12:15pm. Twisted River Tavern, 17600 Center Drive, Sunriver. Free-$365.
DANI’S CLASSES: (45 MIN)
Know Horror - Origins and Cultural Significance of Vampires Explore vampire folklore
“Confronting Racism” Panel Discussion and Presentation Examine recent
white nationalist incidents and the impact of these incidents on local students. Refreshments provided by Kebaba. Sponsored by the COCC Jewish Students Club. Oct. 16, 3-5pm. COCC Campus Center - Wille Hall, 2600 College Way, Bend. Contact: 541-383-7561. Free.
“I Am Not Your Negro,” film Central Oregon Community College Afrocentric Club will be holding a screening. Oct. 9, 5-7:30pm. COCC Campus Center - Wille Hall, 2600 College Way, Bend. Contact: 541-383-7561. Free. Bend Venture Conference The 2019 Bend Venture Conference will feature three competition categories: Early Stage, Growth Stage, and Impact with finalists selected in each category. Oct. 17, 4 and 8am and Oct. 18, 4 and 8am. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. $135-$329. Community Learning Workshop: Fundamentals of Leadership Led by Rod Ray, lead-
ership consultant and former chief executive of Bend Research, this course explores the importance of vision and values in leadership practices. Wednesdays, 5:30-7:45pm. Through Nov. 6. OSU-Cascades Campus, 1500 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-706-2101. Most workshops are $79 plus a $35 application fee.
Know Horror - Murder as History
Author and criminal historian JD Chandler will discuss the study of murder and history. Emphasize the historic role of murder in Oregon’s past. Oct. 14, Noon-1pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-3121032. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
Know Horror - Oregon Ghost Stories Hear stories of Oregon’s most haunted
places. ASL interpreting provided. Join Historian and Paranormal Investigator Rocky Smith for a presentation of history, folklore and the paranormal. Rocky will share some unbelievable ghost stories from his years of experience investigating haunted places. Oct. 10, 7-8pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-1032. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
the Star Dome inflatable planetarium followed by night sky viewing at Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory. Sat, Sept. 14, 7:45-10pm, Sat, Sept. 21, 7:45-10pm, Sat, Sept. 28, 7:45-10pm and Sat, Oct. 12, 7:45-10pm. Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Rd., Sunriver, Sunriver. Contact: 541-593-4394. info@snco.org. $15.
THEATER Know Horror - “Evil Dead - the Musical” Sneak Peak Join us for sneak peak
of this wildly popular and darkly funny musical. “Evil Dead: the Musical” is back and packed with your favorite things including death, dismemberment, and dance numbers! Oct. 12, 4-5pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Oct. 13, 3-4pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-1032. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
Know Horror: “The Canterville Ghost” Preview at CTC Find out what happens when
an American family meets the ghost of Sir Simon in the play by Tim Kelly, directed by Molly Choate. Oct. 17, 6:30-8pm. Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541312-1032. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
Master Improviser Leads Improvisational Theater Workshop; For Fun, Stage & Life Renny Temple turns students
into improv players with techniques and tools. Register now: www.rennytemple.com for info/bio/ history/links. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 5:30-7:30pm. Through Oct. 24. COCC Bend Campus, 2600 NW College Way, Bend. Contact: 818-561-5555. rennytemple@gmail.com. $149/8 two-hour classes.
These Shining Lives Based on the true story of four women in the 1920’s, These Shining Lives follows Catherine Donohue and her coworkers in a watch factory. Thu, Oct. 10, 7:30pm, Fri, Oct. 11, 7:30pm, Sat, Oct. 12, 7:30pm and Sun, Oct. 13, 2pm. Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $25/adult, $21/seniors & students.
WORDS Classics Book Club We will discuss One of
Ours by Willa Cather. Oct. 9, 6-7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. sara@roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.
Bend Design 2019
2019 Event Guide October 23-26 benddesign.org
#BendDesign2019 #BendDesign
BEND DESIGN Welcome to the Fifth Annual Bend Design! Every October, we convene creative thinkers from a diverse range of practices and professions for talks, workshops, screenings, and problem-solving sessions. Bend Design’s intimate, welcoming atmosphere enables the leaders of tomorrow to engage with the exceptional, experienced creatives of today. Our participants make new connections, collaborate on new projects, and learn new skills. Together we explore how creative thinking and practices can lift up our lives, our communities, and the wider world. You're invited to listen, learn, and bring your knowledge to the conversation. It all happens here at Bend Design 2019.
About Scalehouse Bend Design is produced by Scalehouse, a contemporary creative center that shapes our shared future through creativity, collaboration, and conversation. We believe that our future presents complex challenges and opportunities, not just benefiting from creativity but requiring it. Throughout the year, we convene diverse thinkers for in-depth discussions, artistic expression, and hands-on collaboration. At energetic gatherings, our audiences interact directly with artists, designers, civic leaders, and cultural visionaries, working alongside them to solve pressing problems in our communities and the world at large. We are member-supported and we hope you will join us on this creative movement. www.scalehouse.org. Board Members: Sandy Anderson, Kiel Fletcher, RenĂŠ Mitchell, Martha Murray, Jenna Goldsmith, and Robert Johans.
MAIN STAGE BEND DESIGN 2019 SPEAKERS Thursday, October 24 Tower Theatre 9:00am - 5:00pm
MARTIN VENEZK Y
D E A N N A VA N B U R E N
J E SS I C A B E LL A M Y
PE TE R B U R R
Hear from innovative thinkers from a diverse
J O E L PI LG E R
TR É S E A L S
LI Z JAC K SO N
D E B B I E M I LLM A N
range of disciplines and professions, exploring the processes, practices, and impact of design thinking toward solving complex problems in
Designer / Artist / Educator
Architect / Artist / Activist
Design Researcher / Design Justice Advocate Entrepreneur
Designer / Founder / Letterman
Advocate / Designer / Disability
new ways.
Artist
Designer / Author / Educator
Main Stage Highlight: Engaging in Disability as a Creative Practice with Liz Jackson Designers are increasingly referring to disability in terms of accessibility. But accessibility is only one part of disability; it’s the need. And it is being taught at the exclusion of disability history, disability culture, and disability theory. Liz discusses the impact of engaging in disability, not as a problem to be solved, but rather as a discipline and a creative practice. This presentation teaches designers how to design WITH, rather than for disability.
SUPPORTING
C R E AT I V E SY N E R GY IN OUR COMMUNIT Y
FURNITURE
| ACCESSORIES | DESIGN SERVICES
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WORKSHOP HIGHLIGHTS Friday, October 25 8:30am - 5:00pm
Workshop Highlight: The Power of Stepping Out of Your Comfort Zone with Diane Gibbs
Break out for workshops, meet-ups,
Every creative yearns to produce great work but
film screenings, and collaborations in
often feels underutilized and under appreciated.
venues around downtown Bend. New
This workshop will reveal how thriving creative
public art funding models? Making
businesses empower mere mortals to produce
zines? Changing real people’s real
truly great creative, as well as their secrets that
lives through the built environment?
you can apply to your craft. Sponsored by:
Crash course in type design? It’s all
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here. Workshops will be located at
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Deschutes Brewery Public House,
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DoubleTree by Hilton, The Oxford Episcopal Church, and Tin Pan Theater.
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E A SY L YN E T TE X ANDE RS “H OW TO WR ITE A K I LLE R BRIEF” & “MOMENTUM” BOOKS AVA I L A B L E O N A M A Z O N O R W I L D A L C H E M Y. C O M / S H O P
WE BELIEVE IN THE POWER OF CREATIVITY To learn more about our mission or to see how we serve youth throughout Portland and Central Oregon, visit us at www.CalderaArts.org.
KITCHEN & BATH DECORATIVE PLUMBING FIXTURES
Every day, our core values are realized in our process, practice, and culture. CURIOSITY RESPONSIBILITY COURAGE Join the conversation with BBT Architects.
bbtarchitects.com
Schedule an appt today: 541-382-1999 20265 Brinson Blvd. Bend, Oregon 97701 www.thefixturegallery.com joanie@thefixturegallery.com
AND THE FUN CONTINUES
Mash Ups
Dinner Convos
The Roundhouse Foundation
Wrap Party
Thursday, October 24 5:00pm
Thursday, October 24 7:00pm
Friday, October 25 5:00 - 7:00pm
Wrap-up Day One of
Close out Day One of Bend
After a day of workshops, talks,
Bend Design with creative
Design with dinner conversations,
and films come celebrate the close
conversations, mingling, and
featuring local creative thinkers
of Bend Design at the Wrap Party.
more. Meet speakers and
providing an opportunity for
It is the place to mingle with new
like-minded design thinkers
in-depth conversations around
friends and exchange ideas. Join
while you visit design-oriented
focused topics. Hosts make
us Friday at the Oxford Hotel.
businesses in downtown Bend.
dinner reservations at local Bend
supporting creative thinking
through grantmaking and its Pine Meadow Ranch Artist Residency Program in Sisters, Oregon For more information visit www.roundhousefoundation.org
restaurants.
See benddesign.org for full schedule.
STOW_BendDesignConf_2019.pdf
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9/3/19
11:30 AM
NEW PROGRAM
Combine traditional studio arts with cutting-edge technical skills, and become a creative communicator who can move audiences. C
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OPB Radio | Saturdays, Noon | Sundays, 10 a.m.
THANK YOU To Our Sponsors & Creative Partners
Bend Design is supported in part by a grant from the Bend Cultural Tourism Fund. The Bend Cultural Tourism Fund (BCTF) is a grant program dedicated to enhancing the local economy through the promotion and cultivation of Bend’s cultural tourism programs. Grants allocated through the BCTF support art and culture based projects and programs that attract tourists to the City of Bend.
M A K ER S
Many, many, many thanks to the volunteer committee for their countless hours of dedication to bring this conference to Bend, to our incredible sponsors for their generous support, and
crah
to all of you for joining us for three days of creative inspiration, conversations, and connections.
C R E ATO R S
RenĂŠ Mitchell Martha Murray Greg Amanti Pauly Anderson Shelley Anderson Lana Bannow Joshua Berger Krystal Collins Heather Crank Ryan Diener Miguel Edwards Mardy Hickerson Shannon Hinderberger
BU I L D ER S
Kimberly Krueger Jamie Lincoln Jason Lovejoy Holly Roberson Geneva Strauss-Wise Erin Tyler
D O O D L ER S
Darlene Veenhuizen Hunter Weyand Lindsay Woods
EVENTS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT Mystery Book Club We will discuss Thir-
teenth Tale by Diane Setterfield. Oct. 16, 6-7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. sara@ roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.
Nonfiction Book Club We will discuss
Out of This World Book Club We will dis-
cuss One of Ours by Willa Cather. Oct. 9, 6-7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. sara@ roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.
Wordsmith’s Wednesday Open Mic
Hosted by Mosley WOtta, this open mic is for poets, storytellers, musicians and more. Come check out the action! Second Wednesday of every month, 6-8pm. The Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend.
Writers Writing: Quiet Writing Time at Deschutes Public Library Bring personal work, read a book, or answer emails. Enjoy the focus of a quiet space with the benefit of others’ company for motivation. Mondays, 9am-Noon. Deschutes Public Library-Downtown, 601 NW Wall Street, Bend. Contact: 541-312-1063. paigef@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.
ETC. Autumn in Central Oregon Photo Workshop Enjoy a weekend of photographing
stunning autumn landscapes in the heart of Central Oregon’s Cascades. Zack Schnepf and Christian Heeb will lead the workshop. Oct. 12, 2-8pm and Oct. 13, 6-11:30am. Cascade Center of Photography. Contact: 541-241-2266. workshops@ccophoto.com. $240.
Community Learning Workshop: Nonprofit Catalyst Led by Adam Krynicki, executive
oir-style writing, including poetry and personal essays, as well as opportunities for self-publishing with workshop leaders Jenna Goldsmith and Erin Rook. Mondays, 5:30-7:45pm. Through Oct. 14. OSU-Cascades Campus, 1500 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-706-2101. Most workshops are $79 plus a $35 application fee..
Daniel Monroe Psychic Medium “Hello From Heaven” Do you
have a loved one that you would love to connect with? Would you like to receive validation that your loved ones are still a part of your life? Daniel Monroe is an extremely gifted Psychic Medium from the Portland area with the ability to hear and see that which most cannot. Oct. 12, 7-9:30pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend. $20-$30.
Preventative Walk-In Pet Wellness Clinic The Bend Spay and Neuter Project offers
vaccinations, deworming and microchips. No appointments necessary. 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.
Science, Medicine, Economics & Technology Join us for a monthly presentation with
three of our Touchmark residents as they discuss science, medicine, economics & technology. Third Tuesday of every month, 2:30-3:30pm. Through Dec. 17. Touchmark at Mt. Bachelor Village, 19800 SW Touchmark Way, Bend. Contact: 541-383-1414. Free. Seating limited. Please RSVP to Anne Wilson..
Senior Day Visitors 65 and older are invited to enjoy the Museum for free on this day. Oct. 16, 9am-5pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-382-4754. info@highdesertmuseum.org. Free for 65+.
VOLUNTEER
director of the OSU-Cascades Innovation Co-Lab, this workshop brings a team of local nonprofit leaders and experts to share insights and practices that can be applied immediately to increase an organization’s impact. Mondays, 5:30-7:45pm. Through Oct. 21. OSU-Cascades Campus, 1500 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-706-2101. Most workshops are $79 plus a $35 application fee.
American Red Cross Disaster Action Team Members Needed American Red
Community Learning Workshop: OpenHeart, Open-Mind Communication A
Become a Big Brother or Big Sister in Redmond Looking for caring adult mentors
workshop in navigating relationships with compassion and disciplined thinking, and encouraging honest interactions in both work and personal relationships. Led by Dennis Lynn, instructor of human development and family sciences. Thursdays, 5:30-7:45pm. Through Oct. 17. OSU-Cascades Campus, 1500 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-706-2101. $79 plus a $35 application fee.
Cross Disaster Action Team Volunteers needed to respond to local disasters such as house fires, forest fires and other natural disasters here in the Cascade Region. Ongoing. volunteercentraloregon.org, 2804 SW Sixth Street, Redmond. Contact: 503-528-5624. Volunteer.cascades@redcross.org.
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.
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! Located past Cascade Lakes Distillery, call for hours and location. Contact: 916-956-2153.
Challenge Day Cascade Middle School is
looking for adult volunteers. This event is filled with interactive and energetic activities aimed to provide teens and adults an opportunity to break down walls of separation. Contact assistant principal Eric Powell with interest at 541-3557003 or at eric.powell@bend.k12.or.us Oct. 14, 8am-4pm and Oct. 15, 8am-4pm. Cascade Middle School, 19619 SW Mountaineer Way, Bend. Contact: 541-355-7003. Free.
