Source Weekly May 28 2015

Page 1

MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 1

r e m Su m c i s u M e d i u G s!

w o h S f o Lots ! u o y s t c e st dir

e t y t i l a n o s r Our pe

GUID E S IN S ID E

CULTURE

P. 49

Orange is the New Piper

CHOW

P. 50

Cobalt Reboots Dojo

OUTSIDE

VOLUME 19 • ISSUE 22 • May 28, 2015 • “One good thing about music, when it hits you, you feel no pain.” - Bob Marley

P. 52

Bend-made Bike Wheels!


2 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

NEW MEMORIES AWAIT YOU AT SUNRIVER RESORT

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NOW OPEN! Come See the Newly Transformed Sunriver Resort We’re excited to reveal a reinvented dining experience. Carson’s American Kitchen, Twisted River Tavern and The Living Room offer seasonal Pacific Northwest-inspired fare set against spectacular views of Sunriver meadow, Deschutes National Forest and Mt. Bachelor. Grab a delicious meal between your adventures at the marina, spa, golf courses and Sunriver’s 40+ miles of paved pathways.

Join us for the

Taste of the Northwest Dinner Series Featuring Willakenzie Estate Winery Saturday, May 30th | 6:30 p.m. Join us at the historic Great Hall for the Sunriver Resort Taste of the Northwest Dinner Series. Meet the winemakers from Willakenzie Estate Winery, and experience the custom tasting menu specially prepared by our own award-winning Executive Chef Travis Taylor. Purchase advance tickets online for a $5 discount. Lodging packages also available.

www.sunriver-resort.com/tasteofthenw

Please call 800-354-1632 or visit sunriver-resort.com


THIS WEEK EDITOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR

Phil Busse Erin Rook

EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Hayley Murphy COPY EDITOR Lisa Seales FILM & THEATER CRITIC Jared Rasic BEER REVIEWER Kevin Gifford LITERARY CONNOISSEUR Christine Hinrichs INTREPID EXPLORER Corbin Gentzler COLUMNISTS Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Wm.™ Steven Humphrey, Roland Sweet, Matt Jones, EJ Pettinger, Pearl Stark, Josh Gross FREELANCERS Delano Lavigne, Eric Skelton, Erik Henriksen, Marjorie Skinner, Courtney Stewart, Sara Jane Wiltermood PRODUCTION MANAGER Jessie Czopek GRAPHIC DESIGNER Esther Gray ADVERTISING SALES DIRECTOR Amanda Klingman ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Ban Tat, Chris Larro, Kimberly Morse OFFICE/ACCOUNTS MANAGER Kayja Buhmann CIRCULATION MANAGER Kayja Buhmann CONTROLLER Angela Switzer PUBLISHER Aaron Switzer WILD CARD Paul Butler NATIONAL ADVERTISING Alternative Weekly Network 916-551-1770 Sales Deadline: 5 pm Mondays Editorial Deadline: 5 pm Mondays Calendar Deadline: 12 pm Fridays Classified Deadline: 4 pm Mondays Deadlines may shift for special/holiday issues.

The Source Weekly is published every Thursday. The contents of this issue are copyright ©2015 by Lay It Out Inc., and may not be reprinted in part or in whole without consent from the publisher. Cartoons printed in the Source Weekly are copyright ©2015 by their respective artists. The Source Weekly is available free of charge at over 350 locations, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies of the Source Weekly may be purchased for $1.00, payable in advance. Anyone removing papers in bulk will be prosecuted on theft charges to the fullest extent of the law. Subscriptions are available: $125 for a full year. For back issues, send a $2.00 self-addressed, stamped envelope (9” x 12”). Writers’ Guidelines: Call first or send an email outlining your intention. We accept unsolicited manuscripts and comics.

Address Phone Fax Email Website

704 NW Georgia, Bend, Oregon 97701 541.383.0800 541.383.0088 info@bendsource.com www.bendsource.com

MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 3

ABOUT THE COVER Illustrated by:

W

e receive a lot of emails and drop-in visits from readers. Sometimes, the visits are just simple “thank yous” for a job well done, like the box of doughnuts that Sweethearts dropped off a week ago. (No, thank you!) But a few months ago, I received a short note from a local middle school teacher. “I am a teacher at Cascade Middle School keenly aware of my students’ opinions about Bend’s future in light of the exceptional growth of the community,” wrote Theo Wilhelm. “It is very interesting to hear about the Bend they wish to inherit. I am hoping to get the middle school students to write letters expressing their visions. Would you be willing to include a spread in the Source Weekly sharing their ideas?” Indeed, I was intrigued. I told Wilhelm: Yes! Please send the letters from your sixth grade students. But Wilhelm did so much more than. He set up visits from City Councilors with his students and arranged a seminar with Bend 2030 to talk about visioning. On Pages 7 and 9, we have published about a dozen letters from these students. They are smart and earnest insights into what they want the future to be—and it isn’t about jet packs and technology, but sincere hopes for a clean and livable city. Ultimately, the students are addressing City Council, but really these letters are addressed to each of you, as requests for you to stop driving so much, to figure out ways to pollute less, and to think about what you can do to preserve Bend for these young people.

EDITOR’S CHOICE:

Music Guide on page 13

Jarrod Eastman - acrylic on board

Title:

"The Only Way to Fly"

Find out more at: www.jrodart.com

Mailbox

5

The Boot

10

News

11

Feature

13

Our Picks

23

Sound

25

Out of Town

39

Clubs

40

Events

41

Culture

49

Chow

50

Outside

52

Film Shorts

56

I ♥ Television

57

Astrology

58

Advice Goddess

59

News Quirks

60

Puzzles

63


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MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 5

OPINION LETTERS

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

IN REPLY TO “LETTER: SAVE SOME WATER FOR THE FISH” (5/13)

The Dead Fish Society’s letter repeats Landwatch’s claim that the Tumalo Creek flow will be drastically diminished in the future. This was the conclusion presented in the report, “Climate Change Impacts on Stream Flow.” The report was a joint effort by personnel of Northwest Land & Water, Water Professionals Network (WNP), and Mark Yinger Associates. The specific claim is that climate change will reduce the precipitation needed to recharge the regional aquifer. As a result, the June Tumalo Creek flow is estimated to decrease by 69 percent in 2039 and by 86 percent in 2060. A close reading of the report, however, uncovers a fatal analysis flaw. The analysts used the 2008 groundwater recharge estimate throughout the study interval (20082060). But 2008 was a particularly dry year. In the 30 years prior to 2008, the estimated annual recharge value fell below the 2008 value only twice. The low recharge estimate for 2008 is consistent with the Bend rainfall total in 2008, which was just 6.5 inches, 55 percent of normal. The analysts’ use of the low recharge value throughout the 53-year study interval rendered their analysis and conclusions invalid. There is a deeper question about this re-

port. Let’s assume that it was commissioned to provide results that could influence public policy. There is convincing evidence, however, that the report contains a significant error. Did that error occur due to an analytical blunder or was the low recharge value used intentionally to produce a desired result? It is not clear which it might be. One of the report authors is a Washington State licensed professional geologist and another is an Oregon State registered professional geologist. State licensed professionals have an ethical duty to provide their clients with unbiased analysis. It would be interesting to see if that ethical requirement has been followed. —Jared Black

LIGHT METER

IN REPLY TO “LETTER: A HOME BUILDER’S TAKE ON AFFORDABLE HOUSING” (5/13)

I find it not surprising that a builder would say “No one is satisfied now with smaller homes” and more comments against small homes. I bought a new 900 square foot, two bedroom, one car garage home last year, as did three others in our little group. Many other people expressed interest, however, the builder has now gone on to build larger homes. Yes, they would (and do) sell—it is the builders who are not wanting to build them. I suspect their profit is much better on larger homes, hence the lack of desire to build them! There has been much interest in recent years in tiny homes—much smaller than mine—if you build it, they will come! —Sally Slick

UGB AND BPRD

One of the major arguments for enlarging the Bend Urban Growth Boundary (UGB) and for Bend Parks and Recreation to forgo the System Development Charges (SDC) for affordable housing developers is that Bend is currently facing a housing crisis; however, before turning Bend into another Phoenix, Arizona, or povertizing BPRD, maybe it is worthwhile to understand how we arrived at this situation in the first place. An article in the May 21 Wall Street Journal, titled “Luxury-Building Focus Adds to Rent Squeeze,” noted that “of 370,000 multifamily rental units completed from 2012 to 2014 in 54 US metropolitan areas, 82 percent were in the luxury category.” As Susan Wachter, professor of real estate at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania explains, “I don’t believe there ever has been a time where we have produced so much luxury housing.”

A VISITOR SEARCHES FOR A NAME AT THE 8TH ANNUAL “MORE THAN A NAME” MEMORIAL DAY REMEMBRANCE EVENT IN TROY FIELD. PHOTO BY ERIN ROOK.

Clearly, builders have gone where the money is; however, their present cry for needed land and civic handouts in order to build low income housing smacks of the boy who, after killing his parents, asked the court for mercy since he is an orphan. In addition, the rent squeeze is a problem not just for low-income workers, but more and more, also an issue for middle class families and individuals. In response, cities such as Atlanta, Georgia (according to the Wall Street Journal), are “considering a mandatory requirement that developers of new housing help create units deemed affordable… Individuals who are considered to be middle class…school teachers, city employees and bank tellers need housing subsidy as well.” I suspect BPRD’s directors will support giving up some SDC funds; they tend to be both empathetic and problem solvers. I think, though, that these directors need to remember their primary mission. I believe Bend’s parks and trails have figured predominantly in the city’s recent resurgence. I also believe that many overestimate BPRD’s resources. Through successful bond elections, public and private partnerships and grants, and frugal accounting, BPRD has accomplished much. Still, a perfect storm of pressure to increase salaries, especially for lower paid staff, of higher PERS costs, and of higher health insurance expenses awaits. Should BPRD choose to forgo SDC’s for

low cost housing I urge them to touch only SDC funds which would result in less money for trails, parks, etc. Tapping its general funds in any way, I believe, is too financially dangerous. —Bob Almquist

Letter of the Week! Bob, thank you for the exhaustive and smart analysis about the city’s current needs and responsibilities. I couldn’t have said it better myself. No, really! You said it much better copyrighted 2015 E.J.than Pettinger’s I could have. How about picking up a $5 gift certificate to Palate as a thank you?

Mild Abandon

E.J. Pettinger’s

copyrighted 2015

Mild Abandon

“Okay, we’ve got snacks and drinks; “Okay, we’ve got snacks and drinks; the thingmissing missing now is some the only only thing now is some kind all-consuming narrative.” kind of of all-consuming narrative.”

