Source Weekly September 8, 2022

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BOB WEIR ON THE MOUNTAIN RELIEF FOR WELL OWNERS A NATURALIST’S VIEW ON WORRELL WAYSIDE GUIDE INSIDE THE NEXT STEPS AFTER A COMMUNITY TRAGEDY TREATING TRAUMA

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Sales Deadline: 5pm, Mondays Editorial Deadline: 5pm, Mondays Calendar Deadline: 10am, Mondays Classified Deadline: 4pm, Mondays Deadlines may shift for special/holiday issues. On the Cover: Evan Namkung is an artist/muralist from Bend. He grew up in Oakland, California, before moving to Bend, and his art is inspired by the unseen and underappreciated aspects of life, whether in the city or natural environment. His style is deeply inspired by street art and he brings influences of the color, spontaneity and freedom of graffiti while also incorporating modern elements of realism. He views every painting as a mural on a canvas that could just as easily be seen on the side of a building, and whether it's the grit of city living, the diverse world of plants and animals, or anything in between. His art offers opportunities to see the world in a different way. He has painted several local murals, and his next public project will be a live mini mural painting at The Environmental Center in Bend on Sept. 14 from 4:30-6:30 pm.

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adventure and

EDITOR’S NOTE: Following a major event like the one Bend saw last week at the east side Safeway, lots has been reported about the events of that night, and about the backgrounds of some of the vic tims. Some of that we have consciously decided not to share here in our print pages, instead this week focusing on the notion of community support. Something that stood out for me in the interview you’ll find in this week’s Fea ture section is the importance of self-care. Sure, it can be a term tossed about in certain circles to encourage one to buy any number of health and beauty items, whether they’re helpful or not, but self-care shouldn’t be underestimated or over looked simply because of those sometimes-disingenuous connotations. Self-care looks like drinking water and eating nourishing food, as the professional in that feature story mentions. It looks like talking to a trusted person about your needs or concerns. It looks like taking a walk or loving on a pet, or other basic deeds that help us stay grounded and somewhat removed from the concerns of the day. It can be easy to spiral when we spend all our days on social media, searching for the next big story about the next awful thing. And while we do traffic in the news of the day inside these pages, we also strive to bring you the reminders of the connections and fulfillment that can be found by living in a community. I hope you peruse these pages with the idea of fostering connection in mind. Thanks for reading! 97703 This photo captures stillness in Thanks to @recreationleader this beautiful photo.

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OPINIONB etween climate-change calamities, coronavirus and ongoing gun vio lence like the case we saw in Bend last week, we are in a world where we confront crisis on the regular. Perhaps, in the before-times, before we faced down a global pandemic, it was more palatable to see our elected leaders misstep or remain absent when a com munity crisis cropped up. But with the many crises we’ve faced in the years since the advent of COVID-19, we’ve all become more attuned to what we need to hear from leadership and what it looks like when a community lacks leaders willing to stand up and quell our fears or share difficult and import antWemoments.don’talways think about it in “normal times,” but during a crisis, the character of our community leaders is revealed. It is during these tough times that we fully appreciate the impor tance of character and a moral com pass… and at its most basic, the value of clear communication. At the beginning of a crisis, whether we like it or not, social media is bound to do its game of “telephone,” spread ing rumor and speculation like the fastest of wildfires. In the initial hours after the Aug. 28 shooting at Safe way, this was certainly the case. Social media chatter included talk of multi ple shooters, of multiple locations of shootings, of conspiracies and casual ties that greatly overstated the actu al death toll in the grocery store that Sunday night. Living alongside the fear and uncertainty of social media on that night was a terrifying experience. And that’s where so many of us would have been left that night, were it not for swift action on the part of local leaders including Mayor Pro Tem Anthony Broadman and Police Chief Mike Krantz. Within several hours of the shootings, city leaders includ ing the two named above were staging a press conference to share as many details as they could. Within about 12 hours, Broadman had crafted a state ment and had it sent out to the pub lic. Within about that same amount of time, county and city leaders had set up a location for trauma support. We don’t want to overstate the case and make it sound like seeing lead ers do their jobs as expected is some modern marvel—but at the same time, it shouldn’t be taken for granted. A March 2020 article from the Brit ish Broadcasting Corporation out lined how important messaging can be during a crisis, citing the work of Uni versity of Leiden crisis management researcher Arjen Boin: “Despite modern politics’ wellknown focus on press relations, Boin suspects that, in the heat of the moment, many leaders still don’t appreciate just how important the messaging can be during times of cri sis, particularly regarding consisten cy and openness. ‘I think that leaders sometimes underestimate the effect of their own words, especially the [effects of] things they don’t say as well as the things they do say,’ he says.”

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Crisis management typically has two parts: The initial response, and then the “thinking and learning” phase, where people are tasked with analyzing what happened, how to prevent some thing similar in the future and how to do better next time. Between the rap id law enforcement response to the shooting and the rapid communica tions in the hours following, it appears local leaders made the grade on the first part. If what we hope for in part two is to see gun violence decrease and to see people’s mental health concerns identified and treated sooner, then we must look further outward than just the Bend City Council and local police, as big-ticket items like changing gun laws or expanding access to mental health care lie not necessarily in the lap of local politicians but in those at the state and federal level. With that, then, you can imagine what we’ll say next: An election is coming.

Now—not more than ever but on par with any time in the past—who we select as leaders at all levels—munic ipal, county, state and federal—does matter. We may not be able to measure character and moral compass with a simple endorsement interview, but it’s the place where we begin to know our prospective leaders and to assess their readiness for the hard work ahead. As we move into the next two months and our many interviews with local politi cal hopefuls, you can bet this will be on our minds.

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—Beverly Michaelis via facebook.com

Letter of the Week:

I see little hope for a country that continues to condone excessive vio lence, verbal and physical. A country that is eating itself alive.

O

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Letters RE: WHAT’S THE DEAL WITH ADUS? TAKE ME HOME, 9/1 I’d like to comment on the column Take Me Home—about ADUs (addi tional dwelling unit) in the Sept. 1 issue. Written by a real estate broker, the arti cle puts ADUs in a positive light. My hus band and I have lived in our single-family dwelling for 39 years. It’s a very well-es tablished neighborhood; most of the houses were built in the late 1970s. The couple next to us had an adjacent extra lot. When they sold their property, the lot was sold separately. A few years later the city changed their zoning code. Now they encourage ADUs. Then a mon strosity of a dual living ADU would be built there. Everyone in the neighbor hood called the city to complain. We were all told that the building would be constructed per the city permit process. Now there are renters there and occa sional loud parties. Our quiet neighbor hood has been destroyed because of this ADU. We don’t think ADUs as in-fill in established single residential neighbor hoods are a good idea! —Alice Berntson, Salem RE: WATER AT HOME. FEATURE, 8/25 Thank you for pursuing this! We use Watersmart reports and are happy to see our water use is down in 2022 com pared to 2021 and 2020 due largely to converting irrigation heads from spray to rotating or drip.

So, I grew up in Corvallis. One of the things they know about, because Ore gon supplies the world with grass seed is GRASS. I once asked my neighbor who was a PhD in the soils department when and how to water a lawn. His answer, “It doesn’t take much water if you aren’t stupid” was his reply. He said, water at 5 am for 15 minutes every other day. The grass and soil are ready to accept the water then. If you water after the sun comes up, the water just runs off into the drain because the plants can’t accept it. They are bracing to survive the sun and reject most of the liquid as does the soil. So, don’t be stupid. Don’t water at 3pm. You are throwing away money and the water is doing your lawn and plants more harm than good.

—Margot McIlvenna via facebook.com

—Greg Byrne GUN VIOLENCE I’ve wanted to move to Bend for 15 years. I fell in love with it, and dreamed of living here. I loved the natural beauty and the friendly people I encountered. Three years ago a job opportuni ty appeared and finally, I was going to move, with my family, to Bend. Over that time, Bend did not disap point. It was everything I wanted and more. I was thankful that I’d left behind all the aggression, the road rage and vio lence that surrounded me living near a big city. That I would no longer have to worry about going out to public places with groups of people. My family and I could live in a friendly place, a place where nature reminds us of what’s good in the world. A place of security. That all changed for me on the night of August 28, 2022. I got a call from our daughter asking if we’d heard about the Safeway shoot ing. Immediately my heart sank for the innocent victims, my stomach turned as I thought of their loved ones who will need to try to deal with their loss, my own personal dreams of living in a friendly, peaceful city, shattered. In an instant, Bend became… just another city… another city in a gun addicted, sick, backwards looking nation.Now, as a survivor, I have to some how come to grips with, being con cerned, and worried, whenever I or my family goes out into the public. Every emotion I thought I’d left behind, is once again sitting on my shoulder. Eat ing away at my soul.

I’m tired of ending letters with the words “keep safe.” Keeping safe used to be, and should be now, something we live with daily. So for now on, I’m changing my sign offs with…. Good Luck, cause that’s all we’ve got.  —John Bell   Keep in the know of what's going on in Central Oregon, follow us on Instagram and Twitter.

Letter of the week receives $5 to Palate!

AMPHITHEATER Did you ever live next door to a thoughtless neighbor?  One who wouldn’t turn his music down late at night.   The guy, let’s call him Hayden, blasts his stereo so loud that you can’t shut it out.  As the evening progress es, he tends to turn it up louder.  Close the windows, close the door, turn up your own TV, put on headphones.  To no avail.  The bass and drums come right through it all.  Sometimes the win dows rattle or the lamp shade quivers. You want to sit outside and enjoy the cool Bend evening.  Forget about it.  Open up and let the breeze waft through.  Not gonna happen.  You just keep everything closed up and turn on theIfsubtitles.youcomplain, Hayden just ignores it.  If you talk to the building manag er, you learn that Hayden has “connec tions”.  He’s  Just.  Too.  Important.  Besides, he “always goes to bed at 10:00.” Well, I don’t want Hayden to lose his music.  Some of it is kinda nice.  I just want him to turn the damn knob to the left. Keep it to himself. He’s like the neighbor who throws his lawn clippings over the fence to your lot.  It’s nice that he mows his lawn.  But you don’t want to clean up after him.  If any of this sounds familiar, it’s because we live with it dozens of eve nings a year.  It’s time to put some rea sonable limits on Hayden’s volume control.  He can have his music, and we can have the quiet enjoyment of our homes on summer evenings in Bend.

HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY? Send your thoughts to editor@bendsource.com. Letters must be received by noon Friday for inclusion in the following week’s paper. Please limit letters to 250 words. Submission does not guarantee publication. Opinions printed here do not constitute an editorial endorsement of said opinions.

Margot: Thanks for the remind er. If you must have grass and if you must water it, at least try to do it at a time when it takes the least amount of water to produce a good result! We are publishing our water series—including covering at-home water use—at least in part for instances like these, where one story can lead to more conversa tion and more sharing of knowl edge for everyone. Come on by for your gift card to Palate! —Nicole Vulcan

The tracker strips ideological, motivations and casualty requirements, ending up with a much less conservative account of mass shootings. The Rockefel ler Institute of Government reports 402 mass shoot ings between 1966-2020 — defining mass shootings as targeted violence at one or two locations and excludes gang violence, targeted militancy and terroristic activ ity. The “typical” hallmarks of a mass shooter is well known in the U.S. — someone who is isolated and experienced childhood trauma and bullying.

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By Jack Harvel T

Using just the similarities to identify mass shooters is largely discouraged among researchers. There are many people who own guns, suffer from mental illness and are bullied who don’t commit mass shootings.

The gunman in Bend posted a manifesto just before committing the attack, but had uploaded videos shoot ing an AR-15 and shotgun in China Hat in the weeks approaching the shooting. A former classmate of the shooter told the Associated Press that the gunman threatened to shoot him. Researchers say it’s rare that no indication is given of what’s being attempted.

“Overwhelmingly the research says that that anger starts with early trauma. That trauma is typically vio lence in the home or—so often with school shooters, they are victims of sustained severe bullying. If that trauma goes unrecognized and untreated, it festers, causing depression, despair, hopelessness and a desire for control and revenge,” wrote Lezlie Neusteter, a Sis ters-based researcher and founder of Prevent Mass Shootings Now, in a statement.

An alternative to profiling is threat assessment, which focuses more on pre-attack disturbing behaviors. Schildkraut says one of the most overt warning signs is leakage, when shooters either directly say their plans or hint at them. Though shooters are thought of as iso lated, there are often warning signs expressed to peo ple near them, or through an online presence.

The number of mass shootings committed over time, according to the Rockefeller Institute of Government.

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In Deschutes County crisis counselors are available at the Stabilization Center at 63311 Jamison Street in Bend, or through its 24-hour crisis line at 541-322-7500 ext. 9.

Mass shootings can tend to cluster, and it’s believed among researchers that there’s some contagion. The frequency of mass shootings has risen since they were first studied. Between 1966-1975 there were 12 mass shootings, according to the Rockefeller Institute of Government, and between 2011-2020 there were 160.

Schildkraut recommends a no-notoriety proto col that elevates survivors, victims and heroes from a mass casualty event, rather than indulging the atten tion-seeking behavior of perpetrators by naming them. Mass shootings are becoming more of a distinctly U.S. issue, accounting for 73% of 139 incidents in developed countries between 1998-2019, according to a study in the International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice. Researchers are wary to tie this to a single issue, but say ease of access to guns, reaction ary politics and a precedent of similar attacks contrib ute to “Nobodyit. knows for sure why it’s so much worse in America. But some of it is, it’s like a bad habit. That we’ve had so many of them, that it’s right in every body’s face if I get angry and decide that my life isn’t worth living, I’m going to take a couple people with me. And here’s how I do it now to make me famous. That’s one reason it’s American, our tradition of glori fying people who do this stuff,” Dvoskin said.

Courtesy of the Rockefeller Institute of Government

“People do that for a reason, they communicate. We’re a species that communicates. And so this will all come out in the investigation. When people say, ‘He was a loner,’ or, ‘Nobody knew him,’ and then three days later, when the investigation starts to percolate, we find out, somebody did, and they didn’t pick up the phone,” said Joel Dvoskin, a forensic psychologist who’s evaluated mass shooters.

A turning point for how we understand mass shoot ings is Columbine, which made the shooters house hold news over several days of nonstop news coverage.

he Aug. 28 shooting at a Bend Safeway was the 528th mass shooting in the United States in 2022, according to data website MassShootingTracker, which defines any incident of four or more people shot to its list of attacks. The list, as of press time on Sept. 5, is at 544 — an average of 2.18 shootings a day with 605 people killed and over 2,200 wounded.

“They tell pretty much anybody who will listen what they’re about to do. And in that respect, the num ber-one way that we can help to prevent these charges is from educating the public about what leakage looks like, helping to break down the bystander effect that we often see, which is where people have information and don’t come forward for one reason or another, and then providing them the mechanisms or outlets to do so like a community based anonymous tip line,” Schil dkraut said.

“I think Columbine changed the way that our coun try understands mass shootings, because of the fact that it was the first time we pretty much ever watched it play out live on national television, the way that we’re very accustomed to now,” Schildkraut said. “A result of that is it basically glamorized and glorified those two perpetrators because it got so much atten tion, the likes of which had never been seen before.”

“The more time you spend trying to profile against these things, number one, you’re going to completely miss the needle in the haystack you’re trying to wade through, but number two, in doing so you’re basical ly criminalizing a haystack,” said Dr. Jaclyn Schild kraut, an associate professor of criminal justice at the State University of New York at Oswego and executive director of the Regional Gun Violence Research Con sortium at the Rockefeller Institute of Government.

PreventingNEWS

Tragedy Experts share ways mass shootings can be prevented

The Cedar Creek Fire is expected to impact Bend’s air quality

The Cedar Creek Fire ignited from a lightning strike on Aug. 1 and has been growing as firefighters scramble to con tain it in difficult terrain. The fire is over 18,000 acres as of press time on Tues day, making it Oregon’s second largest current fire after the Rum Creek Fire in Josephine County, which was nearly 20,000 acres as of press time.

Courtesy of Inciweb

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With the difficult terrain firefight ers have been using indirect firefighting strategies, constructing fire lines away from the active fire where they have a better chance of stopping its spread. Over 800 firefighters are working on the fire, which currently has 12% of its perimeter contained. Eight helicopters have dropped water on the fire, which is characterized as creeping, smoldering and torching single trees as it grows.

NEWS Well To Do As

There are 17,000 private wells in Deschutes County serving nearly 35,000 people, but as Central Ore gon faces its worst drought on record, wells have been drying up. A declining snowpack, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, and more piping and lin ing of irrigation canals, speculated by Oregon Water Resource Department officials, have contributed to depleted sources of groundwater — water flowing in underground aquifers pulled up by wells. As of May 18, Oregon Water Resource Department’s regional water master Jeremy Giffin had received 33 complaints of wells drying up in 2022. A loan and grant program from Deschutes Coun ty and NeighborImpact could get Deschutes Coun ty residents up to $2,000 for domestic well repairs or replacements. The funding for the program comes from Senate Bill 5561, a budget reconciliation bill that provides money to low-income tenants for emergen cy rental assistance as well as $100 million for drought protection.

By Jack Harvel Smoke is expected to create “unhealthy” air quality in Bend by Sept. 7, largely due to the Cedar Creek Fire about 25 miles west of La Pine. Air quality is defined as unhealthy once pollutants are potent enough to impact the health of the general public. Satellite images of the Cedar Creek Fire show smoke clouding Jefferson, Wasco and other northern counties. Wind patterns are expected to shift some smoke toward Bend on Wednes day, though by Friday air quality is expected to return to “healthy” levels.

“As groundwater levels decline, we continue to see an increased demand for domestic water assistance across the—PHILCounty.”CHANG groundwater supply shrinks, Deschutes County is offering $2,000 to people who’ve had to repair or replace wells

The Cedar Creek Fire is expected to usher unhealthy air into the Bend area this week.

Originally officials estimated the fire would be fully contained by Oct. 1, but have since removed an expected con tainment date.

“Today’s accomplishment will ensure Oregonians from across the state, in rural, suburban, and urban communities alike, will all benefit from the protec tions we will extend during the special session,” said Senate Majority Leader Rob Wagner (D-Lake Oswe go) in a press release after the bill passed in Decem berDeschutes2021. County is getting $396,000 of that $100 million and distributing it through NeighborImpact’s Home Preservation Loan Program. The broader pro gram grants up to $50,000 in low-interest loans for home improvements to Central Oregon homeowners making at or below the area median income — though well rebates don’t have an income requirement. Rebates are only available for people who’ve replaced or repaired their wells after Jan. 1, 2021, with proof of costs“Asincurred.groundwater levels decline, we continue to see an increased demand for domestic water assis tance across the County,” said Deschutes County Commissioner Phil Chang in a press release. “We’re grateful that these funds are available to assist resi dents who are experiencing issues.” Drilling companies typically charge by the foot, and new wells with pumps can become extremely costly.

Andy High, the owner of Thompson Pump & Irrigation told the Source in July the average cost of a new well with pumps is about $50,000. Wells in Central Oregon can be as deep as 800 feet, though some only need to dig a couple hundred feet below ground. The program is first-come first-serve, and will con tinue until the funding is depleted. Applications are available on NeighborImpact’s website.

Waldo Lake prevented the fire from moving east, and more than 20 trail heads around the lake are closed. On Sept. 3, the Lane County Sheriff issued a Level 3 (Go) Evacuation Order for the Waldo Lake campgrounds.

By Jack SmokedHarvel Out

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Se prevé que para el 7 de septiembre el humo gene re una calidad de aire “no saludable” en Bend, en gran parte debido al incendio de Cedar Creek que se encuentra a unas 2.5 millas al oeste de La Pine. La calidad del aire es con siderada no saludable una vez que los contaminantes son lo suficientemente potentes para afectar la salud del público en general.Lasimágenes satelitales del incendio Cedar Creek muestran que el humo nubla los municip ios de Jefferson, Wasco y otros del lado norte. Se proyecta que los patrones de viento despla cen algo del humo hacia Bend para el día miércoles, aunque para el viernes se espera que la calidad del aire regrese a nive les El“saludables”.incendiode Cedar Creek fue provocado por un rayo el 1 de agosto y ha ido crecien do mientras que los bomberos luchan para contenerlo en un terreno díficil. Al momen to de la publicación de esta nota del día martes, el incen dio está abarcando casi 17,000 hectáreas, lo cual lo convierte el segundo incendio actual más grande de Oregon después del incendio de Rum Creek en el municipio de Josephine, el cual, al momento de la publicación esta abarcando casí las 20,000 hectáreas.Ellago Waldo impidió que el incendio se moviera hacia el este y más de 20 senderos alre dedor del lago están cerrados. El 3 de septiembre, el alguacil del municipio de Lane emitió una orden de evacuación de nivel 3 (salir) de los campamen tos del lago Waldo. Al principio las autoridades previeron que el fuego estaría completamente contenido para el 1 de octubre, pero des de entonces han eliminado una fecha de contención prevista.