Fences For Fido We need YOU to help
unchain dogs in Central Oregon, so come have a beer with us and learn more! Oct. 10, 6-7pm. Bend Brewing Company, 1019 NW Brooks St., Bend. Contact: 541-728-8085. megang@fencesforfido.org. Free. Sign up on Facebook: FFF Central Oregon Region Volunteers. More info can be found at fencesforfido.org. Ongoing.
Happy Hour in the Garden We’ll be working in the garden and invite you to come help. Tasks vary, depending on the season. No experience necessary, gloves and tools provided. Bring a cup and enjoy some beer or kombucha. This event is family friendly. Drop in anytime. Tuesdays. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend. Contact: denise@envirocenter.org. No cover. Herd U Needed A Home Dog Rescue
A local foster-based dog rescue group who specializes in rescuing herding 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! Awesome people to join an incredible team, whether you volunteer in the clinic, festivals or help 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 is a non-
profit that inspires and empowers positive change in youth through education, jobs and stewardship. Heart of Oregon Corps, 1291 NE Fifth St., Bend. Contact: 541-526-1380. info@heartoforegon.org.
Milkweed Planting Party We have lots of
native milkweed to put in the ground and we’d love your help. Oct. 12, 1-3:30pm. Deschutes Land Trust, 210 NW Irving Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-330-0017. rebekah@deschuteslandtrust.org. Free.
Training: Certified Ombudsman Volunteer Become a volunteer Certified Ombuds-
man. Ombudsman are advocates for your family, friends, and neighbors living in long-term care facilities. To attend the training, an application must be submitted, an interview conducted, and a criminal background check completed. Applications due before September 7, 2019. Oct. 16, 10am-3pm. Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend. Contact: 800-522-2602. volunteer.recruiter@oregon.gov. Free.
Volunteer Drivers Needed Volunteer drivers needed Mon-Fri to transport veterans to the Bend VA Clinic and Portland VA Hospital. Must have clean driving record and be able to pass VA-provided physical and screening. Contact: Paul: 541-647-2363. Volunteer with Salvation Army The
Salvation Army has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for almost every age. Ongoing. Contact: 541-389-8888.
Volunteers Needed Help with daily horse care. Duties include corral cleaning, grooming, walking horses. 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 2019 Annual Bank Executive Panel A panel of Bank Executives will share their view on traditional banking and their take on the future. Oct. 10, 8-10:30am. Bend Golf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Dr., Bend. Contact: eastcascadesrma@gmail.com. $45-$65. ACA and other Dysfunctional Families
A twelve step program where members share their experience, strength and hope about growing up in a dysfunctional family. Wednesdays, 6-8pm and Fridays, 10-11am. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. 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 If you want to
Submitted
Community Learning Workshop: Printmaking An exploration of the art of
drink, that’s your business. If you want to stop, we can help. Call Alcoholics Anonymous. Hotline: 541-548-0440. Or visit coigaa.org.
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.
printmaking with Andrew Lorish. Lessons in tool handling, carving techniques and printing practices, and an opportunity to produce original work. Wednesdays, 5:30-7:45pm. Through Oct. 16. OSU-Cascades Campus, 1500 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-706-2101. $79 plus a $35 application fee..
Bend “GO” Club Learn the ancient, abstract
strategy game of “Go” in a group setting. Call Mike for more info. Sundays, 1-4pm. Market of Choice, 115 NW Sisemore St., Bend. Contact: 541-385-9198.
Community Learning Workshop: Safe Zone Designed for professionals and volunteers
Bend Parkinson’s Support Group Monthly Meeting All are welcome to attend
who provide services to the LGBTQ community and led by Erin Rook and Jenna Goldsmith, this workshop will explore gender identity and sexual orientation and tools and strategies for supporting LGBTQ individuals. Tuesdays, 5:30-7:45pm. Through Oct. 15. OSU-Cascades Campus, 1500 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-706-2101. $79 plus a $35 application fee.
the monthly meetings. Topics include information on medications, physical therapy, anxiety, depression and Parkinson’s research. Feel free to contact Carol at: 541-668-6599 to find out more about the meetings. Third Wednesday of every month, 2-3:30pm. Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend. Contact: 541-668-6599. Free.
Community Learning Workshop: Solving Your Retirement Puzzle A workshop
addressing financial planning and budgeting in retirement, and how to invest new-found time after a career, led by retired financial advisor Oran Teater. Tuesdays, 5:30-7:45pm. Through Oct. 15. OSU-Cascades Campus, 1500 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-706-2101. Most workshops are $79 plus a $35 application fee.
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. Ongoing, 10am-5pm. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW Fifth St., Redmond. Contact: 541-504-0101. thrift@brightsideanimals.org.
Try out an Autumn Photo Workshop from Oct.12-13.
BendUbs Car Club Monthly Meet Owners of European cars are welcome to join our community. BendUbs car club members host an annual charity show n' shine, participate in car shows and sanctioned racing. Visit bendubs.com or like us on Facebook. Second Sunday of every month, 7-9pm. Cascade Lakes Lodge, 1441 SW Chandler Ave., Bend.
25 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Our Man: Richard Holbrooke and the End of the American Century by George Packer. Oct. 11, 1-2pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-3066564. sara@roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.
Community Learning Workshop: Telling Your Story An exploration of mediums for mem-
FIND DEALS HERE WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
26
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27th
Seating Times: 1:30pm & 3pm at COCC Campus Center 2600 College Way in Bend Empty Bowls is an internationally recognized event that raises awareness of hunger and food insecurity. Locally, funds raised from the event support NeighborImpact and its Emergency Food Assistance program. This program feeds approximately 22,000 citizens each month and distributes over three million pounds of food locally each year in Central Oregon.
SAVE 20%-50%
on your favorite loca l businesses
Tickets are $38 per person or $35 when you buy four or more. The ticket price includes a handcrafted bowl, homemade soup, artisan bread, refreshments, and dessert.
FOR TICKETS, PLEASE GO TO: www.neighborimpact.org/empty-bowls
EMPTY BOWLS IS MADE POSSIBLE BY: The Brewer Team at Morgan Stanley, Summit Bank,
Miller Lumber Co., Bend Anesthesiology Group, Pahlisch Homes, Bend Garbage & Recycling, St. Charles Health System, Central Oregon Community College, Rosell Wealth Management, Sunwest Builders, J L Ward Co., Skjersaa Group, 21 Cares for Kids, The Source Weekly, Cascade Culinary Institute, Oregon Green Products, Strictly Organic Coffee Co., Parlour and The Village Baker.
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EVENTS
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT Unsplash
Caregiver Support Group - Bend Senior Center Support groups create a safe,
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.
confidential, supportive environment or community and a chance for participants to develop informal mutual support and social relationships. Third Thursday of every month, 5-6:30pm. Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road, Bend. Contact: 800-272-3900. Third Wednesday of every month, 2-3:30pm. Community Presbyterian Church, 529 NW 19th St., Redmond. Contact: 800-272-3900. Free.
Pie & Particulars Hospitality Event
Ponderosa Pine Seedling Sale Detailed
planting instructions with special tips to optimize success are included with all purchases. Proceeds benefit Project Ponderosa. Fri, Oct. 11, 10am-4pm, Sat, Oct. 12, 10am-4pm, Sun, Oct. 13, 10am-4pm, Sat, Oct. 19, 10am-4pm and Sun, Oct. 20, 10am4pm. Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Rd., Sunriver, Sunriver. Contact: 541-593-4394. info@snco.org. $8-$30/size of tree.
Project Wildfire Steering Committee Meeting Our mission is to prevent deaths, in-
Central Oregon Homebrewers Organization Educational sessions, group brewing,
juries, property loss and environmental damage. Third Tuesday of every month, 8-9:30am. Through Dec. 17. Deschutes County Services Center, 1300 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-322-7129. projectwildfire.pw@gmail.com. Free.
competitions and other beer-related events. Third Wednesday of every month, 6:30-9pm. Aspen Ridge Retirement, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend.
Central Oregon Market Update Join
Citizens’ Climate Lobby Monthly Meeting We work to empower citizens to connect
with and influence members of Congress to implement climate solutions aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Thu, Oct. 17, 5:307:30pm, Wed, Nov. 20, 5:30-7:30pm and Wed, Dec. 18, 5:30-7:30pm. Round Table Clubhouse, 2940 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-389-5400. info@citizesnclimatebend.org. Free.
Compassionate Communication/NVC Practice Groups Through practicing with
others, we can learn and grow using real-life experiences to become more compassionate. 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.
Resist! Rally Weekly resistance protest, Check out the First Annual Quilt Fair from noon-4pm on Sat., Oct. 12.
weekly support meetings, members discover they are not alone. Wednesdays, 9:30am and Thursdays, 10:30am. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St., Bend.
EXTRA! EXTRA! The News: Change and Challenge Panelists: Steve Forrester,
First Annual Quilt Fair You are invited to
Medicare 101 Workshop These workshops
versation group. All levels welcome. Thursdays, 3:30-5:30pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-749-2010.
enjoy an afternoon of quilts, food, fun and entertainment. Silent auction with proceeds benefiting the Alzheimer’s Association! RSVP by October 10 by calling: Christiannae at 541-317-8464. Oct. 12, Noon-4pm. Awbrey House, 2825 Neff Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-317-8464. cbull@enlivant.com. Donations Requested.
A Course in Miracles With practice you
Death Cafe Bend Death Cafes are thought
provoking, meaningful group discussions about any and all issues related to death and dying. Oct. 16, 7-9pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 208-571-0042. cheryl@ deathdoulahandinhand.com. Donations Accepted.
Democratic Debate Watch Party SCO-
PAC puts people first. We welcome the community to watch the debate. Please RSVP. Oct. 15, 5-9pm. The Haven CoWorking, 1001 Southwest Disk Drive, Bend. Contact: 541-323-9675. info@worklifehaven.com. Free.
Emotions Anonymous EA provides an
accepting group setting in which to share experiences without fear of criticism. Through
Tuesday of every month, 4-5pm. Bend Memorial Clinic, 865 SW Veterans Way, Redmond. Contact: alyce1002@gmail.com or kristenjones1227@gmail.com.
Socrates Cafe Conversations all welcome. Contact John at 503-803-2223 with any questions. Second and Fourth Thursday of every month, 6pm. The Commons Cafe, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend. Contact: 503-803-2223. Free.
Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcom-
surely stroll along the Deschutes River with a Certified Nurse Midwife. Meet at the large picnic shelter at Farewell Bend Park, bring water and questions. Second Thursday of every month, 12:15-12:45pm. Farewell Bend Park, 1000 SW Reed Market Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-526-6635. tlclay@stcharleshealthcare.org. Free.
Mayflower 400 – Looking Through a Lens
Rheumatoid Arthritis Support Group Third
Gerry O’Brien, Damian Radcliff and Carolyn S. Chambers. Oct. 15, 11:15am-1pm. Riverhouse on the Deschutes Convention Center, 3075 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-633-7163. info@cityclubco.org. Cost: $25 members / $45 non-members.
be ready to share what you’ve been working on! Wednesdays, 6-8pm. Spoken Moto, 310 SW Industrial Way, Bend.
Curious about Midwifery? Take a lei-
experience, strength, and hope with each other. Thursdays, 7-8pm. Serenity Lane, 601 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend.
Rebecca Locklear will share insights about the Pilgrims and Native Americans. Locklear regularly combines history with the arts, so expect to enjoy interactive activities and interesting photographs of the Cape. Oct. 15, 10am-Noon. Williamson Hall at Rock Arbor Villa, 2200 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Contact: 541-317-9553. BGS@BendBroadband.com. Free.
ConnectW Munch and Mingle We’re connecting all kinds of professional women over a monthly noon meal every second Thursday. The result? Business sharing, social networking and friendship. Oct. 10, 11:45am-1pm. Wild Oregon Foods, 61334 S. Hwy 97, Bend. Contact: 541-5882154. sghiggins@bhhsnw.com. BYOL. will see through the eyes of love instead of fear, forgiveness instead of judgement. Contact Lisa at 760-208-9097 or lmhauge4@gmail.com for location. Saturdays, 10:30am. Location TBA, Location TBA, Location TBA. Contact: 760-2089097. lmhauge4@gmail.com. Free.
Marijuana Anonymous Meeting Share
the theme of the week changes. Contact info@ thevocalseniority.org for more info. Tuesdays, 11:30am-12:30pm. Peace Corner, Corner of NW Greenwood Avenue and NW Wall Street, Bend.
Garage Night Come on down for a pint and
ers welcome. For info, call Sue. Mondays, 6-9pm. Round Table Clubhouse, 2940 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-610-3717. ossz55@yahoo.com.
Italian Conversation Group 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 of all ages. Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Wabi Sabi, 143 SW Century Dr #120, Bend. Contact: 541-633-7205. $10.
Let’s Talk – Open Discussion on Life & Spirituality Facilitated open discus-
sion, not a debate, not looking for the “right” answer. A place to be heard and hear other’s journey and views on the reality of life and spirituality. Tuesdays, 6:30-7:30pm. Wild Ride Brewing, 332 SW Fifth St., Redmond. Contact: shughes79@gmail.com. Free.
Life after Birth This group is facilitated by Dr. Wendy Hatcher, Psy.D, a licensed clinical psychologist who specializes in pregnancy and postpartum-related issues. Tuesdays, 2-3pm. St. Charles Center for Women’s Health, 340 NW 5th Street, Suite 101, Redmond. Contact: 541-526-6635. tlclay@stcharleshealthcare.org. Free.
explain Medicare Parts A and B, Medicare Advantage Plans, and Medicare Supplements. For people turning 65. Oct. 10, 4:30-5:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library - Hutchinson Room, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-973-2100, extension 9. juliecromwell@ffig.com. Free.
Memory Care Support Group Join this open discussion about caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease or other dementia. Third Thursday of every month, 11am-Noon Through May 21. Touchmark at Mt. Bachelor Village, 19800 SW Touchmark Way, Bend. Contact: 541-383-1414. Free. Mommy & Me Breastfeeding Support Group Learn about nutrient dense, organically
raised, locally produced foods and products. Thursdays, 1-3pm. Through Dec. 19. Central Oregon Locavore, 1841 NE Third St., Bend. Contact: 541633-7388. info@centraloregonlocavore.org. Free.
Networking Event for Solar & New Construction Are you curious about installing solar
and achieving net zero for your projects, or looking to create more connections with the building community? Come participate in our newest networking event. Oct. 16, 5pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis, 700 NW Bond St, Bend. Contact: 503-773-8665. mmills@trccompanies.com. Free.
New EV Charging Stations COCC Redmond - Public Launch Join COCC and
350 Deschutes to celebrate new electric vehicle charging stations at the Redmond campus. Oct. 9, 4:30-5:30pm. Redmond COCC Campus Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Lp., Redmond. Contact: 541-327-4358. acompton@350Deschutes.org. Free.