HIGHLIGHTS THIS WEEK

v

Happy Girls’ Run 5k, 10k, and half marathon

May 29-30 Friday: Girls’ Night Out at Seventh Mountain Resort Saturday: Races start and finish at Riverbend Park

$35-$90 to run

Benefits Girls on the Run of Deschutes County

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I’d like to address the recent cougar shootings in town. It seems that very little effort is being put toward the cause and too much into the symptom. Bend has a deer problem. I routinely have deer in my yard (I live on the west side of town near downtown). They never seem to leave town. Deer are also one of the main food staples of cougars. I think it’s high time we start removing the deer. They have begun raising their young in the city, and soon there will be generations of deer that haven’t learned to live in the wild because they’re too busy helping themselves to lawn vegetation and handouts from residents. During the fawn rearing season, deer can also be very protective and deadly to little kids and our domesticated animals (one look on YouTube can show you why). Let’s get serious. If we really care about the cougar problem, we need to start with their food source. Simply put, a city is no place for a wild animal as large as a deer. —Matt Skeels

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6 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

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MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 7

LETTERS NEWS These are letters from Cascade Middle School sixth grade humanities students, submitted to the Source, but addressed to city council. Having been generously treated to an assembly detailing the realities of Bend’s predicted growth designed and hosted by Victor Chudowsky, Bend City Council member; Erin Foote Marlowe, executive director of Bend 2030; and Jon Skidmore, assistant city manager, the students took pen in hand to share their visions for Bend in 2030. Empowered by the opportunity to shape the city they will inherit as adults, the students weighed in on everything from traffic congestion to urban growth boundaries, tourism to water conservation. Indeed the young can, at times, seem naïve. Here, however, away from politics and bureaucracy, they seem to simply make sense. — Theo Wilhelm, Cascade Middle School teacher

Dear City Council:

I am concerned that Bend will outgrow the space that we have. This concerns me because when a lot of people are crammed into a small space, tourism might not thrive nearly as much. My vision is that as we grow as a city, we expand and further develop the eastside. As of right now, most tourism is on the westside. Also we have more gathering places on the westside than the eastside. With all of this considered, the eastside should be further developed because they could use more fun places to be and they have more space to develop. Please consider giving tax breaks to businesses who want to develop for recreational purposes on the eastside. This would encourage growth and tourism on the eastside. In 2030, if my vision isn’t put to place, Bend will have a busy and overcrowded westside and a calm eastside. When I think of Bend, I think of a thriving community, cool gathering places, fast commutes, and beautiful nature around us. With my vision put in place, we will keep all of these attributes.

Sincerely,

Jack Strang

Dear City Council:

One issue that I am especially concerned with for the future is public transportation. Currently in Bend, it can take over an hour to get from one side of town to the other on a city bus. This makes public transportation very inconvenient. A good transportation system can have many benefits. For example, it can help the traffic and air quality because of the decrease of people driving their cars to get where they need to go. Furthermore, anyone who cannot afford or function a car, can use this system. This is why I believe it is necessary for Bend to develop an efficient and well-organized bus system. To make this happen we need to find the money for improvements. We also need to buy more buses for more routes to reduce the layover to an average time of 15 minutes at each stop. I am willing to help by paying a larger amount of taxes for public transportation. Once the improved bus system is here, I am willing to commit to riding the bus at least once a week. By implementing my suggestions we can create an efficient and user-friendly bus system that will benefit our town for many generations to come.

Regards,

Jack Skidmore

Greetings Bend City Council:

As people move to Bend, they will need an occupation, which could lead to openings of new local businesses. My vision for Bend in 2030 is a thriving city full of local businesses whose owners love what they do and contribute back to our community. My idea for ensuring that this vision takes place is by promoting, shopping at, and using local businesses. Benefits from going local range from building economic and social relationships between members of the community, providing better wages and benefits for the people, and creating products and services that are sculpted for this specific region and the distinct taste of Central Oregon. The City Council can contribute to this positive change by creating local economic zones made especially for local businesses and by choosing to use them personally. I will support the local businesses by doing the same: using them myself. I hope my vision of Bend comes true. I will be part of the business community in 2030, as I would like to open a local bakery one day.

In all sincerity,

Shayna Kohl

Dear City Council:

I am concerned about the traffic in Bend. It is already a hassle to get from one place to another. Although the traffic is bad, it is not too late to make it better. If nothing is done to lower the amount of traffic on the streets it will only get worse. The traffic could slow down or even stop in some places. Another issue would be finding places to park. Getting a parking space in downtown Bend is already a challenge. In 2030 the population could be even larger than it is today. That would make it almost impossible to find a parking space. Another one of my main concerns is the air pollution that more traffic would create. With more traffic it will take even longer to get from one place to another. That means that the engines of the cars would be running longer and creating more air pollution. To make sure the traffic in Bend doesn’t get any worse, we need to create new forms of transportation for Bend. One new way to travel would be to take the bus. The only problem is that it takes a very long time for the buses to arrive. That makes it inconvenient for most people to ride. This could be fixed by making the wait times for the buses shorter. Another way to improve traffic would be to get more people to walk or bike to school or work. To make more people walk, or bike, more bike lanes could be made. The traffic in Bend needs to be improved soon.

Sincerely,

Chase McDonald

Greetings City Council Members:

The increase in population worries me because that will place increased demands on Bend’s natural resources. This winter, there wasn’t a large snow pack, leaving us with too little water for the rest of the year. If we have limited snow packs like this in the future, it will be worse because of the expected increase in population as estimated in 2030. If we don’t manage this problem, we could go into a drought like California. Conserving water usage would stop future droughts from happening. If we conserve water in the long run we can do everyday tasks like showering, and washing our clothes. The schools will have water for water fountains, and there will be no water usage limits. If we limit excess water usage, there should be more than enough water to sustain us now and in the future. To help do this, I’ll go around my neighborhood and start a campaign to prevent excess water usage and encourage less lawn in landscaping. My question is: What are you going to do to prevent us from going into a drought when our population increases?

Sincerely,

Marc Grignon

Dear City Council:

By the year 2030, an estimated 40,000 people will come and live in our city. All these people will need to get places and this will cause traffic. What is the solution to this mess? Running, biking, walking, taking the bus, even unicycling. We need trails. My idea is to establish a city-wide, paved trail system for running and walking. The trails should be able to get you from one part of the city to the other. North to south, east to west. Every person should be able to get to work on a set of easy-to-understand, well-kept trails. Many of our city’s problems can be solved with this idea. Less time in our cars will result in lower cost of gas and less air pollution. Car accidents will go down in frequency and there will be less obesity. It is a win-win for everybody. Also, a city wide trail system is less work than to put in more roads and roundabouts. In all, this will increase the quality of our beautiful city. I hope you consider my idea.

Sincerely, Jeffrey Bert

Bend City Council:

I write to you today to make sure that Bend stays local. I don’t want to see local shops go out of business because a Target replaced them. Many of my friends have parents that own a business here in town. Now, let’s say that I drive by one of them and see a sign that says, “Going out of business.” Suddenly, their life is changed all because a larger brand replaced them. Let’s help local businesses by buying their products. The money they make stays in the community, helping schools, hospitals, and families in the community. Larger brands have their money spread out all over the place. As the population of Bend grows, so do our choices. From helping schools, to putting food on the table for residents of Bend, local businesses are the way to go. So, stay local.

Thank you, Jacob Ashby

City Council Members:

I am very eager to see what Bend looks like in 2030. Bend is estimated to have 115,000 people by then. This will surely boost our economy. But I am also very concerned that with our large population growth, it will also add to the abundant amount of cars and add to the ongoing traffic. If we have more cars our area will likely become polluted. We could lose our beautiful environment that makes our city amazing. If we become polluted, tourists will not want to visit, weakening our economy. When the traffic is increased, it will take a long time to get across town. Homeowners in Bend already get upset with a crosstown commute; think about how they will feel if it gets worse. If we convince people to not always drive cars, things may run a lot more smoothly. I also think that if people don’t always drive everywhere, and walk or bike instead, they will be happy and healthy. As the City Council, you should make an effort to convince people to choose alternative transportation. One way you could do that is to have drivers pay for parking or invest in other forms of transportation. I will also make a personal effort to try to walk and ride my bike to places more often.

Sincerely,

Hayden Klein

Dear Members of Bend City Council:

If our rivers continue to get polluted, this could cause wildlife to die or stop inhabiting Deschutes County. This could also destroy our tourist population and potentially our economy. But, if we manage our pollution levels, Bend will continue to be a beautiful city with boats and wildlife dotting the river. The City of Bend and its citizens can work together to prevent river pollution. The City Council can help make this happen by directing runoff from the street drains to the water treatment plant. Here, the water can be cleaned and recycled back into our homes. This will keep the rivers clean, wildlife alive, tourists visiting, support the water treatment plants, and give them more jobs. The citizens can also assist in this project by leaving their cars at home, and instead trying to bike or walk everywhere. Honestly, I don’t want to inherit a city with a grimy river. I want to be able to take my children to float the river, like my parents do now. My generation can start this change, but we need the City Council’s help.

Sincerely,

Harper Justema Continues on page 9


8 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

WE BELIEVE “This community has worked hard to provide our children with a world-class, K–12 education and we need to extend that same opportunity for a world-class higher education.” Heather Anderson

Fourth grade teacher, Juniper Elementary School Bend-La Pine Schools’ 2014 Teacher of the Year

We believe in a four-year university for Central Oregon. WE BELIEVE in OSU–Cascades. OSUcascades.edu/we-believe

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MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 9

LETTERS NEWS Members of City Council:

If we don’t switch to renewable energy, Bend’s natural environment will not stay as nice as it is now. Bend will contribute more greenhouse gases like CO2 that will, in turn, cause our winters to have less snow. The water levels will be lower with decreased snow, endangering animals because of the lack of water in their habitats. On the other hand, if we use more renewable energy our future will have an exceptional environment. Since the environment is the backbone of our community, improving it would only be better for the economy and tourism. It is like killing two birds with one stone; less pollution means a better economy for Bend. My vision for Bend in 2030 is to have at least 75 to 80 percent of Bend’s energy come from renewable energy sources. What the City Council could do to help is to pass a law that would create tax breaks for people that use renewable energy.

Sincerely,

Emilio Fassett

Dear City Council Members:

More families and cars means we will have to cut down trees and destroy habitats to make new homes and roads. This is a big problem. One way we can prevent this issue is by maintaining our urban growth boundary while building multi-family complexes and encouraging people to fix up old homes inside the boundary. If we broaden Bend’s boundary, then we would need to build new homes on forest land, which could harm our environment. Some of the benefits of maintaining the urban growth boundary include: we’ll be able to sustain a healthy, beautiful environment; we’ll have plenty of forest space; and last, but not least, we will still let the newcomers build their homes. In the end, it would work out for everybody. To support my vision of sustaining a healthy environment, I will walk, bike, and carpool instead of just driving.