20228,SEPTEMBER/36ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 9 NEWS

Se prevé que el incendio de Cedar Creek afecte la calidad del aire de Bend

Al 18 de mayo, Jeff Giffin, jefe del Departamento de Recursos Hídricos de Oregon había recibido 33 quejas de pozos que se secaron en 2022.   Un programa de préstamos y subvenciones del municipio de Deschutes y NeighborImpact podría otorgar hasta $2,000 a los habitantes del municipio Deschutes para reparaciones o reemplazos de pozos domésticos. Los fondos del programa provienen del Proyecto de Ley 5561 del Senado, un proyecto de ley de recon ciliación que proporcionó dinero a inquilinos de bajos ingresos para la asistencia de emergen cia para la renta, así como $100 millones para la protección contra las sequías.

Tiznada de humo

Pozo por hacer Conforme disminuye el abastecimiento de aguas subterráneas, el municipio de Deschutes ofrece $2,000 a las personas que han tenido que reparar o reemplazar pozos.

“El logro de hoy garantizará que los habi tantes de Oregon en todo el estado, en las comunidades rurales, suburbanas y urbanas, se beneficien por igual de las protecciones que extenderemos durante la sesión especial,” dijo el líder del senado Rob Wagner (D-Lake Oswe go) en el comunicado de prensa después que se aprobara el Proyecto de Ley en diciembre 2021. El municipio de Deschutes recibirá $396,000 de esos $100,000 millones y los distribuirá por medio del Programa de Préstamos para la Con servación de Viviendas de NeighborImpact. El programa más amplio otorga hasta $50,000 en préstamos de interés bajo para mejoras en el hogar a los dueños de viviendas en el Centro de Oregon que ganan hasta o menos del ingre so medio del área, aunque los reembolsos de pozos no requieren de un ingreso. Los reembol sos solo están disponibles para las personas que reemplazaron o repararon sus pozos después del 1 de enero de 2021, con comprobante de costos producidos.Elprograma atiende a las personas conforme van llegando y continuará hasta que se agoten los fondos. Las solicitudes están disponibles en la página web NeighborImpact’s website.

Por / By Jack Harvel Traducido por Jéssica Sánchez-Millar

Por / By Jack Harvel Traducido por / Translated by Jéssica Sánchez-Millar

Existen 17,000 pozos privados en el municip io de Deschutes que abastecen a casi 35,000 personas, pero mientras el Centro de Oregon enfrenta la peor sequía registrada, los pozos se han estado secando. Un declive en la nieve acu mulada, según un análisis del Servicio Geológi co de los Estados Unidos, y más tuberías y revestimiento de canales de riego, estimaron las autoridades del Departamento de Recursos Hídricos de Oregon, han contribuido a la esca sez de aguas subterráneas, agua que fluye en los acuíferos subterráneos extraídos por los pozos.

SW: What are the effects of someone not seeking help, and in these circumstances, where they have this trauma and they may not utilize these types of ser vices?

TreatingFEATURE

Shannon Hodgen: My typical job as a behavior al health specialist is seeing individuals and running groups, with clients. And so, on any given day, I’ll see between four and six individual clients and then run a group counseling session. And then there’s also lots and lots of documentation and administrative tasks on top of that, too. That’s kind of the typical day—this is not typical but this is also what we do, what we prepare for.

Trauma After Tragedy Deschutes

County Behavioral Health counselor Shannon Hodgen shares how survivors reacted to a mass shooting and what mental health professionals are doing to help

Source Weekly: I’d start just by asking what your typical day to day job is?

SW: And I do want to ask about the range of peo ple affected by this. Are there different approaches for people who maybe didn’t experience trauma firsthand, but are nonetheless impacted by this?

SW: What informs the county’s approach to provid ing these services? And how are support staff trained to address it?

By Jack Harvel On

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20228,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 10

Police tape bordered Safeway’s parking lot on Wednesday, Aug. 31. Police recovered over 100 shell casings from outside the Forum Shopping Center and inside of the Safeway.

The Source Weekly spoke to Shannon Hodgen, a mental health counselor with Deschutes County Behavioral Health, in the aftermath of these sessions to learn about treating trauma, DCBH’s approach and the immediate needs of the community in the wake of violence.Theconversation

Aug. 28 Donald Surrett Jr. and Glenn Bennet were shot and killed by a gunman in a Bend Safe way, and two others sustained non-life-threaten ing injuries during the attack. The initial harm done by the shooter was followed by a collective trauma felt by many in the Bend community.

Jack Harvel

Shoppers who were present and people shocked by the act of violence have sought help from behavioral health services in the days following. An open invite to counseling from Deschutes County Behavioral Health and the Deschutes County District Attorney’s Victim Advocate was offered at Pilot Butte Middle School the Monday and Tuesday after the attack and at Deschutes County Stabilizations Center Wednesday to the fol lowing Monday.

has been lightly edited for clarity.

SW: And about how many people have utilized this service? And what are the immediate needs of people experiencing trauma?

SH: I had been present at the Pilot Butte Middle School, I was there Monday and Tuesday. And I want to say it was probably between 35 and 50 folks those two days? And then the immediate needs of people experi encing trauma, I would say, is to have a safe and poten tially confidential place to talk about what they saw and what they heard and what they did, and the whole experience without fear of exposing anybody else to further trauma, and just trying to feel better in gener al. Because a lot of people are really struggling with a lot of things that were sort of tangential to it, and that were directly involved.

SH: We’re using critical incident stress manage ment skills. There is a group of us within the county that are trained in this specific intervention. And so, we utilize that initially, and then there are sort of sub-in terventions within that, that we’re also using. One of those interventions and the one that we’re using, I would say the most, I’ve seen the most, is called the SAFER-R model of crisis intervention with individuals. And so that is an acronym for Stabilize, Acknowledge the crisis, Facilitate understanding and normalization, Encourage effective coping, and Recovery or Referral. So that’s pretty much what we’re using with folks.

SH: I would say that, in general, this is getting into kind of the brain science of it, which I really am inter ested in and appreciate. Trauma occurs in the same place in the brain pretty much for every human being. And so, my experience is that if you’ve been trauma tized, you’ve been traumatized, whether it’s vicarious ly, generationally or directly. So, the first step being in all of that is having a place that’s comfortable, that’s safe, and where you can share your experience and get support. I think we approach everybody initially, pret ty similarly, and just providing that supportive space and allowing them to process.

SH: The things that people are talking to me about when they do utilize services, obviously, because I’m services, I am hearing a lot of people feeling real ly hyper-vigilant in their homes, which means they’re just on super-duper readiness mode all the time. So, whether it be in their homes, when they are going to the supermarket, a lot of people are talking about feeling very resistant about sort of doing normal daily tasks, like going to the store, or being out in public, being out in areas where there are a lot of people. And they’re uncomfortable. So, you know, there are lots of things that people experience. But I would say that’s probably the first one. I’m hearing people having difficulty with

SH: This is what we call an initial response. There will be longer-term responses that last into the future regarding this incident. So, this is one of those times where we’re meeting with people in short duration and kind of high intensity. And then as we start to see if people are able to resume equilibrium or not, and they continue to have issues, that’s where we would certainly make referrals. We would get them addi tional supports, maybe we would get them connect ed with a therapist here to continue doing work, and make additional recommendations for folks, for sure. I don’t have information about ongoing services specif ic to this incident at this point in time. But I know that we have been briefed that this is the initial response, and there will be continuing response into the future.

SH: I would say there was, I think that there is a plan in place for things like this. I’m also fairly new to the county. And what I can say is, we had a fast response, in addition to the rapid engagement structure with it.

Jack Harvel

“Human connection and communicating with other human beings and finding community and shared experience is really important. It helps with the processing of this event. And isolation doesn’t tend to be helpful.”—SHANNON HODGEN

FEATURE

SH: What I would say first and foremost, is talk to somebody. Human connection and communicating with other human beings and finding community and shared experience is really important. It helps with the processing of this event. And isolation doesn’t tend to be helpful. So, I would say, first and foremost, reach out to another human being—a trusted human being who’s a healthy support. The second thing I would say is, if you can work yourself into a place where you can engage with a therapist in the community, whether it be Deschutes County or another helping profession al, I would encourage them to do that. And there’s so many ways to do that right now. You know, if they can bring a friend with them to the middle school, or come here or another counseling organization, and just see somebody. I think the other thing that I would say is, as the level of stress in your life goes up, so to must the care of self. So, doing things like being mindful about taking care of your body, getting adequate sleep, and if you can’t sleep, get some rest, drink water, eat food that is healthy and nurturing for your body. And I would say most of all connect with other human beings about the experience.

SH: When we have a group of people who are trained in this model of critical incident stress man agement, we are ready to be deployed as soon as an incident occurs, whether that incident be something like what occurred on Sunday night, or whether that is any other kind of incident. So, you know, I think there are also those of us who recognize the fact that there would need to be services deployed pretty quickly. And so, there were a lot of people who stepped up and said, ‘Hey, you know, please place me where I’m needed.’ And we were ready to go. SW: So there wasn’t kind of a strategy already in place, this was just a reaction to this happening?

sleep. I’m hearing people sort of not having appetite, or having too much appetite, just kind of like a lack of equilibrium that they didn’t have before this hap pened. Those are the kind of the big ones.

SW: This whole program got started less than 24 hours after the traumatic event. How did this get con ceived and implemented so quickly?

SW: What would you say to community members who haven’t sought support, but are still impacted by this?

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SW: The counseling available at the middle school is a great first step for people needing help. But I assume there’s some medium to long-term support.

And I wanted to see what the forward thinking is at Deschutes County Behavioral Health and wheth er that’s a targeted program or just connecting with resources?

Fall term starts September 19. APPLY TODAY! Transfer Degrees Career & Technical Education Options Community Education | GED Prep Classes Small Business Development Center Adult Basic Skills | English Language Learning cocc.edu • 541.383.7700 COCC is an affirmative action, equal opportunity institution. Boards cover the shattered window of the Big Lots store in the Forum Shopping Center. A gunman fired into the store before entering a nearby Safeway.

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20228,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 12 Make Friends, Earn Money, Gain Job Experience Are you between the ages of 16-24 and struggling to finish school or experience barriers to employment? At Heart of Oregon, we want to help you navigate these challenges—our supportive staff are here to help you achieve your goals and find your pathway to success. Check out heartoforegon.org to learn more about our program opportunities, and find out which one is right for you. Apply now to start this October Have questions about applying? Call 541-633-7834. WORK-EARN-LEARN at Heart of Oregon Corps Opportunities available for youth ages 16-24 PRESENTED BY: Music by: Hosted by: All AgesLive TunesLocal EatsFresh Brews

FRIDAY 9/9

Latino fest aims to unite the Latin cultures that exist in Central Oregon with an all-day celebration. There will be Colombian rhythms and dancers, food, cultural booths and plenty more! Sat., Sep. 10, 11am-5pm. Sahalee Park, 241 SE Seventh St., Madras. Free.

SOURCE PICKS

SUNDAY 9/11

BLÜ EGYPTION AIN’T NO PARTY LIKE A GENRELESS PARTY

PONDEROSA KINGS

The late ‘90s and early 2000s are knocking which means it’s time to kick down the door and rock out for the night. Less Than Jake is a mega-hit Ska machine and Bowling for Soup released uber hits “Stacy’s Mom,” “1985” and many more sing-a-long classics. Fri., Sep. 9, 6:30-10pm. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $30.

KNOW

FRIDAY 9/9

ERIC PASLAY & JON LANGSTON

LESS THAN JAKE & BOWLING FOR SOUP HOW OLD IS STACY’S MOM?

CYCLES WITH FAIR TRADE BOOGIE

SATURDAY 9/10

LATINO FEST CELEBRATING CENTRAL OREGON LATIN CULTURE

Get in free music and sunshine while you can! The Ponderosa Kings play a down-home style of blues that provides the perfect escape on a Sunday afternoon. Sun., Sep. 11, 2-4pm. 10 Barrel Eastside, 62950 NE 18th St., Bend. Free. 9/12

9/8 – 9/13

ENVIRONMENTAL CENTER WELCOMING WEEK

MONDAY

SLAPPIN’

FOOT STOMPING BLUES

COUNTRY’S MUSICIAN Eric Paslay continues to stay humble although he has won multiple Grammys and has been hailed by other country musicians as one of the best in the business. Jon Langston, an artist who has climbed the charts recently himself, will join Paslay on stage at Oregon Spirit Distillers. Fri., Sep. 9, 6-10pm. Oregon Spirit Distillers. 740 NE First St., Bend. $30.

EVERYONE’S WELCOME “Welcoming Week” is a movement designed to help communities and neighborhoods come together. Head to the Environmental Center and start building your community! Fri., Sep. 9, 9am-5pm. The Environmen tal Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend. Free.

Blü Egyptian may not play one specific genre, but they know the sounds to get the crowd moving. Travel the world’s rhythms in a night of expansive jams. Sat., Sep. 10, 8pm. High Desert Music Hall, 818 SW Forest Ave., Redmond. $12.

NATURAL HISTORY PUB: FUNGI OF CENTRAL OREGON BEER AND MUSHROOMS, WHAT COULD GO WRONG? Snag a tasty brew and learn all about the fungi that exist around Central Oregon in this educational lec ture. Fungi experts Ariel Cowan and Sarah Navarro will speak. Mon., Sep. 12, 7-8pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend. Free.

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TUESDAY 9/13

FRIDAY 9/9

FLAVOR: WHISKEY TASTING AT OREGON SPIRIT DISTILLERS LEARN HOW WHISKEY IS MADE Oregon Spirit Distillers is letting participants have the chance to dive deeper into their favorite whiskeys. The distillery will guide tasters through the nuances of different aging and storing styles. Be sure to register by Sep. 9! Tue., Sep. 13, 4-5:30pm. Oregon Spirit Distillers, 740 NE First St., Free. TUESDAY 9/13 MILLENNIALS: THEY’RE SHAPING THE FUTURE, WHO SHAPED THEM? SO HARD TO UNDERSTAND The good news? After attending this seminar partic ipants will be one step closer to solving the mystery behind those pesky millennials. The bad news? We haven’t even started talking about Gen-Z. Tue., Sep. 13, 11:30am-1pm. Riverhouse on the Deschutes Con vention Center, 3075 N. Highway 97, Bend. Free-$40.UnsplashSubmitted Courtesy Rage PR Unsplash Unsplash BENDTICKET.COM ERIC PASLAY & Jon Langston at Oregon Spirit Distillers BOBBY WEIR & WOLF BROS Presented by Bigstock at Hoodoo Ski Area HEY, KING! w/ Tomo Nakayama & Helga at Volcanic Theatre Pub SATURDAY, SEPT 10 AT 2PMSATURDAY, SEPT 10 AT 8PMFRIDAY, SEPT 9 AT 6PM

SATURDAY 9/10

THURSDAY 9/8

THE BASS Audiences will be shocked by how much noise three people can make. Cycles is composed of a powerful trio of musicians who rock hard and let the crowd groove. Thu., Sep. 8, 9-11:30pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub. 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $12.

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20228,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 14 StyleFallArts ISSUE & Advertise in the most stylish issue of the year! On Stands September 15 Ad Deadline September 9 advertise@bendsource.com | 541.383.0800 Featuring TOP SHOPS A special advertising supplement to all the hot retail shops in town! E Newsletter Feature just $100! Reach over 9.5k digital subscribers in the special edition e-newsletter! LIVE IN CONCERT ATHLETIC CLUB OF BEND COURTYARDHOSTED BY THERAPY WORKS SCAN TO BUY TICKETS BUY TICKETS ONLINE AT WWW.NEWPORTAVENUEMARKET.COM/CONCERTS OR IN PERSON AT NEWPORT AVENUE MARKET BEN D ʼS LOCALLY P R ORECNOCETAMITNI,DECUD T S E RIES CSN TITLE SPONSOR SUPPORTED BY PRESENTED BY STAGE SPONSOR CLOSING SPONSOR AUTO SPONSOR NIGHTLY CONCERT CLOSING BROUGHT TO YOU BY COLDWELL BANKER BAIN OF BEND CARRIE DITULLIO REALTOR

Taking the reins from Powers is sing er/songwriter Ky Burt, who you might recognize as the lead singer of coun try-swing band Holy Smokes or from his solo performances around the area. He released his debut solo album, “The Sky In Between,” in April of 2019. Pow ers says he took notice of Burt imme diately when they met, noting that the pair were practically destined to become friends. For Burt, hosting the Story tellers Open Mic is an opportunity he couldn’t let pass by. “I am really excited to take over hosting, to say the least. Having known Bill for years and his efforts towards community and music, and being a ded icated songwriter/performer/communi ty builder myself, there’s a real energy in being able to carry on the support of others in pursuing their craft. Bill will be greatly missed but the show will go on!”

The evolution of local music scenes depends a lot on people like Bill Powers, who really open doors and create spaces for people to share and be themselves. This is why scenes thrive and continue to grow. So the next time you see Pow ers out at a show, make sure to tell him thank you for hosting all of these years. An even better gift would be to show up on Tuesday nights to watch history con tinue on with Ky Burt at the helm. The open mic continues.

Storytellers Open Mic Tuesday evenings, 6-8pm Sign-up for performers at 5pm The Commons Cafe 875 NW Brooks St., Bend

Thank You, Bill Bill Powers passed the torch on to Ky Burt as the Storytellers Open Mic host, where its loving spirit will remain intact

Bill Powers has long been the face of the Storytellers Open Mic series at The Commons, a weekly affair on Tuesday nights that added even more magic to the often-buzzing Brooks Alley. But after more than five years of running things, Powers announced on Facebook that he would officially be stepping down from his role as host. His final time leading the night was on Aug. 30. During the pandemic Powers had pondered the future of his role with the open mic, and now the time was right. “I enjoyed the break from every thing during Covid, and when things came back I think I’d just lost some steam overall and I started wondering how long I’d continue,” Powers tells the Source. “I just couldn’t decide I was ready to stop. I had such a strong attach ment to it all. I recently just kinda ‘took inventory’ of things—and I just wanted to have at least another evening home.”

By Isaac Biehl

SOUNDS

Courtesy of Bill Powers

Powers has been leading the front almost every night since he stepped in during the early iterations of the eve ning. Sure, he’s had subs fill in for him every now and then, but his determi nation and passion for this evening is what has kept it running so successful ly. Even during the height of the pan demic, Powers was one of the first to start livestreaming concerts within the community. He continued a week ly live-streamed open mic to fill in the Storytellers void; held a Honey Don’t weekend series called Honey Brunches with his wife Shelley that contributed to the St. Charles Meal Mission; and he also managed to remotely coordinate differ ent at-home live streams from different artists for the Source Weekly's Home Concert series. Not only was Powers a brilliant open mic host, but he contin ues to be the biggest champion and fan for live music in Central Oregon. “I’d never hosted an open mic [before]. I sure had played plenty! But I took the opportunity and I’m so glad I did. Every season or year there’s been a new batch of folks attending regularly or occasionally and I’ve gotten to know a lot of cool and interesting folks through doing this,” Powers wrote in his good bye post on Facebook. “Dan Baumann and the various staff since I’ve been there were half the reason I enjoyed it so much. They’ve always been chill and fun and made me feel at home. Hell, Shel ley and I were sitting in the Commons’ back porch overlooking Mirror Pond back when it was Crow’s Feet Com mons when we decided that we’d move to Bend from Western Colorado. So the place has always been special to us.”

Handing over the reins. Here is Bill Powers, left, and Ky Burt during Powers’ last night as host of the Story tellers Open Mic.

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“It’s helped me let this go knowing I could leave it in good caring hands. Thanks Ky—I know the open mic will carry on in the spirit that we’ve had.”