Oregon Lyme Disease Network, Bend Chapter Support Group Support talk, sometimes with an emphasis on education. Please call Oregon Lyme Disease Network to register for meetings. Third Thursday of every month, 4:30-6pm. The Hive, 205 NW Franklin Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-321-6536. theresa@ oregonlyme.com. Free.
Spanish Club Spanish language study and con-
Suicide Bereavement Support Group
This free group is available to anyone over the age of 18 who would like support after the loss of a loved one by suicide. Second Monday of every month, 7-8:30pm. Partners In Care/Suicide Bereavement, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend.
Oregon Communicators Toastmasters Meeting Enhance your leadership and com-
munications skills in a supportive environment, in-person or online. https://zoom.us/j/246410212. Meet and greet at 6:15pm. Thursdays, 6:307:30pm. La Pine Community Health Center Meeting Room, 51600 Huntington Road, La Pine. Contact: 541-408-7610. oregon.communicators. club@gmail.com. Free.
Try Transit Tuesday Cascades East Transit is encouraging Central Oregonians to ride the bus by offering free bus service in Bend. Oct. 15, 2-4pm. Redmond Transit Hub, 777 SW Kalama Ave, Redmond. Contact: 541-548-9534. dhofbauer@coic.org. Free. Walk of Remembrance Please join us in honor of the International Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day and in celebration of the Wave of Light. Find support and continue along the path of healing. Oct. 15, 5-7pm. Compass Park, 2500 NW Crossing Dr., Bend. Contact: 541-749-8794. rlsortor@scmc.org. Free. Weekly Climate Strike Youth and adults gather to demand that government action be taken to combat climate change. Join us as we fight for a future. Fridays, 4pm. Through Dec. 6. Peace Corner, Corner of NW Greenwood Avenue and NW Wall Street, Bend. Contact: 541-383-0852. oregon@youthclimatestrikeus.org. Free. Women’s Cancer Support Group For the newly diagnosed and survivors of cancer. Call for info. Thursdays, 1-3pm. Mountain Laurel Lodge, 990 SW Yates Drive, Bend. Contact: Judy: 541-728-0767.
27 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
For new and prospective members! Join us for a piece of pie and learn some particulars about NCOB. Oct. 15, 1-3pm. Newcomers Club of Bend, P.O. Box 7972, Bend. Contact: 541-728-3710. ncob.hospitality2018@gmail.com. Free.
Celebrate Recovery Celebrate Recovery is a Christ-centered, 12-step recovery program for anyone struggling with addiction of any kind. Mondays, 6:30pm. Faith Christian Center, 1049 NE 11th St., Bend. | Tuesdays, 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.
Stephanie Higgins and Bobbie Bashian for a local Market Update! Oct. 9, 6-7pm. Angela Moore, 404 SW Columbia St, Bend. Contact: 541-588-2154. sghiggins@bhhsnw.com. Free.
Overeaters Anonymous Meeting
FAMILY & KIDS’ EVENTS After School Eco-Kids Club Over the course of six weeks, we’ll learn skills and strategies for reducing our daily footprint. In each class we’ll create low-waste swaps like herbal first aid kits, sprays and lip balms. Mon, Oct. 7, 4:30-5:30pm, Mon, Oct. 14, 4:30-5:30pm, Mon, Oct. 21, 4:30-5:30pm, Mon, Oct. 28, 4:30-5:30pm, Mon, Nov. 4, 4:30-5:30pm and Mon, Nov. 18, 4:305:30pm. The Garden Cafe & ORA Juice Co., 519 NW Colorado Ave., Bend. Contact: 218-340-3035. info@obsidianeducation.org. $20 per class.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
28
Afternoon Pokemon Cards Drop off the
, N.D. Blending Nature with Medicine Insurance Accepted
kids and enjoy the West Side shopping district! We host players, learners and traders at these weekly Pokemon card games, now in our beautiful new party nook. All attendees supervised by highly skilled Poke-Masters. Wednesdays, 2:30-4:30pm. Wabi Sabi, 143 SW Century Dr #120, Bend. Contact: 541-633-7205. wabisabibend@gmail.com. Free.
Art Club Art Club is a unique after school program to develop one of the most valuable skills for life - creativity - for ages 5-11. Thursdays, 4-5:30pm. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend. Autumn Palooza Celebrate autumn with
painting, crafts, and snacks for the whole family. All ages welcome! Oct. 12, 1pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-312-1061. Free.
Backpack Explorers – Interstellar
We will have a blast with the stars, the moon and the sun in a space-themed day! Discover the important role Central Oregon played in preparing U.S. astronauts for lunar landscapes in the exhibit Moon Country. Children ages 3-5. Oct. 16-17, 10-11am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97, Bend. Contact: 5413824754. info@highdesertmuseum.org. $15 per child, Members receive 20% discount.
Backpack Explorers – Moving & Grooving Come on an adventure! We’ll
every year since we opened!
explore music and movement while moving and dancing like animals. Children ages 3-5. Oct. 9, 10-11am.. Children ages 3-5. Oct. 10, 10-11am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97, Bend. Contact: 541-382-4754. education@ highdesertmuseum.org. $15/child, Members receive 20% discount.
Creative Story Time Bring your little for this unique story time. We’ll read a different book each week, followed by an art-making experience inspired by the story. Perfect for ages 1.5Y-5. Wednesdays, 10-10:45am. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend. Evidence Based Birth® Childbirth Class Evidence Based Birth® Childbirth Class.
Oct. 11, 6:30pm. Pangea Chiropractice, 409 NE Greenwood Ave., Bend. $175-$250.
Family Yoga Join us on Sundays for a fun
Family Yoga series! Partner-up with your little yogis (age 4 - 8) for yoga sequences, partner poses, yoga games and breathing techniques. Sundays, 9:30-10:30am. Through Nov. 17. Free Spirit Yoga + Fitness + Play, 320 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-241-3919. info@freespiritbend.com. $99/per child.
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Free Spirit Ninja Elite Junior athletes,
ages 8-12, increase your athletic performance through the exciting sport of Ninja Warrior! Through focus and determination we will coach you through the three main components: gymnastics, ground-based obstacles and climbing. www.freespiritbend.com Tuesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. Through Oct. 15. Contact: 541-241-3919. info@ freespiritbend.com. Registration: $115.
Free Spirit Ninja Warrior 8-Week Series; Thursday Evenings Kids ages 6-10
will gain abilities through obstacle course training, climbing, fitness conditioning and team motivation. Drop-offs welcome. www.freespiritbend. com Thursdays, 5:30-6:30pm. Through Oct. 17. Contact: 541-241-3919. info@freespiritbend.com. Registration: $115.
How to Make the Best of Parent-Teacher Conferences & Choose the Best School
Featuring local educational consultant and former Principal, Elie Gaines, who will share her expertise. Join us to listen, share and ask questions. Fit for grades PS-12. Oct. 15, 7:15-8:30pm. Sylvan Learning Satellite, 2754 NW Crossing Dr, Suite 101, Bend. Contact: 541-640-3331. Info@AllSchoolsConsulting.com. Free.
Kerbal Space Program Lab Build a rocket and explore the galaxy with this flight simulation video game. Ages 10-17 years. Online registration is required. Wed, Oct. 9, 2-4pm and Sat, Nov. 9, 1:30-3:30pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-312-1050. Free. Kids Ninja Night Drop off your kids age
6+ for up to 3 hours of fun in our indoor ninja warrior play space. Our experienced adult staff members will supervise and lead fun group games. We provide free pizza and healthy drinks! Sat, Sept. 14, 5:30-8:30pm, Sat, Oct. 12, 6-9pm and Sat, Nov. 16, 6-9pm. Free Spirit Yoga + Fitness + Play, 320 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-241-3919. info@freespiritbend.com. Early Bird: $20/kid, Day-of: $25/kid.
Kids Yoga 8-Week Series Kids (ages 6-12) will enhance flexibility, strength, balance and coordination. Mindful yoga techniques will calm the nervous system, manage frustrations and and improve focus. https://freespiritbend.com/ kids-yoga-classes Wednesdays, 3-4pm. Through Oct. 16. Contact: 541-241-3919. info@freespiritbend.com. Registration: $115.
Kids Yoga Party This class is just for the
young yogis - no parents allowed! Drop off the children for a night of yoga, dance, mindfulness and play designed to cultivate presence of mind, heart and body. Ages 4-11. Second Saturday of every month, 6-8pm. Wild Thing Yoga, 1441 SW Chandler Ave., Suite 105, Bend. Contact: info@obsidianeducation.org. $20.
kids. Look up MOPS Bend on Facebook! Oct. 12, 10am-1pm. Mission Church Bend, 61303 S HWY 97, Bend. Contact: 541-977-2648. mopsbend@gmail.com. No cover.
Museum and Me A quiet time for children and adults with physical, intellectual and/ or social disabilities to enjoy the High Desert Museum after hours. Explore the Museum’s newest exhibits and revisit your favorites. Oct. 12, 5-8pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-382-4754. info@highdesertmuseum.org. Free.
Music, Movement & Stories Movement and stories to develop skills. Ages 3-5 years. Tue, Oct. 1, 6:30pm, Thu, Oct. 17, 11:30am, Tue, Nov. 5, 6:30pm and Thu, Nov. 21, 11:30am. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-617-7097. Free. Nano-Ninjas 8-Week Series Kids (ages
3.5 - 6) will love making new ninja buddies in this strategically designed class. Through positive direction kids will gain confidence while enhancing their focus, strength and body awareness. Thursdays, 4:15-5:15pm. Through Oct. 17. Contact: 541-241-3919. info@freespiritbend.com. Registration: $115.
Pajama Party A night of fun and educational activities! All ages welcome! Tue, Oct. 15, 6:30pm and Tue, Nov. 19, 6:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-617-7097. Free.
Paws to Read Reluctant readers read with a
dog. Ages 6-11 years. Online registration is required. Thu, Oct. 3, 4pm, Thu, Oct. 17, 4pm, Thu, Nov. 14, 4pm and Thu, Nov. 21, 4pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend. Contact: 541-330-3760. Free.
Pumpkin Palooza Get ready for fall! Paint mini-pumpkins and make creepy treats! Ages 10-17 years. Oct. 16, 2:30pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St., La Pine. Contact: 541-312-1090. Free.
Kids’ Night at Bend Montessori We're hosting a Kids’ Night so that parents can enjoy an evening at BendFilm Festival or The Environmental Center’s 30th Anniversary Celebration. Take advantage of this great opportunity for kids to learn, play and explore in the Montessori classroom with wonderful teachers - all while you enjoy a few hours of fun! Oct. 11, 5:30pm. Bend Montessori School, 680 Northwest Bond Street, Bend. Free.
Sunriver Resort’s Fall Festival Two
LEGO Block Party Kids, legos and a ton of
Teen Service Club Camp Fire’s Teens In Action clubs are all about teens working together to make their community a better place. Members decide what causes they want to address and volunteer for those causes in a fun group environment! Wednesdays, 5-7pm. Through Nov. 20. BendTECH, 1001 SW Emkay Dr, Bend. Contact: 541-539-6231. beth@campfireco.org. $40-100.
fun for the whole family! All ages welcome. Sat, Oct. 12, 9am, Wed, Oct. 23, 2:30pm, Sat, Nov. 9, 9am and Wed, Nov. 27, 2:30pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-312-1061. Free.
Little Artist Playgroup Nurture your little’s developing brain through rich sensory experiences and messy play during our drop-in class for ages 1.5Y-5. Tuesdays, 10:30-11:15am. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend.
Mini-Ninja + Me Kids ages 2-4 will have a
blast during this upbeat movement class! Kids will develop coordination skills, balance, and confidence as they explore mini-obstacle courses with their parent. Tuesdays, 12-12:45pm. Through Oct. 15. Contact: 541-241-3919. info@ freespiritbend.com. $115.
Mom & Baby Yoga Mothers are invited to stretch, relax and have fun in a child friendly environment. Moms will focus on shoulder opening, easy yoga sequences and postnatal core-building while spending time bonding with their babies and connecting with fellow moms. No experience necessary. Tuesdays, Noon-1pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. $17/drop-in. MOPS Bend Clothing Swap & Sale
Drop off clothing the week before and shop on Saturday for a new to you wardrobe for the
fun-filled weekends for the whole family. We’ll have a pumpkin patch, hay rides, a hay maze, pumpkin decorating, fall-inspired food and drink specials, a petting zoo with pony rides, a harvest market and more! Sat, Oct. 5, 1-5pm, Sun, Oct. 6, 1-5pm, Sat, Oct. 12, 1-5pm and Sun, Oct. 13, 1-5pm. Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Dr., Sunriver. Contact: 541-593-1000. michael.patron@destinationhotels.com. Free.
Toddler Move + Make Join us for a
morning of play including yoga poses, breathing exercises and art-making. Perfect for ages 1.5Y5. *Please note you must register for this class ahead of time. Thursdays, 9-9:45am. ARTdog Children’s Art Studio, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 130, Bend.
Weekend Pokemon Cards We have cards to borrow and professional Pokemasters to oversee Third Saturday of the month we go an extra hour for our Tournament! Saturdays, 10am-1pm. Wabi Sabi, 143 SW Century Dr #120, Bend. Contact: 541-633-7205. wabisabibend@gmail.com. Free. Youth/Adult Slackline This class will be a combination of basic poses, transitions, floor exercises, stamina drills and games. 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
CULTURE
Companies On The Rise
Local companies Riff Cold Brewed and Meli Wraps reach the finalist stage at the Bend Venture Conference By Isaac Biehl
Riff Cold Brewed One of Riff’s newest products, the Alter Ego sparkling coffeefruit tea, is changing the process of harvesting coffee beans and eliminating waste at the same time. As Riff co-founder and CEO Paul Evers tells me, during the harvest, coffee farms de-pulp the beans from the coffeefruit and then the rest is left to rot in the field. Through research, Evers and company estimate that there will be 100 billion pounds of coffeefruit that’s wasted this year. If it’s not properly managed, the fruit rots and generates methane gas, can end up in streams and destroy ecosystems and cause even more damage.