Sincerely,

Ella McMullin

Dear Sir or Madam:

I am writing to you with a concern about how the quality of Bend’s air conditions will change in 2030. With the population of our city quickly expanding, the number of vehicles that will be on our roads polluting our air will increase as well. If Bend were to create more bike lanes, and bus stops, (which would also multiply the number of public busses) then our air pollution would decrease. If this matter is not taken into concern, then we could lose the pure, non-polluted air that other cities wish they had. Tourists, and people looking to settle down, would no longer want to visit Bend. Not to mention the people who live here now. I wouldn’t want to live in a place with horrible air quality. Something that sets Bend apart from other places is the clean and fresh air. If we try to help our community one step at a time then everyone, including generations to come, will be able to enjoy something that other cities have truly lost and can never get back. The people living in Bend right now

were given a gift that should not be wasted. Citizens all over can help by taking their bikes to work, carpooling, or even riding the bus.

Sincerely,

Julia Burdsall

Bend City Council:

When 2030 finally rolls around, Bend will no longer be the relatively small town we live in today. If we don’t plan for this, Bend may become overcrowded and the city we love will slowly vanish. Many people come to Bend because of its close proximity to the Cascade mountain range, our national forests just outside the city limits, and the Deschutes River flowing through the city. If we don’t plan for the growth of Bend, the things we love about our city could suffer. In order to preserve Bend, we must build more multi-family housing and plan for roads to transport people efficiently. Multi-family housing has a low environmental footprint and allows more people to live in smaller spaces. We can do many things such as this to keep Bend the beautiful, relatively small city it is today, in 2030, and many years to come.

Respectfully,

Nick Bagley

Now Open

How did Anne end up at SELCO?

Dear Members of Bend’s City Council,

There has been talk of building more highways, which is a crucial mistake. For example, Seattle built more highways in hopes of decreasing traffic. However, they were sorely mistaken. Instead the opposite happened and traffic increased. To illustrate the two negative impacts: there will be fewer walkers and more cars, and with more cars comes more pollution. I think that the most suitable, clean energy transportation solution to Bend’s growing population challenge is to build a public train running on cables. We must also have a low riding fare so it’s accessible to all people and it must have a warm welcoming interior that invites people to ride it. What we do in the present will impact our future.

Respectfully, Zach S. Jepson

Dear City Council:

Bend’s population is expected to grow by nearly 45 percent by the year 2030. With the population around 115,000 lots of toilets will be flushed. When the main sewer was built in Bend the population was about 35,000 people. The sewer has held up well but with the usage tripling, the sewer may become a bigger (and messier) problem. Although it would be lots of work and time, the city will need to extend the sewer. This will keep the city clean and safe. Many people every year have been injured from sewer leakage. It can cause small floods and creates other dangers on the street. If the city can extend the sewer, and kids like me act wiser about what they put down the toilet, it will keep the city healthy. If people like me stop flushing their dead goldfish down the toilet (just build it a grave), then the sewers will stay safe. If the people that most others listen to make a stand about keeping our city great, it will keep its - - - -. Sincerely, Will Nyman

She called for a car loan and found a low rate on insurance, too. With one quick call, Anne was preapproved for an auto loan. Her loan came with low payments thanks to a great rate and longer term. SELCO was even able to save her money on auto insurance, and protect her new wheels with an extended warranty.

How will you end up at SELCO? Visit us to see what SELCO can do for you.

selco.org / 800-445-4483

Several locations in Bend and Redmond

NMLS# 402847 Membership requirements apply. See SELCO for details.

Banking | Mortgages | Insurance | Retirement | Business Lending


10 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

THE BOOT NEWS

We Can’t Hear You

THANK YOU

CENTRAL OREGON

For helping us celebrate the 50th anniversary of COCC’s Bend Campus Our appreciation and heartfelt thanks to those who helped make the event spectacular.

The Coats Family for their generous land donation where COCC is now located. Mid Oregon Credit Union · Big Foot Beverages · Carlson Sign Company And the support of: COCC Foundation COCC students, faculty and staff

For the display of old and new cars: The Porsche Club Kendall Auto Group of Bend Doug Watson (for the Tesla) The Central Oregon Chevy Club Duram Plummer (for the Ferrari)

CENTRAL OREGON COMMUNITY COLLEGE 2600 NW COLLEGE WAY, BEND, OREGON 97701 541.383.7700 • www.cocc.edu

In last Tuesday’s election, Brady Fuller won the election for Position One on Bend Park and Recreation District (BPRD) with 4,081 votes. That is hardly a big number of votes—actually only four percent of the total number of eligible voters. Yet, Fuller won by a landslide, thumping incumbent Dan Fishkin, who only earned 2,305 votes, and challenger Foster Fell, who pulled in 2,068 votes. Ultimately, Fuller took 48 percent of the vote, nearly twice the percentage for his two competitors combined. Yet, the bottom line is that only 18 percent of registered voters bothered to submit a ballot. No, we are not trying to detract anything from Fuller’s victory. Yes, we did endorse Fishkin, but in our endorsement interview we also were impressed by Fuller’s sincerity and his preparedness. With two major capital projects underway for BPRD, we believed that it was best to maintain Fishkin’s same capable leadership. We are, however, chastising the tens of thousands of you who did not bother to vote in this last election—83,156 in Deschutes County to be exact, and that doesn’t even account for the number of people not yet registered to vote. The low voter turnout, in one analysis, is easy to understand: The races for BPRD board members and for Central Oregon Community College directors may not seem like a marquee positions. Certainly, during presidential election cycles, like in November 2014, voting rates jump considerably; to be precise, four times as many people voted in November 2014 than in last Tuesday’s local election. But the rationale that those elections are more exciting and important is counter-intuitive to us: Yes, those races have splashy TV ads and incessant media coverage, but the issues are often much more removed from daily life. Yes, the President certainly sets the tone for national debates about foreign policy and social issues, and affects financial issues like taxation and interest rates, but a member of the Park & Rec board determines what services you will have down the street from you, and arguably has a much greater impact on your daily life. Moreover, in presidential elections voters rarely have as much leverage to provide their opinion. By the numbers, a voter in last Tuesday’s Special Election had four times more leverage for his or her vote as compared to what he or she voted in November 2014 for president or any other position on that ballot; yet fewer of you take part. This does not compute. But, we hate to be simply problem-observers; we’d also like to give some solutions. Like, yes, go vote next time. Also, and more immediately, go submit an opinion at City Council. For the next two weeks, the City of Bend is taking comments about a proposed increase for water and sewage fees. We don’t argue that the City of Bend needs money. That is evident. While maybe not a scientific method to calculate the City’s dire financial position, drive down any street in town and count the potholes, and the picture is fairly clear that the City of Bend is not flush with revenue. We certainly don’t fault the City for looking for a means to increase that flow (no pun intended) by increasing water and sewer fees. But we find it curious that the City is looking to increase basic fees at the very same time it is trying to plow forward waiving System Development Charges (SDCs) as a means to incentivize more affordable housing. To us, it seems as if increasing water and sewer fees has a huge potential to have an adverse affect on that very demographic that the City is trying to serve with more affordable housing. But, those are just our thoughts. Please go submit your own to the City. Comments can be filed before June 19. We encourage you to do so. Make up for not voting!


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As the weather heats up, so too does crime. And this summer, the Bend Police Department is hoping to nip bad behavior in the bud with an expansion of the city’s civil exclusion zone. But the move, which would allow police to ban individuals cited or arrested for certain crimes from the downtown area, is not without controversy. At its May 20 meeting, Bend City Council voted 5-2 in favor of a first reading of an ordinance to expand the zone’s footprint. The current exclusion zone, approved in 2010, covers public parks such as Drake Park, the breezeway, and adjacent areas owned by the City. The expanded zone would stretch from Greenwood Avenue to Idaho Avenue and from Broadway Street to Lava Road/ Harriman Street. Since the exclusion zone’s inception, Police Chief Jim Porter said 34 people have been excluded. In testimony to City Council, he explained that the majority were banned for drug-related crimes (41 percent), followed by trespassing (23), consuming alcohol in public (15), disorderly conduct (12), vicious dogs (6), and sex crimes (3). Part of the controversy comes from the basis that the individuals excluded need not be convicted of any crime. And while they have a right to appeal the exclusion, because it is a civil rather than criminal proceeding, they are not entitled to legal representation. Concerns have also been raised about the efficacy of such exclusions and the possibility of simply moving criminal activity to a different part of town. While Chief Porter and City staff repeatedly emphasized that the exclusion zone is intended to reduce violent crime and chronic offenders, the code includes a long list of eligible criminal citations, ranging from serious person crimes like assault and sexual offenses to more minor missteps including graffiti, littering, and underage smoking. The amendments also add marijuana and dog-related offenses to that list. “There’s a privilege to being part of our society,” said Councilor Casey Roats. “If this is the deterrent we need to make downtown nice...I don’t see this as being an issue whatsoever.” Councilor Sally Russell noted that the exclusion zone could have some silver lining for those excluded. “I think this is a really fair tool,” Russell said following Chief Porter’s testimony. “I remember that a huge percentage of your repeat calls are mental health. We know as a community we are working with that. This is another opportunity. This is a way to pull them into our safety net.” City staff indicated in its report to Council that the expansion would likely reduce the number of incidents police respond to downtown, increase the number of visitors to downtown businesses, and make the area safer. No potential downsides were suggested. But Councilor Barb Campbell, one of the two who voted against the ordinance, had plenty of concerns. Before sharing her

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thoughts, she passed out copies of the U.S. Constitution. “I understand the Constitution fully, and this is not about the Constitution, it’s about criminal activity that needs to be curtailed,” said Councilor Doug Knight. “I will be supporting this.” But Campbell, who owns the downtown toy store Wabi Sabi, said her concerns about civil rights and unintended consequences outweigh any benefit she might gain as a downtown business owner. “This thing protects my business and I don’t understand how we can do this downtown and not in Northwest Crossing, in the Old Mill,” she said. “We treat these individuals like it’s a game of Whac-A-Mole,” a reference to the carnival game where a player knocks down one “mole” just to have it pop up elsewhere. She pointed out that similar ordinances had been passed and repealed in Portland and Eugene. In both cases, the American Civil Liberties Union opposed the ordinance. “The ACLU of Oregon has consistently voiced objection to civil exclusions and we must do so here,” ACLU Legislative Director Andrea Meyer wrote in a statement to the Portland City Council in 2010. “To be clear, the ACLU of Oregon does not oppose exclusions when they are issued by the courts.” Meyer continued to explain that exclusions issued by the court as part of a criminal proceeding give the accused the opportunity to be represented by counsel and would not require law enforcement to assume the role of the judiciary by meting out punish-

ment. It’s a sentiment Councilor Campbell echoed in her impassioned remarks. “I just worry about how much of a problem is there, is this really the solution to the problem, are we just pushing this off into the rest of the community?” Campbell continued. “If they’re not breaking the law, they’re not breaking the law. If they’re breaking the law, put them in jail.” But that’s easier said than done, according to proponents of the ordinance. In cases where police issue citations and the cited individual does not appear in municipal court, police have little recourse but to send the citation to collections. Chief Porter said the exclusion zone gives police a tool to better manage the behavior of those for whom a citation is little deterrent. “It’s just one more tool to remove criminal behavior downtown,” Chief Porter said at the Council meeting. “Whether we’re Whac-A-Moling them or not, we want to make this an area that’s safe for people.” But Campbell, as well as locals speaking out in the visitors’ section, expressed concern about the fact that folks excluded from downtown might simply take their criminal behavior elsewhere, such as the Old Bend neighborhood or other shopping areas. “If we do this they’re going to move to where?” asked Councilor Nathan Boddie, who also voted against the ordinance. “I’m concerned this tool opens up opportunity to sweep some things under the rug that aren’t aesthetically pleasing.” Council will vote on a second and final reading of the ordinance at its June 3 meeting.