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20228,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 16 Saturday, September 24th 10:00am to 4:00pm after party and People's Choice Award to follow Discover unique Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs), a geothermal greenhouse, net-zero ready affordable townhomes, passive and net-positive homes, and more! The 2022 Green Tour invites you to... Kick off the Tour at Open Space Event Studios, Tuesday, September 20th Learn the ABCs of ADUs over lunch at The Environmental Center, Wednesday, September 21st Take a guided bike tour with Bend Bikes to sites from 1-4pm Demo the latest Electric Vehicles with Forth Mobility Stemach Design | Sunwest Builders | North West AeroBarrier Dream Home Building and DesignWasim of Nazareth Photography Thank sponsors:you, LEARN MORE AND REGISTER AT ENVIROCENTER.ORG/TOUR.     Find your copy of the Green Tour Guide in the 9/22 issue of The Source!

Midtown Yacht Club Dustin Does Trivia Midtown Yacht Club has partnered with Dustin Riley Events to remix a trivia night into an extra playful event that no one thought possible! Dustin’s high energy and positive vibes will bring the community together, creating an experience not-done-before in the trivia scene. 7-9pm. Free.

Zero Latency Bend Karaoke Thurs days & Friday Nights That’s right! Karaoke is coming to Zero Latency in Bend. Download the SINGA app and sign up for your time slot and song. Note: The venue will show up on the SINGA app by Mon., 8/29 to sign up. $7 at the door, includes a domestic beer. 9 Friday Worthy Burgers and Brews Rudolf Korv and the Northwest Feels For Eugene-based Americana duo, it’s about honoring the journey, while never losing sight of where they’ve been. It’s about listening to the small voice that guides listeners along the way, whether it comes from somewhere deep inside or someplace high above. 5-7pm. Free.

Hayden Homes Amphitheater Nine Inch Nails Nine Inch Nails is coming to Bend with special guest Yves Tumor! This American in dustrial rock band hailing from Cleveland, Ohio, incorperates thematic visual elements, intricate lighting and special events in its concerts. 7pm. $99.50.

Northside Bar & Grill Accoustic Open Mic w/ Derek Michael Marc Head down to the Northside Bar and Grill Wednesdays to catch local artists perform live. 7-9pm. Free. Pour House Grill Ultimate Trivia Night with Clif With new questions every week written by the host Clif, and interesting gameplay, including wager style Double Jeopardy and Final Jeopardy questions, Pour House Trivia Night will have you on the edge of your seat. 6-8pm. Free.

Seven Nightclub & Restaurant The CO Show The CO Show is a free comedy showcase ($15 donation suggested). Central Oregon Comedy Scene and Karaokaine productions have teamed up to bring this show to Central Oregon! 8pm. Free. Silver Moon Brewing Song & Story with Pete Kartsounes Pete is an award-winning singer-songwriter, flat picker and cutting-edge musician’s musician. No stranger to life out on the road, Pete has spent over two decades bringing his voice and guitar to stages all over the world. 6-8pm. Free.

Craft Kitchen and Brewery Fill My Blank - Live Interactive Game Show Fill my blank is back, baby! Comedians are bringing the super popular TV game show format back in this live interaction game show. The host, Katy Ipock, will read a sentence with a blank. Chosen audience contestants and local comedians will participate in the Fill My Blank Game Show and have the chance to win prizes. 8-10pm. $10.

River’s Place Fair Trade Boogie Band Oldschool funk, afro-beat classics, Latin jams and modern psychedelia. 6-8pm. Free.

Deb Auchery, Stephanie Von Ayden and Alex Hauptman. Hosted by Katy Ipock. 21+. 7-9pm. $10 at Bendticket.com. $15 at the door. The Lot Paul Eddy Paul Eddy, you’re dinner is ready, and your guitar sits upon the chair. Taps are lathering, folks are gathering — time to get up there! 6-8pm. Free.

Faith Hope & Charity Vineyards Live at the Vineyard: Cody Joe Hodges That Country Sound Summer Tour will deliver his high-ener gy performance and his brazos bottom drawl. Chairs and tables provided for attendees. Ad vanced ticket purchase required. 6-9pm. Adults $25 - Children 12 and Under Free.

Volcanic Theatre Pub Cycles w/ Fair Trade Boogie Band at Volcanic Cycles epitomize the power-trio format with ripping guitar, fat bass grooves played out through furious slapping and viciously dynamic drum beats flowing over intricate tempo changes. 9-11:30pm. $12.

High Desert Music Hall Dammit Lau ren! & One Mad Man Dammit Lauren! is a rock 'n' roll trio, born out of a love for alternative and indie rock. The group’s music combines melody with unconventional chords and driving rhythm, led by Lauren’s distinctive and dynamic vocals. Local talent One Mad Man will join the stage as well. 8pm. $15.

Worthy Brewing Rudolf Korv and the North west Feels Live For Eugene-based Americana duo, it’s about honoring the journey, while never losing sight of where they’ve been. It’s about listening to the small voice that guides us along the way, whether it comes from somewhere deep inside or someplace high above. Come join Worthy Brewing for an evening of live music. 6-8pm. Free.

CALENDAR

Bledsoe Family Winery Mathieu Rainey at Bledsoe Family Winery Join the winery for a glass of Walla Walla’s finest! Mathieu Rainey just released its new album inspired by some of the greats like Tom Petty, John Mayer and so many more. 4:30-6:30pm. Free. Cabin 22 Trivia Wednesdays at Cabin 22 Trivia Wednesdays at Cabin 22 with Useless Knowledge Bowl Live Trivia Game Show! More TV coverage, locals specials and prizes to win! 25 SW Century Dr. Bend. Free.

Silvermoon Brewing Less Than Jake &

Oregon Spirit Distillers Eric Paslay & Jon Langston Country artist Eric Paslay delivers a powerful punch as a renowned Plati num-selling, GRAMMY nominated hit songwriter, artist, and performer. Jon Langston will also join the stage at Oregon Spirit Distillers. 6-10pm. $30.

High Desert Music Hall Blü Egyptian Formed in 2020 in Chico, Blü Egyptian plays orig inal music encompassing bluegrass, rock, funk, latin and reggae for the ultimate dance party! Come down and groove. 8pm. $10.

Western country-punk band, Jenny Don’t and the Spurs are from Portland, Ore. Meshing country and rock-in spired music, the band’s songs are filled with fast guitar picking and western energy. Jenny Don’t and the Spurs are playing at the Volcanic Theater Pub on Sept. 14 at 8pm with local band The Shining Dimes.

The Capitol Comedy More laughter underground with another comedy night at The Capitol. Featuring: Billy Brant, Drake Lock, Zac,

7 Wednesday Bevel Craft Brewing Live Music Wednes daysJoin Bevel Craft Brewing on the patio for free live music every Wed night through the summer! Check its website for the upcoming show list. 6-8pm. Free.

River’s Place Cody Joe Hodges Listeners will hear a hint of Brazos-bottom dirt in the voice that sets the tone for Cody Joe Hodges’ sound. 6-8pm. Free.

Hub City Bar & Grill DJ/Karaoke Nights DJ dance music intermingled with karaoke! 8pm. Free.

Hoodoo Ski Area Bigstock Presents: Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros The benefit concert for Oregon Adaptive Sports (OAS) is headlining Bob by Weir & Wolf Bros. With The Grateful Dead's Bobby Weir, GRAMMY winning bassist Don Was and prolific drummer Jay Lane, the concert at Hoodoo is one not to miss. 2-8pm. $111.82. Hub City Bar & Grill DJ/Karaoke Nights DJ dance music intermingled with karaoke! 8pm. Free. The Outfitter Bar at Seventh Mountain Resort Live music with Paul Eddy Band Join outside on the rink for live music from Paul Eddy Band! The group is a 2-piece combo featuring songwriter/guitarist Paul Eddy and drummer Kyle Pickard from Bend. 4-7pm. Free.

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Silver Moon Brewing Marmalade Mountain, The Secret Beach + Blood Ocean Marmalade Mountain, aka Zack Fischmann, has tumbled through America’s punk-folk-psychrock scenes, creating songs that blend the homespun aesthetic of K Records with a playful vulnerability akin to folk hero Michael Hurley. 7-11pm. $10.

LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE

> Tickets Available on Bendticket.com

Paul Eddy Bedell artist and local song-singer sings originals, C&W, Sinatra and Beatles! Sweet location, food carts, local brews and live music. That’s the ticket! 5:30-7:30pm. Free.

Zero Latency Bend Karaoke Thursdays & Friday Nights That’s right! Karaoke is coming to Zero Latency in Bend. Download the SINGA app and sign up for your time slot and song. Note: The venue will show up on the SINGA app by Mon., 8/29 to sign up. $7 at the door, includes a domestic beer. 10 Saturday Bend Cider Co. Marianne Wilson- Singer Songwriter Come listen to Mari’s guitar playing and beautiful voice. Her storytelling through lyrics will take listeners on a musical journey. 5-7pm. Free. Craft Kitchen and Brewery Comedy at Craft: Showcase Some of Central Oregon’s finest under one roof. Featuring: Carrie Reid, Billy Brant, Paul Brien, Tracy Rieder and Katy Ipock. Hosted by Zac. Ipockolyptic productions is dedicated to providing entertainment that is free of racism, homophobia and transphobia. Strong content expected. 21+. 8-10pm. $10.

Bowling For Soup: Back for the Attack Tour Alternative-indie-rock bands Less Than Jake and Bowling For Soup are performing at Silvermoon. Joining the headliners, Keep Flying is performing as a special guest at the Back For The Attack Tour. 6:30-10pm. $30.

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Rachel Bennett

Craft Kitchen & Brewery Comedy Open Mic Sign-up 7:30pm. Starts at 8pm. Free to watch. Free to perform. If you’ve ever wanted to try stand-up comedy, this is where you start! 8-10pm. Free. Crosscut Warming Hut No 5 Kenny Had den Join Crosscut Warming Hut for music in the garden with Kenny Hadden. 6-8pm. Free. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your go-to karaoke tune? 8pm-Midnight. M&J Tavern Open Mic Night Downtown living room welcomes musicians to bring their acoustic set or turn it up to eleven with the whole band. Bring your own instruments. 6:30pm. Free.

Volcanic Theatre Pub Hey, King, Tomo Nakayama & Helga Writer, vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Natalie London and her partner, vocalist and percussionist Taylor Plecity, evoke the exuberance of Arcade Fire, the freewheeling simplicity of Tom Petty, and the witfilled resonance of Fiona Apple. 8-11pm. $10.

Worthy Brewing Live Music Wednesdays Enjoy free live music every Wednesday at Worthy Brewing’s Eastside Pub! 6-8pm. Free. 8 Thursday Bridge 99 Brewery Thursday Trivia Night Join Bridge 99 Brewery each Thursday at 6pm, for live UKB Trivia. Free to play, win Bridge 99 gift cards! Free. Craft Kitchen and Brewery Trivia Night Craft is bringing a nostalgic spin to trivia with large, hand-crafted replicas of Trivial Pursuit wheels. The brewery has enough wheels for six teams. So, arrive early to claim your favorite color! Sign-up 6:30pm. Event from 7-8pm. Free. Faith Hope & Charity Vineyards Live at the Vineyard: Anna P.S. ... Advance Ticket Purchase Required Entertaining audiences as a one-woman-symphony with guitar, foot per cussion, flute and more. Anna and her music are one and the same. An indie-folk musician whose music is genuine and honest. 5-8pm. Adults $15 - Children 12 and Under Free. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your go-to karaoke tune? 8pm-Midnight. Northside Bar & Grill Dark & Grey Rock and alternative covers. 7-9pm. Free. Porter Brewing Co. Live Music with The Ballybogs Grab a pint, sit back, relax and enjoy live music by an amazing group of artists who bring the best Irish Trad Music in Central Ore gon! 6-8pm. Free.

Eurosports Sisters Food Cart Garden

Visit Sagebrushers Art Society in beautiful Bend to see lovely work, paintings and greeting cards by local artists. New exhibit every 8 weeks. Visit sagebrushersartofbend.com for information on current shows. Wednesdays, 1-4pm, Fridays, 1-4pm and Saturdays, 1-4pm. Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-617-0900. Free. Beginning Mosaic Learn the basics of mosa ic while creating an artistic and functional piece. Participants have a choice of making a mirror, wall plaque or trivet. Second session covers grouting. Sun, Sep. 11, Noon-2pm. Carleton Manor, 1776 NE 8th St., Bend. Contact: 907-2301785. jesica@carletonmanormosaics.com. $75.

CALENDAR EVENTSTICKETS AVAILABLE AT

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Initiative Brewing Trivia Tuesdays in Red mond Trivia Tuesdays in Redmond, with Useless Knowledge Bowl. Join in to win top team prizes! Bring your team this week. 6:30pm. Free.

Kreitzer Art Gallery and Studio Open Daily by Appointment 55-year professional artist David Kreitzer displays sublime and stun ning water, landscape, city, figure, floral and fan tasy oil and watercolor masterworks. Meditative, healing and soul-satisfying. Mondays-Sundays, Noon-7pm. Through Sep. 30. Kreitzer Art Gallery and Studio, 20214 Archie Briggs Rd., Bend. Con tact: 805-234-2048. jkreitze@icloud.com. Free. Learn to Knit at Fancywork Yarn Shop Get started on the path to creating your own treasured handknits! Learn the fundamentals of knitting, basic stitches, how to read a pattern, fix your mistakes and more. Create a small project to take home. Pattern provided. Take three classes and earn a 10% discount on yarn! Every other Thursday, 5:30-7pm. Fancywork Yarn Shop, 200 NE Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-3238686. hello@fancywork.com. $10. Monday Morning Wheel Throwing with Yvonne - Five Weeks 10am to 1pm This class is for beginning/intermediate students. Continuing students will build skills while work ing on group or pre-approved personal projects. New students will learn the steps in throwing, glazing and firing. Mondays, 10am-1pm. Through Oct. 10. Tumalo School of Pottery & Craft, 65093 Smoky Butte Dr., Bend. Contact: 321-432-8009. potterybyyvonne@gmail.com. $225.

Line and Swing Dancing Lessons Line and swing dance lessons every Thu. night at The Cross-Eyed Cricket! Thursdays, 7-9pm. CrossEyed Cricket, 20565 NE Brinson Blvd., Bend. Free. Soul in Motion Conscious Dance Move, dance, breathe, connect... with all that moves within you. Guided and facilitated to support you to let your body take the lead, enjoying a deeper connection with yourself and others. Sep. 7, 6-7:30pm. Terpsichorean Dance Studio, 1601 NW Newport Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-948-7015. soulinmotionbend@gmail.com. $20.

Silver Moon Brewing Open Mic at the Moon Silver Moon Brewing’s open mic is back now on the big stage! Get a taste of the big time! Sign-up is at 4pm. Come checkout the biggest and bad dest Open Mic Night in Bend. 5-8pm. Free. 10 Barrel East Side Sunday Funday with The Ponderosa Kings Join 10 Barrel on the biergarten lawn for free live music with The Ponderosa Kings! Playing down home blues in Central Oregon. 2-4pm. Free.

Intermediate/Advanced Wheel Throw ing Class

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River’s Place Trivia Sunday Live UKB Trivia at River’s Place in Bend. Win gift card prizes for top teams! It’s free to play. Indoor and outdoor seating available. Noon-2pm. Free.

River’s Place She & The Devils Duo The Dev ils Duo plays roots rock ‘n’ roll. There’s a love of good old country music as well and Evan Mullins sings the hell out of Waylon! Great original tunes with tight harmonies. 6-8pm. Free.

from Mexico onstage to celebrate the Latin American cultures of Central Oregon. Local dance and music groups will perform and visitors can enjoy food from vendors, cultural booths, kids activities, and find out what community organizations offer. Sep. 10, 11am-5pm. Sahalee Park, 241 SE Seventh St, Madras. Contact: 541382-4366. cynthia@latca.org. Free. Sunday Brunch and Karaoke Wake up right with brunch and karaoke! Sundays, 10am3pm. General Duffy’s Waterhole, 404 SW Forest Ave., Redmond. Free.

Second Saturday at the Gallery Enjoy free food and libations at the Artists Gallery Sunriver Village the 2nd Saturday of each month. Work of 30 local artists is on display and here’s your chance to meet some of those artists. 4-6pm. The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Dr., Sunriver. Contact: 541-593-8704. Free.

Paint With an Artist: Mark Jamnik Inviting your inner artist to pick up a paintbrush and reconnect to the creativity you had as a child. If you have been wanting to paint, this is your chance. No artistic experience needed. All sup plies will be provided so you will leave with art you create! Sep. 7, 6-7:30pm. Open Space Event Studios, 220 NE Lafayette Ave, Bend. $45.an-artist-mark-jamnick.www.openspace.studio/event-details/paint-with-Contact:me@markjamnik.com.

The Commons Cafe & Taproom Story tellers Open-Mic Storytellers open-mic nights are full of music, laughs and community. In the old house Bill Powers of Honey Don’t and several other projects in town hosts one of the best open mics in town. Sign-ups start at 5pm sharp in the cafe and spots go quick. Poetry, comedy and spo ken word welcome, but this is mainly a musical open mic. 6pm. Free.

Bridge 99 Brewery Monday Night Trivia Now playing Mondays (Thursdays too!) at 6 it’s live UKB Trivia at Bridge 99 Brewery. Win Bridge 99 gift cards! 6-8pm. Free. Craft Kitchen & Brewery Industry Night Yacht Party with Bend Burlesque It’s time to honor the friends who miss shows due to working those long nights in the INDUSTRY! It’s a yacht party, so dress up in your best boating attire (costume contest). 7pm. $20.

The Yard @ Bunk + Brew Open Mic Nights Tom Hudson runs the show with amazing sound and lighting set-ups, as Bunk+Brew does Open Mic like no other. Sign-up on site. 6-10pm. Free. Tuesday

Crater Lake Spirits Downtown Tasting Room Flight Night with John Shipe Come to the downtown tasting room for live music and some great deals! 5:30-7:30pm. Free.

Classes and Dance Join Argentine Tango every Wednesday for Tango classes and dancing! Your first class is free. 6:30-7pm Tango 101 Class, no partner needed! 7-8pm All Levels Class. 8-9:30pm Open Dancing. Wednesdays, 6:30-9:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. Contact: 541-7283234. tangocentraloregon@gmail.com. $5-$10. Blues Social Dance Meet friendly people, enjoy great music and connect with others through dance at this bi-weekly social. Drinks plus catching up with old friends and making new ones at 7pm, beginner dance lesson at 8pm followed by social dancing until 10pm. Every oth er Friday, 7-10pm. Through Dec. 30. The Range Apartments Clubhouse, 3001 NW Clearwater Dr, Bend. Contact: 541-508-7766. $5 suggested donation.

FILM EVENTS Bend Production Society Happy Hour Bend Production Society invites the commuity to the Bend Production Society Social! Grab a cold beverage and mingle amongst fellow photography and video production peers. Sep. 8, 5-8:30pm. Open Space Event Studios, 220 NE Lafayette Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-410-5866. info@openspace.studio. Free.

The Cellar—A Porter Brewing Com pany Music Night: Featuring Central Oregon Music & Musicians Grab a pint, sit back, relax and enjoy live music by Central Oregon musi cians! Every 2nd and 4th Tue. of the month at The Cellar. 6-8pm. Free. Walt Reilly’s Trivia Join Walt Reilly's on first and third Tuesday of every month for trivia with Trivia on the Moon! Make a reservation and men tion "trivia." No minors after 9pm, trivia usually ends around this time. No limits on team sizes. 6 rounds plus 2 bonus rounds. 7-9pm. Free.

GoodLife Brewing Summer Tuesdays Music Series in the Biergarten Live music with some of Central Oregon's finest small bands. Enjoy a relaxed environment, food carts, lawn games, hand-crafted cocktails and Goodlife’s award-win ning brews. All ages welcome. 6-8pm. Free.

Galveston Street Market

Courtesy Bend Ticket

The Galveston Street Market is a local vendor’s market with the goal of bringing community together while men toring new and seasoned makers alike. Vendors change each week for a variety of locally made products so there’s something for everyone. Fridays, 5-9pm. Through Sep. 30. Big O Bagels - Westside, 1032 NW Galveston Ave., Bend. Con tact: galvestonstreetmarket@gmail.com. Free.

ARTS + CRAFTS Art Viewing

This class is for intermediate students. Continuing students will continue to skill build and work on their own projects or a group decided project. The course includes one scheduled 3-hour class per week for five weeks and use of studio tools, one 25 lb. bag of clay and glazes. Tuesdays, 10am-1pm. Through Oct. 11. Tumalo School of Pottery & Craft, 65093 Smoky Butte Dr., Bend. Contact: 321-432-8009. pottery byyvonne@gmail.com. $225.