Riff has made it their mission to use the rest of the fruit that gets left behind. “The analogy I share with people is it’s like picking an apricot off the tree, extracting the pit and making a beverage with it and taking the rest of the fruit and throwing it away,” says Evers. “Coffeefruit tastes very different than coffee— it’s incredibly delicious, naturally sweet and caffeinated. By reducing the amount of waste at the source we’re helping the environment, and it requires virtually no additional investment in infrastructure for farmers. But they can potentially double their revenue stream.” Through the process of upcycling the fruit, Riff is creating a clean, all-natural energy drink and something unique in this area of the beverage industry. Even through Alter Ego’s packaging and shelf life, the footprint left behind by the process of distribution is cut back greatly. From the beginning of the fruit being harvested, to the brewing process and the final packaging, Alter Ego is a product that was built for the environment. “We’re super excited about this because our DNA is about innovation,” adds Evers. “We aspire to be a company that does good—in all ways.” Meli Wraps Founded in 2015 by longtime friends Melia Foster and Nicole Galchutt, Meli Wraps began with creating reusable food wraps out of their garage. Fast forward to 2019 and now the duo is ready to present at BVC. “It is such a privilege to get to be a part of this conference and being able to compete with some other awesome
ARTWATCH
Find more information on Meli Wraps at meliwraps.com
companies,” says Galchutt. “Getting the congrats email after passing through each stage has led to many happy dances, as we really want to win this so we can grow our company larger—which means making a bigger impact in our environment.” Meli Wraps are designed to serve as an easy alternative to store food using something other than single-use plastics, such as plastic bags or wraps. The wraps are made from GOTS organic cotton, locally sourced beeswax, tree resin, organic coconut oil and organic jojoba oil. “The beeswax blend is infused into our fabric, which also has preservative qualities to keep food fresh longer when stored in a wrap, which in turn helps to lessen food waste,” explains Galchutt. Users can actually wash Meli Wraps around 150 times. When it looks like their lifespan is up, the wraps can be cut into strips and naturally composted. This helps eliminate plastic from ending up in the oceans and rivers and prevents plastics from sitting in a landfill where the
Thu., Oct. 17- Fri., Oct. 18 Tower Theatre $185-329
Cari Brown
Artist Kiel Fletcher considers the potential—and the drawbacks—of A.I. in his new work
I
Bend Venture Conference
By Cari Brown
Art vs Artificial Intelligence
n his body of work on display now at Pence Pinckney Gallery at Central Oregon Community College, interactive media and video artist Kiel Fletcher exhibits work seated in artificial intelligence and technology. Through varied independent and collaborative pieces, Fletcher seems to invite the viewer, and at times the unwitting
products can produce harmful chemicals. Each wrap features a gorgeous and unique print to make them stand out, and Meli Wraps also come in different sizes to fit various food storage needs. The other two categories in the BVC include the Early Stage and Growth Stage. The former is dedicated to companies— which don’t necessarily have to hail from Central Oregon— that “have a great idea and are close to proof of concept, are pre, or very early, revenue and are in the process of testing their product in the market.” The winner of this competition can be awarded a $25,000 investment courtesy of the Portland Seed Fund. Then the Growth Stage showcases companies that “have a proven concept, have generated initial revenues and are prepared to scale quickly with investment.” Finalists here could collect $250,000 or more in investments.
Artist Kiel Fletcher discussing his work, exhibiting now at Pence Pinckney Gallery on the COCC campus.
participant, to question whether technology is a thing to revere or to be wary of. With pieces such as “Interactive,” a collaboration with Ron Sparks, Fletcher reminds visitors that the words people use within earshot of a discrete
microphone elicit a response—displaying images and GIFs in an unending stream, underscoring the reality that this routinely happens when people are online. In “Quorra 1 & 2,” we witness the frailty of a suicide prevention bot as it fails
to track the intricacies of a basic human interaction. In discussing the work, Fletcher states, “With a lot of the work in here, I am trying to poke at the idea of A.I., artificial intelligence, in the sense that it IS artificial and is not actually that smart. These technologies can be really… impressive but they can also fall flat at the same time.” This is a show worth seeing. Its success is in poignant moments, such as the collaborative pieces with writer Jenna Goldsmith, in which poetry is read over a film of spliced images from Google Maps, or the fact that work is made with the very technology it’s critiquing—exposing technology’s potential for beauty and failure alike. “Artificial Intelligence”
Thu., Oct. 3-Thu., Oct. 31 Pence Pinckney Gallery, COCC 2600 NW College Way, Bend Free
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
T
he Bend Venture Conference showcases the what’s what and the who’s who of business happening in the region. This year’s conference—the largest “angel” conference in the Northwest—takes place on Oct. 17 and 18 and is featuring two companies from Bend that have made it to the finals of the Impact Stage. According to the BVC website, the Impact Stage “honors for-profit businesses that are still in early evolution stages of their business. These companies have a social or environmental mission integrated into the core of their business.” The winner of the Impact competition could end up with up to $100,000 in investments. We spoke to some of the folks behind Riff Cold Brewed and Meli Wraps to gain insight into their businesses, and to find out what makes each business deserving of a finalist spot for the Impact Stage at this year’s BVC.
29 Meli Wraps
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CH
CHOW
Modern Meat Markets
Hometown butcher shops offer that personal connection, so common in days gone by
LITTLE BITES By Nicole Vulcan
Submitted
By Donna Britt @donnabrittcooks
Game Changer: Hop Water Non-alcoholic hop-infused water is a delight for drinkers and non-drinkers alike Old-world methods and family traditions are alive and well at Sisters Meat and Smokehouse.
which led to the decline of things such as the local butcher shop. But the pendulum always seems to swing back. Here we are in the 2020s, and guess what’s cropping up in communities all over the country?? Yep, you got it: local meat shops, focused on local products. “We do think of it as kind of a three-headed monster. It’s about selling great beer, great house-smoked meats and sandwiches made from those meats, and it’s also about a fresh case full of house-stuffed sausages, dry-aged steak, pork and chicken all from as close to the shop as we can get it,” says Williams. The other real throwback is the human connection. As Johnson explains, “This is still a place where you can come in and actually talk to the person that makes what we sell.” Tambi Lane Photography
Stories of the good ol’ days of hog butchering on the farm and everybody having a smokehouse on their property may be part of the inspiration behind the current obsession with everything “local.” That, and the realization that it’s healthier for people—and the planet in general—if people can eat food that comes from nearby. That includes meats. To recap: Primal Cuts Market on Galveston in Bend is where visitors will find a case full of things such as house made sausages, smoked bacon, dry aged ribeye and deli meats. There’s also a freezer filled with local Wagyu beef, lamb, soup stocks and more. Patrons can order deli sandwiches and charcuterie boards, along with daily specials. Shelves are stocked with handcrafted specialty items such as Primal’s famous pickled onions. There’s also the option to fill a growler or grab a pint. In Sisters, the go-to local meat shop is the artisanal butchery and eatery known as Sisters Meat and Smokehouse. Offerings include in-house smoked jerky and other meats and cheeses as well as freshly cut meats. There’s also a freezer full of things such as ground bison, bratwurst and dog bones. The lunch/early dinner menu features deli sandwiches using the meats smoked in-house and charcuterie. Handcrafted jams and seasonings line the shelves and local beers and wines are on tap. Primal Cuts Meat Market 1244 NW Galveston, Bend primalcutsmeatmarket.com
Sisters Meat and Smokehouse Local meat shops are focusing on fresh, in-house made products.
110 S. Spruce Street, Sisters sistersmeat.com
Lovers of hops—but not necessarily booze: Prepare to have your Minds. Blown. A new drink, made in Bend, is offering that hoppy flavor people love, but without the alcohol. Heck, there isn’t even any malt to interfere with people’s love for the popular flowering vine that put Oregon beer on the map. Oregon Hop Springs is a sparkling water with hops added. Founders Cindy and Dave Glick dropped a six pack off at the Source Weekly recently—and with this thirsty crew, suffice to say it didn’t last long. The drinkers among us liked it for that hoppy taste that would allow one to sip freely, without the worry of getting too tipsy. “It’s a good drink after you’ve had enough IPAs, but you don’t want to leave the party,” Cindy Glick told the Source. The non-drinkers liked it as an alternative to the other non-alcoholic beer options on the market—currently, mostly limited to lager-type brews that don’t scream hops. Even the kids of the Source got in on the action, stoked to get to “taste what beer tastes like.” The Glicks—who recently retired from careers in education and forestry— got the idea from their oldest son, who works in Asia, where he discovered a similar Japanese product. Thinking the idea could be made with Northwest hops, the couple set out to experiment with different recipes. The final product is made with organic Citra and Mosaic hops sourced from the Willamette Valley. In Bend, find Oregon Hop Springs at Newport Market, West Coast Provisions and Mother’s Juice Cafe. In Sisters, find it at Melvin’s, Cascade Trail Stop and other spots. It’s also available at Life Source Natural Foods in Salem, and Silver Falls Brewery in Silverton. Oregon Hop Springs oregonhopsprings.com
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
“I
t’s a little-known secret that I bought a meat shop so that I could continue to make soup,” jokes Jake Williams, owner/manager of Primal Cuts Meat Market on Bend’s west side. He enjoys making soup from scratch, using the daily leftover bits and pieces from Primal’s butcher shop. But let’s get something straight: Primal isn’t your great-grandma’s butchery… unless there was a bar with three dozen tap handles offering beer, cider, and CBD sodas in grandma’s shop! Yet Williams and his counterpart, Jeff Johnson, CEO of Sisters Meat and Smokehouse, are both in the business of keeping old-world methods and family traditions alive and well in their modern-day, local meat shops. Johnson partnered with Master Smoker and third-generation Oregon meat craftsman Brody Waller to open the shop in Sisters, where they’re keeping Waller’s Grandpa Jack’s legacy going strong. Grandpa Jack’s old sausage stuffer and carcass hanger are displayed in the shop, among other memorabilia. Rewind 100 years to the 1920s, when local butcher shops were a fixture in most American towns and cities. For thousands of years before that, beginning with the earliest hunter-gatherer tribes, butchers served a valuable purpose in human society: slaughtering, dressing, and cutting meat, fowl and fish for human consumption. Interestingly, 1916 was a historic year for the grocery industry; it was when Clarence Saunders opened the first-ever “self-service” grocery store in Memphis, Tennessee. Saunders’ Piggly Wiggly was just the beginning of what you might call the golden age of the supermarket,
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Tambi Lane Photography
FOOD & DRINK EVENTS Now Open! New & Gently Used Items
FOOD EVENTS Locavore Food School - Nourishing Herbal Infusions Learn how to make
nourishing herbal infusions with Laura Parker, Community Created Herbalist. Oct. 17, 4:305:30pm. Central Oregon Locavore, 1841 NE Third St., Bend. $5 Current Locavore members / $8 Non-Members / Free WIC & SNAP recipients.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MONTH XX, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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BEER & DRINK EVENTS Immersion Brewing’s Pretzel Fest 2019 We are at it again with Pretzel
Fest! Join us on our back patio “The Arizona Mullet” celebrating everything pretzels. What goes great with pretzels? Beer. What goes great with beer? Music. Pretzels and beer by Immersion and music by Joseph Balsamo. Oct. 12, 1-7pm. Immersion Brewing, 550 SW Industrial Way, Bend. Contact: 541-633-7821. kate@imbrewing.com. Free.
Local’s Night Come on down to Bevel Craft
Brewing for $4 beers and food specials from the food carts located out back at The Patio! Tuesdays, 3-9pm. Bevel Craft Brewing, 911 SE Armour Rd. Suite B, Bend. Contact: 541-97-BEVEL. holla@bevelbeer.com. Free.
Palate Trip If you’ve ever wondered, “Where can I sample craft beer and amazing wine in
Bend,” we’ve got the answer. 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 and Pistons Head down to Porter
Brewing for Pints & Pistons, a free cruise-in for cars and motorcycles. Kid-friendly with food and drinks! This is an ongoing event every Sunday over the summer. Sundays, 11am-4pm. Porter Brewing, 611 NE Jackpine Court, #2, Redmond. Contact: 541-504-7959. info@porterbrewingco.com. Free.
Pub Re-Opening Celebration! Join us for a full day of activities, entertainment, and food/drink specials! Five different bands, brand new food menu, same delicious beer. Tons of giveaways from Silver Moon and DrinkTanks! Oct. 12, 5pm-Midnight. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-388-8331. info@silvermoonbrewing.com. $5 cover at 8pm. Shade Tree Brew Tour Brewery tour with the usual samples included! Bottles and growlers are also for sale. ID required. Oct. 12, 3pm. Shade Tree Brewing, 19305 Indian Summer Road, Bend. Free. Sunday Funday Trivia & Happy Hour
Come grab a bite from our food carts, enjoy our happy hour and play trivia for some Sunday fun! Oct. 13, 4pm. River’s Place, 787 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend. Free. Bevel Brewing
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Head down to Bevel Brewing for Local's Night every Tue. from 3-9pm.
CH
Thank You! The Redmond Winter Shelter of Shepherd’s House Ministries
Boneyard’s seasonal offering gives us one more reason to herald fresh hop beers
would like to thank Music in the Canyon and Wolfe House for supporting our cause through the October 2 benefit concert at the American Legion Amphitheater.
By Heidi Howard Darris Hurst
We also thank the following businesses and organizations whose generosity sponsored our shelter and a night of great music!
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH Redmond, Oregon
Enjoying fresh hop season with a Feels Like the Fresh Time at Boneyard Pub.
I
t’s that time of year again: fresh hop season! During this time of year, the hops are ripe and plump for the picking, and fresh hop beers come out in droves. The smell of lupulin is in the air. Ahhhhh. During this season, beer is brewed with fresh hops that haven’t been dried or processed in any way. Often brewers—especially those with larger commercial systems—brew with hops that have been processed and pressed into pellets. They may “dry hop” a beer as well by adding dried hops to the brew after they’ve boiled it. This gives it a fresher, brighter note. With a fresh hop beer, they’re brewing with fresh-off-the-bine hops. This is sometimes called wet hopping. You might be thinking, ‘no way… I won’t like a fresh hop beer. I hate bitter IPAs.’ Well, guess what: fresh hopping a beer actually lessens the bitterness often found in a traditional NW IPA. Instead, it’s fresh. It tastes green, or may even be citrusy, depending on the hops. My very first fresh hop beer for 2019 was Boneyard’s Feels Like the Fresh Time. Remember when we talked about bitterness? Well, this beer is at a 35 on the International Bittering Unit scale. That’s a low IBU for an IPA. This beer is also what you would call a SMaSH beer—or Single Hop and Single Malt beer—because this beer uses 100% Coleman Farms Simcoe hops and 100% Maris Otter malt. The hops were
picked, thrown on a truck and delivered to Boneyard’s kettle ALL IN THE SAME DAY. You cannot get fresher than that, and at $5 a pint, that’s phenomenal. The thing I like most about a fresh hop beer is the aroma, and this beer was no exception. The smell is bright. It’s like I crushed a hop in my hand and brought it up to my nose. It’s vibrant and green. Interesting factoid… people who “don’t like IPAs” also often don’t like cilantro. Both smell and taste “soapy” to them. OK, back to this Boneyard beer. There’s absolutely no hop astringency in Feels Like the Fresh Time. On my palate I get light hints of melon and a lovely grassiness, sometimes called “barnyard.” Ever so slightly I can pick up a spice, like black pepper, and in the finish a slight “dankness.” Simcoe hops are fantastic. As the beer warmed up it became complex. The biscuit, bready flavor from the malt began to meld in with the hops and it became complex. I was not expecting that in this beer. Fresh hop beers warm are usually no bueno for me! Boneyard is a must visit for Central Oregon visitors. Their main distribution is in keg form. Boneyard beers are what us beer geeks call “whales,” or “white whales.” They’re hard to get and sought after outside of the Northwest. If you give a crowler of Boneyard to an East Coast beer geek, they’re going to owe you big time.