Gov. Kate Brown Declares Drought Emergency in Deschutes County Deschutes County joins a growing list of Oregon counties—now 15 deep—designated by Gov. Kate Brown as drought emergencies following Friday’s announcement. In addition to Deschutes, Grant, Jackson, Josephine, Lane, Morrow, Umatilla, and Wasco counties have been added. “The majority of our state is parched due to the warm winter and lack of snow,” Gov. Brown said in a release. “As we move into summer, many areas of the state are going to dry out very quickly, likely leading to a difficult fire season as well as water shortages. We need our state, local and federal partners to be prepared as our communities grapple with hot and dry conditions.” In an effort to drive home the seriousness of these conditions, Gov. Brown is launching the #ORdrought campaign, which she kicked off with the video in which she stresses that while the situation is dire, meaningful changes can still be made. “It may look green now, but we are going to experience one of the worst droughts in the history of our state,” she says in the video. “But the script hasn’t been written yet. By working together, we can begin to make a difference right now.” The drought declaration directs agencies such as the Oregon Department of Agriculture, the Department of Water Resources, the Water Resources Commission, and the Office of Emergency Management to assist water users and the state in mitigating the impacts of the drought. In response to the drought declaration, the City of Bend issued a Stage 1 water curtailment alert. A Stage 1 alert does not impose any mandatory restrictions on City water customers and can be sparked by four factors. In this case, it’s the first two: Forecasts of below normal summer streamflows and forecasts of above normal temperatures. “Water conservation is more important than ever,” City Manager Eric King said in a release. While the declaration of a drought by the Governor is listed as one of the initiating conditions for a Stage 2 curtailment— which would include such prohibitions as filling swimming pools, washing sidewalks, and pressure washing decks—Water Conservation Manager Mike Buettner says that fact alone does not require it. He told the Source that if the City were to experience a shortage in its water supply—a possibility as it gets hotter and drier—it might prompt mandatory restrictions. “While we may be short on the supply side on the surface water component, we can attenuate for that with ground water,” Buettner explained. Still, he admits, “I could see us going to Stage 2 sometime down the road.”


12 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

NEWS

High Time

Bend City Council appoints subcommittee to research local marijuana regulation BY ERIN ROOK

Locals’ Wednesdays!! Local Craft Beer Specials All Day!!! $5 Breakfast Every Weekend till Noon. Serving Lunch Everyday.

HAPPY HOUR Mon-Fri 3-6 pm | Everyday 10- Close

With the clocking ticking down to the July 1 launcn date, Bend City Council has created a three member subcommittee to research ways Bend might prepare for the legalization of recreational marijuana. Councilors Victor Chudowsky, Casey Roats, and Nathan Boddie are considering the options the City has for regulating the time, place, and manner in which retail and other pot-related establishments do business. While most councilors supported letting state-level commissions lead the way, they also acknowledge the importance of maintaining local control over certain aspects of the emerging market. “I think the main principle to advance,” Mayor Jim Clinton said in the work session preceding the May 20 City Council meeting, “is the City of Bend needs to have local control over all those things that are affecting our city….the location, when they can be open and stuff like that.” The committee likely will focus on the recreational market, since it remains unclear where a number of bills targeting medical dispensaries will land. On the whole, Council’s discussion of the issue was brief and dispassionate. No major concerns were raised, aside from the need to maintain local control. “It’s a question of recognizing that this passed, the voters wanted it, looking at it in a way that’s free from stigma and stereotypes,” explained Councilor Chudowsky. “I know there are concerns about having these things near schools, that type of thing.” Councilor Boddie encouraged his fellow councilors to look to other cities for possible solutions, rather than reinventing the wheel. “We don’t want people loitering around a school with a bong,” Boddie said, “but at the same time, there are probably models out there that work, and others that don’t.” On the state level, the Joint Committee on Implementing Measure 91 is currently considering 13 House bills and 12 Senate bills related to the regulation of cannabis. Below is selection of the bills currently under consideration. HB 2033: Chief Sponsor: Rep. Andy Olson (R-Albany) Summary: Directs State Board of Pharmacy to classify any synthetically manufactured cannabinoid as controlled substance in Schedule I. Makes exception (for those approved by the Food and Drug Administration for therapeutic purposes). HB 2040: Chief Sponsor: Rep. Greg Smith (R-Heppner) Summary: Prohibits medical marijuana facilities and licensed producers, processors and sellers of marijuana from being located within one mile of school. Becomes operative January 1, 2016. HB2041:ChiefSponsor:Rep.GregSmith( R-Heppner) Summary: Provides that local governments may prohibit medical marijuana facilities and producers, processors

and sellers of marijuana from being located within one mile of school. HB 2676: Chief Sponsor: Rep. Peter Buckley (D-Ashland) Summary: Directs Oregon Liquor Control Commission to register medical marijuana production sites, processing sites, wholesale sites and individuals who perform work that requires handling marijuana. Provides for testing of marijuana through existing laboratory accreditation program. Transfers regulation of medical marijuana dispensaries from Oregon Health Authority to commission. HB 2885: Chief Sponsors: Rep. Ann Lininger (D-Lake Oswego), Rep. Ken Helm (D-Washington County) Summary: Provides that Oregon Liquor Control Commission may delay issuing licenses to applicants for processing marijuana products that are intended to be consumed as food or as potable liquid until July 1, 2016. HB 3238: Chief Sponsor: Rep. Peter Buckley (D-Ashland) Summary: Directs Department of Justice to study and report on barriers to extending credit to marijuana operations that are not criminal under state law. HB 3298: Chief Sponsor: Rep. Alissa Keny-Guyer (D-Portland) Summary: Prohibits sale or transfer of cannabinoid products by medical marijuana facility or person who holds license to sell marijuana at retail if cannabinoid product is not labeled (with information regarding health risks, dosage, and cannabinoid and THC content). HB 3299: Chief Sponsors: Rep. Alissa Keny-Guyer (D-Portland), Rep. Ann Lininger (D-Lake Oswego) Summary: Appropriates moneys from General Fund to Department of Education for State School Fund and Oregon Health Authority for the purpose of developing and implementing marijuana abuse prevention curricula and marijuana abuse prevention public information program. HB 3369: Chief Sponsor: Rep. Ann Lininger (D-Lake Oswego) Summary: Prohibits Oregon Liquor Control Commission from issuing license to producer, processor or seller of marijuana if proposed premises for producing, processing or selling marijuana is within 1,000 feet of school. Exempts existing license holders and home growers. HB 3400: Chief Sponsor: Rep. Peter Buckley (D-Ashland) Summary: Directs Oregon Health Authority to develop and maintain database of information related to producing and processing of marijuana by persons responsible for marijuana grow sites under Oregon Medical Marijuana Program. SB 479: Chief Sponsor: Sen. Chris Edwards (D-District 7) Summary: Creates Task Force on Clinical Research of Cannabis and directs task force to study and report on development of medical cannabis industry that provides patients with medical products that meet individual patient needs.


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 13

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FEATURE NEWS

WHAT’S YOUR VICE WHITE WINE Do you have a babysitter scheduled?

WHISKEY

WEED

Do you call it a violin or a fiddle?

Well, Willie Nelson of course. (June 25, Les Schwab)

YES

NO

FIDDLE

Is this date night?

How old are your kids?

Willing to drive?

Under Five: Melissa Etheridge is like story time for adults (see page 15, Peak Summer, July 22)

YES

YES Pull out the picnic blanket and cozy down, see page 15

NO Girl’s Night Out: Pink Martini (July 25, Les Schwab)

Boy’s Night Out: The Thermals (June 19, Bite of Bend)

Physically, But Not Mentally, Out of Diapers: Weird Al

(Sept. 4, Les Schwab)

Plenty of road trips out there (pre-drinking, of course), see page 19

NO

Old Enough:

Pick n’ Paddle has a great lineup, check out the fun-spirited Polecat (June 24, Tumalo Kayak & Canoe)

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MUSIC GUIDE

Stay local with the Belfry in Sisters; check out the gritty and sexy bluegrass of Jessica Hernandez & the Deltas (June 28)

And, Phish, duh! (July 21 & 22, Les Schwab)

VIOLIN

Does weed make you sleepy or jumpy?

Mellow out with the Sunriver Classical Concert (August 9, 12, 15)

JUMPY

SLEEPY

Kick off your flip flops and check out page 17

Oh, Pooh bear, Common Kings’ easygoing reggae will sooth your thoughts. (June 20, Bite of Bend)

Still going strong?

Gotta a second wind? NO: Just relax, sleepy head, check out bands to sway to, page 15

NO: Chill with Steve Earle (June 29, Tower Theater) YES:

Rock out with Social Distortion (Sept 7, Century Center)

YES: How about clicking heels at Rum & The Sea (June 20, Drake Park)


14 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

MUSIC IN THE CANYON 2015 Summer Concerts!

A free celebration of Art, Music, Fun Food and Family.

WEDNESDAY NIGHTS 5:30-8:00PM 7/1 Countryfied Local favorites! countryfied.org music in the canyon

7/29 HIGH DESERT HUSTLERS Blues night! All night long!

8/12 Hobbs the Band Rockin' blues from Sisters!

8/26 OUR GRAND FINALE The Stunt Poets The CUTMEN

7/29 FRANCHOT TONE w/MOON ROOM

www.musicinthecanyon.org

Beautiful pop rock

LADIES NIGHT OUT AT CASCADE FACES Thursday, June 11th at 5:30 Several Door Prizes To Be Given Away that night! Hors d'oeuvres, Wine And Fabulous Savings On: Sculptra, Restylane, Perlane, Dysport, Aesthetic Services and Skin Care Products.

RSVP 541-312-3223

Michael E. Villano MD, FACS CASCADE FACES 431 NE Revere Ave #110

541-312-3223

Welcome to Bienvenidos! A new restaurant with a unique twist of various recipes representing several countries from around the world. This culinary experience is sure to satisfy your palate.

Monday - Thursday 11 am to 9 pm Friday & Saturday 11 am to 10 pm Closed Sundays 744 NW Bond St. Downtown Bend

(541) 389-5325 www.bienvenidosbend.com

American Legion Park/Redmond Rotary Pavilion 850 SW Rimrock Way and Highland Ave in Redmond OR Music in the Canyon Foundation is registered as a 501(c)(3) non profit charitable organization. Tax deductible donations and patronage are welcome.