Elixir Wine Group Locals Music Night Enjoy live musicians, great wine and small bites. 6-9pm. Free. On Tap Locals’ Day Plus Live Music Cheaper drinks all day and live music at night, get down to On Tap. 11am-9pm. Free.

Open Space Event Studios Out of Thin Air Improv Theater - Improv Comedy Tues days Out Of Thin Air – Improvisational Theater Company is back! If you think you’ve seen improv before, think again! 8-10pm. $10.

Tuesday Evening Wheel Throwing - All Levels This class is for beginning/interme diate students. Continuing students will keep skill building and work on their own projects or a group decided project. The course includes one scheduled 3-hour class per week for five weeks and use of studio tools. Tuesdays, 6-9pm. Through Oct. 11. Tumalo School of Pottery & Craft, 65093 Smoky Butte Dr., Bend. Contact: 321432-8009. potterybyyvonne@gmail.com. $225.

Silver Moon Brewing Eric Leadbetter & Friends Local artist, Eric Leadbetter, hosts his fellow musicians for this weekly free show every Tue. Come sit out on the brewery’s patio and enjoy an evening of music, food and most import ant...stellar craft beers! 6-8pm. Free.

Sunriver Brewing Eastside Pub Puzzled Pint Puzzled Pint is a casual, social puzzle-solv ing event happening at rotating bars on the sec ond Tuesday of the month. These puzzles often incorporate crossword clues, code breaking, word play and logic problems. 6:30-9pm. Free.

Sunday

Flights Wine Bar Trivia at Flights Wine Bar Join Flights Wine Bar on Sundays for trivia with King Trivia! Get a group together and come get nerdy. Awesome prizes and as always, delicious food and drinks! 4-6pm. Free. Flights Wine Bar Live Music at Flights Come grab a great glass of wine, have an incredible dinner and enjoy live music every Sun at Flights Wine Bar. 6-8pm. Free.

The Astro Lounge Open Mic Mondays Amaz ing top notch talent, jaw dropping! All musicians and comedians are welcome from first-timers to pros. Hosted by Nancy Blake and Danny Guitar Harris, two long-time local musicians. 8pm-Mid night. Free.

CentralMUSICOregon Ukulele Choir - Open Jam and Sing Ukulele players and people who love to sing are invited to this outdoor jam and sing! Songbooks will be provided. 7-8pm. Through Sep. 9. Hollinshead Park, 1235 NE Jones Rd., Bend. Contact: 541-390-244. juliehan ney@gmail.com. Free, donations accepted. Latino Fest Latino Fest returns live to Madras with Colombian rhythms and dancers

Hub City Bar & Grill Big Band Open Jam All welcome to sing or play an instrument, just come on in and get on Gordy’s sign-up sheet. 5-8pm. Free. Obie Oasis Concert Sundays Bring a chair, picnic and beverage to the Obie Oasis Amphi theater and enjoy talented regional musicians. This is a house concert with performer donations encouraged. 2pm. Donation.

Marmalade Mountain, aka Zack Fischmann, is known for his acoustic tracks and lighthearted music. His new 10-track album, Strange Angels, features nostalgic lyrics with a playful energy. Marmalade Mountain is playing at Silver Moon Brewing on Sept. 10 at 7pm with alternative bands The Secret Beach and Blood Ocean.

The Astro Lounge Local Artist Spotlight Sundays This is a chance to listen to Central Or egon’s newest and upcoming local artists. They have earned their spot to perform a two-hour show, changing weekly, every Sun. 7-9pm. Free.

FestivalNatureDiscoverDiscoverNatureFestivalSATURDAY,SEPTEMBER1711am-3pmAlpenglowPark,Bend PRESENTING SPONSOR Free!Free! Festival Guide Plus Children's Forest Community Report CHILDRENSFORESTCO.ORG Thank you to our sponsors for making this event possible!

Special Performances

1:00 Hula Hoop dancing with Lindsi Kay. Come and learn skills and "hoop tricks" while awakening creativity and physical expression.

Slow Bike Race and Helmet Fitting with Commute Options Bike

There is limited parking at Alpenglow Park. We encourage families to use alternative forms of transportation. A shuttle will run between overflow parking at Caldera High (0.5 miles away) and Alpenglow Park.

Nature Banners with Wondery Art and Adventure School

Edible Plant Sensory Activity with Bend Urban Gardens Welcoming Fall with Juntos Aprendemos

Bouldering Lessons and Games with Vámonos Outside

Nature Journaling with High Desert Museum Environmental Activities with the Environmental Center Treasure Hunt with the Children's Forest of Central Oregon

Happening All Day...

12:00 Music with Mo Phillips. This genre bouncing, body shakin', good time performance has a bit of everything. Mo's approach is very collaborative, with the audience helping to create songs together.

We strive to make Discover Nature Festival a welcoming and inclusive experience for all. We hope you can join us!

DIY Kite Building with the Central Oregon STEM Hub

Pine Cone Bird Feeders with Think Wild

Climbing Wall with Bend Park and Recreation District

ACTIVITIESEVENT ACTIVITIES

Braintan Leather Demonstration with Wildheart Nature School

Solar System Walk with Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory Birding with East Cascades Audubon Society Fly Casting Instruction with Trout Unlimited Bird Beak Buffet with Oregon State Parks

Archery with Bend Park and Recreation District Fire Fighter Challenge and Fire Truck with U.S. Forest Service

All are Welcome!

EVENT

Discover Nature Festival celebrates the diversity of ways that we all connect with nature. The event provides something for everyone, including nature arts and crafts, STEM activities, outdoor recreation, music, food, and more. Bring your family out to try a new outdoor activity, connect with amazing community organizations, and learn how we can all help take care of our environment and community. Free for all!

The 10 Essentials with Camp Fire Central Oregon Nature Pop-Up Poems with Deschutes County Library Story Walk with Discover Your Forest Milkweed Seed Planting with Deschutes Land Trust Mud Play with Bend Forest School

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Obstacle Course with Cascadia Junior Cycling Composting and Worms! with the Green Leadership Coalition

Outdoor Learning

OUR WORKOUR WORK Families and Health

The Children’s Forest partners with schools to enhance learning through outdoor education. We break down barriers to outdoor learning and bridge gaps in classroom funding.

Our NatureHoods program is a free 4-day program with the goal for students to see themselves as scientists who study nature. The program reached 952 K-2 students from rural and Title I schools this year.

“The NatureHoods program gave my students an increased excitement about science and the environment around us. Students are more openly looking at the world around them in greater depth".

The Children's Forest offers free events and programs throughout Central Oregon to connect youth of all ages – and their families – with nature. Supporting Our Network Most of the work of the Children's Forest is done through our amazing network of partners. Our goal is to enhance their work and bring resources to support programs for communities.underrepresentedWe provide small grants, trainings, and funds to inclusive.makeadvancesinternships,supportallwhichourworktotheoutdoorsmore

Highlight: Kids On-the-Move 45 families from La Pine and Redmond participated in a free 4-week family program this summer, offered in partnership with OSU-Extension's Nutrition Education Program. Children ages 0-5, and their parents, engaged in fun nature-based activities, physical activity, and received recipes and kits for healthy snacks. Highlight: YES Projects With support from the Forest Service, the Children's Forest funded 10 projects that reached 1,023 participants. During a year when youth faced many social and emotional challenges connected to the stresses of the pandemic, our partner programs helped connect youth to the healing power of nature.

CHILDREN'S FOREST OFCHILDREN'S FOREST OF CENTRAL OREGONCENTRAL COMMUNITYOREGON REPORTCOMMUNITY

NETWORK

Who We Are

The Children's Forest is not a physical place, it’s a partnership between local agencies to enhance the lives of kids - of all abilities and ages - by connecting them with nature. We focus strongly on equity and inclusion, helping to connect underrepresented communities to impactful experiences in nature. We recognize that not all kids have equal access to the outdoors, and not everyone feels safe and welcome in outdoor spaces. We believe that the health and well-being of children, families, and communities improves when all people connect to the outdoors.

REPORT

NETWORK

Highlight: NatureHoods

OUR OUR

Deschutes & Ochoco National Forests, Oregon State Parks, High Desert ESD, BendLa Pine SD, Redmond SD, Sisters SD, Bend Parks and Rec, Redmond Area Parks and Rec, Mosaic Medical, Central Oregon Pediatric Associates, Bend Forest School, Boys & Girls Clubs, Camp Fire Central Oregon, Camp Tamarack, Deschutes Land Trust, Discover Your Forest, The Environmental Center, Friends of the Children, Heart of Oregon Corps, High Desert Museum, Middle Deschutes Watershed Council, Oregon Adaptive Sports, Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, Trout Unlimited, Upper Deschutes Watershed Council, Wildheart Nature School

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What we doWhat we do

OuR PartnersOuR Partners

Photo by: Austin White

Photo by: Wesley Heredia

Vámonos Outside partners with these organizations and businesses to make our work happen! Bend-La Pine Schools, Bend Park and Recreation District, Bend Rock Gym, Black Diamond, Camp Tamarack, Cog Wild, Commute Options, Deschutes National Forest, Deschutes Land Trust, Deschutes Trails Coalition, Discover Your Forest, Family Access Network, Gear Fix, High Desert Education Service District, Juntos (OSU), Juntos Aprendemos, Mt. Bachelor Ski Area, Redmond School District, REI, Stio, Sun Country Tours, The Circuit Bouldering Gym, Think Wild.

DonateDonate

Why VO?Why VO?

Eduardo Romero, Program Specialist, was born and raised in Bend. He is graduate of the COCC Outdoor Leadership program. He is using his talents to help diversify the media as a model and talented photographer. Through Vámonos Outside and his camera, Eduardo is on a mission to bring more Latinx/BIPOC representation into the outdoors. Wesley Heredia, Program Coordinator, has been in living in Bend for six years. He has worked as an outdoor educator all over the Western United States as a wilderness instructor, climbing and mountain guide, environmental educator, and snowboard instructor. His passion is to create lasting and meaningful outdoor recreation opportunities for Latinx/BIPOC youth and families in Central Oregon. Wesley and Eduardo (pictured center). photo by: Sun Country Tours

Vámonos Outside runs outdoor-based programs that serve the Latinx/BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and people of color) communities in Central Oregon. We work with youth of all ages, ranging from preschool to high schoolers. A cornerstone of Latino culture is the family, so we also engage the family unit in outdoor-related activities. Our programs introduce participants to a wide range of outdoor activities including skiing and snowboarding, mountain biking, indoor climbing, kayaking and rafting, and family-friendly camping. All of our programs are free for the community.

Vámonos Outside was born in 2020 out of the need to engage the Latinx community in the outdoors that is abundant here in Central Oregon. Our community recognized the lack of Latinx folks participating in outdoor recreation and not benefiting from all that nature has to offer. Vámonos Outside exists to be the bridge between the Latinx community and outdoor opportunities. It takes a Latinx-led program to understand, navigate, and address the cultural and physical barriers this community has connected to the outdoors.

Our teamOur team

VÁmonos OutsideVÁmonos Outside

Vámonos Outside is a program of the Children's Forest. Donate vamonosoutside.orgat

Group Meditation in Redmond

High Desert Corvette Club

CALENDAREVENTS

Current Fiction Book Club Join Round about Books for Current Fiction Book Club. Participants will discussing “Sea of Tranquil ity” by Emily St. John Mandel. Sep. 7, 6-7pm.

Your Spirit Guide will lead you through the haunted streets and alleyways of Historic Downtown Bend where you’ll learn about the city’s many macabre tales, long-buried secrets and famous ghosts. Wednesdays-Sun days, 7:30-9pm. Downtown Bend, Bend. Contact: 541-350-0732. bendghosttours@gmail.com. $25.

Share your professional and busi ness expertise! Become a volunteer mentor with SCORE in Central Oregon. The SCORE chapter is growing. Your experience and knowledge will be valued by both new and existing businesses in the community. To apply, call 541-316-0662 or visit centraloregon.score.org/volunteer. Fri., Aug. 26 and ongoing. Contact: 541-316-0662.

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Volunteer with Salvation Army

Creative Nonfiction Critique Group Join an intimate group of like-minded women ready to critique each other’s writing. Gain feedback, confidence and encouragement as we dive deep into what’s working and what’s not. This is an MFA-style course focused on creative nonfiction (memoir, essays, etc.). Weekly meetings via Zoom for seven weeks. Wednesdays, 6:30pm. Through Sep. 14. Contact: jessica@jessicajhill. com. $295.

ClassHeads Up 7 Up! A Playwriting Work shop 10-week class! Ages 12-19. Seven easy steps to getting that play out of your head and on to the page. Whether you are a seasoned playwright or just starting out, this workshop is for you! Mondays, 4-6pm. Through Nov. 28. Cascade Theatrical Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-389-0803. ctcinfo@ cascadestheatrical.org. $60 for non-members, free for members. I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change A musical revue celebrating the mating game! This crowd-pleasing comedy takes on the truths and myths behind that contemporary conundrum know as ‘the relationship.’ “I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change” is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals. www. concordtheatricals.com. Fri, Sep. 9-Fri, Sep. 23. Cascade Theatrical Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-389-0803. ctcinfo@ cascadestheatrical.org. $36-$39.

Game Night Let’s Play LeftCenterRight Bring friends and make new friends. More peo ple the bigger the pot. Simple game, one dollar table and 5 dollar tables. The winner of each game takes the pot. Wed., 5-7pm. Zero Latency Bend, 1900 NE 3rd St STE 104, Bend. Contact: 541-617-0688. zerolatencybend.com.

Kirtan & Sacred Sound Kirtan and Sacred Sound with Bend Bhakti Collective and special guests through the month. Find out why chanting mantra is beneficial. No singing or other experi ence needed! Thursdays, 7-8:30pm. Through Oct. 6. Heritage Hall, 230 NE 9th St., Bend. Free.

Groundswell:ETC.

with Par rots! 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.

The High Desert Corvette Club's purpose is to plan and conduct safe social activities and events that pro mote enjoyment of Corvettes. It also contributes annually to local nonprofit organizations. Due to COVID-19, please check its website for meeting details: highdesertcorvettes.org. Second Tuesday of every month, 6-7:30pm. Contact: 909-9947500. 1991highdesertcorvettes@gmail.com.

PLAYA Writing Intensive “Lost in Place” Nurture your creative writing. Take part in a unique weekend writing intensive at PLAYA, an arts and sciences residency campus located on Summer Lake. Daily generative writing work shops, led by writer and poet Ellen Waterston, will be informed and complemented by morning field trips and evening discussions. Thu, Sep. 8, 9am and Sun, Sep. 11-5pm. Playa, 47531 Hwy 31, Summer Lake. Contact: info@writingranch.com. $750 per person.

Board Games Hosted by The Base

Northwest Crossing Farmers Market Saturday Farmers Market in Bend’s Northwest Crossing neighborhood. Find fresh produce and support local growers and businesses! Satur days, 10am-2pm. Through Oct. 1. NorthWest Crossing, NW Crossing Drive, Bend. Contact: farmersmarket@c3events.com. Free. Not Cho Grandma’s Bingo Not Cho’ Grandma’s Bingo is back at Silver Moon Brewing! Its hosting its famous bingo event for good times and a chance to win some cold hard cash! Sun days, 10am-1pm. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Free. Twentieth Annual 9-11 Rally and Golf Event 20th Annual 9-11 rally to support Oregon’s Veterans. Starts Sep. 9 with a golf scramble, and the event still has spots available! Continues with a poker tourney, BBQ, charity ride and more on Saturday. Sep. 9, 8am and Sep. 10, 9am. Crooked River Ranch, 5060 SW Clubhouse Rd, Crooked River Ranch. Contact: 541-848-7763. oscar@bendbroadband.com. Free. Wildlife Conservation Photography Join the wildlife team to learn about and photo graph the wildlife at the High Desert Museum. Experienced photographers will be available to assist participants with camera techniques for portrait-style and action photography opportu nities with raptors and mammals. Sep. 8, 10am2pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend. $150, Members receive 20% discount.

CallVOLUNTEERforVolunteers-Play

Share Your Business and Professional Expertise

Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Dr., #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. julie@ roundaboutbookshop.com. Free. Nonfiction Book Club Join Roundabout Books for Nonfiction Book Club. Participants will discuss “The Way Out: How to Overcome Toxic Polarization” by Peter T. Coleman. Sep. 9, 6-7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. julie@ roundaboutbookshop.com. Free. Not Your Average Book Club Join Round about Books for Not Your Average Book Club. Intergenerational, for ages 14 and up! All are welcome! Participants will discuss “The Chosen” and the Beautiful by Nghi Vo. Sep. 12, 6-7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. julie@ roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.

PRESENTATIONS + BendEXHIBITSGhostTours

Environmental Center Welcoming Week Welcoming Week is a global movement that brings communities and neighborhoods of all backgrounds together to build strong con nections and affirm the importance of inclusive places. Sep. 9, 9am-5pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend. Contact: 541385-6908. Free. Know Flavor - Tastes Along the Old Silk Road Discover how flavors, spices and trade traveled the world via the Silk Road. You can attend this program online or in person. To take part online, register by at deschuteslibrary. org. Sep. 10, 2-3pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St., La Pine. Contact: 541-312-1063. paigef@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.

Natural History Pub: Fungi of Central Oregon Central Oregon is home to a broad range of fungi. From mushrooms to molds, fungi play an important role in our region’s forests. Sep. 12, 7-8pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend. Free. Why Water Banks Make Sense Find out the potential behind water banks in Central Oregon to enable the flexible and voluntary market-based reallocation of water, particularly during drought conditions. Sep. 12, 6-8pm. Open Space Event Studios, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-382-4077. info@deschutesri ver.org. Free.

CTCTHEATERTeenTheatreProgram

Humane Society Thrift Store - Vol unteers Needed Do you love animals and discovering “new” treasures? Then volunteering at the HSCO Thrift Store Donation Door is the perfect place to combine your passions while helping HSCO raise funds to provide animal welfare services for the local community. For information contact: rebecca@hsco.org. Ongoing. Humane Society Thrift Shop, 61220 S. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-241-3761. rebecca@hsco. org.

The Salvation Army has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for almost every age. It has an emergency food pantry, volunteers visit residents of assisted living centers and they make up gifts for veterans and the homeless. Ongoing. Contact: 541-389-8888.

The Base at Franklin is a new space in the Old Bend neighborhood for neurodivergent humans and allies to access community through the shared goal for connection and wellness. The Base at Franklin 541-610-8826 Fridays, 4-5:30pm. RSVP Required. Free. Caregiver Support Group Join on zoom (or possibly in person) for the SAO Caregiver support group. Open for Stroke survivor caregivers AND all caregivers in general, the group has so much in common and benefit from connecting with others in a similar place. Email for zoom link. Stroke Awareness Oregon. Contact: sanchana@ oregonstate.edu Second Monday of every month, 1-2pm. Through Dec. 12. Contact: 541-678-2380. sanchana@oregonstate.edu. Free. Celebrate With the Bend Bhakti Col lective Kirtan, sacred song, dance and commu nity. Celebrate with the Bend Bhakti Collective. Thursdays, 7pm. First Presbyterian Heritage Hall, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. Contact: 541-3824401. Free-$20.

AuthorWORDSEvent:Backskatter

GROUPS + MEETUPS Become a Better Public Speaker! Do you struggle with public speaking? You’re not alone! Come visit Bend Toastmasters Club and learn how to overcome your public speaking fears. Wednesdays, Noon-1pm. Contact: bend.toastmasters.club@gmail.com.503-501-6031.Free.

This meditation will be lead by Laura Wegner, Owner of Spark Wellness this week. She will channel a Sirius B being, named Sera. Sera would like to introduce a new perspective to our collective meditation with her version of meditation. Join them in Redmond. Sep. 12, 6:30-8pm. Spark Wellness, 210 Southwest 5th St., Suite 4, Red mond. Contact: 541-604-2440. hello@sparkwell ness.love. Donation.

by Tom Wangler Bend author Tom Wangler will join Dancing Moon Press publisher Kim Cooper Findling to talk about his new book, “Backskat ter.” Sep. 8, 6-7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Dr., #110, Bend. Contact: 541306-6564. julie@roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.

Compassion into Action Groundswell: Annual fundraising event for local end-of-life nonprofit The Peaceful Presence Project (thepeacefulpresenceproject.org). Join the Hanai foundation in person at Hanai of Bend on Sun. for live music with CJ Neary, stories of the group’s impact in the community, the Before I Die Wall, and a silent auction & raffle. Sep. 11, 4-6pm. Hanai Foundation, 62430 Eagle Road, Bend. Contact: info@thepeacefulpresenceproject. org. $50.