33 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
CRAFT
Feels Like the Fresh Time
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Join us for a special Fresh Hop Dinner! Our Executive Chef Dan Volk will be preparing a special 4 course Oktoberfest dinner paired with our Fresh Hop Beers and an educational discussion from one of our brewers on how fresh hop beers are made and why they are so special in our industry. It’s a night you won’t want to miss! @10BARRELBREWING
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WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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SCREEN
By Jared Rasic Joker • Courtesy IMDb
SC
A Conversation with FILM SHORTS Christine Vachon The producer behind “Boys Don’t Cry” and “Hedwig and the Angry Inch” will earn the Indie Woman of the Year award at this year’s BendFilm By Teafly Peterson Killer Films
ABOMINABLE: You know what I think is abominable? That this is the third cartoon in the last year about The Abominable Snowman/ Sasquatch. While I’m sure “Abominable” is probably pretty cute, “The Missing Link” was a downright classic from Portland’s Laika animation studio. Support the movie that did it first! Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema AD ASTRA: Brad Pitt takes on space pirates, daddy issues and crippling isolation in director James Gray’s newest exploration of fragile masculinity. “Ad Astra” is almost a great film, hampered by an underdeveloped script and weird tonal issues throughout, but the visuals are so outstanding that it’s hard not to recommend the film. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House
Christine Vachon will take part in several conversations throughout the BendFilm weekend, in addition to screenings of four of her films.
I
f you were a queer kid, an outsider, or a weirdo growing up in the ‘90s and you wanted to see yourself on film, Christine Vachon had your back. The legendary indie producer will have four of her groundbreaking films screened at this year’s BendFilm festival, where she’ll also be honored with the Indie Woman of the Year award. Vachon is known for bringing the stories of the un-championed to the screen and creating modern classics. BendFilm will screen a number of her films, including “Hedwig and The Angry Inch,” “Carol,” “First Reformed” and “Boys Don’t Cry.” Ahead of the festival, I had the opportunity to chat with Vachon. Source Weekly: Where did your love of film begin? Christine Vachon: I was lucky enough to grow up in New York City and we could walk to the movie theater. On the Upper Westside there were a lot of movie theaters and most importantly, the type of movie theaters that is pretty much extinct now: the second-run movie theater where you could go see movies for a dollar. From the time I was 8 or 9 years old, because it was a different time, we could run around by ourselves and stand outside the movie theater, if it was R rated, and get an adult to walk us in. SW: Do you remember a film you fell in love with as a kid? CV: “The Poseidon Adventure.” It had everything! SW: Why did you chose to be a producer, rather than making your own films? Often producers are credited with bringing other’s vision to life. What made you want to do that? CV: I don’t think it is fair to producers or producing to boil it down to bringing other people’s visions to life, since so often the material originates with us. We often are the ones who bring on the other creative elements, like the writer or the director or
both. Ultimately we will get behind a director to work very hard to make sure we all have the same vision and we will work very hard to execute that director’s vision, but I find it always a little disheartening when people feel compelled to remove the art of producing from the creative process. SW: What kind of projects do you want to work with? CV: It’s complicated, but ultimately, does the story feel compelling? Does it feel resonant for our times? Is the script strong and does it feel like a story we haven’t seen before? Then there is the consideration of whatever elements are attached, the director, the actors, what have you. And finally, is this something we can pull off? SW: Have the stories you have wanted to bring to life changed over the past 30 years? CV: Well, I think the stories we want to see have certainly changed. Especially because of the different ways that we want to consume media now. I think the fact that there is streaming services that are doing all kinds of content has allowed probably a lot of the stories that are more provocative to migrate over to television, streaming services, etc. Whereas theatrical filmmaking has… At the end of the day what it really means is that making a theatrical motion picture that is not a superhero movie is actually more of a challenge than it has been. SW: What stories are you interested in telling in the future that you haven’t seen yet? CV: Oh, I don’t know, I’ll know it when I see it. “Carol” screening, and a conversation with Christine Vachon
ANGEL HAS FALLEN: Gerard Butler kills things. Morgan Freeman is president. That one guy who’s always a bad guy is the bad guy. Nick Nolte looks like he got put away wet. Things explode. There’s a knife fight. It will make all the money... and next year we’ll get Arches Have Fallen, about a terrorist with flat feet. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX BRITTANY RUNS A MARATHON: The always wonderful Jillian Bell plays an unhealthy woman entering her 30s who takes up running as she works toward competing in the New York City marathon. This could have ended up being a cheesy inspirational flick but instead is a very funny look at mental and physical health. A gem. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Tin Pan Theater DARK PHOENIX: Hey, look, another adaptation of the “Dark Phoenix Saga,” a much beloved comic arc from the 1980s. I wonder if they’ll get it right this time? It can’t be worse than “X-Men: The Last Stand,” can it? Oh, sweet summer child. It can always get worse…especially in Hollywood. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Odem Theater Pub DOWNTON ABBEY: The show ended with enough dangling threads to leave the possibility of a movie open and here it is. All the characters we know and love have returned, making this an all-star…wait a second. I just figured it out. This is like “The Avengers” for people who like the aristocracy. I get it now. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House GLORIA BELL: Julianne Moore gives one of her finest performances as a woman who finds love at a time when she was searching for anything but something serious. A surprising and heartfelt little movie. Odem Theater Pub HUSTLERS: Jennifer Lopez and company bring us a movie about strippers with hearts of gold drugging and ripping off Wall Street dicks who helped ruin the economy. This is a surprisingly big hit already and a much
IT: CHAPTER TWO: While the movie is still quite fun and is filled with some bravura horror set pieces, it’s such an unwieldy mess that it’s hard to recommend. Bill Hader should be in more horror movies though. That guy’s got a future in the movie business. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema, Odem Theater Pub JOKER: Massively controversial before it was even released, “Joker” takes a run at the origin story for one of pop culture’s biggest villains and gives him a soul. Not deserving of all the bile, this is a comic book movie that flirts with controversy while etching out its own dark territory. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema, Odem Theater Pub JUDY: Renee Zellweger dives deep into her portrayal of cinema legend Judy Garland and will most likely be making new shelf space for fistfuls of acting awards. Even when the film becomes somewhat maudlin, Zellweger always remains remarkable. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House PAVAROTTI: Even if you don’t know opera, you’ve probably heard the name Pavarotti, the most famous tenor of all time. He makes everything sound good. He’s like the Barry White of opera. This is a documentary about his life. I bet he sings in it. Odem Theater Pub RAMBO: LAST BLOOD: This new and supposedly final entry in the franchise sees Stallone take on drug cartels for revenge purposes, I assume. It’s always pretty fun watching Stallone kill people, so hopefully he can keep up the good work with this one. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema THE ADDAMS FAMILY: Oscar Isaac was born to play Gomez Addams in a live action movie, but an animated one will have to do. This should be a visually stunning bit of weirdness if they keep things dark enough to see how creepy the Addams family really is. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House, Redmond Cinema, THE LION KING: Look, I’m sure this movie is really pretty to look at and everything, but if it doesn’t have Jeremy Irons playing Scar, then I’m gonna make a hard pass. I’m sure I’ll see it at some point, but messing with perfection is never a good idea—even if it’s Disney messing with their own perfect ideas. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX THE PEANUT BUTTER FALCON: One of the sweetest movies ever made. The film follows a young man with Down syndrome following his dream to be a professional wrestler. Part Mark Twain and part southern gothic fairytale, “The Peanut Butter Falcon” is the textbook definition of a crowd pleaser. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Cinema
STREAMING THIS WEEK
“MISSING LINK”
Fri., Oct. 11. 5:30pm Tower Theatre
A sadly overlooked animated classic from Portland’s Laika Animation Studio is filled with a heartwarming story, solid jokes and the finest stop-motion animation ever put to film. Show this one to the kids; it’s a treasure.
IndieWomen Producing IndieFilm with Christine Vachon Sat., Oct. 12. 2pm McMenamin’s Rambler Room See other screenings at BendFilm.org
better movie than the trailers would have us believe. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
Now Streaming on Hulu courtesy IMDb
BendFilm Festival: An Itinerary SC SCREEN Ski bums, preachers and beekeepers, oh my By Jared Rasic
Thur., Oct. 10 5:30pm, Tower Theatre: “Ski Bum: The Warren Miller Story”— It’s always worth catching the opening night film, plus the mountain cinematography and attendance by ski legend Dan Egan makes this a must-see. 8pm, The Oxford: Opening Night Reception— Schmoozing with filmmakers and cinemaphiles in the swanky Oxford is always a blast and the fest barely feels like it has begun unless you make an appearance at this always-interesting party. Get home safe. You have a big day tomorrow. Fri., Oct. 11 10am, Regal Cinema: “WBCN and the American Revolution”—A fascinating doc about underground radio and its ability to effect social and political change. Timely as all hell.
PROMOTE YOUR CENTRAL OREGON EVENT FOR
FREE GO TO:
CALENDAR.BENDSOURCE.COM
Courtesy IMDb
12:45, Tin Pan Theater: “Honeyland”— The most beautifully directed documentary since “Leviathan,” this doc following Macedonian beekeepers is absolutely breathtaking.
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Find food and hydrate. Not just with alcohol. 3pm, Tower Theatre: Narrative Shorts #2—It’s not a film festival without a block of shorts, and this one has all women directors. Plus, “How Does it Start” is gorgeous. 5:30pm, Tower Theatre: “Carol”— One of the best movies of the last decade screening with the legendary producer Christine Vachon in attendance? Yes please. Also, Cate Blanchett is everything. 8:30pm, Riff Taproom: Friday Night Afterparty—Always a good idea to refuel on beverages, but be quick because you have to go back to...... 9pm, Tower Theatre: “Hedwig and the Angry Inch”—I mean, this is arguably the greatest musical ever made. To see it on the big screen is life. Sleep the good sleep. Sat., Oct. 12 10:30am, Regal Cinema: “Little Miss Westie”— A stunningly empathetic documentary following two transgender siblings and a beauty pageant. Lovely. 12:15, McMenamins: First Features— A panel of first-time filmmakers moderated by Ron “Bull Durham” Shelton. A must attend for those interested in the nuts and bolts of filmmaking.
Woo-Sir Choi in “Parasite.”
Food? Nah, just sustain yourself with the nourishing qualities of film! 2pm, McMenamins: IndieWomen Producing IndieFilm w/Christine Vachon—Three women directors discuss filmmaking in a panel moderated by groundbreaking producer Christine Vachon. Unmissable. 4pm, Regal Cinema: “Someone Somewhere”— A powerful and pointed dramedy following a desperate group of strangers all trying to be noticed in Hollywood. This one will stick with you. 5:45, Regal Cinema: “First Reformed”— My personal highlight of the fest is this screening of Paul Schrader’s masterpiece of tension, starring Ethan Hawke, with producer Christine Vachon in attendance. Literally one of the best movies ever made. Worth missing the awards ceremony for. 8:30pm, Tin Pan Theatre: “Midnight Traveler”— A doc following a filmmaker
with a price on his head from the Taliban who must go on the run with his family. This will win Oscars. Go home, you’re an animal! Sun., Oct. 13 10:30am, Tower Theatre: “Parasite”— Bong Joon-ho is South Korea’s finest director and “Parasite” just might be his best film. An outright masterpiece that defies genre. The rest of the day will be scattered with screenings of the award winners, so this is a perfect chance to play it loose and catch whatever you missed. And there you have it. Another BendFilm is in the books and hopefully you saw everything you wanted to. There’s no wrong way to attend BendFilm, so find the itinerary that works for you and get to feasting. BendFilm Festival 2019
Oct. 10-13 bendfilm2019.eventive.org for tickets and showtimes
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
T
he time is nigh for a veritable smorgasbord of movies across four days where you finally have an excuse to pig out on cinema. BendFilm Festival 2019 is upon us and the lineup is stacked, leading people like me into a paralysis of indecision when it comes to structuring the itinerary to maximize hours per day divided into which movies look the most interesting. I like to be helpful, so here’s a breakdown of one of the myriad of ways to catch as much as possible over the weekend. Mix and match to your heart’s desire, but here’s the basic layout of my personal dream schedule for BendFilm 2019.
OUTSIDE EVENTS ATHLETIC EVENTS Bend Area Running Community (BARC) 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.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Bend Babes Brew & Running Crew If
(541) 322-2154 555 NW Arizona Avenue, Suite 25
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 and wheels (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. Dirt Divas Group mountain bike rides aimed at women of all skill levels. Ride with a group that fits your level! Meet at Pine Mountain Sports. Demo bikes available; but come 60 minutes ahead to get one. More info online. Second and Fourth Monday of every month. Pine Mountain Sports, 255 SW Century Dr., Bend. FootZone’s IntroRUN 5K Training Group FootZone makes learning to run
fun and achievable, and your new running buddies will keep you going! Learn about running form, breathing, warm ups, nutrition, and gear while training for a 5K over 8 weeks! Rank beginners and lapsed runners welcome! Oct. 12, 8-10am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-317-3568. michelle@footzonebend.com. $80..
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 snowfree and lit paths in the Old Mill. Tuesdays, 5am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: colton.gale@gmail.com. Free.
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.
Storm King Half, 10K, 5K Formerly the Down and Dirty Half, this 13.1 mile course starts and fi nishes at the 7th Mountain Resort. With the exception of the parking area at the
Inn itself the course is all dirt. The course is made up of single track and dirt roads. Hills are of course on tap for this race. The fi rst half is largely dirt roads with lots of room for passing. At the top of the climb you get a break with your second aid station and some sweet singletrack descending back towards the Inn of the Seventh. Oct. 13, 9am. Various Locations - Bend.
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@jessbfi t.com.
OUTDOOR EVENTS BMX Practice and Racing Weekly
Riders of all skill levels welcome! Great for kids to work on biking skills, feel excitement of racing on closed track. Loaner bikes and helmets available. Riders must wear long sleeve shirts, pants/knee protection, close toed shoes. Monday open practice 5:30-7:30pm $5. Weds. Practice 5:30-6:30pm Racing 6:45pm $8. Mondays-Wednesdays, 5:30-7:30pm. Through Oct. 30. High Desert BMX, 21690 Neff Rd., Bend. Contact: nickhighdesertbmx@gmail.com. $5 for Practice, $8 for Racing.
Full Immersion: Intro to Whitewater Kayaking A two and a half day introductory
progression series to whitewater kayaking. Last weekend for the class! Fri, Oct. 11, 5:308pm, Sat, Oct. 12, 9am-4pm and Sun, Oct. 13, 9am-6pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6, Bend. Contact: 541-317-9407. $245/includes equipment.