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 15

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FEATURE

For the chill-out sit-back and relax music consumer PHOTO BY CHRIS HORNBECKER

Music does not need to be an activity at all. Spread out a blanket, open a bottle of wine, and let the music wash over. Or, heck, if that’s even too much, the music can just be a backdrop for a summer evening. Peak Summer Nights at the Athletic Club of Bend are spoton for an early evening lounging on the grass. There is nothing too aggressive for music choices, but always big-name performers; nothing too flashy, but all imminently likable. Gregg Allman (5:30 pm, Tuesday, June 30, $43-$88), Melissa Etheridge (5:30 pm, Wednesday, July 22, $45-$90), and Punch Brothers (5:30 pm, Friday, September 4, $34$79). Although most of the Les Schwab Amphitheater shows this summer are get-up-and-go (Wilderness, Michael Franti, Phish), Pink Martini returns for the umpteenth summer for its big band orchestral soundscapes; couples perfectly with white zinfandel (6:30 pm, Saturday, July 25, $35-$65). Likewise, most of the Oregon Zoo Concert series in Portland has

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MUSIC GUIDE

a bit more bounce in its step than layback and relax attitude (albeit a bit dated, Huey Lewis? Chris Isaak? What is this, 1989?), but the Sweet Harmony Soul show features Patty Griffin’s beautiful, soothing twang, although Mavis Staples, who also headlines the show, may unapologetically shake you from any slumber (7 pm, Saturday, July 25, $35-$70). For other easy-going concerts, Tuesdays in July and August are reserved for Munch & Music (5:30 pm, Drake Park, free) and the summer concert season wraps up with Sisters Folk Festival, where most of the musicians are the type of performers who age like fine wine—which is to say that long-time traveling acts like The Subdudes are only deepening their sound the longer the play, and Jonathan Byrd & The Pickup Cowboys who, already mid-career, are increasingly upping the sass of their elegant Country & Western songs. The festival also spices in newer acts, like The Stray Birds, Pennsylvania newcomers who play bluegrass with sharp precision and have been traveling steadily for the past two years and are at the beginning of a long career. (September 11-13, Sisters, $120.) (PB)

ACTION TYPE: SWAY Lean left, lean right

SISTERS FOLK FESTIVAL SEPTEMBER 11-13

PHOTO BY KATHLEEN NYBERG.

There’s a middle ground in the summer concert scene that falls somewhere between dancing it out and packing a picnic and sacking it out. It’s a world where lighters are held high, voices rise from the crowd (off key but in unison), and the most sophisticated dance move is a deeply felt step touch. These are the shows you’d be a little let down seeing in a sit-down concert hall, but at which dancing is hardly required. While not every show in the series on the McMenamins lawn at Edgefield fits into the sub-genre of sway, there are a number of prospects prime for singing and shifting along. Put on your fanciest vegan attire for Morrissey on Thursday, July 23 (sorry, no cats allowed). And, channel your inner joker, smoker, and midnight toker as the Steve Miller Band plays its music in the sun (Tuesday, August 4). The Waterfront Blues Festival is a Portland classic, now in its 28th year, and features a wide range of sultry acts from across generations. From old timers Buddy Guy and Allen Toussaint to newer voices like Macy Gray and Jessica Hernandez and the Deltas. And remember the Neville Brothers? Turns out, they have a sister, Charmaine

Neville. She’ll be putting her own spin on her family’s famous sound. (Thursday, July 2-Sunday, July 5, Waterfront Park, Portland). Prefer to get your sway on with a cold can of PBR in hand? There a fest for that, Project Pabst. Genre-wise, this one runs the gamut, but with a common thread of poppiness. That means one thing: drunken sing-a-longs with thousands of your new best friends. With big names like Weezer, Blondie, TV on the Radio, Against Me!, Run the Jewels, and The Both (Aimee Mann/Ted Leo), enough people should know the words that even if you don’t, no one will notice. (Saturday, July 18-Sunday, July 19, Portland) And, rounding out the summer, Musicfest Northwest is a perennial favorite, chock full of shows begging for a easy back and forth groove. Whether your feet are fueled by Foster the People (best know for “Pumped Up Kicks”), the horn-infused pop of Beirut, or the nostalgia-inducing indie rock of Modest Mouse, it’ll be like synchronized swimming, only standing up, and not in water (Friday, August 21-Sunday, August 23, Portland). (ER)

The Subdudes The Bills Ryan Montbleau Eric Bibb Darlingside Mandolin Orange Shinyribs & Tijuana Train Wreck Horns Halden Woffard & The Hi*Beams Front Country The Ballroom Thieves Tracy Grammer The Stray Birds New Country Rehab Liz Longley Young Dubliners Jonathan Byrd & The Pickup Cowboys Tim & Myles Thompson


16 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

PERCHED JUST JUST ABOVE THE OLD MILL AMPHITHEATER, LISTEN TO THE MUSIC WHILE ENJOYING THE BEST VIEW IN TOWN!

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MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 17

NEWS FEATURE

M MER 20 1 SU

Feel the music in your feet PHOTO BY TUMALO CREEK KAYAK & CANOE

Sometimes, a concert is more than an opportunity to hear a beloved band, throw a few back, and socialize with friends. Sometimes it’s about spending time with music that moves you—literally. Whether you have moves like Jagger or your go-to is the Carlton, there’s a show for every kind of groover and shaker. The Barefooted Boogier is a common sight around Bend. Frequently spotted close to the stage, wearing loose hemp or linen garments, and generally oblivious to the world around them. The Barefooted Boogier has no regard for what others may think and, as such, not uncommonly attends concerts solo. They instead open themselves up to channel the positive vibes emanating from the stage. You are likely to find the Barefooted Boogier at one or more of Michael Franti and Spearhead’s summer shows. (Thursday, August 20, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; Friday, August 21, Edgefield, Troutdale; Sunday, August 23, Les Schwab A mph it heater, Bend). The barefooted boogier is also likely to be spotted at Tumalo Creek Kayak and Canoe’s Pickin’ and Paddlin’ summer concert series. With all those boards and other water toys to test out, it seems silly to wear shoes at all. So far, the lineup includes Polecat (June 24), Brothers Comatose (July 29), Rainbow Girls (August 26), and Renegade String Band (September 19). Another common “species” is The Swinger (no, not that kind of swinger, though we can’t rule out the possibility of some overlap). We’re talking about the folks who are serious enough about their dance moves that they’ve likely taken lessons, have a preferred dancing partner, and actively seek out shows that support their swing habit. Though there are many types of swing, West Coast and Country are two of the most popular varieties. West Coast

5

ACTION TYPE:BOOGIE DOWN

MUSIC THE HIGH & DRY GUIDE BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

swingers will feel at home twirling and kicking along to modern swing band Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, made popular in Swingers and still going strong (Friday, July 2, Oregon Zoo). Prefer a little twang with your twirls? Alt country star Kacey Musgraves brings her lively country, millennial take on the old saw; boot stomping encouraged (Thursday, September 3, Britt Pavilion). Finally, The Club Kid. Some of the most serious concert dancers are typically found in dark nightclubs. But when summer approaches, that big yellow orb in the sky replaces the shimmering disco ball of the club, and these night creatures can be found busting a move out in the open—and often at some of the state’s more lively festivals. For starters, Portland’s Pride Festival—always a safe bet for crowd-plea sing house, pop, and hip-hop acts— this year features the woman who sang the hook in the 1990 hit “Everybody Dance Now,” Martha Wash. She was also one half of The Weather Girls, who brought the similarly epic “It’s Raining Men.” She will be joined by acts ranging from raunchy rapper Big Dipper to electro-pop artist Jesika Von Rabbit. (Saturday June 13, Waterfront Park, Portland.) If electronic dance music is more your scene, don’t miss Paradiso, featuring big names like Armin Van Buuren and Skrillex, as well as up-and-comers like Mija (Friday, June 26-Sunday, June 28, Gorge Amphitheater). And then there’s What the Fest. With a focus on electronic music and a Country Fair-like vibe, this fest is an experience. But one thing is certain—with acts spanning the spectrum from Ning-Nong Sing-a-long and Love Bomb Go-Go Marching Band to Device Grips and Griz—there will be dancing. (ER)

AUGUST 14-16 Outside Bend

Great Northern Planes Crary, Evans, & Spurgin The Student Loan Thorn Hollow String Band The Loafers Anvil Blasters Bitterbrush Banjo Gallimaufry Cinder Blue Bend’N Strings And more....

BITE OF BEND JUNE 19-21

Downtown Bend Friday 19: Woebegone & The Thermals Saturday 20: Notables Swing Band, Second Son, Corner Gospel Explosion, Wilderness, Franchot Tone, Common Kings. Sunday 21: Da Chara Duo, Honey Don’t, The Rum and the Sea, Elektrapod.

The Drum and Guitar Shop

New Summer Bend designs and styles are here!

Specializing in High Quality Drum Kits, Guitars and Accessories 63830 NE Clausen, Ste.103 www.stringsandcymbals.com

541.382.2884

541-306-6071

909 NW Wall St.

Representing Bend in STYLE since 2007


18 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

FOR OVER 25 YEARS SUNTRACK SOUND HAS BEEN CENTRAL OREGON’S LEADER IN CONCERT PRODUCTIONS. THIS YEAR WE ARE EXCITED TO EXPAND OUR SERVICES TO INCLUDE:

-FULL VIDEO PRODUCTION SUPPORT -CORPORATE SET DESIGN -SPECIALTY LIGHTING -A/V RENTALS Like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/suntrackbend Suntrack Sound LLC. | 541.241.1118 | www.suntrack.com | info@suntrack.com

LIVE AT THE RANCH

PATRICK LAMB Portland-based songwriter and performer Patrick Lamb combines his influences of funk, soul, R&B and jazz to create a unique sound and stage performance.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 14 5:00PM