Volunteer Here! Gratifying opportunity avail able! All aspects of daily horse care and barn maintenance for Mustangs to the Rescue. Mon.Sun. Mustangs to the Rescue, 21670 McGilvray Road, Bend. Contact: 541-330-8943. volunteer@ mustangstotherescue.org. Free.

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Badminton Night! Beginners and expe rienced players welcome. Extra racquets and birdies provided. The $10 cost helps pay for the facility. Wednesdays, 7:30-9:30pm. Through Nov. 2. Bend Hoops, 1307 NE 1st St, Bend. Contact: 503-720-8605. jimwinkle@gmail.com. $10.

Thursday Night Run Run through the Old Mill for around 3-5 miles, stay for food and drinks! Thursdays, 6-7pm. Spoken Moto, 310 SW Industrial Way, Bend. Free.

The Schil ling’s Farmers Market gives local farmers and makers a place to come together and celebrate good, hard, honest work – the work done by the hands of neighbors. Come out and help the com munity grow! Sun., Sep. 11, 10am-3pm and Sun., Oct. 9, 10am-3pm. Schilling’s Garden Market, 64640 Old Bend-Redmond HWY, Bend. Contact: 541-323-0160. info@schillingsgardenmarket. com. Free. Second Street Second Saturday Join the Second Street Bend shop community at Bend Coffee & Books for a special food menu, alongside live music and local artists’ works! Sep. 10-Sat, Dec. 10, 10am-2pm. Bend Coffee & Books, 155 NE Greenwood Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-388-3249. bendcoffeebooks2022@gmail. com. Free. Sisters Farmers Market Sisters Farmers Market runs every weekend from the first Sunday in June through the first Sunday in October. Sundays, 11am-2pm. Through Oct. 3. Fir Street Park, Sisters, Sisters. Contact: sistersfarmersmarket@gmail.com.541-904-0134.Free.

Parkinson’s Resources of Oregon Support Group

Courtesy Anti Records

FOOD + DRINK

This support group offers a safe space for all people involved in caring for or managing Parkinson’s Disease. Please contact Kay Terzian if you wish to join or have further questions 541-388-1706. Fridays, 9:45-11:45am. Through Jan. 1. Bend Coffee & Books, 155 NE Greenwood Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-388-1706. kaymarie.terzian@gmail.com. Free. Paws & Pints Come talk dogs and make friends with other like minded folks! Join Paws & Pints for a hosted beverage, and there may even be an adorable puppy or two looking to meet their perfect person! First Wednesday of every month, 5-7pm. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Free. Second Sunday Vintage Market Gathered Wares invites you to its Second Sunday Vintage Market at the Old Ironworks Arts District. 10+ vendors selling the best vintage Central Oregon has to offer. IG: @gatheredwaresshop. Second Sunday of every month, 10am-2pm. Through Sep. 11. Gathered Wares, 50 SE Scott St., Bend. Contact: 541-389-2566. Free.

FootZone Fall Training Groups Trail Half Marathon Training for and completing a Trail Half Marathon (13.1mi) is a challenging and rewarding endeavor. Participants benefit from FootZone’s experienced head coach and mentors. Tuesdays-Saturdays, 8am and Tue, Aug. 16, 6pm. Through Nov. 12. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-317-3568. col@ footzonebend.com. $150.

We’ve learned a lot about what it takes to hire and retain young talent, but what if we took this a step further to get to know this generation as a whole? Sep. 13, 11:30am-1pm. Riverhouse on the Deschutes Convention Center, 3075 N. Highway 97, Bend. Contact: 541-688-7653. kim@cityclub co.org. Free-$40.

Bend Girls AllRide Junior Shredders

September Outdoor Industry Coffee & Coworking

Cross Cut Warming Hut: Locals’ Day! Tuesdays are Locals’ Day. Enjoy $1 off regular size draft beverages. Every Tuesday. Crosscut Warming Hut No 5, 566 SW Mill View Way, Bend. Featured Flight w/ Devona Featured Flight with Devona, wines from both Oregon and Washington. Flight will be available all day but be joined by winemaker John Abbott from 4:306:30pm. 4 Wines $28 $25 Flight Club Members Sep. 8, 4:30-6:30pm. Flights Wine Bar, 1444 NW College Way Suite 1, Bend. Contact: 541-7280753. flightswinebend@gmail.com. $28. Growler Discount Night! Enjoy $2 off growler fills every Wednesday at Bevel! Wednes days. Bevel Craft Brewing, 911 SE Armour St., Bend. Contact: 831-245-1922. holla@bevelbeer. com. Free. Jeff Ibach Transplant from Hawaii, Jeff brings a little bit of home to his folk music as he grooves on his guitar. Sep. 10, 6-8pm. Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St., Bend. Free. Know Flavor: Whiskey Tasting at Oregon Spirit Distillers Registration required. Registration ends Sep. 9 at 2pm. Ages 21+ Join a guided tasting of un-aged and aged whiskey. Learn about the process of distilling and how barrel aging influences the color and flavor profile of a spirit. Sep. 13, 4-5:30pm. Oregon Spirit Distillers, 740 NE First St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-1029. laurelw@deschuteslibrary.org. Free.

Natural Selection Proving Grounds Presented by Pacifico Natural Selection Proving Grounds presented by Pacifico, returns to Prineville, OR’s Flying Blind Dirt Park (former ly Oregon Dirt Park) on September 10, 2022. The best 32 big mountain and slopestyle riders in the world will drop into an expanded venue featuring naturally-enhanced features evolving the sport in real time. 9am-6pm. Flying Blind Dirt Park, 12600 SE Juniper Canyon Rd, Prineville. Contact: 541-362-9969. $25-$95. Redmond Running Group Run All levels welcome. Find the Redmond Oregon Run ning Klub on Facebook for weekly run details. Thursdays, 6:15pm. City of Redmond. Contact: rundanorun1985@gmail.com.

Makerspace Open House DIYcave is Bend’s Makerspace and its having an open house and bloc party. Come by to see all the resident artists and makers in action! There will be live music, food and drinks, raffle prizes, vendor booths and much more! Sep. 10, Noon-5pm. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave.com. Free.

EVENTS

One weekend per month, 10 months a year, Septem ber-June. Join other adults in a year-long jour ney learning survival skills, camping outdoors, connecting with nature, practicing skills human ancestors once relied upon and learning more about the more than human world around you. First 2022 class meets Sep. 10-11. Sep. 9. Bend, RSVP for address, Bend. Contact: info@nighthawknaturalistschool.com.901-486-4734.$1975.

Locals’ Night Monday is the day to be at Silver Moon Brewing! Come on down and join the local family all day every Monday! Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Locals’ Day Come on down to Bevel Craft Brewing for $4 beers and cider and $1 off wine all day. There are also food specials from the food carts located out back at The Patio! Tues days. Bevel Craft Brewing, 911 SE Armour St., Bend. Contact: holla@bevelbeer.com. Free.

TRAINING GROUPS + 2022EVENTSATHLETICMBSEFThrillaCyclocross Series

The Mountain Muskrats Dive Club has Odell Lake for our monthly dive. Join the club to explore and clean this incredible mountain waterway. Not certified? No problem. Club dives are a perfect time to discover scuba diving! Sep. 11, 9:30pm. The Den Dive Shop, 56881 Enterprise Drive, Sun river. Contact: 541-600-9355. thedendiveshop@ hotmail.com. $100 annual club fee.

MBSEF brings back its weekly cyclocross series for the month of November! Racers will rip around the grounds of The Athletic Club of Bend and can register for individual races or the fourday race series. There will be no race on Sep. 15. Thursdays, 5:15pm. Through Sep. 29. Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Dr, Bend. Con tact: 541-388-0002. molly@mbsef.org. $15-$35.

Bend Girls AllRide Junior Shredders 5-Week Camps The Jr Shredder 5-week Camp is the foundation of the Girls AllRide Program! This is where your shredder will learn and refine the fundamental skills of mountain biking. The mission is to use mountain biking as Indie-rock band Hey, King! released its self-titled debut album in 2021. Natalie London and Taylor Plecity create heartfelt, emotional music with intentional songwriting. Hey, King! is playing with Tomo Nakayama and Helga at the Volcanic Theater Pub on Sept. 10 at 8pm.

Fall Harvest Dinner Join Seed to Table Farm as it celebrates the bounty and community efforts surrounding fresh food and farm-based education with a beautiful three-course meal served by Chris and Emma Leyden of FEAST Food Co. Tours are included. Kids welcome! Mu sic by Melanie Dyer Trio. Sep. 10, 4:30-7:30pm. Seed to Table Farm, 998 E Black Butte Ave., Sisters. Contact: 425-753-6282. office@seedto tablesisters.org. $75. Schilling’s Farmers Market

Homeschool Adventure Art Class Join Wondery Art+Adventure School for a semester class where participants learn how to observe and create like an adventure artist. Each week participants focus on a new element of art and bring it to life through nature journaling and a guided art project. Mondays, 9am-Noon Through Dec. 12. Wondery Art + Adventure School, 19550 Amber Meadow Dr Suite 190, Bend. Contact: sarah@wonderyschool.com. $780. Moms + Groms Meetup Moms + Groms is officially back at Boss Rambler! Moms, it’s simple: show up with your grom(s) to socialize and drink beer (or whatever you want) with other moms while the kiddos make new friends! All moms get $1 off drinks! Every Wednesday, 3-6pm. Boss Rambler Beer Club, 1009 NW Gal veston Ave., Bend. Free.

Whiskey Tuesdays The Cross-eyed Cricket Watering Hole is offering exclusive access to a li brary of top shelf whiskeys every Tue. One ounce pours for reasonable prices. Come by and try something new, or sip on your favorites! Tues days, 11am-11pm. Cross-Eyed Cricket, 20565 NE Brinson Blvd., Bend. Free. Wine Wednesdays Happy hour all day on Wine Wednesday. Come in for discounts on glasses, beers and apps! Wednesdays, 3-9pm. Flights Wine Bar, 1444 NW College Way Suite 1, Bend. Contact: 541-728-0753. flightswinebend@ gmail.com. Free.

Mountain Muskrats Club Dive

Millennials: They’re Shaping Our Future, What Shaped Them?

AdultCLASSESACTIVITIES/SKILLSOUTDOOR/SurvivalImmersionCourse

CALENDAR TICKETS AVAILABLE AT

Redmond Farmers Market Featuring locally grown produce, artisan foods, prepared foods and crafts. Redmond Farmers Market shares a dedication for supporting local farms and eating delicious and healthy foods. Thurs days, 3-7pm. Through Sep. 15. Centennial Park, Evergreen, Between 7th and 8th St., Redmond. Free.

BEER + DRINK

Looking to make connections and build community in the outdoor industry? Join Thump for a networking event. From 9-10am mix and mingle, grab a coffee from Thump, then from 10-11am open coworking, bring your laptops and notebooks. Sep. 7, 9-11am. The Grove, 921 NW Mt. Washington Drive, Bend. Contact: mkhamilt@ gmail.com. Free.

Neuroqueer Meetup A safe place for neu rodivergent, queer individuals to exchange with the goal of promoting exploration and sharing of experiences, as well as empowerment and con nection to community. Every other Wednesday, 6-7:30pm. The Base at Franklin, 5 NW Franklin Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-610-8826. hello@base atfranklin.com. Free. Non-specific grief support group Small Support Group (4-5 people) for those who need a safe space to share a grief difficult to share with one’s friend and family. Sun. 5-6pm. Free.

5-Week Camps The Jr. Shredder 5-week Camp is the foundation of the Girls AllRide program! This is where your shredder will learn and refine the foundational skills of mountain biking. Its mission is to use mountain biking as a platform for youth to discover and build confidence. Sep. 13, 3:30-5:30pm. Cog Wild, 255 SW Century Drive, Bend. Contact: 480-343-7037. girls@ladiesallride.com. $225.

FAMILY + KIDS After School Art Club Art Club is a unique after school program for kids to create and bring their ideas to life in an inspiring studio space. The weekly schedule features a different focus each day. Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 2:30-5pm. Through Dec. 15. Wondery Art + Ad venture School, 19550 Amber Meadow Dr Suite 190, Bend. Contact: sarah@wonderyschool.com. $150 per month.

Stream Stewards Student Video Contest by the Upper Deschutes Wa tershed Council Calling all Central Oregon student filmmakers! Be entered to win two free tickets to the Jack Johnson concert on Sun., Sep. 25, by submitting your video to the Stream Stew ards Video Contest. All contest applications are due by Sep. 15. Please visit the Upper Deschutes Watershed Website website for specific contest details. Aug. 16-Sep. 15, Midnight-11:59pm. Con tact: cboylan@restorethedeschutes.org. Free.

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Moon Ceremony Gather under the Moon with The People’s Apothecary for an evening of community, creating sacred space, setting inten tions and letting go of things that do not serve us, and learning new ways to release dis-coor dinate energy. Thu, Aug. 11, 5:30-7pm, Sat, Sep. 10, 6-7:30pm and Tue, Oct. 25, 6-7:30pm. This is not your typical moon ceremony! Those who gather in this shared sacred space of ceremony will be witness to an eclectic, electric, energiz ing experience. During circle, Aubrey will share with us the teachings of the Quechuan people and Andean Cosmovision. You will leave feeling at-ease and connected. Sat., Sep. 10, 6-7:30pm and Tue., Oct. 25, 6-7:30pm. The Peoples Apoth ecary, 19570 Amber Meadow Dr, Bend. Contact: 541-728-2368. classes@thepeoplesapothecary. net. $20.

Capoeira: A Martial & Cultural Art Form of Freedom Free yourself from everyday movement and thought streams, push your boundaries and find joy in community. This Afro-Brazilian art combines music and acro batics in a constant flow of movement, attacks and creative defense. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 7-8:30pm. High Desert Martial Arts, 63056 Lower Meadow Dr. Ste. 120, Bend. Contact: 541-6783460. ucabend@gmail.com. $30 intro month.

By Chris Williams At 74, Bob Weir is still discover ing himself and where he can take his music. Perhaps that is why he has assembled two distinct groups to keep the songs and spirit of the Grate ful Dead alive after all of these years. Dead & Company was formed in 2015 alongside other Grateful Dead mem bers Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart, while adding superstar musicians John Mayer, Oteil Burbridge and Jeff Chi menti into the mix. With that ensem ble the group is able to bring back the larger-than-life sounds and epic dance grooves that made the band a tour ing powerhouse and cult favorite for decades. But what about the Dead’s more stripped-down and laidback tunes? That’s where Bob Weir and the Wolf Brothers come in.  The Wolf Brothers were formed in 2018 with bass player and produc er Don Was, as well as drummer Jay Lane. The Wolf Brothers are the gritty, raw sounding, cousin to Dead & Com pany that are able to more masterfully reconstruct the Dead’s more acoustic and blues driven anthems. The group plays Grateful Dead songs, Weir orig inals and other folk classics from the counter culture catalog. Audiences can expect an experience more akin to plucking away tunes on the back porch rather than filling up stadiums for thousands of psychedelic voyagers.  The setting at Hoodoo Ski Area is fitting for two reasons. First, it’s a benefit concert put on by Bigstock Fundraising to raise funds for Oregon Adaptive Sports, which works exten sively with Hoodoo and Mt. Bachelor to provide equitable ski access. Also, there is no better feeling than listen ing to legendary jams while getting to look at the mountains and setting sun in clear alpine air. Doors to the show open at 2pm and Gbots and the Jour neymen will open starting at 3pm. Car pooling is encouraged, and there are plenty of campsites around the ski area to ease the burden of traveling. (Camp ing is not included on site.)

Parkinson’s In-Person Exercise Class PWR! Moves Group Exercise Class. Please join Nancy Nelson- Parkinson’s Exercise specialist for this whole body in-person, function-focused exercise that will push you to do more than you think. You will be challenged physically and cognitively while working through fitness goals: strength, balance and agility. Call Nancy 503-799-5311 Tuesdays-Thursdays, 1-2pm. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. Contact: 503-799-5311. nancyn.pdex@gmail.com. $160 for 8 weeks. Sacred Cocoa Ceremony We invite you to join us on a fabled and whimsical quest ~ a quest that begins in your heart-center and radiates out into the community. Through visualizations, music, the breath and intention, The Peoples Apothecary invites you to allow the symbiotic interplay of cacao and community connection to speak to you. Sep. 12, 6-7:30pm. The Peoples Apothecary, 19570 Amber Meadow Dr, Bend. Contact: 541-728-2368. classes@thepeople sapothecary.net. $25. Scottish Country Dance Scottish Country Dance class is on Mon. from 7-9pm at the Sons of Norway Building, 549 NW Harmon. A chance to socialize and get a bit of exercise, too. Beginners are welcome. All footwork, figures and social graces will be taught and reviewed. Contact 541508-9110. Mondays, 7-9pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. Contact: 541-5089110. allely@bendbroadband.com. $5. Self-Awareness Class with Rev Jane Hiatt Unity event 7-Week Class! Self-aware ness is necessary for optimal balance and func tioning in life. To be self-aware is to be in tune with the multi-dimensions of being. Zoom Link provided upon registration Text: Conscious Living by Gay Hendricks In the Flow by Eric Butterworth Sep. 8, 5:30-7:30pm. Through Oct. 20. Contact: 541-280-5040. Cylvia@cylviahayes.com. $75.

Tai Chi for Health™ created by Dr. Paul Lam

Tai Chi with Grandmaster Franklin

The Vance Stance / Structural Re programming Is pain preventing you from activities you love? Can you no longer “power through?” Mondays-Wednesdays-Thursdays, 6pm. EastSide Home Studio, 21173 Sunburst Ct.,, Bend. Contact: 541-330-9070. x12 classes = $180.

HEALTH + WELLNESS

Outdoor Yoga Flow Classes Join Free Spirit Yoga outside in the fresh air for this all levels adult Vinyasa Flow Yoga Class built around sun salutations and creative sequencing to build heat, endurance, flexibility and strength. Prena tal students are welcome as well as teens 13 and older with parents.

This two-day per week class is appropriate for anyone who wants a slower Tai Chi class or those dealing with chronic health conditions. The gradual, gentle and simple movements help facilitate healing and improve motion, flexibility and balance. The entire class can be performed in a wheelchair or a chair. Any student may sit for all or part of the class. Half of our time is gentle warm-ups. “Tai Chi for Health” classes are traditional moves, modified and adjusted by Dr. Paul Lam and his team of medical experts. We also explore using our knowledge of Tai Chi to help us stay safe and balanced, as seniors. Mondays-Wednesdays, 8:45-9:45am. OREGON TAI CHI, 1350 SE Reed Mkt Rd Ste 102, Bend. Contact: 541-389-5015. $55-$65.

THE VANCE STANCE ® Is pain preventing activities you love? Can you no longer “pow er through” pain from accidents, injuries and historic bad posture? Been told there is no remedy for: Scoliosis, Sciatica, Bunions or “bad” shoulders, back, hips and Knees? Correct your posture and flexibility to become pain free! Mon days, 12-2 and 6-8pm, Wednesdays, 6-8pm and Thursdays, Noon-2pm. Through Dec. 1. Vance Bonner, 21173 Sunburst Ct., Bend. Contact: 541330-9070. vancebonner@juno.com. $180.

Cog Wild Ladies Progression Rides Join like minded ladies for a fun, low stress en vironment, social pace ride with skills sessions along the way. Rally your girls, minimum of 4 riders required to run these rides. Join us for a single session or join them all. $45 per session. Thursdays, 4:30-7pm. Through Sep. 29. COG WILD, 19221 SW Century Dr, Bend. Contact: 541385-7002. info@cogwild.com. $45 per session.

541-241-3919.SWSep.days-Saturdays-Sundays,Mondays-Tuesdays-Thurs9:15-10:15am.Through11.FreeSpiritYoga+Fitness+Play,320PowerhouseDrive,Suite150,Bend.Contact:info@freespiritbend.com.$18.

Terri at 541-390-1097 Sundays, 3-4pm. Contact: 541-390-1097. oacentraloregon@gmail.com.

The focus is on the individual. I teach the original form as it was taught in the monastery: un changed—Taoist Tai Chi Chuan 108 movements. This holistic approach focuses on the entire body as well as the mental and spiritual aspects. Each movement is fully explained. Neogong, Baoding & Sword are taught. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:45-10:45am. Grandmaster Franklin, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd, Bend. Contact: 541-797-9620. arawak327@gmal.com. $80.