Gravity Sports Sale Visit Gravity Sports at Mt. Bachelor for a special retail event. Closeout deals on last year’s gear and gain first access to new 2020 winter gear and apparel. Oct. 12, 9am-5pm and Oct. 13, 9am5pm. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Drive, Bend. Contact: 541-382-1709. Free.
Hawk Watching Join volunteers with East
Cascades Audubon Society for the Green Ridge Raptor Survey. All visitors and volunteers can participate in spotting and tracking a variety of birds of prey as they migrate south. For more info and directions go to ecaudubon.org or email or.naturalist@gmail.com Sun, Sept. 1, 9am, Tue, Sept. 3, 9am, Wed, Sept. 4, 9am, Thu, Sept. 5, 9am, Mon, Sept. 9, 9am, Wed, Sept. 11, 9am, Sun, Sept. 22, 9am and Saturdays-Sundays, 9am. Through Oct. 20. Indian Ford Campground, Hwy 20 & S Pine St., Sisters. Contact: 541-923-6943. or.naturalist@gmail.com. Free.
Santiam Wagon Road Walk Join the Deschutes Land Trust to explore the 150-year old Santiam Wagon Road at Whychus Canyon Preserve. Explore the site of an early homestead and the signs and symbols still visible along the trail today, that help tell the story of travel and commerce in the high desert. Oct. 10, 9am-Noon. Whychus Canyon Preserve, outside Sisters, Sisters. Contact: 541-330-0017. event@deschuteslandtrust.org. Free. Winter Running 101 Stay warm, dry, safe, and fed during your winter runs! Get info about shoe options, layering, how to keep your nutrition from freezing, how to be seen, what your traction options are, and more. We’ll have tasty examples of winter fueling, too! Oct. 10, 7-8pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-317-3568. michelle@footzonebend.com. Free.
O
OUTSIDE
Bend or Bust
Water sports giant, Aquaglide, moved to Bend last year. Now it has big plans for local water fun
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By K.M. Collins Submitted
acquisition, explains, “Before Aquaglide was headquartered in Bend, outdoor was already in our DNA. Having our base of operations in Central Oregon has solidified our team’s access to research and development mediums like rivers and lakes. We can walk the walk, surrounded by so much water.” People may know Aquaglide for the 25 unique models and numerous accessories it manufactures. The company’s inflatables can be seen navigating the urban Deschutes River corridor, Elk Lake and a myriad of other Central Oregon waterways. What’s so great about inflatables? Cunningham and Esselman say the Submitted
Indoor and outdoor aqua parks by Aquaglide may be staples in Bend recreation by the end of 2020.
functional aqua park at an outside venue, as well.” Coming from management positions with companies including K2, Mastercraft Boat Company, Mammut and the North Face, Cunningham got to know Bend in college, on rock climbing and mountain biking sojourns. His willingness to lead the operation after its acquisition was dependent on the company being located here in Central Oregon. “It’s hard to put a price on proximity poised for product development and quality of life for my workforce,” Cunningham explains.
Esselman adds, “If we don’t have an authentic love for watersports then it won’t be conveyed to the consumer through our products in an authentic way. It would be so much harder for our staff to get out and enjoy the water if we weren’t located in Bend.” Navigating toward the horizon, Esselman is stoked to build Aquaglide’s community presence through local events, including river cleanups. Cunningham looks forward to being ingrained in “the fabric of the community, the way brands like Hydroflask and Ruffwear are. A local staple.” Submitted
Black Foot Angler inflatable kayaks by Aquaglide are great for high desert fishing and exploring Bend waterways.
hearted, fun-loving, outdoor industry team vibe, my one-off modeling opportunity was a blast. Product development was a recurring topic during the shoot. “How does this volume feel? Are you sitting low in the water? Is this a good shape? What about the decking?” Jackson Esselman, global director of marketing, continually inquired us paddle posers about a number of features. Aquaglide designs and manufactures aquaparks, inflatable kayaks, standup paddle boards and towables for watersports enthusiasts and outdoor recreationalists. The company moved to Bend last October, after being acquired by Kent Watersports. Its offices are located on NW Wall and Portland, near downtown Bend. Jeff Cunningham, who took the helm as general manager for Aquaglide in August 2018, following the
ease of transportation and storage is a key factor. “You can roll incognito,” said Cunningham, with a cheeky grin. “You may live in an apartment or ride a motorcycle. Aquaglide has a paddle solution for that. Inflatables make accessing the water so much easier for everyone.” Single and tandem paddle crafts are just the tip of the iceberg for Aquaglide. Internationally renowned for its innovative and one-of-a kind, water-based inflatable aqua parks, these mini water parks are blowing minds in over 80 countries. Picture a super forgiving ninja warrior gauntlet crossed with an obstacle course playground. Cunningham shares, “Look for track-system aqua parks next year in local pool facilities. And summer 2020 could hold the unveiling of a fully
Black Foot Paddle boarding: Author KM Collins just before she clotheslines on a rock and takes a chunk out of her fin.
VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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astened at the end of a long shaft, I dip the SUP paddle blade in the icy waters of Big Eddy rapid on the Deschutes River, just south of Bend. Feathering and dragging it as a directional rudder, I struggle to maintain a line and simultaneously smile casually for the cameras. Tailing out parallel to the paparazzi on the borrowed Aquaglide Black Foot inflatable SUP I was meant to model, a familiar scene unfolded. I ate shit, hitting a barely submerged lava rock, which ripped a chunk out of the Black Foot fin. Carnage. Alas, the perils of whitewater paddle boarding. Luckily the Aquaglide team was cool about it. Due to their light-
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N A T U R A L
O
W O R L D
Where Have All the Bugs and Birds Gone? Reports of staggering bird population declines By Jim Anderson in your neighborhood were empty, you’d rightly conclude that something threatening was going on.” Then the scientist put it into another realm of understanding: “If 3 billion of our neighbors—the ones who eat the bugs that destroy our food plants, carry diseases like Equine Encephalitis, are gone, I think we all may stop to think that’s threatening.” I’ll put it into another example; “If 3 billion of our neighbors who eat mosquitoes suddenly vanished, wouldn’t that be a very serious situation.” Somehow, right this moment, and without any really good working hypothesis of how it happened, there is a sudden outbreak in parts of North American of an Asian disease carried by mosquitoes. It is impossible to spray all the real estate and aquatic communities to kill mosquitoes in such numbers as to halt the threat of that Asian dilemma from spreading. If we did spray, the damages to non-target ecosystems would be so catastrophic it would upset the apple cart everywhere. We must depend on natural controls, and one of the most effective are swallows. As an example, a Cornell researcher put the missing bird situation in a way that makes all the sense in the world to me: using Evening grosbeaks. When he was a youngster he saw “invasions” of them, but today, he gets excited if he sees just one. That’s very similar to what I have observed, but in an even shorter period of time. My family and I have lived at Sun Mountain for over 40 years, feeding backyard birds from the first day we arrived. When we arrived at this location, we had over a dozen Evening grosbeaks coming to our feeder daily. In fact, we had more grosbeaks than house sparrows. Over the
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American Robin, Central Oregon residents in summer and visitors in winter—and they come in normal colors as well as leucistic—black and white.
years the house sparrow population has grown, while we haven’t seen a grosbeak in well over 15 years. Did the house sparrows drive them out, or is avian salmonella getting them, like other bird species? Avian researchers say habitat loss is a big reason for birds vanishing—but then, a 2015 study said domestic and feral house cats kill over 2.6 billion birds annually. Studies on birds killed from striking windows is also staggering: somewhere around 624 million, while automobile strikes accounted for another 214 million dead birds. Keeping your house cat at home will help reduce cat-killed bird numbers, and removing feral cats will also be a big help in reducing cat-killed birds. The best way to solve the bird-strike on windows is by sticking a silhouette of an accipiter (bird hawk) on your window. That usually works pretty well in keeping most birds from trying to fly through your house. And please, remember Rachel Carson, the author of “Silent Spring,” published as a warning about the harmful elements we are coping with in the technological world. She told us what too many powerful
BEND’S LOCAL INDEPENDENT OUTDOOR RETAILER
chemicals will do to the Earth — and us — if we weren’t cautious. Unfortunately, I fear Carson was more than correct. What she predicted is happening today, and if we don’t stop pouring chemicals into our soil and water it’s going to be more than birds and insects that will disappear. As an example, the Oregon Department of Transportation sprayed a weed-killer along Hwy 20 awhile back, killing thousands of pine trees along the roadway. The dead trees have been removed, but the stuff that killed them is still in the soil—doing what, I wonder… If we stop using pesticides and herbicides in our own backyards, that will be a beginning. If we take the time to think and understand what chemical applications do in the long run, and stop them before they start, the world will be a healthier place. Birds and bats eat mosquitoes; all we have to do is make it easier for them to do so and we can stop mosquito-borne diseases. We won’t need to spray to kill mosquitoes. OUTDOOR RESEARCH PATAGONIA PETZL RAB PRANA MERRELL SMARTWOOL THERMAREST METOLIUS SALEWA SCARPA SEA TO SUMMIT OBOZ MOUNTAIN HARDWEAR HYDRO FLASK ZEAL MONTRAIL ARC’TERYX FIVETEN GARMONT KEEN LA SPORTIVA MAMMUT DARN TOUGH OSPREY CHACO SMITH
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Monday - Saturday 10am-6pm Sunday 10am-5pm
39 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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ot too long ago, I became aware that insects are disappearing from the earth, not just here in the Pacific Northwest, but around the U.S., and in Europe. That’s a very serious state of affairs. Without insects we won’t have the tools to pollinate the marvelous variety of plants that grow on this good earth, among them a lot of the foods we eat. Now I’m receiving notices about birds also disappearing. One headline from the Associated Press states: “Where are the wild birds? 3 billion fewer than 1970,” which was based on the Science article, “Staggering decline of bird populations.” Conservation scientists at Cornell University discovered this drop in bird populations and are wondering why and what can be done to stop it. This is part of what the Christmas Bird Count is all about. We do it to spot population trends. The National Audubon Society started these counts over 100 years ago, amassing bird numbers all across the U.S. and Canada. It appears the scientists at Cornell decided to take a look at the numbers and see if or what was happening in bird populations across the board. Another scientist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, after reading the Cornell study, stated, “This is a landmark paper, it’s put numbers to everyone’s fears about what’s going on.” But it doesn’t tell us “what’s” going on; just that it has happened. Every year the state ornithologist at the University of Connecticut received calls from throughout the state from people noticing a drop in bird numbers. This prompted the scientist to say, “If you came out of your house one morning and noticed that a third of all the houses
REAL ESTATE YARDLEY ESTATES SINGLE LEVEL 63140 Peale St.
ADVERTISE IN OUR REAL ESTATE SECTION ADVERTISE@BENDSOURCE.COM
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Single level home on a quiet cul-de-sac featuring a great room, chef’s kitchen, vaulted ceilings w/skylights, spacious master & 2 large addt’l beds. Outstanding craftsmanship. Fully fenced yard has been $465,000 immaculately landscaped.
NWX NEW CONSTRUCTION 2412 NW Crossing Dr.
Designed & constructed by award-winning duo, home sits on corner lot in heart of NWX. Features an open floor plan w/master on the main. 2 guest beds, bath & loft upstairs. Central vac, A/C, PV solar panels $699,900 & 50A vehicle charger.
BEAUTIFUL RIVER FRONT HOME 3136 NW Quiet River Ln.
This home will feel as though your entire life is a vacation with the river just yards from the back deck. 3 beds + a bonus/4th bed & an office, vaulted great room, chef’s kitchen, multiple outdoor areas & oversized $999,000 3-car garage.
SALE PENDING
CONTEMPORARY TETHEROW 61398 Cannon Ct.
1.10 ACRE LOT IN THE PARKS 61430 Cultus Lake Ct.
Rare 1.10 acre lot at The Parks at Broken Top on Bend’s westside. Gentle slope perfect for your dream home in a highly desirable neighborhood. Enjoy parks, community pool & central location to westside $465,000 amenities.
Luxurious finishes & breathtaking views in Tetherow’s Heath neighborhood. Single level w/an entertainer’s great room, expansive patio, office, private master suite & 2 guest rooms. 3-car garage w/ $1,369,500 additional storage area.
n ow S h ow i n g
by
Colleen Dillingham
BEAUTIFUL TOWNHOME
RIVERFRONT LIVING 536 NW Harmon Blvd.
Enjoy riverfront living with amazing river views and river access all just moments from the Galveston corridor and Downtown Bend. Charming, updated home offers 2 bed, 2 bath, a finished basement w/office & bonus room. $1,385,000
OPEN SAT & SUN 12-3PM
61156 FOXGLOVE LOOP Great 2nd home or primary residence, this lovely townhome in fantastic SW location of River Canyon Estates. No need to join a fitness center as you have one here! Plus a swimming pool, clubhouse and tennis courts. Easy care living as HOA takes care of exterior of the home & landscaping/irrigation in the front yard. 3 BR, 2.5 bath, open floor plan, gas fireplace and private, fenced backyard.
GREAT NEW PRICE: $419,000 Terry Skjersaa
Principal Broker, CRS
Jason Boone
Principal Broker, CRIS
Mollie Hogan
Principal Broker, CRS
Cole Billings
Colleen Dillingham
Broker
BROKER
Skjersaa Group | Duke Warner Realty
541-788-9991
1033 NW Newport Ave. Bend, OR 97703
colleendillingham@gmail.com
541.383.1426
www.SkjersaaGroup.com
550 NW FRANKLIN AVENUE, SUITE 108, BEND
OPEN SUNDAY 12-3 PM
888 SW Theater Drive, Bend • $799,995
Rare opportunity to be in In the Luxurious Pahlisch Homes neighborhood of Deschutes Landing, just steps to the Deschutes River & The Old Mill District. 3 bedroom 4 bath, 2311 sq feet townhome features wood floors, quartz countertops, and designer finishes throughout. Master suite has tiled showers and soaking tub with huge walk-in closet. Oversized two-car garage w/ shop also outfitted with full utility bathroom. This property is eligible for a City Of Bend Short Term Vacation Rental Permit.
PRICE REDUCTION
61378 Geary Drive, Bend • $319,995 This Energy Star and Earth Advantage Certified 3 bedroom 2 bath Craftsman Style Home is located on a nice size landscaped lot in SE Bend, on a quiet street minutes away from shopping. Spacious livingroom and kitchen with Pantry and Island allowing for lots of storage. Over-sized master bedroom with vaulted ceilings. Extra room for office area or bonus room. Forced air/AC upstairs. Mitsubishi ductless heat/AC downstairs. Covered front porch and back deck.