Tickets at

BendTicket.com Adults $18 | 6-12 $12 | 5 & under free

877-392-8274 | BlackButteRanch.com | 7 miles west of Sisters


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 19

M MER 20 U 1 S

FEATURE

ACTION TYPE: ROAD TRIPPING Get out and go! PHOTO BY HAYLEY MURPHEY

Have we already mentioned that Les Schwab Amphitheater hosts probably its most impressive year yet, from the Decemberists to Willie Nelson, and there is the Tuesday night Munch & Music at Drake Park, Wednesday night Pickin’ & Paddlin’ on the Deschutes, and Thursday night shows throughout the summer in Bend. But sometimes, it is just a good idea to roll down the windows and scream out of town on a road trip. Three hours to the south, Britt Fest is a remarkable venue. Nestled adjacent to the former silver mining boomtown of Jacksonville, these are disarmingly charming shows. Covering Dave Brubeck and Beck, the Portland Cello Project kickstarts the summer with a classical swing (8 pm, Thursday, June 4, $20), and with shows like Toad the Wet Sprocket (7 pm, Sunday, June 21, $39+) and G. Love & Special Sauce with Big Head Todd & The Monsters (7 pm, Sunday, July 26, $39+). Also, Britt Fest hosts a world-class orchestra—and violin and cellos reverberating under a canopy of a billion stars is an out-of-this-universe experience (Opening Night, 8 pm, Friday, July 31, $32+). And, three hours to the north is Edgefield, an enclosed outdoor amphitheater that provides the ambiance of a giant backyard party (okay, perhaps a bit

more grand than that, or if Bill Gates owned the backyard). With a Portland hipster crowd, these shows buzz with an urbane, but chill afterwork attitude. Interestingly (and a little hometown pride here), Les Schwab has attracted many of the same big-name acts that many of these road trip venues have—although some of the shows are slightly different, like The Decembrists are pairing with Tex-Mex Calexico (7 pm, Tuesday, July 14) at the Britt Fest, and Edgefield has Sheryl Crow (July 6), which, oh, that’s the same show, with up-andcoming Nashville songstress Lera Lynn (July 7), and Weird Al is playing here, there, and everywhere this summer. Probably the most original lineup to road trip for, though, is MusicfestNW (Portland), which features many bands not performing other places this summer, like Belle and Sebastian, Modest Mouse, the rocking Foster the People, and The Tallest Man on Earth, whose folksy songs sit somewhere between high art and toe-tapping pop. (August 21-23,Waterfront Park, Portland, $60+ daily pass, $140+ three day pass). (PB)

ACTION TYPE: CAMPING

For the overnight adventurous type PHOTO FROM NORTHWEST MUSICFEST

For the truly committed, the overnight festival—and camping out—is full emersion. If going to a show and then heading back home to tuck yourself in is like a first date, these camp-out festivals are a true, full-on relationship. And, dry Oregon summers coupled with good-natured and polite crowds make for ideal weekend getaways. There is an increasing number of high quality outdoor festivals, some feeding off each other and all increasingly efficiently managed. Probably the gold standard is Pickathon. What started more than a decade ago as a stripped down overnight hoedown has grown over the past few years into a massive festival. It is still dynamic, with campgrounds tucked into the woods and simultaneous stages ranging from natural amphitheaters to sets played in horse barns. The lineup rivals anything in the Pacific Northwest, and arguably now sets the standards, with popular artists like Heartless Bastards and Ty Segall, and an impressive lineup of up-and-coming musicians, but the popularity has become part of its own struggle, prices aren’t outlandish, but also not a steal and car camping and RV parking is already sold out. (July 31-August 2, Pendarvis Farm, Happy Valley, $272). More accessible and stripped down—and emerging as one of the strongest festivals in the Pacific Northwest—is Wildwood, a collection of gritty and bearded musicians (Willy Tea Taylor, Knoxville’s Matt Woods) as well as a curation of fun-spirited, boot-stomping bands, like R&B favorite Ural Thomas, and the jangling folk-rock of Wild Rabbit from Bellingham. Increasingly, the festival is also pulling bands from outside the region—like Texas old-tyme country-rockabilly crooner Emily Herring and Alabama honky tonk Banditos. (July 17-19, Roshambo Artfarm, Wil-

5

MUSIC GUIDE

lamina, $85.) The most “traditional” camp-out festival is StringSummit—and hosted at the original Pickathon venue with the original blueprint of hippie-dippie standup bass plucking longhairs, this four day festival is an earnest, fun romp, with longstanding acts like Yonder Mountain String Band and the Del McCoury Band anchoring the lineup (and playing multiple evenings), but also with a few outliers like the eerie and charming crooners, Shook Twins, and another sister act, the guitar pickings and trippy harmonizing of Rising Appalachia. (July 16-19. Horning’s Hideout, North Plains, $205+) Closer to Bend, and probably the most postcard picture-perfect of the summer festivals, is 4 Peaks. With many returning attendees, the mood is familiar and friendly. The lineup is less rock than Pickathon and less grit than Wildwood, and more funk (like beboppy, jazzy The Motet), roots (like Rusted Root) and Americana. (June 19-21, Rockin’ A Ranch, $140 pass) While most of the overnight camping festivals loiter around the idea of Americana music, and are more likely than not to include a mandolin with at least every other band, What The Festival busts clean from these county fair stereotypes, and functions more as a millennials’ version of Burning Man, with illuminated art installations, light shows, massive wading pools, club music, and electronica beats. Many of the more delux camping options (yurts, etc.) are already claimed, but there are still car camping spots, or roll the dice and count on your average-to-good looks to find you a sleeping spot (June 19-22, Wolf Run Ranch, Dufur, $225+). (PB)

4 PEAKS MUSIC FESTIVAL JUNE 19-21

Rockin A Ranch The Motet ALO Rusted Root Melvin Seals & JGB Poor Mans Whiskey Roy Rogers & The D.R.K. Brothers Comatose Polecat Dead Winter Carpenters Acorn Project Asher Fulero Band Heels to Hardwood Dirty Revival High Council The Student Loan T Sisters Down North Crow and the Canyon The Pitchfork Revolution Franchot Tone JED


20 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

FEATURE NEWS

June

1 Twin & Pachow Kabang Volcanic Theatre Pub

2 Lori Fletcher

Northside Bar & Grill

3 Kris Lager Band McMenamins Old St. Francis

Vampirates & Beerslayers Volcanic Theatre Pub

4 Broken Down Guitars McMenamins Old St. Francis

Michael Lewis Martinez with Anna Gilbert Volcanic Theatre Pub

5 Newberry Event Music & Arts Festival Teaser with Melody Guy and more Volcanic Theatre Pub

The Whiskey Rebellion, Popcorn, Joe Schulte Crux Fermentation Project

Long Tall Eddy & Moon Room Broken Top Bottle Shop

2nd Hand Soldiers Silver Moon Brewing

6 Pigs on the Wing The Belfry

Butterfly Breakdown & North Country Volcanic Theatre Pub

Community Garden Celebration with Local Artists COCC Bend Campus

The Chinups Elk Lake Resort

Truck Stop Gravy Silver Moon Brewing

7 Japhy’s Descent with Buckle Rash Volcanic Theatre Pub

Kinzel & Hyde

Broken Top Bottle Shop

8 Kottonmouth Kings The Domino Room

10 Sarah Gerristen & The Shadow Catchers McMenamins Old St. Francis

Tony Holiday

Volcanic Theatre Pub

11 Hobbs The Band The Belfry

Left Coast County McMenamins Old St. Francis

The Mulligan Brothers Volcanic Theatre Pub

Downhill Ryder

C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market

Heather & Tom

Faith, Hope & Charity Vineyards

12 Hobbs The Band The Belfry

Alpha Tango Volcanic Theatre Pub

The Rockhounds

Party On the Patio—Country Catering

Mark Ransom & The Mostest Crux Fermentation Project

Scratchdog Stringband Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards

Tracorum

Silver Moon Brewing

13 Hobbs The Band The Belfry

Space Oddity—David Bowie Tribute Tower Theatre

Scratchdog Stringband

SUMMER MUSIC GUIDE Broken Top Bottle Shop

The Domino Room

Tower Theatre

Silver Moon Brewing

Crux Fermentation Project

Alive After 5

Broken Top Bottle Shop

Angeline’s Bakery

Munch & Music

Volcanic Theatre Pub

Silver Moon Brewing

Like A Rocket 14 The Rugs

16 Grace Askew

Truck Stop Gravy Randy McAllister Band

27 CoLOsO, Chris Carpenter, & Hokulea Ohana Hula Dancers

Les Schwab Amphitheater

Volcanic Theatre Pub

Dogwood Cocktail Cabin

Genders

Crow’s Feet Commons

17 JP Harris & the Tough Choices McMenamins Old St. Francis

Supersuckers

Volcanic Theatre Pub 18 John Doe with Jesse Dayton McMenamins Old St. Francis

Rhythm Dragons & Big Evil Volcanic Theatre Pub

CinderBlue

Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards

4 Peaks Music Fest Rockin A’ Ranch

Steel Pulse

Midtown Ballroom

19 Sam Outlaw Volcanic Theatre Pub

4 Peaks Music Fest Rockin A’ Ranch

Mango Stew

Party On the Patio—Country Catering

Yvonne Rammage

Crux Fermentation Project

The Thermals Bite of Bend

20 4 Peaks Music Fest Rockin A’ Ranch

Live Music Saturdays Hardtails Bar & Grill

Todd Haaby

NorthWest Crossing

Central Oregon Pride—Rum & the Sea Drake Park

Common Kings Bite of Bend

Williams Lost Elk Lake Resort

21 4 Peaks Music Fest Rockin A’ Ranch

Broken Down Guitars Les Schwab Amphitheatre

Pacific Haze

Steve Earl & The Duke with Robert Earl Keen

Pickin’ & Paddlin’—Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe

25 This Frontier Needs Heroes & Paula Boggs Band Volcanic Theatre Pub

Willie Nelson & Allison Krauss Les Schwab Amphitheater

Local Music Showcase Century Center

26 Naked Gypsies Party On the Patio—Country Catering

Motopony, Tristen, Big Harp & More

Crux Fermentation Project

Abbey Road Live Angeline’s Bakery

Hobbs The Band

Elk Lake Resort

Elk Lake Resort

The Belfry

Sunriver Summer Concert Series

Tower Theatre

Silver Moon Brewing

Les Schwab Amphitheatre

Les Schwab Amphitheater

Broken Top Bottle Shop

Turf Tunes—SHARC

Tower Theatre

Volcanic Theatre Pub

Athletic Club of Bend

Tower Theatre

July

Phish

Les Schwab Amphitheater

1 Andrew W.K.

Garcia Birthday Band

The Domino Room

Silver Moon Brewing

2 Tim Cruise

22 The After Attack feat. Yak Attack

Northside Bar & Grill

Volcanic Theatre Pub

3 Bomberos

Mellissa Etheridge

Party On the Patio–Country Catering

Athletic Club of Bend

Familiar Souls & Tim Bachrof

Phish

Crux Fermentation Project

Les Schwab Amphitheater

The Sindicate

Garcia Birthday Band

Silver Moon Brewing

Silver Moon Brewing

4 2nd Hand Soldiers

23 High & Might Brass Band

Elk Lake Resort

Munch & Music

Precious Byrd

24 Soul Benders

Sunriver Summer Concert Series

Party on the Patio—Country Catering

5 Cloverdayle

Trailer 31

Les Schwab Amphitheater

Crux Fermentation Project

Calico The Band

JZ Band

Turf Tunes—SHARC

Angeline’s Bakery

6 Sheryl Crow

2nd Hand Soldiers

Les Schwab Amphitheater

Silver Moon Brewing

8 Quarterflash

25 Scott Cossu

Alive After 5

Old Stone Church

9 Cracker

Pink Martini

Munch & Music

Les Schwab Amphitheater

28 Jessica Hernandez & The Deltas The ABBA Show Tubaluba

Coyote Willow

30 KPOV 10th Anniversary Party Gregg Allman Band

Les Schwab Amphitheater

Polecat, Coyote Willow, The Gold Rush

The Chinups

NorthWest Crossing

Doc Ryan

Rat Hole Brewpup

Volcanic Theatre Pub

Party on The Patio—Country Catering

NorthWest Crossing

23 Stronghold

The Red Paintings

Silver Moon Brewing

Franchot Tone

Death Cab for Cutie with Built To Spill

McMenamins Old St. Francis

17 Jones Road

Century Center

Broken Top Bottle Shop

24 Brent Alan & His Funky Bunch

16 Jonatha Brooke

The Hoons + Last Giant

The Doobie Brothers & Pat Simmons Jr. Cocktail Cabaret

15 Heart by Heart

10 Five Pint Mary

Party on the Patio—Country Catering

Greg Botsford

Crux Fermentation Project

11 Student Loan

NorthWest Crossing

Nushooz

18 Baduku & Bahuru Marimba Derek Michael Marc The High Street Band Hobbs The Band 19 Chiringa

The Rock Bottom Boys 21 Polyrhythmics Blue Lotus (Phish after party)