Dance Meditation Transformation Dance Meditation Transformation is held every Thu. at 6pm at the Hanai Center. The experience of meditation going through the five stages of preparing your body and mind to flow freely is a unique experience. The session ends with a free flow dance set of world music. Thursdays, 6-7:30pm. Through Sep. 22. Hanai Foundation, 62430 Eagle Road, Bend. Contact: 310-420-5873. seedofnothingness@gmail.com. Suggested donations $15-$25. Double Gonger Sound Bath with Alchemy Bowls Full Moon journey with a weave of double Sound current, Yoga and Mantra. Shining light on two divinely sacred energies, Shiva and Shakti, alive in both men and women. Sep. 11, 7-8:30pm. Bend Hot Yoga, 1230 NE 3rd St. Unit A320, Bend. Contact: yoga@bendhotyoga. com. $15 BHY Members; $25 Non-Members. Drop In Monday Meditation - open to all Come join in the beautiful gardens for meditation and healing! Mondays, 6:30-7:30pm. Blissful Heart Wellness Center, 45 NW Greeley Ave, Bend. Contact: 510-220-2441. cathleen@ blissful-heart.com. Donation Based. Forest Bathing Part meditation, part nature connection, forest bathing is a therapeutic practice that can help you relieve stress, tame your mental chatter and find yourself in the present moment. Sep. 10, 9:30am-Noon. La Pine State Park, 15800 State Recreation Rd, La Pine. Contact: mindy@rootedpresence.com. $35. Impact Parkinson’s Disease Exercise Program Impact PD! is a high energy exercise class designed for people with Parkinson’s. Whole body activation, voice work, facial expres sion, counteract your symptoms, dual tasking, fine motor skills and increase your daily activity. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:15-10:30am. High Desert Martial Arts, 63056 Lower Meadow Dr. Ste. 120, Bend. Contact: 503-799-5311. nancyn.pdex@ gmail.com. $119 a month. In-Person Yoga at LOFT Wellness & Day Spa In-person yoga classes at Bend’s newest yoga studio! Tuesdays: Vinyasa with instructor Kelly Jenkins. 5-6pm. Limited to five participants. Thursdays: Foundation Flow with instructor Kelly Jenkins. 5-6pm. Limited to five participants. Schedule online or call to reserve your spot! Tuesdays-Thursdays, 5-6pm. Loft Wellness & Day Spa, 339 SW Century Drive Ste 203, Bend. Contact: 541-690-5100. info@loftbend. com. $20. Lakshmi Community Workshop Abun dance Chanting Workshop. Meet and connect with the goddess of abundance and beauty in this 90-minute workshop. Thu., Sep. 8, 6-7:30pm and Thu., Oct. 13, 6-7:30pm. The Peoples Apothecary, 19570 Amber Meadow Dr, Bend. Contact: 541728-2368. classes@thepeoplesapothecary.net. $10 donation.

Bend Zen Meditation Group Bend Zen sits every Mon. evening at 7pm. Arrive at 6:45pm to orient yourself and meet others. We have two 25-minute sits followed by a member-led Dharma discussion from 8:05-8:30pm. All are welcome! Learn more and sign up for emails at www.bendzen.net Mondays, 6:45-8:30pm. Brooks Hall at Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 Wall St., Bend. Contact: bendzensitting@gmail.com. Donations accepted.

25 a platform for youth to discover and build confi dence. Tue., Sep. 13, 3:30-5:30pm. Cog Wild, 255 SW Century Drive, Bend. Contact: 480-343-7037. girls@ladiesallride.com. $225. Bend Rock Gym BIPOC Climb Night Join Vamonos Outside and the BRG for its monthly BIPOC climbing night. Second Tuesday of every month. Bend Rock Gym, 1182 SE Cen tennial Ct., Bend. $15.

Online Only: Know Flavor - Micro wave-friendly, Plant-based Recipes Discover easy, microwave-friendly vegan recipes for those busy nights. This is a live webinar. Receive the Zoom link at deschuteslibrary.org. Join 2x cookbook authors Robin Coarts and Jules Schnedeker as they share tips, tricks and recipes from their latest cookbook. Sep. 7, 6:30-7:30pm. Contact: 541-312-1063. paigef@deschuteslibrary. org. Free. Out of the Darkness Walk Join the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention to raise funds and awareness for mental health and suicide prevention. The Out of the Darkness Community Walk is a journey of remembrance, hope and support. Friends, family, neighbors and coworkers walk side-by-side, supporting each other and in memory of those we’ve lost. Sep. 10, 10am-1pm. Alpenglow Park, 61049 Southeast 15th St., Bend. Contact: 971-375-5509. oregon@ afsp.org. Free. Outdoor Yoga Class All-levels Vinyasa Flow class. Our community yoga classes take place outside, with the sun shining, the birds chirping and the river flowing by. For visitors, new to Bend and locals - build strength and flexibility in community, in nature! Parking pass, mat and props included. Reservation required, please visit website. Fridays, 8:30-9:30am and Wednesdays, 8:30-9:30am. Through Sep. 28. Tumalo State Park, 64120 O. B. Riley Rd, Bend. Contact: 503888-3674. wildlandguidingcompany@gmail.com. $20.

CALENDAREVENTSTICKETS AVAILABLE AT Gung Ho for Bob Weir & Wolf Brothers

Bob Weir & Wolf Brothers Sat., Sep. 10. 2pm Hoodoo Ski Area 27400 Big Lake Rd., Sisters $120

Community Acupuncture Reduce stress, increase vitality and energy, treat acute and chronic pain and strengthen your immune system through acupuncture in an affordable, community style setting. Both new and returning patients are welcome! Join David Watts, LAc at Hawthorn every Wed. and Fri. Call to schedule today! Wednesdays, 10:30am-1pm and Fridays, 10:30am-1pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend. Contact: Reservations: 541-330-0334. info@hawthornehealingcenter. com. $60/session.

Overeaters Anonymous (OA) Meeting Zoom meeting Password: 301247 For more infor mation: centraloregonoa.org/ For assistance, call

APortland-based burger operation has opened a new location in Bend. SuperDe luxe is an “old-school burger drive-thru” with three locations in the Portland metro area. This month, Bend became the site for its fourth location, with the new restaurant now open along NE Third Street.

he Grove in Northwest Crossing in Bend already has a number of new and unique food offerings—and since early August, that has included the new Rancher Butcher Chef, a combo of family-style steakhouse and meat counter. RBC part ners with local ranchers to offer items for sale, but it also has a “home ranch,” 7-Mile Creek Ranch, in Fort Klamath, near Crater Lake, part of the Country Natural Beef Cooperative of family ranches. “7-Mile balances habitat restoration with responsible, natural cattle grazing and is leading efforts to improve water quality and fish habitat in the Klamath Basin,” reads a description on the RBC website. Dishes on the dinner menu—all intended to be shared plates—include various cuts of steak as well as burgers, spaghetti car bonara, seared scallops and cedar-planked salmon, and numerous appetizers and salads. RBC also offers a hearty wine list and a specialty cocktail menu. The butcher shop located on the same property had its soft opening this week and is currently open from noon to 4pm Fridays and Saturdays. Dinner is served Wednesday through Sunday from 5-9pm, though hours will be extended to 4:309:30pm starting September 14. Like most restaurants these days, staffing is the next hurdle to increasing its hours.“We will be announcing a grand opening in the coming weeks, we just need to hire a few more cooks to be able to get up to our seven day a week schedule,” said Renee Gorham, co-owner. She and husband John Gorham were the previous owners of Portland’s Toro Bravo and other restaurants before leaving Portland in 2020 and relocating to Central Oregon.

By Nicole Vulcan

Butcher Counter Opens at Rancher Butcher Chef

SuperDeluxe was created by restauranteurs Micah Camden and Matt Lynch who also created the Little Big Burger chain. The new Bend location’s lobby is open from 8am to 10pm every day.

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SuperDeluxe 805 NE Third St., eatsuperdeluxe.comBend

Rancher Butcher Chef 2838 NW Crossing Dr., Bend rbcbend.com

Submitted by RBC

SuperDeluxe is known for its pasture-raised beef burgers, cage-free chicken sandwiches, veggie and vegan burgers, hand-cut chicken nuggets and French fries, as well as its all-day breakfast menu that includes egg sandwiches on egg muffins. Oh, and milkshakes are also on offer in flavors including blackberry and coffee and the “big three” of chocolate, strawberry and vanilla.

FranklinNW550Ave. Greenwood706NE Newport1052NW 15th1075SESt. eastsidegardensinc.com541-383-3722 61780 SE 27th Bend SUMMER SPECIALS!! Have a burrowing rodent problem? Who you gonna call? gopherbusters@live.com TRAPPING • GASSING • RESULTS Office 541-205-5764 cell 541-331-2404 Moles, Voles, Gophers and Squirrels Residental • Commercial • Farm & Public Lands

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Bend Gets SuperDeluxe #4

One of my first guests was local Chef John Kelly (currently at Flights Wine Bar in Bend). He suggested we make a scallop dish together and explained how scallops are one of the easiest proteins to prepare— plus they’re available year-round and they pair well with all kinds of flavors. Other reasons that now is a good time for this par ticular recipe: The Oregon Whiskey Festival, celebrat ing whiskey distilled and made in Oregon, is coming up later this month (Sept. 23-24) at Oregon Spirit Dis tillers, and celery and arugula are both now in season!

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(541) 647 2198 | 845 NW DELAWARE @JACKSONSCORNERBEND | 7A 9P DAILY BRUNCH DINNER GRAB & GO MEALS FRESH BAKED PASTRIES & BREAD HUGE BEER & NA SUPPORTNATTYCOFFEESELECTIONWINELOCALFOOD! SINCE2008

By Donna Britt @foodlifelove.com Way back at the very beginning of the pandemic shutdown in the spring of 2020, I was hosting a local television segment on food and dining out. I would go around to area restaurants and farms, inter viewing chefs and growers, all the while sampling their fresh harvests and delicious dishes. When restaurants were forced to shut down, we created a series on cook ing restaurant-quality meals at home. I invited a few chefs into my own home to cook for the show (this was the time before masks became mandatory and we real ly knew what was happening with the coronavirus).

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Once sauce has thickened enough to coat the back of a spoon, stir in peas to warm through. Remove from heat. Spoon sauce onto plate and top with seared scallops. Drizzle Pickled Celery Caramel on top and place arugula on the side. Celery Caramel cup rice wine vinegar cup sugar 4-5 celery stalks, sliced thinly 1 teaspoon mustard seeds 1 teaspoon fennel seeds 1 bay leaf Mix vinegar and sugar together in a small sauce pan and heat on low heat until combined. Add remaining ingre dients. Simmer on low for 20+ minutes, until sauce is thick and syrup-y. Set aside to garnish scallop dish. Reserve leftover in fridge for several weeks. Pickled celery and arugula are perfect accompaniments to seared scallops. scallops with bourbon bacon sauce and pickled celery caramel. Donna Britt Courtesy Britt

Seared

CHOW

Seared Scallops with Bourbon Bacon Sauce & Pickled Celery Caramel

This restaurant-quality dish, easy to make and sure to impress, is made with Oregon whiskey and in-season celery

Courtesy of Chef John Kelly Serves 4 8 small to medium sized scallops, fresh or frozen (if frozen, thaw in fridge) keep scallops as cold as possible until ready to use • Salt and pepper, as desired • Canola oil • 4 slices bacon, par-baked (partially cooked), chopped into pieces • 2-3 cloves fresh garlic, minced • 1/2 ounce bourbon/whiskey, your local favorite • 1 ounce orange juice • 1½ cups heavy cream, room temperature • 1/2 cup green peas, fresh or frozen • Pickled Celery Caramel (recipe below)

Pickled

• ¼

• ¼

Courtesy

What I learned from Chef Kelly is that happy acci dents often occur in pro kitchens, and his Pickled Cel ery Caramel is one of them. The day he forgot about the celery he was pickling on a back burner was the day he discovered that reducing pickled celery down for longer than you meant to made for a syrupy can died celery that paired perfectly with scallops. I also learned how to choose a fresh scallop by smelling it; it shouldn’t smell at all fishy, but rather nice and sweet. A couple of other scallop tips to keep in mind before you heat up your skillet include removing the small abductor muscle if the scallop has one (it’s a small fin ger-like piece of flesh that pulls off easily) and mak ing sure your scallops are dry before putting them in the hot oil. This ensures that the scallops will get that desired golden brown sear.

Donna

Seared Scallops with Bourbon Sauce and Pickled Celery

• Arugula, for garnish Remove abductor muscle from scal lops if present. Dry each scallop com pletely with a paper towel. Season scallops with salt and pepper as desired. Heat heavy non-stick skillet on high heat until very hot. Add a few swirls of cano la oil. Add scallops, leaving room between them (if necessary sear in two batch es). Tilt pan back and forth, moving oil around until scallops are golden-brown on each side, turning only once. Scallops will easily release from pan once seared properly.Addbacon pieces and garlic to skillet. Remove just the scallops from the skillet and set aside while making sauce. Remove the skillet from heat and add bourbon to the bacon and garlic bits. Stir a few times, allowing alcohol to burn off. Return skillet to heat and add OJ, stirring once or twice. Add warmed cream to skillet, continuing to stir so sauce doesn’t stick and also to release tasty tidbits from bottom of skillet.

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CULTURE

In spite of their young age, these teenagers are filled with emotion, talent and the drive to be better at music. They each produce and release music, along with playing gigs around Central Oregon. Their music styles range from pop to folk, singer-songwriter, rap and old-school rock. Each of them thinks music is for everyone; it doesn’t matter your age or gender, if you like it, listen.

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Jaymi Vision Jaymi Vision is a 15-year-old singer-songwriter who has performed at the Tower Theatre, River house on the Deschutes, Silver Moon Brewing, Bunk+Brew Historic Lucas House and fundraisers for the KIDS Center and Helpers nonprofit, along with frequent gigs at the Northwest Crossing Market. She also has her own music on platforms including Spotify, Amazon Music, Apple Music, YouTube and Instagram. Vision’s music genre is singer-songwriter, folk and pop. She describes her sound as modern, singer-songwriter and recognizable because her setlists have popular cov ers along with her own music. She plays the guitar and ukulele, and intends to release her latest single this fall. When asked about her favorite song she has written, she responded, “One of my favorites I created a long time ago, it’s called ‘One More Day.’ It’s about how just saying something or reach ing out to somebody can stop them from committing suicide or getting into a depressed state. I wrote that during quarantine because I felt that it was a really strong song, especially in that time when people weren’t necessarily reaching out to each other so that really hit home for me,” Vision explained. Her music comes from the heart, the reality of life and what she and other peo ple go through. Vision had teachers at Cascade School of Music after the pandemic who helped her improve, including Matilda Joy, Stephanie Slade and Jon Harnum. Her favorite part of making music and performing gigs is seeing people enjoying her music—specifically the little kids who are in awe as they walk by, she said. Listen to her music on Spotify, Apple Music and Amazon Music at Jaymi Vision, or watch her gigs and songs at @jaymivision on Instagram, @jaymivision on Tik tok, Jaymi Vision on YouTube.

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If You Like It, Listen Teenage musical artists take on the Central Oregon stage

Drake Walker Drake Walker, a 16-year-old living in Bend, is a pop, rap and folk artist with three singles out on every streaming platform, titled “Memories,” “Can’t Go Wrong” and “I Miss The Days.” Walk er also has an album coming out called “Three Rivers” featuring folk and pop music. Walker has been creating music since he was six years old, when he first started taking violin lessons. Quick ly, his music teacher realized his talent for singing and he started taking piano lessons to pair with his voice. Walker plays seven instruments including cello, bass, drums, guitar, alto saxophone, vio lin and piano. He’s played gigs for Sunday Guitars at the Deschutes County Fairgrounds, a program called Central Oregon Rock Ensemble at Volcanic Theatre Pub, at school and busking downtown. The community is Walker’s favorite part of being a music artist.

By Miranda Vogel

Miranda Vogel Tracy Dickinson Krista Mudrick

29 Nora Mudrick

When asked about the hardest part of being a musician he explained, “It is incredibly hard to gain traction and to go anywhere. But I don’t see that as an obstacle; I see that as something I can easily conquer if I try.” Walker is hard working and dedicates most of his free time to recording and layer ing tracks, along with learning music theory and trying out tricks on programs Dao and LOGIC Pro. “The music industry is so crazy, you could blow up overnight and not even know til you check social media the next morning, and your life is changed forever. But I don’t really want that. I’d like to grow my music career first locally, do more gigs and release more music. I want it to take time because I feel like if I did blow up overnight I wouldn’t know what to do and I wouldn’t be prepared for it,” he explained. Find Drake Walker on any streaming platform or through his socials @drakewalkermusic on Instagram, @itz_draco_walker on Tiktok and Drake Walker Music on YouTube.

Sixteen-year-old Nora Mudrick, stage name Nora Jean, is a singer-songwriter releasing her first EP called “Universe With You” soon on all music platforms. Mudrick’s sound combines mul tiple styles including old-school rock, ‘60s and more. Mudrick described her sound as, “Very vulnerable and very touching. I find it relaxing but it can also be very lyrically aggressive, only because it’s so transparent that the honesty can wow anyone. I don’t think many people expect a teenager in high school to be that vulnerable, espe cially in music.” She is right; Mudrick’s music is a mix of stories, emotion and unpredictability all built on her own experiences and feelings. Her favorite song on her upcoming EP is called, “The Big Bang” because she feels there is a lot of depth in the song and it is very relatable. Mudrick also plays gigs around Central Oregon at places like the Volcanic Theatre Pub, downtown Bend and the Deschutes County Fair, along with school events. Mudrick primarily plays the guitar but also plays the piano, ukulele and bass. She produces music in her mentor/producer Rod DeGeorge’s home studio and has been working with DeGeorge for four years. She brings him pre-written songs and basic chords with a melody and the two add layers and other instruments to make music. Her passion for making music and making people feel heard takes her music to levels extremely impressive, especially for her young age. Mudrick’s music can be found on YouTube at nora jean music, @norajeanmusic on Tiktok, and @norajeanmusiic on Instagram.

 Your friendly local film reviewer’s takes on what’s out there in the world of movies. One Dog at a Time, LLC Gale Blanchard Personal Pet Sitting in my Home One or Two Dogs (If Both Live Together) Overnight or Daycare Perfect, Perfect,You'reYou're SEPT 9-24 I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change presented byarrangement with Concord Theatricals. www.concordtheatricals.com THUR-SAT 7:30 PM SUNDAY 2:00 PM JimmyMusicbyRobertsDirectedbyJacobSmartBook & byLyrics Joe Dipietro CascadesPresentsTheater 148 NW Greenwood Ave. cascadestheatrical.org 541-389-0803 visit www.prettypussycat.com 1341 NE 3rd Street, Bend 541-317-3566 Say it Loud, Say it Proud! PartySexLingerieToysSupplies Costumes & Wigs Pole Shoes Gifts Galore ONLINE SHOPPING NOW AVAILABLE! Your One Stop Adult Fun Shop! Join us thisatSaturday, June 25that Drake Park River Floaties Summertime means Funner Times! Your One Stop Adult Fun Shop! Funky Floaties & NowSwimwearinStock! Get em while its HOT! ONLINE SHOPPING NOW AVAILABLE! 1341 NE 3RD ST • 541-317-3566 • PRETTYPUSSYCAT.COM PARTYSEXLINGERIETOYSSUPPLIES COSTUMES & WIGS POLE SHOES GIFTS GALORE tcHreEretfAvappyouresyIMdb

Regal Old Mill

AFTER EVER HAPPY: This is the fourth film in a series I have never heard of in my entire life. First there was “After,” then “After We Collided,” followed by “After We Fell” and now “After Ever Happy.” Wait, there’s already a fifth movie coming? What is even happening right now? I guess these are romances based on YA books that began as Harry Styles fan fic…so let’s just forget we ever had this discussion. A woman arrives to her rental home but the dude that played Pennywise is already there. Most people would flee into the night, but then we wouldn’t have a movie, so psychological horror ensues. before the filming of this thriller was complete, so the filmmakers waited until AI technology had improved enough to finish making the movie. Not sure whether that sounds like a touching goodbye to a great actor or grave robbery. I Regal Old Mill A meta horror comedy that tries to reframe the high concept hilarity of “Scream” for post-Millennials and the Zoom generation. Pete Davidson is in it, so I guess this movie will be our news cycle for the next few weeks, although it is pretty entertaining and fun. Regal Old Mill, Tin Pan Theater, Odem Theater Pub BREAKING: John Boyega turns in an intense per formance as a desperate Marine Corps veteran who holds a bank full of people hostage with a bomb. Based on a true story, “Breaking” also has one of the last performances of the late, great Michael K. Williams. Regal Old Mill BULLET TRAIN: Why yes, I would like to see Brad Pitt fight a train full of assassins as it speeds across Japan. When you’ve got one of the co-creators of the “John Wick” franchise behind the camera, that means there will be just as many jokes as punches and “Bullet Train” is just as goofy as it is exciting. Regal Old Mill, Odem Theater Pub DC LEAGUE OF SUPER-PETS: This animated adventure sees The Rock and Kevin Hart as the voice of Superman and Batman’s respective dogs that must team up to save their respective Super Partners. Regal Old Mill, Odem Theater Pub ELVIS: I would have zero interest in this one if it wasn’t from the same filmmaker that did “Moulin Rouge,” so I know it will at least be visually inter esting. Sorry, I just don’t care about Elvis. I like the musicians he ripped off more. Regal Old Mill, Odem Theater Pub EMILY THE CRIMINAL: Aubrey Plaza breaks bad in this deliriously intense crime drama that feels like one part “Uncut Gems” mixed with two parts of just being poor in America. Tin Pan Theater FIRE OF LOVE: This documentary is an astounding look at Katia and Maurice Krafft, two French vol canologists whose love was as fiery as the magma they encountered. Or something equally cheesy. Seriously, you’ve never seen a documentary like this, I promise. It’s beautiful and a strong reminder of the art that lives in all humans. Tin Pan Theater HONK FOR JESUS. SAVE YOUR SOUL: Produced by Jordan Peele and Daniel Kaluuya, this blistering satire pokes fun at megachurches and religious hypocrisy. With Sterling K. Brown and Regina Hall starring, this will be a beautifully acted takedown of corporate organized religion. Regal Old Mill.