Tony Levison Broker 541.977.1852
alevison@me.com
Jamie Garza Broker 541.788.0860
CENTRAL OREGON
JamieGarza@windermere.com
695 SW Mill View Way Suite 100 • Bend, OR • www.Alevison.withwre.com
TAKE ME HOME
REAL ESTATE
By Abbie + Rick Sams Licensed brokers, Team Sams at Fred Real Estate Group
Winterizing the Home
REAL ESTATE LISTINGS 64595 OLD BEND REDMOND HWY, BEND 4 BD/5 BA | 4,2OO SQFT $1,195,000
Cold weather doesn’t have to mean higher energy bills Easy ways to seal up drafts include replacing worn weather stripping around doors and windows, installing a draft stop below leaky exterior doors and adding insulated gaskets at electrical receptacles and switch plates. If there’s a fireplace in the home, close the damper. Leaving the damper open while the fireplace isn’t in use is like leaving a window open, allowing warm air to escape through the chimney. Quick Tips Ceiling fan: The switch on the ceiling fan does have a use: it reverses the blade direction. In the summer it’s used to cool a room by pulling hot air upward. Reversing directions will force the warm air down and help to circulate the air, providing a more consistent temperature throughout the home. Passive solar and window coverings: Opening window coverings on south-facing windows during the day helps promote passive solar heating. Using insulated window coverings helps keep the heat in and the cold out. Mind tricks: Place an attractive throw blanket on furniture and colorful rugs on hard surfaces to create a more pleasant and cozy ambience, which will reduce the mental urge to crank up the furnace. The Internet is a great resource for energy saving tips. Visit Energy Trust of Oregon’s website, www.energytrust.org, for advice, info on rebates and incentives including a $50 coupon off a smart thermostat. Another excellent website is www. energy.gov/energysaver/energy-saver, a consumer resource on saving energy and using renewable energy technologies at home.
Bonnie Varner, Principal Broker 541-788-3485 Bonnie.Varner@myluckyhouse.com
Misty Rupe, Broker 503-991-3233 Misty.Rupe@myluckyhouse.com
Thinking about buying a new home or refinancing? If so, let’s chat. Tracia Larimer MORTGAGE BROKER
NMLS# 1507306
Azara Mortgage, LLC
NMLS#1577943
(541) 241-8344
GORGEOUS NWX CRAFTSMAN HOME WITH CHARMING ADU 2541 NW Lemhi Pass Drive 3bd/3.5ba, 2677 sq ft OFFERED AT $839,000 Beth Melner 541-907-6035 Rick Melner 541-678-2169 melnergroup@stellarnw.com melnerproperties.com
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Richard Sams LICENSED BROKER, NAR GREEN, ABR, EARTH ADVANTAGE BROKER
HOME PRICE ROUND-UP
Photos and listing info from Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service
Otis Craig
541-948-2311 rick@teamsams.com
Broker, CRS
<< LOW
20809 Glenn Maroe Ct, Bend, OR 97701 3 Beds, 2 Baths, 1,006 sq ft, .14 Acres lot Built in 1996 $309,000 Listed by Realty Yield.
MID >>
FIND YOUR PLACE IN BEND
18729 SW Choctaw Rd, Bend, OR 97702 3 Beds, 3 Baths, 2436 sq ft, 1.23 Acres lot Built in 1978, $517,000 Listed by Fred Real Estate Group
www.otiscraig.com
Abbie Kephart Sams BROKER 503-812-2025 abbie@teamsams.com
www.teamsams.com
541.771.4824 otis@otiscraig.com
<< HIGH
2486 NW Wyeth Pl, Bend, OR 97703 5 Beds, 4 Baths, 4,317 sq ft, .57 Acres lot Built in 1999 $950,000 Listed by Harcourts The Garner Group Real Estate.
Licensed in the State of Oregon
41 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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he arrival of snow in September had Central Oregonians thinking about cold winter and firing up the furnace. Even though there are a couple more months of fall, it’s prime time to start getting homes ready for winter. There are projects for every budget; some best left to the pros, but most DIY-friendly—and they’ll all help keep homes warmer and energy bills lower. Heating/ Ventilation/ Air Conditioning (HVAC) system: Call in a professional for an inspection, evaluation and cleaning to ensure the systems are running efficiently. Even just changing the furnace filter is a simple DIY task that will help the system “breathe” properly with less effort, which equates to less energy needs to operate. Thermostat: Programming the thermostat or installing a Smart Thermostat will save energy use by controlling temperatures that match people’s daily schedule and needs. Instead of keeping a home at a constant temperature it’s most efficient to keep the temperature lower when nobody is home or is sleeping and at a warmer temperature while awake at home. Smart thermostats learn a household’s habits and actually self-program, while also allowing users to operate the system remotely and turn up the temps before everyone arrives home. Another easy tip is shut the doors to rooms not being used. That’s zonal heating on a budget. Sealing the home envelope: Sealing up drafts from doors, windows and other areas will help keep homes feeling warmer. Check for drafts by looking for cracks, gaps or openings, especially in the attic or basement and around doors and windows.
Currently, home has 3 rentals professionally managed. Two bdrms in main house and 1 bdrm/bath in each guest quarters. Updated kitchen. Private setting. 7 acres. Shop and RV parking.
2019
A partnership with
MFA in Creative Writing Program
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Cash Prizes!*
Winners will have their works published in the Nov. 21 issue of the Source, and will be invited to read from their works at a reading Nov. 24 at the Downtown Bend Library, along with judges from the OSU-Cascades MFA program.
• Submit up to five poems, 30 lines max each • Include the title of poem in the file name. Also have the title of the poem on the poem document (no-brainer, we know… but…) • Save each poem as its own PDF document • Include your name, email address and phone number in the body of the email you send with your poems. DO NOT include your name on the poems • Email poems to editor@bendsource.com with “Poetry Contest” and your first and last name in the subject line (You can also drop your poems off at the Source: 704 NW Georgia Ave., Bend. Place your poems in an envelope with your name, phone number and email address on the outside of the envelope.)
“We die. That may be the meaning of life. But we do language. That may be the measure of our lives.” — Toni Morrison, 1931-2019
DEADLINE:
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SCIENCE ADVICE GODDESS TheAbout Dumpster Fire Within six weeks ago, I started
dating the nicest guy. I have some intimacy issues (basically, fear of abandonment), and having somebody be nice to me is new and uncomfortable. I freaked out one night and had sex with somebody else. I know this guy I’m dating isn’t sleeping with other women, but we haven’t had the official talk. I don’t plan on doing this again, but I really want to confess. The guilt is terrible. --Disgusted With Myself The only man in your life with whom you should be discussing your recent sexual history is Dr. Maury Finkelbaum, your 7,000-year-old gynecologist. You and Neighbordude might be all kinds of fond of each other, but you have no agreement for sexual exclusivity, and you can’t violate a treaty that doesn’t actually exist. Still, assuming that he isn’t getting it on with anyone else, it’s natural that you’d feel guilty about an apparent asymmetry in sexual grazing. Human psychology evolved to have a sort of inner accounting staff monitoring the fairness level of our behavior -- calculating whether we’re giving as much as we’re getting. However, unlike everybody’s grandma, evolution doesn’t care whether we’re nice people. It just wants us to survive so we can pass on our genes. Accordingly, this fairness monitoring system safeguards our physical survival through safeguarding our social survival. (In ancestral times, slackers or freeloaders booted from the ancestral band markedly increased their chances of becoming some sharp-fanged thing’s Sunday brunch entree.) Even today, when we perceive that we’re getting more than our fair share of something -- whether it’s cake or sex with hot strangers -- our behavioral accounts payable team pings us in the form of feelbad: the noxious, gut-churning feeling of guilt (and/or its poisonous BFF, shame). Research by evolutionary psychologist Daniel Sznycer and his colleagues deems guilt a “recalibrational emotion.” Translated from the Professorese, this means that our wanting to stop the feelbad from guilt motivates us to even the balance between ourselves and somebody we’ve shorted in some way. The thing is, emotion, which rises up automatically, with no effort from us, needs to be fact-checked by reason. Unfortunately, reason has to be dragged out of bed and forced to work. And that’s what you need to do with yours. Again, remember that you and this guy had no
exclusivity agreement that would have barred you from venturing into other men’s beds, back seats, or sex dungeons. Also, let’s get real on why you’re longing to tell. It isn’t to make the guy feel better but to make yourself feel better -- to rid yourself of the psychological tension that comes from holding back information. (It’s basically the emotional version of a really bad need to pee.) Next, consider the view from psychiatrist and evolutionary researcher Randolph Nesse that painful emoAmy Alkon tions are important motivational tools -- just like physical pain, when you, say, lean back at a party, all apex of cool, and rest your palm on a hot stove. Just as the searing pain gets you to lift your hand pronto, you can use your guilt-induced discomfort in a positive way: as reinforcement against your stepping out on the guy once you two do have a relationship. Other helpful insight comes from research on “attachment.” The “attachment behavioral system,” explain social scientists Mario Mikulencer and Philip Shaver, motivates human beings, from infancy on, “to seek proximity to significant others (attachment figures) in times of need.” A person’s “attachment style” indicates the degree to which a person “worries that a partner will not be responsive in times of need” (including the worry that one’s partner will flee the relationship entirely). However, Mikulencer and Shaver note that “a growing body of research shows that attachment style can change, subtly or dramatically.” One way to change it is through asking your partner to be very physically and emotionally expressive with you in loving, cuddly-wuddly ways. Research by psychologist Brooke C. Feeney finds that the more an insecurely attached person sees their partner is there for them -- like with touch that “conveys acceptance, warmth, and intimacy” -- the more independent (that is, the less clingoramous) they can be. Finally, there’s something you can do to help yourself feel more secure, per Mikulencer and Shaver’s research: Turn on the TV in your head and run helpful programming -- mental video of warm, fuzzy “attachment figures.” The researchers explain that “thoughts of an available and supportive attachment figure” lead people with a lot of attachment insecurities “to behave more like secure people.” Or, putting this another way, your response to a man being really loving to you would be to give love in return -- as opposed to giving excuses like “I was so freaked out by how nice you were to me that I tripped and fell on somebody else’s penis.”
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.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): “Love is when you
ASTROLOGY By Rob Brezsny
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I hope you are embarking on a vigorous new phase of self-redefi nition. I trust you are excited about shedding old ways of thinking about yourself and eager to revise and re-imagine the plot of your life story. As you do, keep in mind this helpful counsel from physicist Richard Feynman: “You have no responsibility to live up to what other people think you ought to accomplish. I have no responsibility to be like they expect me to be. It’s their mistake, not my failing.”
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 18): “Experiment is the sole source of truth,” wrote philosopher and polymath Henri Poincaré. “It alone can teach us something new; it alone can give us certainty.” He wasn’t merely referring to the kinds of experiments that scientists conduct in laboratories. He was talking about the probes and explorations we can and should carry out in the course of our daily lives. I mention this, Aquarius, because the coming days will be prime time for you to do just that: ask provocative questions, initiate novel adventures, and incite fun learning experiences.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “The universe is
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In my opinion, Pis-
under no obligation to make sense to you,” declared astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson. If that’s even a little bit true, I bet you won’t believe it in the coming weeks. According to my analysis, the universe will make a great deal of sense to you—at times even exquisite, beautiful, breathtaking sense. Life will be in a revelatory and articulate mood. The evocative clues coming your way about the nature of reality could tempt you to believe that there is indeed a coherent plan and meaning to your personal destiny.
cean singer, poet, and actor Saul Williams produces high-quality art. So he has earned a right to critique mediocre art. In speaking about movies and TV shows that are hard to enjoy unless we dumb ourselves down, he says that “we have more guilty pleasure than actual f------ pleasure.” Your assignment in the coming weeks, Pisces, is to cut back on your “guiity pleasures”—the entertainment, art, and socializing that brings meager returns—as you increase and upgrade your actual f------ pleasure.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Constantine P. Cavafy’s poem “Waiting for the Barbarians” imagines the imminent arrival of an unpredictable agent of chaos. “The barbarians are coming today,” declares the narrator. Everyone in town is uneasy. People’s routines are in disarray. Faces look worried. What’s going to happen? But the poem has a surprise ending. “It is night, and the barbarians haven’t come,” reports the narrator. “Some people have arrived from the frontier and say that there aren’t any more barbarians.” I propose that we use this scene as a metaphor for your life right now, Taurus. It’s quite possible that the perceived threat isn’t really a threat. So here’s my question, taken from near the end of the poem: “What are we going to do now without the barbarians?”
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Some folklorists prefer the term “wonder tales” rather than “fairy tales.” Indeed, many such stories are fi lled with marvelous events that feature magical transformations, talking animals, and mythical creatures like elves and dragons and unicorns. I bring this up, Gemini, because I want to encourage you to read some wonder tales. Hopefully, as you do, you’ll be inspired to re-imagine your life as a wonder tale; you’ll reframe the events of the “real world” around you as being elements in a richly entertaining wonder tale. Why do I recommend this? Because wonder tales are like waking dreams that reveal the wishes and curiosities and fascinations of your deep psyche. And I think you will benefi t profoundly in the
coming weeks from consciously tuning in to those wishes and curiosities and fascinations.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): I suspect that in the coming days you’ll be able to see into everyone’s souls more vividly than usual. You’ll have a special talent for piercing through the outer trappings of their personalities so as to gaze at the essence beneath. It’s as if your eyes will be blessed by an enhancement that enables you to discern what’s often hidden. This upgrade in your perception may at times be unsettling. For some of the people you behold, the difference between how they present themselves and who they actually are will be dramatic. But for the most part, penetrating to the depths should be fun, enriching, even healing. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “This heart is rusty,” writes poet Gabriel Gadfl y. “It creaks, it clanks, it crashes and rattles and bangs.” Why is his heart in such a state? Because he has been separated from a person he loves. And so he’s out of practice in doing the little things, the caring gestures and tender words, that a lover does to keep the heart well-oiled. It’s my observation that most of us go through rusty-heart phases like this even when we are living in close proximity to an intimate ally. We neglect to practice the art of bestowing affectionate attention and low-key adoration. We forget how important it is for our own welfare that we continually refresh and reinvigorate our heart intelligence. These are good meditations for you right now, Leo.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “All the effort in the world won’t matter if you’re not inspired,” writes novelist Chuck Palahniuk. I agree! And that’s a key meditation for you right now. Your assignment is to enhance and upgrade the inspiration you feel about the activities that are most important to you—the work and the play that give you the sense you’re living a meaningful life. So how do you boost your excitement and motivation for those essential actions you do on a regular basis? Here’s a good place to begin: visualize in exuberant detail all the reasons you started doing them in the fi rst place.