Burnin Moonlight Elk Lake Resort

Countryfied

Sunriver Summer Concert Series

26 Okaidja + Shokoto

Les Schwab Amphitheater

Code Red

Turf Tunes—SHARC

The Nightlight Show feat. Shanan Kelley Crow’s Feet Commons

Bend Summer Festival

29 Brothers Comatose, Pitchfork Revolution, Honey Don’t

Elk Lake Resort

Pickin’ & Paddlin’—Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe

Downhill Ryder Abbey Road

Sunriver Summer Concert Series

12 Lyle Lovett & His Large Band Les Schwab Amphitheater

The Strange Tones Turf Tunes—SHARC

13 John Mayall

Hinder

Deschutes County Fair Grounds

High Street Band Alive After 5

30 Reno & Cindy Faith, Hope & Charity Vineyards


M MER 20 1 SU

MUSIC GUIDE

5

FEATURE

MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 21

29 Will West & The Family Strangers NorthWest Crossing

Summit Express Jazz Band Elk Lake Resort

Out of the Blue Sunriver Summer Concert Series

Autonomic

Show Your Spokes—Parilla Grill

September 1 Lori Fletcher Northside Bar & Grill

4 Punch Brothers

WILCO

Martina McBride

Athletic Club of Bend The Domino Room

Deschutes County Fair Grounds

Mango Stew

Party on the Patio—Country Catering

Helga & Paul Arney

Deschutes County Fair Grounds

High & Dry Music Festival

Crux Fermentation Project

Hobbs the Band

Angeline’s Bakery

15 Floater—Acoustic

August

Classical Concert III

31 Jackie Barrett America

Moon Room

Tumbleweed Peep Show

1 Five Pint Mary

Party on the Patio—Country Catering Crux Fermentation Project Outside Bend

Angeline’s Bakery

The Domino Room Tower Theatre

Greg Botsford & The Journeyman

NorthWest Crossing

Elk Lake Resort

Deschutes County Fair Grounds

Sunriver Summer Concert Series

Elk Lake Resort

Outside Bend

Sunriver Summer Concert Series

Turf Tunes—SHARC

Show Your Spokes—Parilla Grill

Outside Bend

Joe Nichols

Out of the Blue

Derek Michael Marc Harley Bourbon

Broken Down Guitars High & Dry Music Festival 16 Briana Renea High & Dry Music Festival

Les Schwab Amphitheater

18 MOsley WOtta (feat. Central Oregon Area Youth)

Turf Tunes—SHARC

21 2nd Hand Soldiers

2 Wilderness

Moondog Matinee

5 Leroy Bell & His Only Friends Alive After 5

Crow’s Feet Commons

Party on the Patio—Country Catering

Laurel Brauns

7 Cinder Blue

Crux Fermentation Project

Party on the Patio—Country Catering Sunriver Music Festival Sunriver Resort

Elk Lake Resort

Moon Mountain Ramblers

22 Blackstrap The Design

Sunriver Summer Concert Series

Angeline’s Bakery

Wobegone

NorthWest Crossing

23 Michael Franti & Spearhead

Les Schwab Amphitheater

Symphony Race

Elk Lake Resort

25 Lisa Dae & Robert Lee

Sunriver Summer Concert Series

26 The Ballroom Thieves

Show Your Spokes—Parilla Grill

Rainbow Girls, Tone Red, Sweet Harlots

Turf Tunes—SHARC

Pickin’ & Paddlin’—Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe

8 Tim Snider Trio Wilco

Slick Side Down

Moon Mountain Ramblers All You All

9 Tommy Hogan 11 Dawes

Show Your Spokes—Parilla Grill Les Schwab Amphitheater COCC Track

Northside Bar & Grill

McMenamins Old St. Francis

Tower Theatre

28 Familiar Souls

Tower Theatre

Broken Down Guitars & Stacy Johnson

Faith, Hope & Charity Vineyards

Dennis McGregor & the Spoilers

12 234th Army Band of Oregon 13 Scratchdog Stringband 14 Floater—Electric

Now Open and Serving Breakfast, Lunch & Cocktails. 7am - 3pm, Wednesday-Sunday.

Party on the Patio—Country Catering Crux Fermentation Project Angeline’s Bakery

“Weird Al” Yankovic Les Schwab Amphitheater

intimatecottagecuisine.com

Brent Alan & His Funky Friends Angeline’s Bakery

Patrimony

Party on the Patio—Country Catering

Miquel Mendoza

Crux Fermentation Project

5 Viasol

NorthWest Crossing

Moon Mountain Ramblers Elk Lake Resort

Precious Byrd Sunriver Summer Concert Series

6 Bend Harper & The Innocent Criminals Les Schwab Amphitheater

7 Social Distortion Century Center

11 Jones Road Party on the Patio—Country Catering

Ryan K

Crux Fermentation Project

Sisters Folk Festival Sisters

12 MoWo & Friends (feat. Central Oregon Area Youth) NorthWest Crossing

Hopsin with Dizzy Wright

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Midtown Ballroom

Elektrapod

Elk Lake Resort

Sisters Folk Festival Sisters

13 Sisters Folk Festival Sisters

18 Friends of Lenny Party on the Patio—Country Catering

Honey Don’t

Crux Fermentation Project

19 Renegade String Band, Franchot Tone

Upcycling into

art!

Pickin’ & Paddlin’—Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe

Curtis Salgado

NorthWest Crossing

Mark Ransom & The Mostest Elk Lake Resort

25 Precious Bird Party on the Patio—Country Catering

Bend Roots Fest

Crux Fermentation Project

28 Citizen Cope Midtown Ballroom

541-420-4961 1234 NE 1st St. Bend www.sarabella.com


22 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

presents

e on Sunrise Pat l a e K l l Bi t Broken Top Club io a

July 16th,

Doors Open at 6 pm Concert 7-9 pm

Tickets $15 Food and beverage will be available or purchase Space is limited Call 541-383-8200 to purchase your tickets or stop by!

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Wed-Fri : 11 am - 8 pm Sat & Sun : 8 am - 8 pm

For reservations call 541-383-8200 Reception@brokentop.com

62000 Broken Top Drive | www.brokentop.com “Like” us on Facebook


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 23

OUR PICKS

thursday 28

saturday 30

Happy Girls Run

BendFilm Bash

RACE—Boasting courses that are enjoyable for first-time runners and seasoned racers, races includes a mix of trail, groomed paths, and paved surfaces. With 5k, 10k, and half marathon options plus goodie bags and a post-race party with beer/cocktails, it’s no wonder these runners are happy! Late entries are accepted up to the morning of the race and despite the name, men are welcome to join the ladies. 8 am. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St. $40, $50, $90.

ARTY PARTY—The 12th annual BendFilm Festival is just half a year away, which means it’s time for the annual fundraiser. This year’s event features the wildly popular variety show “Night Lights with Shanan Kelley,” which has sold out 25 consecutive shows since February 2014. Nosh on apps from Spork and throw back GoodLife brews, Elixir wines, and Bendistillery spirits. 6-9 pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $55.

saturday 30

friday 29

CARGo Bike Rodeo

Open ‘til Dark

BIKE RODEO—What is most intriguing about this event is that it promises an obstacle course for cargo bikes. Please tell me there is some sort of airborne jumping included! What is most noble about the event is that they are encouraging more people to bike. Three cheers for that! (For more bike events this week, see page 52). Noon – 4 pm. Bend Electric Bikes, 223 NW Hill St. Free.

BEER—The High Desert Museum is good to the last drop, and tonight’s event unofficially wraps up Beer Week, and a month-long exhibition of “Brewing Culture,” a fascinating collection of science tidbits about beer. Includes, get-up-andgo music from funk(y)-Americana Truck Stop Gravy. 5 – 9 pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. $10 beer tasting package (includes 5 tasting tickets).

saturday 30 & sunday 31 Rescue Revolution

HORSES—The Humane Society reports some 100,000 horses are abused each year, whether by cramped lodging spaces, or underfeeding, or worse. Today’s event is a happy answer to that problem; a graduation of sorts for rescued horses. Throughout the day are obstacle course competitions, highlighting the prowess to which the horses have returned, and Sunday offers opportunities for adoption. Yeah, bring your hitch! 9 am – 8:30 pm Saturday, 9:30 am – 2 pm Sunday. Brasada Ranch, 16986 SW Brasada Rd., Powell Butte.

friday 29

Happiness Sprinkling JOY—Today’s forecast: low 70s, partly cloudy skies, and a chance of happiness sprinkles. If you take to heart KTVZ Chief Meteorologist Bob Shaw’s daily recommendation to “Have a sparkling day,” this event is for you. Join a national movement of people wearing yellow shirts and holding signs of encouragement, like “You are delightful!” Or just drive by and absorb the warm fuzzies. 3:30-5:45 pm. Third Street and Reed Market Road. Smiles are free.

wednesday 3

Bend Farmers Market

friday 29

LOCAL FOOD—Wednesday farmers market in downtown Bend begins! The one stop shop for those who wish to connect with growers and producers, purchase local food, and agricultural goods. The Bend Farmers Market is also the first farmers market in Oregon to launch a Farm-toSchool program. They work with the Bend-LaPine School District to incorporate market products into school lunch programs and educated students about healthy eating. 3 – 7 pm. Brooks Alley, behind the Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. Free to attend.

Twista HIP-HOP— How many syllables can you recite in 55 seconds? Rapper Twista probably has you beat. The lyrical acrobat held the Guiness World Record in 1992 for fastest rapper—clocking in at 598 syllables in 55 seconds. Though his most popular song is called “Slow Jamz,” in his record-busting rap he crammed an average of 10 syllables into each second. This may be one show where you don’t have to worry about that dude behind you trying and failing to rap along in your ear. 8 pm. The Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave. $20 general, $50 VIP.

wednesday 3 Vampirates

saturday 30

MUSIC—A decade old punk band, and with showing no signs of growing up, Vampirates are fast-moving, relentless “classic” punk. Mixing adolescent glee with on-stage antics, their shows smack of the relentless energy of ‘80’s California punk pioneers. Bring a helmet. Playing with Beerslayers. 9 pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $5.