THE RACE TO ALASKA: Do you want to be pinned to your theater seat for a couple hours while watching a documentary about one of the most dangerous races in the world? Good, because that’s absolutely going to happen here. Have fun with that. Tin Pan Theater

WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING: I really liked this book and actress Daisy Edgar-Jones is a fantastic new talent, so hopefully this Rural Noir murder mystery catches the imaginations of people unfa miliar with the story. If the reviews are accurate, the film doesn’t quite capture the same magic as the book does, but not many movies adapt novels very well in the first place. Regal Old Mill, Odem Theater Pub Jared Rasic

THREE THOUSAND YEARS OF LONGING: The new film by George Miller, the genius behind “Mad Max: Fury Road” and “Babe: Pig in the City,” stars Tilda Swinton and Idris Elba and is focused on a lonely woman who discovers a Djinn in a lamp who offers her three wishes for his freedom. Imperfect, but lovely. Regal Old Mill

THOR: LOVE AND THUNDER: Writer/director Taika Waititi is one our most innovative filmmakers and “Love and Thunder” is packed with mind-blowing visuals and some of his most irreverent humor yet. Don’t believe the negativity, this is an absolute blast. I hope we get Thor movies forever. Regal Old Mill

MARCEL THE SHELL WITH SHOES ON: Did you fall in love with the hilarious and touching YouTube videos of Marcel (voiced by the luminous Jenny Slate) when they came out a few years ago? Of course you did. Well, this feature length story about the little shell searching for his people is one of the sweetest and kindest movies of the last few years. A joy. Tin Pan Theater MEDIEVAL: A Czech historical action drama about Jan Zizka, a Bohemian military commander who never lost a battle. With the always great Ben Foster as Zizka and co-starring Michael Caine, this is should be a bloody good time for fans of historical fiction. Regal Old Mill NOPE: One of my most anticipated movies of 2022 is here: Jordan Peele’s third feature as a director, “Nope.” Instead of doing another deep dive into the fractured psyche of humanity, this is an alien invasion story unlike any we’ve ever seen. This managed to exceed every single expectation I had for it. Regal Old Mill

FILM SHORTS By

THE INVITATION: This period horror film is a reinterpretation of Bram Stoker’s “Dracula,” but set at a destination wedding in the English countryside. Starring the luminous Nathalie Emmanuel, this looks like a classy creeper designed to engage the brain while being spooky as all get out. Regal Old Mill

TOP GUN: MAVERICK: There’s a reason why Tom Cruise is the last true movie star and it’s mostly because he’s that perfect blend of creepy, weird and desperate to entertain us—and boy does he. Talk about a highway to the danger zone. Regal Old Mill, Odem Theater Pub, McMenamins

JAWS: This is legit one of the best movies of all time, now available to see in either IMAX or in 3D. I hope I have nightmares about a shark swimming at my face in a crowded movie theater from now on. That sounds like fun, for sure.

By Jared Rasic

This is not your grandparent’s version of Galadriel…it’s better.

SCREEN

Jeff Bezos was given direct instruc tions by his kid not to screw up “Lord of the Rings,” and I think he hired the right folks to make sure he doesn’t dis appoint the little dude. I’m kinda loving what Amazon is doing with its new bil lion-dollar acquisition as of the first two episodes and I have a feeling it’s only going to get better. “The Rings of Power” is set in the Second Age of Middle Earth (thousands of years before “The Hobbit”), so this is less a prequel and more of a deep dive into a period of Tolkien’s universe that we haven’t seen before. The budget is so massive that it’s impossible to tell that it’s a TV show and not a new movie, plus the casting and prosthetics for the elves, orcs and dwarves are so perfect that the first two eps instantly made me feel like I was back home in Middle Earth. I can’t wait for more.

So many nerdy things are happen ing in the realm of TV and pod casts that, dare I say, it’s an exciting time to be alive for dorks like me. I’ve already expressed my love of comics and superhero movies plenty of times across these pages, but now my lifelong obsession with fantasy is finally paying off. Whether it’s new stuff in the “Game of Thrones” world, new stories set in Tolkien’s Middle Earth or a 25-year-inthe-making adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s masterpiece, “Sandman,” — the stuff I got beat up for liking in middle school is now cooler than ever. Now who’s a stu pid head, Troy!? In Pod We Trust: If you’ve been missing high fantasy content since “Game of Thrones” com pletely pooped the bed with its ending, do what I’ve been doing since 2019 and discover some pretty excellent pod casts to tide you over (not that any tid ing needs to happen anymore). I have a deep and abiding love of listening to strangers play Dungeons & Dragons (I’ve been listening to “Critical Role,” “Nerd Poker” and “Harmontown” cam paigns for years), but the one I’m really digging now is “Broadswords,” an all-fe male D&D podcast focused intently on the storytelling and world building. The effortlessness to their camaraderie throughout the play-through makes this the most bingeable D&D campaign since the early days of “Critical Role.” What really depresses me about nerd culture is how much gatekeeping is involved when it comes to inclusivity. Just look at the raging and frothy anger coming from a segment of the toxic nerd fandom about the POC in “House of the Dragon” and “Rings of Power.” It’s very ugly and got me re-evaluat ing whether I even wanted to be a part of that fanbase anymore. I sought out something to counteract the hate and found “Rivals of Waterdeep,” a Chica go-based D&D campaign played exclu sively by a POC cast and live-streamed to the official “Dungeons and Dragons” Twitch stream, then formatted into a podcast for people who can’t watch live. If you’ve ever had the desire to dive into D&D and feel alienated by nerd culture, these two podcasts are both pretty great places to start. Now Streaming “Game of Thrones” has burned me before, so I’m a bit gun-shy when it comes to diving back into the world of Westeros, but I remember how much I loved those early seasons of the show (and still dearly love the books and world George R.R. Martin has creat ed), so giving the first two episodes of the new prequel series, “House of the Dragon,” a shot was an easy choice. And so far, so good. The series (already renewed for a second season) is set 172 years before the birth of Daenerys Tar garyen and follows the fifth genera tion of Targaryens sitting on the Iron Throne. There are plenty of dragons and even more high court posturing and political shenanigans, so consider me cautiously optimistic that we’re headed somewhere addictive and unmissable.

Courtesy of Amazon

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The world’s top freeride mountain bikers choose their lines and go big in Prineville

GO HERE By

Most who are unfamiliar with the freeride associate it with Red Bull Rampage: a course sitting in a remote desert with jumps carved into cliffs in the middle of trails and lines that run straight down the hillside. This is known as big mountain freerid ing. Another is slopestyle, which is where riders hit a series of jumps and features, with usually around 10 features to choose from. Proving Grounds gives riders the best of both of these worlds.

This year features an expanded female field and is the only mountain biking event to feature equal pay for both male and female riders. The women ride the same course as the men making it so viewers truly get to see what all of the best ath letes in the sport have to offer.

Natural Selection Proving Grounds

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Natural Selection Tour Proving Grounds Sat. Sept. 10 8am Flying Blind Dirt Park 12600 SE Juniper Canyon Rd., Prineville $25-$95 Trevor Lyden 5K heroes on thepresentsrun our 3rd annual a dog, kid, and family-friendly benefit! streetdoghero.org | 541.323.DOGS REGISTER EVENTS FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY 5K FUN RUN•2 KIDSʼ RUNS KIDZ ZONE•DOG ZONE LIVE ENTERTAINMENT & DJ FOOD TRUCKS•BEER GARDEN FOR ALL + FREE BEER FOR RUNNERS! AND A RAFFLE WITH HUGE PRIZES INCLUDING A CRUISE SAME DAY REGISTRATION AVAILABLE 25SEP10AM - 2PMATHLETICCLUBOFBEND

hose familiar with the nuances of freeride mountain biking will see a compe tition like none other Sunday at the Natural Selection Tour Proving Grounds competition near Prineville.

The Proving Grounds course is lined with huge features, from big drops off of wooden platforms and rhythm sections to massive jumps more related to a ski and snowboard slopestyle event. The course has endless variations of lines that riders can choose from which helps expand on creativity and particular styles that are important in freeride competition.  Returning this year is Bend local, and last year’s champion, Carson Storch. Storch will look to defend his title in a field of 20 pro riders who have been individually selected based on their skills and fearlessness.

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While there are multiple days of festivities, the big competition day is Saturday. Audience numbers are limited to 2,000 attendees. The competition takes place at Flying Blind Dirt Park near Prineville and there are limited camping spots available for up to three nights. Camping passes will allow for exclusive access to the Friday night jump jam and a film screening. Chris Williams

Saving a Bend Sanctuary

• The few animals that call this place home would all be ignominiously destroyed or displaced, including deer, marmots, chipmunks, lizards, and a number of insects and birds. Bend resident, friend and outstand ing birder Tom Crabtree says that at various times of the year you could find American crows, Anna’s hum mingbird, California scrub jay, Ruby-crowned kinglets, and Pygmy nuthatches using the resources the wayside offers. Robins and Waxwings feast on the juniper ber ries. Non-resident species also use such parks as over night resting places during migration.

• We would also lose an outdoor classroom for children who, with their teacher, can study geology, biology, botany and environmental conservation all in one small Currentlyplace!the park has trails, picnic tables, benches, a gazebo and an open space at the top of the outcrop ping for larger gatherings. There is nothing else like this iconic sliver of High Desert in downtown Bend. If it is demolished and hauled away, it can never be recovered. And just what would the commissioners do with that beautiful dedication plaque? This is a publicly owned park. If the commission ers do not respect the will of the majority of the peo ple, what other natural areas will be at risk of being destroyed? They need to know the will of the people so please join me and write them a letter, or email them at citizeninput@deschutes.org.FindoutmoreaboutWorrell Wayside by going to saveworrellpark.com. Talk to your family and friends, and help save a sanctuary!

• Respect and honor for a beloved citizen of Bend and his family for whom the park was dedicated.

In my view, here are a few reasons to save this little gem of a park:

The effort to save Worrell Wayside, slated to become more parking

Sue Anderson Sue Anderson

O OUTSIDE D

Looking toward the County Services building from a Worrell Park trail. Dawn Mackey, at right, and Tina Fiedler enjoy lunch on a shady Worrell Wayside bench.

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In my book, you just can’t dedicate such a special piece of scenic real estate and the nature of Central Oregon to a person who accomplished so much for the Central Oregon community, and with the stroke of pen and a couple of million bucks turn it into a parking lot.

By Jim Anderson ear Readers, there is a move afoot to destroy a unique—and meaningful—little natural area in downtown Bend, and make it into a parking lot, for crying out loud! Worrell Wayside, a county park set aside nearly 25 years ago, “preserved and protected for public use,” sets on an outcropping of relatively recent volcanic rocks from the early times of Newberry Monument, and is presently occupied by a beautiful selection of native plants and animals. It’s located just a stone’s throw north from the courthouse. Deschutes County is planning to expand the pres ent courthouse and, needing a new parking area for the expected upcoming traffic, cast more than a casual eye on what the commissioners call “the rock pile” next door. After considering several other options, they chose the least expensive, which would be to “rede sign” the park with 68 parking spaces. However, as it is, they really should have given that “rock pile” a lot more thought before they just wrote it off. Other people in Bend sure did, and I hope—after reading this, you will too. Had you been wandering around in that beautiful area about 4,000 years ago you would have had to have been pretty quick on your feet, as lava flows from the then growing Newberry Caldera (volcano) were ooz ing into the area and are what Worrell Wayside is made of today.Andwho was this Bill Worrell? According to a note I received from Alice Elshoff, retired teacher, he was a big mover and shaker in Bend back in the “good old“Williamdays.”

‘Bill’ Worrell was a known educator, school superintendent, leader, wrestler, coach, offi cial, high school teacher, professor and researcher. He coached wrestling, officiated in high school and the Pac-8, announced state meets, served as commis sioner of officials, and served on the Oregon Cultural Exchange executive board. “He was also recognized as one of Oregon‘s out standing education leaders many times and received numerous awards for his dedication and leadership. In honor of Bill’s community leadership and con tributions, the county park was named the Worrell Wayside County Park in downtown Bend, Oregon,” Elshoff said.

• With open space being destroyed daily with impu nity in the Bend area, making way for housing, more businesses, and other parking lots, it is more import ant than ever to preserve what is left of areas offering respite from concrete and asphalt.

• We would lose some magnificent Ponderosa Pines that have seen their neighbors felled over the years to make way for construction.

Having dealt with cannabis users for whom this does not apply, more research is welcome, as well as an exam ination of the improvements made to the motivation and execution of tasks when cannabis is used. Because I hav en’t cleaned a bathroom without can nabis in 10 years, and it’s always ready for its close-up. Pharmaceuticals lose favor and money to cannabis It’s been established that when peo ple have access to regulated cannabis, it reduces their use and interest in a wide range of pharmaceuticals—most importantly, opioids. That means fewer sales of pills, and we now have a better idea of that cost to drug makers.

By Josh Jardine T

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20228,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 34

Cannabis beats tobacco, the downtrend for Big Pharma and more tidbits about cannabis use

From the press release: “We were surprised to see that there was really very little difference between canna bis users and non-users when it came to lack of motivation or lack of enjoy ment, even among those who used can nabis every day.”

There’s no need to start a GoFund Me page to benefit Big Pharma just yet, but it doesn’t portend good things as legalized access grows. Three researchers have determined that 10 days after a cannabis program is established, stock market returns go down for makers of both namebrand and generic pharmaceuticals by 1.5% -2.0%.  From the paper’s abstract: “Returns decreased in response to both medical and recreational legalization, for both generic and brand drug makers. Investors antici pate a single legalization event to reduce drugmak er annual sales by $3B on average.”(That number may actually be larger, as researchers were limited to information provided by publicly held companies, which exclude entities as privately held such as Purdue Pharma, which recently agreed to a $6 billion fine for its role in the opi oidWhilecrisis.)this isn’t going to bankrupt these companies, it does account for the money and effort the industry puts toward opposing cannabis legalization.  Cannabis>Tobacco for first time A record number of people in the U.S. are now smoking cannabis more than they are smoking cigarettes, as well as eating more cannabis than they are smoking tobacco. There was no data for those eating tobacco, because, eeeewwww. AGallup poll determined that while 11% of respondents admitted to smok ing a cigarette in the week prior, 16% admitted to smoking cannabis and 14% admit to using edibles. (The poll didn’t account for those rolling blunts.) While tobacco use has been on a steady decline over the past few decades, this year marked the first time cannabis surpassed tobacco usage.  Alcohol remains the front runner among intoxicants, with 45% of respon dents reporting having had alcohol within the past week. Legal and easy access to alcohol accounts for some of this, as not every state has a regulated system for cannabis access.  But as Marijuana Moment notes, consumption of alcohol doesn’t mean fully embracing it. Another Gallup poll from August 2022 finds that while 53% of respondents feel that cannabis has a “positive” effect on the consumer, just 27% felt that alcohol had positive effects on the consumer. Another 75% felt alcohol had a “negative” impact on society.  smokesignals@bendsource.com

The study, per formed by the Uni versity of Cambridge and University Col lege London, focused on “274 adults and adolescents who reported using cannabis 1-7 times per week over the course of three months.” Researchers used four criteria, including my favorite new potential band name, anhedonia— defined as “an inability to experience pleasure in acts which normally produce it.” The other three involved apathy, and the manner in which users were motivated by, and acted on, obtaining rewards.  They found that there was statis tically no difference between the apa thy and motivation of cannabis users and nonusers, and cannabis users actu ally had a very slightly higher ability to experience pleasure.

SMOKE SIGNALS

The Latest in Cannabis News

he expansion of Medical and Adult Use cannabis programs across the U.S. has led to—brace yourself— more cannabis use. It’s also led to more studies about cannabis use, includ ing how it impacts the users, and what effects the growing use is having on other commodities. Here’s an overview of some recent research findings. Cannabis isn’t making you lazy. You are lazy  The stereotype arguably most often applied to cannabis is that it makes the user lazy and unmotivated. But a new study says that’s not the case.

23.

Pearl’s Puzzle Difficulty Level

The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote: “Louisiana in September was like _________ll from nature. The air - moist, sultry, secretive, and far from fresh - felt as if it were being exhaled into one’s face. Sometimes it even sounded like heavy breathing.” - Tom Robbins, Jitterbug Perfume Local! comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark pearl@bendsource.comat © Pearl mathpuzzlesgames.com/quodokuStark(www.brendanemmettquigley.com)QuigleyEmmettBrendan©2021 Animal transporter Still live, as a game ball Got bigger Forbidden for Muslims Stipulation for some parking garages Spot for icicles and Christmas lights Dayton-to-Columbus dir. Helicopters to hospitals Flying start 22. “Where is the ___?” Burning bright Like some spicy eggs Prefix with -futurism 27. Celebrated scoring a goal in soccer, maybe 28. Rock and Roll Hall of Fame guitarist with a doctorate in astrophysics 32. Netanyahu’s party 34. County festivals 35. Petting zoo female 36. Byway to the highway 37. Better’s opposite 38. “Praise Jesus!” 39. Cy Young candidate 40. One with a new employee badge 41. 11-time PGA Player of the Year 42. Witch’s skill 44. Character in “Six” who sings “I Don’t Need Your Love” 45. L’eau lands 46. “Nobody else feels that way” 49. In and of ___ 52. Charged particle 53. They’re said when the lights are turned on 54. Never ever 57. Like Allegra or Zyrtec 58. Hiker’s depression 59. Bald baby 60. Stage of a journey 61. Compost heap’s giveaway 62. Bad looks 63. Stat for a 39-Across DOWN 1. Directly in front (of) 2. Indian princess 3. Best Picture winner between “The Deer Hunter” and “Ordinary People” old summer’s-end melancholy nips at my heels. There’s no school to go back to; no detail of my life will change come the onset of September; yet still, I feel the old trepidation.” Baume, Line by

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Tom Robbins, Jitterbug Perfume

16.

Tom Robbins, Jitterbug Perfume for the week of Aug 29, 2022

The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote: “Louisiana in September was like ll from nature. The air - moist, sultry, secretive, and far from fresh - felt as if it were being exhaled into one's face. Sometimes it even sounded like heavy breathing.”

- Sara

10.

Sara Baume, A Line Made by Walking © Pearl

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Fill in every row, column, and 3x3 box with each of the letters C H E A P S N O B exactly once. The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will “Louisiana in September was like ll from nature. The secretive, and far from fresh - felt as if it were being exhaled even sounded like heavy breathing.”

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

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Puzzle for the week of September 5, 2022Difficulty

14.