Homework: I discuss some of my ideas about astrology in the article published here: https://tinyurl.com/RobOnAstrology
FEST I VA I C Ksports E T S movies AVA I LofAall BL E N OW ! Durham director Hear the stories behind one of L theTbest time with Bull J O Iand N Tscreenwriter H E F U N ATRon T HShelton E A N Nand U A LOregon-based G 5 K I C K- O film F F PA R T YS E P Levy. T 27TH critic, Shawn 16TH
ANNUAL
WHEN
S AT U R DAY, O C T 1 2 T H 2:45 PM WHERE
T H E TOW E R T H E AT R E 8 3 5 N W WA L L S T R E E T
OCT 10-13 16TH ANNUAL
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43 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 2019 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You’ve probably heard the saying, “Genius is 99 percent perspiration and one percent inspiration.” It’s often attributed to inventor Thomas Edison. Sixteenth-century artist Michelangelo expressed a similar idea. “If you knew how much labor went into it, you would not call it genius,” he said about one of his masterpieces. I’m guessing that you Scorpios have been in a phase when these descriptions are highly apropos. The work you’ve been doing may look productive and interesting and heroic to the casual observer, and maybe only you know how arduous and exacting it has been. So now what do you do? I say it’s time to enjoy the fruits of your efforts. Celebrate! Give yourself a thrilling gift.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In 2005, Facebook was a start-up company barely on the map of the internet. Its president asked graffi ti artist David Choe to paint murals on the walls of its headquarters. Choe asked for $60,000, but the president convinced him to be paid with Facebook stock instead. Years later, when Facebook went public, Choe became a multi-millionaire. I suspect that in the coming months you will be faced with choices that are less spectacular than that, Capricorn, but similar and important. My conclusion: Be willing to consider smart gambles when projects are germinating.
meet someone who tells you something new about yourself,” wrote poet André Breton. I think that’s an excellent principle to put at the top of your priority list in the coming weeks, Aries. To be in maximum alignment with cosmic rhythms, you should seek input from allies who’ll offer insights about you that are outside your current conceptions of yourself. You might even be daring enough to place yourself in the paths of strangers, acquaintances, animals, and teachers who can provide novel refl ections. There’s just one caveat: Stay away from people who might be inclined to fl ing negative feedback.
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HEALTH & WELLNESS EVENTS “The 5 Secrets of Winning in Retiring from Sport” Author Janae Alito wants to
help you win in life beyond sport. Oct. 17, 6:307:30pm. Focus Physical Therapy at Recharge, 550 SW Industrial Way Suite 130, Bend. Contact: info@transitionwhatnow.com. Free.
Meditation Classes First class is free! Mondays, 7-8pm, Tuesdays, Noon-1pm, Wednesdays, 7-8pm and Thursdays, Noon1pm. Blissful Heart Wellness Center, 45 NW Greeley Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-595-3288. halie@blissful-heart.com. Free.
All For One Community Reiki Local Reiki
NaMEOWste Cat Yoga Come join us
Ayurveda and Pranic Healing Come
enjoy tea and community while learning about Pranic Healing and Ayurveda, and experiencing a short meditation. Oct. 16, Noon-1pm. Tula Movement Arts, 2797 NW Clearwater Drive, Suite 100, Bend. Contact: 541-706-0676. info@ sacredspacehealingarts.com. $10 suggested donation.
Bend Educational Event: SOS - Safety Outreach for Seniors Fire Marshal
Larry Medina works with communitiy partners to reduce risk for local residents. Larry also serves as Board Chair for the American Red Cross. Oct. 16, 2pm. Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend. Free.
Community Healing Flow A gentle flow
class , proceeds donated to charity. Fridays, 4-5:15pm. Bend Community Healing Center, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 133, Bend. By donation.
Create/Manifest Abundance Use the
tools from this class taught by Rev Jane Hiatt to create abundance for anything you desire. Mondays, 12:30-2 and 6:30-8pm. Through Dec. 2. Unity Community of Central Oregon, 63645 Scenic Drive, Bend. Contact: 541-388-1569. Bendunity@gmail.com. Donations accepted.
EFT Tapping & Energy Wellness Experience how energy work can immediately improve the way you feel. Oct. 13, 1pm. Sisters Library, 110 North Cedar Street, Sisters. Free.
Expert Answers to Back Pain Chronic back pain specialist, Dr. Mathew Paluck, will share insights to help you understand the causes of back problems. Oct. 10, 6-7pm. Tykeson Hall, OSU-Cascades, 1500 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-322-2211. jgriggs@thecenteroregon.com. Free.
Grief Support Group This program
creates a safe and supportive environment to begin your journey towards healing. Contact St Charles Hospice, 541-706-6700 to register. Wednesdays, 2-3:30pm. Through Nov. 13. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-706-6700. spcoyle@ stcharleshealthcare.org. Free.
Gyrokinesis This class will help improve range of motion, coordination, flexibility and mobilization. BYO mat. Thursdays, 9:30-10:45am. The Blissful Heart ~ Crystal Sanctuary, 45 NW Greeley Ave., Bend. Contact: 760-271-3272. angela@blissful-heart.com. $15/class, first class is free. Health & Wellness Fair Proceeds to
benefit the Alzheimer’s Association. Oct. 16, 10am-2pm. Fox Hollow Assisted Living, 2599 NE Studio Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-383-2030. morozco-thompson@regency-pacific.com. Free.
Introduction to Movement Signature Projects Learn skills for deeper and more
45
for a series of yoga classes with our shelter kitties! Second Sunday of every month, 2-3pm. Through Dec. 31. BrightSide Animal Center, 1355 NW Hemlock Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-923-0882. info@brightsideanimals.org. $10 suggested donation.
Prineville Educational Event: Living Well with Parkinson’s Please join us for
an afternoon workshop focused on living your best life. Presented by: Carol Pfeil, Program Coordinator for PRO in Central Oregon, joined by community members. Questions? Carol@parkinsonsresources.org Oct. 10, 2pm. Room 1868, 152 Northwest 4th Street, Prineville.
Qigong Plus Qigong enhances one’s ability
to heal using breathing, sound, movements, concentration, massage and meditation. Sunday class by appointment. Contact Dawn Song, text or email only. Sundays, 12:30-1:30pm 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.
Restorative and Gentle Flow Yoga
Taught by Suzanne E-RYT Kripalu School of Yoga and Health. Mondays, 5:30-6:45pm and Tuesdays, 9:30-10:45am. Bend Community Healing Center, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite 133, Bend. Contact: 240-498-1471. info@bendcommunityhealing.com. First class free, 5-pack intro/$40.
The NEW REDMOND ISSUE will explore the next big thing in development, downtown revitalization, outdoor recreation and more. Discover the culture, people and charm of Redmond in this new special issue of the Source Weekly!
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Tai Chi Classes with Dr. Rob Neilson are in the Yang style of Taiji. The practice is 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. Tai Chi For Health Instructor Maureen Benet. Certified by Dr. Paul Lam. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 8-9am. OREGON TAI CHI, 1350 SE Reed Mkt Rd Ste 102, Bend. Contact: 541-389-5015. First class free. The Playbook for Aging This session will be an intro to the issues we should be thinking about and planning for. Oct. 10, 4pm. Sunriver Library, Venture Lane, Sunriver. Free.
ssue! I y a d i l Ho
2019
Thursday Weekly Walk Get acquainted with walking routes, learn how to track your walks on your smartphone and meet some friendly new people. Thursdays, Noon-1pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-317-3568. michelle@footzonebend.com. Free.
Transcendental Meditation Intro Talk A presentation on the Transcendental
Meditation® Technique. Tue, Oct. 1, 12:301:30pm and Mon, Oct. 14, 6:30-7:30pm. Deschutes Public Library-Downtown, 601 NW Wall Street, Bend. Contact: 541-598-5920. mwebster@tm.org. Free.
Type 2 Diabetes Listening Session for People with I/DD Oct. 9, 2pm. Abilitree,
2680 Twin Knolls Dr., Bend. Free.
Vin/Yin Yoga Mondays-Thursdays, 3pm. First
United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St., Bend. Contact: 541-420-1587. By donation.
restful sleep and reduce anxiety. Mondays, 5:307pm. Susana Lauder, 1740 NW Pence Ste. 6, Bend. Contact: 541-647-8023. Free.
Yoga An hour of yoga with Shawn Anzaldo. BYO
ManKind Project Open Men’s Circle Open circles give men a chance to
Zen Discussion & Meditation A weekly
explore themselves and share with others. Located at 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend. Oct. 15, 6:30-8:30pm. Bend, RSVP for address, Bend. Contact: 458-206-3324. zzubelgoog@ gmail.com. Free.
A SMALL CITY WITH A BIG IMPACT!
mat. Thursdays, Noon-1pm. Princess Athletic, 945 NW Wall St., Suite 150, Bend. Free.
Dharma discussion and meditation. Open to all. No meeting 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.
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practitioners come together to give 30 minute sessions. All ages welcome! Sessions will be held on the second Friday of every month. Oct. 11, 6:30-8pm. A Child’s Garden, 2150 NE Studio Rd #A1, Bend. Free.
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46
Deschutes County: The Land of Endless Youth Activity Centers By Jeremy Dickman
L
et’s get this out of the way early: I don’t advocate marijuana use by anyone under the age of 21, and I’ve never met a marijuana user who does. Chronic marijuana use, so to speak, by children and teens has been associated with greater high-school dropout rates, more dependency on government assistance and lower employment rates. There’s debate about whether these outcomes are directly related to marijuana, as opposed to merely being reflective of other conditions at home for kids with easy access to weed. All the same, smoking dope probably doesn’t help a kid with math homework. That’s why the Oregon Liquor Control Commission implemented a large body of regulations aimed at, above all, keeping marijuana away from kids. “No Minors” signs are ubiquitous at every regulated marijuana business in Oregon. Retail dispensaries must ID everyone, and OLCC conducts sting operations regularly. “Childproof ” packaging can only be deemed such after very expensive studies. Businesses cannot advertise in a way that’s attractive to minors. Finally, all marijuana businesses in the state must locate at least 1,000 feet away from public or private schools. Local rules, however, can be even more stringent, with various counties throughout Oregon requiring that marijuana businesses be established at least 1,000 feet away from schools, churches, licensed day care centers, and—in the case of Deschutes County—“youth activity centers.” It’s the YAC loophole that has been weaponized by two-thirds of the Deschutes County Board of Commissioners to serve as a de facto ban on marijuana businesses, ever since Patti Adair was sworn in as commissioner last January. A YAC is not defined in the Deschutes County Code, and as recently as December 2018, when Tammy Baney was still a county commissioner, the Board adopted a relatively narrow view of the definition of a YAC. An adjacent property with 4H activities, for example, did not qualify. In multiple cases in 2019, however, the shift over the definition of a YAC has been pronounced. Most recently, the Board denied an application for a marijuana producer next door to Sundance Meadows (Deschutes County has opted out of new marijuana businesses, but must continue to process and evaluate applications submitted before the effective opt-out date in mid-August).
Per Sundance Meadows’ website, it’s a for-profit business located 8 miles east of Bend that offers “deed” sales of its land for recreation. A swimming pool, horseback riding area, makeshift mini-golf course, ATV trails and wildlife are among the features advertised. We can say for sure what Sundance Meadows is not: A licensed daycare, parochial school, private school or public school with compulsory attendance under Oregon law. It’s not a YMCA, Boys & Girls Club, or even a summer camp for kids. In other words, in the eyes of the OLCC (and every other county in the state) it may as well be a vacant lot when it comes to relevance for separation distances from marijuana farms. Yet according to County Commissioners Phil Henderson and Adair, it’s a Youth Activity Center. Henderson noted that “a swimming pool is the clearest definition of an activity center for youth as anything.” (Read: If you’re a landowner who wants to thwart potential marijuana-farm neighbors, just throw an aboveground pool on your lawn.) Adair weighed in with the following: “They’ve got their little golf thing. Their fishing pond. We know that, um, it has children outside all summer long having a good time.” Henderson seemed to allude to the idea that a YAC could be a roving boundary-pusher, to bolster his argument that if only some portion of a property is geared toward children having fun, then the entire property is a YAC: “I think there’s lots of youth activities going on within 1,000 feet of this grow. They probably come in and out of the boundary.” In other words, Henderson is concerned about the safety of children swimming within 1,000 feet of marijuana plants being grown inside a locked structure that’s under constant surveillance. County commissioners, to their credit, are cognizant of a likely appeal to the Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals following this, and other decisions like it. Yet there is a dearth of guidance from LUBA regarding whether the definition of something like a “Youth Activity Center” would be subject to a remand back to the county. The nature of “day care centers” is that they typically aren’t located miles from civilization on land meant for farming. But if you’re looking for a “youth activity center”? Well, just ask Henderson or Adair; those are everywhere.
THE REC ROOM Crossword “AYE AYE”
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.
P U B
S L A V E D
The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote:
“And the sun took a step back, the _______ themselves to _____ and autumn was awakened.” — Raquel Franco
ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S PUZZLES
ACROSS 1. “Cartel Crew” channel 6. Sports org. with a red, white, and blue ball 9. Some hipster beers, briefly 13. Ice cream orders 14. Some cats blow it 15. Coastal raptor 16. Wrestler’s elan? 18. Drying out spot 19. Decacorn’s debut: Abbr. 20. “Sounds about right” 21. Hexa- divided by two 22. Competed just so you can complain about calls? 26. With it 27. Is ready for 29. Teenage witch’s name 34. Remote batteries 35. Two things a carpenter without a car needs? 39. Underground rock? 40. Dessert made with booze 41. Religious war announcement 43. YA author Gratz 47. Monks’ dirt? 52. Have to pay back 53. Fool’s king 54. Laser hair removal spot 55. Toy’s squeaks 57. Thing that carries a lot of shit? 59. Never to be repeated 60. Rapper Lil ___ Vert 61. Jacques’s title in song 62. Georgia was a part of it: Abbr. 63. Juice 64. ___ over (helped for the time being)
DOWN 1. Content blocking technologies 2. Loud ruckus 3. Like library books and rental cars 4. Head of House Stark 5. Davis of “The Matrix” movies 6. Up till now 7. Iditarod sled dog 8. Firefighting gear 9. “Will it play in ___?” 10. Supergenius 11. OR staff 12. Locked in 17. [We haven’t run the numbers], initially 21. Hitting noise 23. Polite rural reply 24. Puerto Rico governor Vázquez 25. [Names intentionally left off] 28. Pocatello-to-Provo dir. 30. Bubble up 31. Tool that breaks up a rat’s nest 32. Hit head on 33. Pioneering Terry Riley minimalist piece named for the key of its composition 35. Org. in Canton or Springfield 36. Yemeni 37. Sprint competitor 38. It’s often on a class ring 42. Real lulu 44. Spoke unclearly 45. Current amount 46. Closed in 48. “Hamilton” character who sings “That Would Be Enough” 49. Retired TV host Philbin 50. Bummed 51. Theft 55. Crossword nut, probably 56. Crossword entry: Abbr. 57. Illness 58. Superagent Emanuel
“Arbitrary rules teach kids discipline: If every rule made sense, they wouldn’t be learning respect for authority, they’d be learning logic.” — Stephen Colbert
47 VOLUME 23 ISSUE 41 / OCTOBER 10, 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