“The old summer's-end melancholy nips at my heels. There's no school to go back to; no detail of my life will change come the onset of September; yet still, I feel the old trepidation.” Sara Baume, A Line Made by Walking © Pearl

CHEAP SNOB

Answer for the week of Aug 29, 2022

20228,SEPTEMBER/36ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 35 THE REC ROOM FORGETCrosswordIT

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20.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): “Poetry is a life-cherishing force,” said Pulitzer Prize-winner Mary Oliver, who published 33 volumes of poetry and read hundreds of other poets. Her statement isn’t true for everyone, of course. To reach the point where reading poetry provides our souls with nourishment, we may have to work hard to learn how to appreciate it. Some of us don’t have the leisure or temperament to do so. In any case, Cancerian, what are your life-cherishing forces? What influences inspire you to know and feel all that’s most precious about your time on earth? Now would be an excellent time to ruminate on those treasures—and take steps to nurture them

ASTROLOGY

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20228,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 36 WELLNESS

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): It’s impossible to be perfect. It’s neither healthy nor productive to ob sess on perfectionism. You know these things. You understand you can’t afford to get bogged down in overthinking and overreaching and overpolishing. And when you are at your best, you sublimate such manic urges. You transform them into the elegant intention to clarify and refine and refresh. With grace and care, you express useful beauty instead of aiming for hyper-immaculate precision. I be lieve that in the coming weeks, dear Virgo, you will be a master of these services—skilled at perform ing them for yourself and others.

ARIES (March 21-April 19): My reader Monica Ballard has this advice for you Aries folks: “If you don’t vividly ask for and eagerly welcome the gifts the Universe has in store for you, you may have to settle for trinkets and baubles. So never settle.” That’s always useful counsel for you Rams. And in the coming weeks, you will be wise to heed it with extra intensity. Here’s a good metaphor to spur you on: Don’t fill up on junk snacks or glitzy hors d’oeuvres. Instead, hold out for gourmet feasts featuring healthy, delectable entrées.

Is PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “I am lonely, yet not everybody will do,” observed Piscean author Anaïs Nin. “Some people fill the gaps, and others emphasize my loneliness,” she concluded. Ac cording to my reading of the astrological omens, Pisces, it’s your task right now to identify which people intensify your loneliness and which real ly do fill the gaps. And then devote yourself with extra care to cultivating your connections with the gap-fillers. Loneliness is sometimes a good thing—a state that helps you renew and deepen your communion with your deep self. But I don’t belief that’s your assignment these days. Instead, you’ll be wise to experience intimacy that enriches your sense of feeling at home in the world. You’ll thrive by consorting with allies who sweeten your love of life.

Homework: I invite you to send a blessing to someone you regard as challenging to bless. Testify: Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com A Quantum Healing Center It is an egg shaped, patented chamber that utilizes sound, light, and sacred geometry to realign your energies so your body can do what it does best, heal itself. Head to our website to learn more. What is a Harmonic Egg? Sparkwellness.love Ongoing events at Spark Wellness: • Meditations every Monday evening 6:30-8pm • Metaphysical Book Club every 3rd Thursday of the month 541.604.2440 210 SW 5th St. Suite 4 Redmond, OR @sparkwellnessredmond97756 tttt ASpa for the Soul A Women's Fall Spiritual Retreat Guided Meditation Journaling Art Sound Healing Deep Spiritual Work Yoga Beautiful Lodging All Meals This life changing retreat includes: I KNOW WHAT TO DO IF I’M ABOUTCONCERNEDACHILD. kidscenter.org/get-trained Learn how you can help prevent child abuse. Sign up for a training today.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): I will remind you about a potential super power that is your birth right to develop: You can help people to act in ser vice to the deepest truths and strongest love. You can even teach them how to do it. Have you been ripening this talent in 2022? Have you been bringing it more to the forefront of your re lationships? I hope so. The coming months will stir you to go further than ever before in expressing this gift. For best results, take a vow to nurture the deepest truths and strongest love in all your thoughts and dealings with others. Your mind is some times a lush and beautiful maze that you get lost in. Is that a problem? Now and then it is, yes. But just as often, it’s an entertaining blessing. As you wander around amidst the lavish finery, not quite sure of where you are or where you’re go ing, you often make discoveries that rouse your half-dormant potentials. You luckily stumble into unforeseen insights you didn’t realize you needed to know. I believe the description I just articulat ed fits your current ramble through the amazing maze. My advice: Don’t be in a mad rush to escape. Allow this dizzying but dazzling expedition to offer

Please promise me you will respect and revere your glorious star power in the coming weeks. I feel it’s important, both to you and those whose lives you touch, that you exalt and exult in your access to your magnificence. For everyone’s benefit, you should play freely with the art of being majestic and regal and sovereign. To do this right, you must refrain from indulging in trivial wishes, passing fancies, and minor attrac tions. You must give yourself to what’s stellar. You must serve your holiest longings, your riveting dreams, and your thrilling hopes.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): According to Libran poet T. S. Eliot, “What we call the beginning is of ten the end. And to make an end is to make a be ginning. The end is where we start from.” Those are your guiding thoughts for the coming days, Libra. You’re almost ready to start fresh; you’re on the verge of being able to start planning your launch date or grand opening. Now all you have to do is create a big crisp emptiness where the next phase will have plenty of room to germinate. The best way to do that is to finish the old process as completely as possible.

By Rob Brezsny

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Now and then, you slip into phases when you’re poised on the brink of either self-damage or self-discovery. You wobble and lurch on the borderline where self-undoing vies with self-creation. Whenev er this situation arises, here are key questions to ask yourself: Is there a strategy you can imple ment to ensure that you glide into self-discovery and self-creation?

Dear Dr. Jane, My wife has some severe hangups about touching herself, me touching her, and generally any thing that isn’t traditional inter course. Unsurpris ingly, she’s never had an orgasm. We talked about it one night last week in our tent when we were camping at Elk Lake. For the first time in our relationship, she told me the reasons that she’s been so uncomfortable with a lot of things that I think are normal parts of a healthy sex life..  She said that back in college, when guys would touch her, they were too rough. It didn’t feel good and it often hurt her. In many ways, the experi ences were traumatic. She wasn’t raped or anything like that, but she wasn’t treated with the kindness and gentleness that she really need ed then. Lots of times she would get some kind of problem afterwards— like a yeast infection or urinary tract infection. It gave her a bad feeling about many aspects of sex.   I asked her if I could just cup my hand and put it on the outside of her body without doing anything else. I wanted to start to break down the idea that all touch is painful or dirty. She was OK with this. She even seemed happy that I tried something new. What else can we do? Is this some thing that can only be solved with therapy?From, Trying to help Dear Trying,  How lovely that you held your hand over her body with her consent and that you listened to her tell you about what had happened to her when she was younger.Honestly, there are so many things that have happened to so many of us (men, women, non-binary humans) that have hurt us energetically, phys ically, emotionally. It’s very tough for us to RELEASE these things so that we can OPEN to what we really desire and SHARE with a partner. This is what I teach my clients to do when we work together.Your question about therapy is a good one. I’m really impressed that you’ve started connecting intentional ly—listening and taking a slow, mea sured approach to physical intimacy. Bravo! This is the beginning of real openness for you both.  One thing that I’d recommend is that you frame her previous experience beginning. A relationship with a sex therapist or other sex expert such as a well-trained sex coach could support that as long as it doesn’t pathologize herHerexperience. bodyis responding exactly the way it should based on what’s hap pened in her life.  Good luck. This is important stuff.

UNDERSTANDING INTIMACY: CAN YOU BEAT BEETHOVEN? Beethoven SI< Fun Run/Walk Central Oregon Symphony! h h onsors t ueatueet11oven CAN YOU BEAT BEETHOVEN? Beat Beethoven SI< Fun to support the Central Oregon Symphony! BEAT Beethoven's SBS. M� l..:� Octo�er 9, 2022at10:00 am Register online h h h 5kand view all of our generous sponsors at ueatueet11oven .com CAN YOU BEAT BEETHOVEN? Beat Beethoven SI< Fun Run/Walk to support the Central Oregon Symphony! BEAT Beethoven's SBS. M� l..:� Octo�er 9, 2022at10:00 am Register online h h h 5kandviewall of ourgenerous sponsors at ueatueet11oven .com 541.383.0800 | advertise@bendsource.com This special edition brought to you by On Stands: Oct 6 Ad Deadline: Sept 29 Breakfast&Lunch —GUIDE — — — Whether you prefer sweet or savory, veggie or deli, light and crunchy, or rich and heavy, we’ve got the lowdown on the best breakfast and lunch options in town. Readers will sink their teeth into this easy to explore format. Advertise in the Source Weekly’s Breakfast and Lunch Guide and bring home the bacon! Trying to Help

Note:Dr.Xoxo,JaneThis question and answer are taken and modified from a question I answered on the reddit deadbedrooms subthread during a recent Ask Me Any thing.The takeaway here is that what we think about our partner’s sexuality and their responses is almost as impactful as what we say out loud. We send all sorts of signals to each other through eye contact, body language and energy. When you hold your partner with com passion—even in your head—you’re on your way to a beautiful connection that’ll feed you both.

—Dr. Jane Guyn (she/her) is a wellknown relationship coach who received her Ph.D. in Human Sexuality and is trained as a Professional Sex Coach and Core Energy Course.  She’s the author of the Amazon #1 Bestseller, “Too Busy to Get Busy” and has been passionately married to her best friend for over 30 years. You can find her at howtofixmysexlife.com. Send her your questions at thesource@ drjaneguyn.com.

PRICE REDUCED 2936 SW DESCHUTES DRIVE, REDMOND 97756 • $550,000 Home located on a quiet street in SW Redmond lined with mature trees. Open floorplan features kitchen, eating area, half bath, and great room with gas fireplace. Upstairs has 3 bedrooms, 2 bath with utility/laundry room for convenience, also boasts a HUGE bonus room. Double sinks and a large walk-in closet in Primary. Front and back sprinkler system with fenced backyard. 2-car garage with room for shop/storage area. Seller will credit buyer $15,000.00 towards buyers closing cost or rate buydown.

Secluded and private, this small acreage property has a park like setting with plenty of mature trees, conveniently located close to Bend and Redmond. This single level 3 bedroom 2 bath, 1622 sqft ranch style home, features open floor plan with vaulted ceilings. A large primary suite featuring numerous windows and vaulted ceilings. The primary bathroom includes dual vanities. An oversized deck looks outs over the property and a detached garage/shop features an insulated 12 ft garage door, with an additional 400 sqft art studio located on the second floor. The property includes 3.72 acres of COID irrigation irrigated by an underground system, a 20,000 gallon cistern, tool shed, chicken coup, and 400 amp service to the property.

PRICE

REDUCED

PIONEER

PRICE 64170 LOOP, BEND 97701 • $877,995

REDUCED

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20228,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 38 ESTATEREAL ADVERTISE@BENDSOURCE.COMSECTIONESTATEREALOURINADVERTISE TL 1200 Immonen Road, Lincoln City, OR 97367 | Ready to Build $849,000 | 42-acre Ocean/Bay view parcel. Ready to build. Water and power on property. Adjacent to Salishan Resort. Geoff Groener Licensed geoff.groener@cascadesir.com541.390.4488Broker Yourcascadehassonsir.comCoastalConnection MLS# 22-1844 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED. 1033541.383.1426www.SkjersaaGroup.comNWNewportAve.Bend,OR 97703 Skjersaa Group | Duke Warner Realty Terry Skjersaa Principal Broker, CRS Jason Boone Principal Broker, CRS Mollie Hogan Principal Broker, CRS GregBrokerMillikan GORGEOUS MID-CENTURY STYLE CONTEMPORARY HOME IN NWX 2198 NW Clearwater Drive OFFERED AT $1,195,000 CAPTIVATING MOUNTAIN FARMHOUSE IN TETHEROW 61391 SW Skene Trail Brought to you by the award-winning duo of Greg Welch Construction and Jason Todd Designs. 3831 sq. ft, 4 bed, 4.5 bath, 4 car garage, 12’ great room ceilings, grand kitchen, exquisite appliance package, rear paver patio & large gathering around the firepit. 1946 sq. ft., 3 bed, 2 bath nestled on a remarkably private lot with the Earth Advantage certification, walnut & cork flooring, modern stone fireplace, large hearth, roof top deck, private back patio, hot tub, 2 car garage and solar panels. OFFERED AT $2,995,000 695 SW MILL VIEW WAY SUITE 100 • BEND, OR WWW.ALEVISON.WITHWRE.COM | Levisongroupinfo@gmail.com541.915.5977 20436 CLAY PIGEON, BEND 97702 • $750,000 Modern ranch style home on oversized fully fenced/ landscaped corner lot with mature trees. Featuring open floor plan with many windows, allowing for plenty of natural light. The luxurious kitchen includes high-end stainless-steel appliances, quartz counter tops throughout, including waterfall island, soft close drawers, tile back splash. The oversized primary suite boasts dual walk-in closets, dual vanities, giant tile to ceiling shower with soaking tub, dual shower head with body sprayers. This home is great for entertaining with a large covered paver patio that included a gas and wood fireplace that is fully vented. The home includes a full surround sound system both inside and outside.

NEW LISTING 3151 NE WELLS ACRES, BEND 97701 • $514,000 Cozy 3 bedroom 2 bath Palmer home located in a quiet NE Bend neighborhood. This charming light and bright home features refinished hardwood floors throughout, newer carpet, and high-end laminate floors in bathrooms were replaced within the last year. Fully fenced with larger access to back yard on left side of home and mature trees. This home is a great opportunity for investors or a first-time home buyer.

Short-term rentals allow homeowners to rent out a room or the entire prop erty for a term under 29 days (defines short term). It is also worth pointing out that opinions vary on short term rentals; some people use them and greatly prefer them to typical hotels, while others feel like they can be a neg ative impact in their neighborhoods and communities. This article is not meant to debate the merits, or to per suade anybody one way or the other; rather, this article is meant to discuss what they are, how they’re regulated in Bend, and the changes being proposed to them Shortcurrently.termrentals are nothing par ticularly new; people have been rent ing out vacation cabins and homes for a long time, but with the rise of Vaca tion Rental By Owner, or VRBOs, and AirBnB, short term rentals have really gained popularity in Bend. The City of Bend basically classifies STRs into two categories: Type 1 and Type 2. Type 1 STRs are in commercial zones and the mixed-use river front area (near Old Mill boundaries), and mixed employ ment zoning districts, or if in a residen tially zoned area, the owner occupies the home and rents out a room(s).

<< LOW 17189 Pintail Drive Bend OR 97707 Listed for $499,000 3 beds, 2 baths, 1,440 sq ft, 0.46 acres Built in 2000 Listed by Shannon Mathisen of Windermere

Central Oregon Real Estate MID >> 61355 Steens Mountain Loop Bend OR 97702 Listed for $1,050,000 3 beds, 2 baths, 2,251 sq ft, 0.46 acres Built in 1993 Listed by Keith Peterson of Century 21 Cascade Co.

HOME PRICE ROUNDUP

<< HIGH 3039 NW Winslow Drive Bend OR 97703 Listed for $2,275,000 3 beds, 2.5 baths, 3,435 sq ft, 0.71 acres Built in 2022 Listed by Brook Gardner of Stellar Realty Northwest Over the last decade, the rise of short-term rentals has grown tre mendously. Now, when traveling for work or vacation, one has options of where to stay beyond the classic hotel.

20228,SEPTEMBER/36ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 39 TAKE ME HOME By James Keane Licensed broker Short Term Rentals Changes incoming for 2022

FRIDAY, September 30th 5pm-10pm SATURDAY, October 1st 11am-10pm SUNDAY, October 2nd 11am-5pm Celebrate the Autumn season with crafts, art, music, and more! Presented ReadyBy:Sweater Weather?for FIND YOUR PLACE IN BEND & 541.771.4824 ) otis@otiscraig.com Otis Craig Broker, CRS www.otiscraig.com Learn more at kidscenter.org Children and families impacted by child abuse receive our life-changing services free of charge. Cost should never be a barrier to healing.

Photos and listing info from Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service

Type 2 STRs are homes in residential ly zoned areas that are not owner occu pied, and visitors can rent the entire home. All these STRs are required to go through the application process and be approved by the City of Bend. Right now, in 2022 the City of Bend is look ing to make some amendments to the existing STR codes, outlined below. In April 2015 the City of Bend put in rules and an application process to help regulate the STR market, as they were really growing in popularity. Plen ty of existing vacation rentals and con dominiums (Mt. Bachelor Village, for example) were grandfathered into the current regulations. Currently some of the major permitting issues are being amended. The first major proposed amendment has to do with type 2 STRs extending the buffer zone from 250 feet to 500 feet. This means that no STR can be within 250 feet of another existing STR, and right now the City is looking to extend that to 500 feet. The other big amendment is one that allows STR license holders to show proof of longterm leases, and this lease will work in place of “showing proof of use” of the STR to renew a license. The last amend ment is that moving forward, there would be only one STR license per property, meaning that only one unit in a duplex can have an STR license. At a Sept. 12 meeting, the City’s Planning Commission plans to recommend the Bend City Council adopt these changes. For those interested in getting an STR license, I recommend going to the City’s website and reviewing the pleth ora of information. Search an address to see if it qualifies for an STR permit, download an application, and read the most up-to-date information and rules around operating an STR. The city web site also includes the “good neighbor rules” that STRs must follow, as well as allowing people to file a complaint about any issues they may be having with neighbors’ vacation rentals.

Each office is independently owned and operated. All brokers listed are licensed in the state of Oregon. Equal Housing Opportunity. 541.383.7600 | CascadeHassonSIR.com BEND | 18868 RIDGELINE DRIVE $3,100,000 | 3 BD | 4 BA | 3,066 SF | 2 AC MLS# 220152578 SISTERS | 69019 HOLMES ROAD $3,400,000 | 3 BD | 3 BA | 4,797 SF | 63.34 AC MLS# 22093975 Explore over 33,000 properties in Oregon & SW Washington SISTERS | 69920 SANTA FE TRAIL $2,150,000 | 3 BD | 4 BA | 4,518 SF | 2.50 AC MLS# 220152728 BEND | 2275 NW LAKESIDE PLACE $3,500,000 | 3 BD | 4 BA | 3,441 SF | 1.14 AC MLS# 220144243 BEND | 325 NW DELAWARE AVENUE $2,000,000 | 6 BD | 2 BA | 2,586 SF | 0.13 AC MLS# 220152350 BEND | 2320 NW FRAZER LANE $1,599,999 | 4 BD | 3 BA | 2,825 SF | 0.20 AC MLS# 220152483 BEND | 19432 BLUE LAKE LOOP $915,000 | 3 BD | 3 BA | 1,756 SF | 0.14 AC MLS# 220150909 SISTERS | 206 W HEISING DRIVE $950,000 | 3 BD | 3 BA | 2,130 SF | 0.15 AC MLS# 220152522 KLAMATH FALLS | 28888 US-97 $1,600,000 | 4 BD | 3 BA | 3,010 SF | 175 AC MLS# 220127658 BEND | 1451 NE SEWARD AVENUE $975,000 | 4 BD | 3 BA | 3,016 SF | 0.53 AC MLS# 220153101 BEND | 20480 MAZAMA PLACE $789,000 | 3 BD | 3 BA | 2,296 SF | 0.16 AC MLS# 220152281 BEND | 20562 PROSPECTOR LOOP $525,000 | 3 BD | 2 BA | 1,452 SF | 0.12 AC MLS# 220152267 BEND | 734 NE MAJESTY LANE $668,900 | 3 BD | 2 BA | 1,508 SF | 0.24 AC MLS# 220152399 PRINEVILLE | 212 SW MEADOW LAKES DRIVE $525,000 | 3 BD | 3 BA | 2,240 SF | 0.18 AC MLS# 220152995 PRINEVILLE | 673 NE GARNER STREET 299,000 | 2 BD | 1 BA | 792 SF | 0.10 AC MLS# 220152621 BEND | 3492 NW MCCREADY DRIVE $1,100,000 | 4 BD | 3 BA | 2,239 SF | 0.50 AC MLS# 220152638 SISTERS | 69848 CAMP POLK ROAD $895,000 | 4 BD | 2 BA | 2,511 SF | 0.76 AC MLS# 220152324 BEND | 61148 AMBASSADOR DRIVE $729,500 | 3 BD | 3 BA | 2,088 SF | 0.12 AC MLS# 220152553 CascadeHassonSIR.com The Central Oregon Luxury Market Leader

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