Patrimony ROCK—The boys are back in town. After making a splash in their hometown of Bend, the young retro rockers of Patrimony moved further afield. But tonight they return with San Francisco’s Hungry Skinny and Bend’s own Moon Room, dogpiling on an already we’re-not-worthy weekend of musical mayhem. 9 pm. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave. No cover.

Tickets & Info: 541-317-0700 TowerTheatre.org TheTowerTheatre @towertheatrebnd TheTowerTheatre

Worthy Wednesday June 3, 10, 17

Space Oddity June 13

Film Camp

June 22-July 2

Avenue Q

Sept. 11-19


24 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

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Includes Free Live Blues from Bobby Lindstrom Noon-2pm

Out of The Blue Band 6:30-9:30 Fri and Sat May 29th & 30th

Open Tuesday - Sunday Happy Hour Wed-Fri 3-6pm, All day on Tuesdays. 541.633.7606 61276 S. HWY 97, Bend fattuesdayscajunandblues.com

peraBend

Presents

I nto The

Book by James Lapine Music & Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim Originally Directed on Broadway by James Lapine Orchestrations by Jonathan Tunick

Directed by JASON STEIN

Woods

Friday, June 5, 2015 at 7 pm "Brought to you by the same Saturday, June 6, 2015 at 7 pm m usical production team of Sunday, June 7, 2015 at 3 pm 2014's Les Miserables at the Tower T heater" Ticket Prices $20 - $45 Tickets and Info at Pinckney Center for the Arts www.operabend.org 2600 NW College Ave Bend, OR 97701 or Call 1 (888) 718-4253


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 25

SOUND

THE SOURCE

Who Is This Scott Weiland Guy?

SUGGESTS... BY ANNE PICK

Oh, him! BY PHIL BUSSE

As with Batman movies and ecstasy, I apparently missed out on the past 20 years of another cultural force, Scott Weiland, who is scheduled to appear in town at the Century Center, that pavilion space sprawling between GoodLife Brewing and Volcanic Theatre Pub. Oh, sure, I know the name Stone Temple Pilots, and songs like “Vasoline,” but sort of categorized those as some music simply generated by a computer programmed to create radio-friendly “grunge,” sort of the equivalent of the Gap producing flannel shirts to surf that trend in the ’90s. But I’m trying to quickly catch up to the rest of you who were listening to college radio in the ’90s, and recognizing that all this time Weiland has been lurking there in the shadowy corners of my cultural blind spots, from songs on the Avengers and Great Expectations soundtracks, to a Milwaukee, Wisconsin radio station playing his album of Christmas songs repeatedly for 24 hours starting Christmas Eve and ending on Christmas Day. His shows are hard to categorize, from punk drama to intimate connections, but using Boy Scout techniques, I’m trying to triangulate his career and styles with these three songs: “Plush,” Core, Stone Temple Pilots (1993): A ubiquitous anthem in the mid-90s, this song had some of the same grinding guitar chords and drum fills as its northern counterparts, but, as to be expected from a southern California-launched band, more

Dead at the Doj While Dead at the Doj might suggest a karate lesson gone horribly wrong, it’s actually a celebration of the music of The Grateful Dead performed by Brent Alan, Mark Ransom & The Mostest, Riding Tide, DJ Grateful Kev (Kevin Bryne), and featuring Jive Coulis. It really goes without saying, but for information’s sake, The Grateful Dead are considered to be “the pioneering Godfathers of the jam band world.” What does that mean? Expect rock music with psychedelic, folk, blues, and reggae influences and plenty of improvisation. The family-friendly event is a fundraiser supporting the High Desert Martial Arts Education Foundation. All ages. 7 pmmidnight. Saturday, May 30. High Desert Martial Arts, 2535 NE Studio Rd. $10 suggested donation. BACK IN SHADES OF BLACK! SCOTT WEILAND, 5/31. PHOTO BY JAMIE WEILAND

up-beat vocals than the mopey Kurt Cobain. “Barbarella,” 12 Bar Blues, Scott Weiland (1998): Weiland explores new territory with this solo album, with Beck-like curiosity in the song’s arrangements and experimentation. And, the pay-off is huge, showcasing his voice’s versatility both as the familiar just-short-of-screaming force but also with slight twang and sweetness on other verses. “Slither,” Contraband, Velvet Revolver (2004): The broken pieces of Guns N’ Roses gathered around the forceful singer for

Listen Local

Giving music lovers access to the local music scene BY HAYLEY JO MURPHY

Expanding its expansive list of services, the Deschutes Public Library now offers Listen Local, a library-hosted website that is dedicated to connecting the community to local musicians. This music site allows library cardholders to download music from local bands and musicians completely free of charge. Deschutes Public Library created this free service to add to the many ways it is working to build community throughout Central Oregon. “People have many options for discovering and enjoying music online,” Collection Development Librarian Catherine Jasper noted in a press release. “We wanted to offer people a place to discover

a short-lived, hugely popular heavy metal band, scoring Weiland a repeat Grammy for the Best Hard Rock Performance. There is the familiar bass drum metronome, and an almost hypnotic guitar that classifies the song as heavy metal, but I think that Ozzy would say it is easy-listening. Scott Weiland 7 pm, Sunday, May 31 Century Center, 70 SW Century Dr. $25, $100 VIP

great local music and engage in the local music scene.” Currently offering 11 albums from different artists—including Moon Mountain Ramblers, Broken Down Guitars, and Wilderness—Listen Local is covering a wide swath of musialc tastes, with genres ranging from hip-hop and folk to Americana and rock. The process for accessing this free music library is simple and straightforward. Listen Local can be found from any computer with an internet connection, at home or at the library (deschuteslibrary. org/localmusic). From there, listeners can click on an artist they’re interested in, bringing up a page that offers more information on the band, a link to the artist’s website, and a listing of the album’s tracks. Each track can be previewed and then easily downloaded in MP3 format into iTunes. The process is uncomplicated and quick. This is only the first stage of the program, and the library hopes to expand its music portfolio soon. “As far as content goes, this is just the beginning,” Jasper stated. “Every six months we hope to add another round of albums.”

Unplugged Songs BY JOSH GROSS

SCAN THE QR CODE

I recently watched the HBO documentary on Kurt Cobain, Montage of Heck. It’s a well-made film, offering a noisy, impressionistic window into the head of a complicated artist. But one of the things it points out is how important Nirvana’s MTV Unplugged album was, as it showed their songs had reach beyond just being loud and angry, two traits which can always find an audience, even when the songs containing them are really really bad. But that also reminded me what a great show “Unplugged” was, back when MTV did music. So I rounded up some great performances from the show, along with a couple other acoustic versions that reframed the classics for a mixtape. There’s everything from Nirvana and Foreigner, to Scorpions and Jay Z.

Tony Smiley Tony Smiley, a Portland-based one-manband, has been coming to Bend to play shows for many years and over the course of time has become a local favorite. Often dubbed the “loop ninja,” Smiley plays a unique brand of electro-acoustic music that he creates as he loops his way through each multilayered track. His cosmic dance of melodies include rock, hip-hop, reggae, and everything in between, including the occasional splash of Mongolian throat singing and beatboxing. Expect soulful original songs, improved looped beats, and creative cover songs. Come prepared to dance. 10 pm. Saturday, May 30. Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St. $5/adv, $7/door.

Pachow Kabang & TWIN Mandolin, rhythm guitar, harmonica, a washboard: What more can you ask for from a Minnesota-based folk-punk band? While only comprised of three members, Pachow Kabang’s gritty style follows a similar vein as Bend locals Larry and His Flask. TWIN is the brain-child of Winnipeg, Canada’s David Fort and Brooklyn Sampson. The duo plays hypnotic, alternative folk with both a sinister and a heartfelt edge. TWIN takes influences from bands like My Bloody Valentine, The Pogues, Bob Marley, and Woodie Guthrie. 9 pm. Monday, Jun 1. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $5.


26 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

Pickin' & Paddlin' Music Series

Pickin' & Paddlin' Music Series and Demo Days features boat demos and live music at Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe the last Wednesday of every month of the summer. 100% of the proceeds from this event go towards Bend Paddle Trail Alliance: There is still time to catch the wave and help BPTA raise its last $125K to fund the Bend Whitewater Park. Be a part of a lasting legacy. $5 Admission and children 12 and under are free. Demos 4 -7, Music 5 - 9 p.m.

Pickin’ & Paddlin’ 2015 Line Up June 24

July 29

Polecat Coyote Willow The Gold Rust Brothers Comatose Pitchfork Revolution Honey Don’t

August 26 Rainbow Girls Tone Red Sweet Harlots

September 19

SATURDAY

Renegade String Band Franchot Tone

100% to Benefit

Hosted by


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 27

HALF MARATHON •10K • 5K • HAPPY LITTLE KIDS RUN

Saturday May 30th Register online at

www.HappyGirlsRun.com through May 28th

PRESENTED BY

Benefiting


28 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015 2 / WWW.TSWEEKLY.COM

PRESENTED BY

Welcome to the 5th Annual

HAPPY GIRLS HALF MARATHON, 10K & 5K

It all started when an all women's running group in Bend wanted to experience true feelings of accomplishment and camaraderie. This is what inspired the Happy Girls Races.

Welcome to the Fifth Annual Bend Happy Girls Run: Half Marathon, 10K & 5K Run— we look forward to celebrating with you at the finish line! -The Lay It Out Events Team

Their original idea has grown into a race series with runs in Bend, Sisters and Spokane, WA. Last year over 3000 women celebrated a healthy lifestyle, building friendships and achieving goals throughout the Happy Girls Race Series. It’s a race for everyone—some are challenging themselves with their first half marathon,

HOW TO REGISTER

10K or 5K run, while others are seasoned runners, excited for a new experience.

Register online by visiting the HappyGirlsRun.com website. Online registration

Whether you are visiting Bend from other parts of the country or are from right here

will remain open until Midnight on Thursday, May 28th. Late registration will be

in Central Oregon, we welcome you.

available at the Girls Night Out & Packet Pickup at Seventh Mountain Resort

A very special thank you to all of our sponsors, especially our title sponsor: Hayden

Conference Center from 3-7pm.

Homes, and our presenting sponsor: Subaru of Bend. It is with the generous support of our sponsors that races like Happy Girls are possible.

The Perfect Workout for Runners Barre3 will help runners build strength while lengthening muscles and preventing injury. Our 60-minute classes offer a full body workout, perfect for Bend’s athletes on the go.

barre3 Bend • 70 SW Century Dr #140, Bend, OR 97702 • 541.323.2828 • barre3.com B3_Bend_HappyGirl_4.85x3.35.indd 1

4/21/15 11:03 AM


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 29

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

MAY 17, 2012 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 3

Friday, May 29, 2015 Girls Night Out 3:00-7:00pm WHO: Happy Girls!!! WHAT: Packet Pickup

HAYDEN HOMES

WHERE: Seventh Mountain Resort Conference Center

Building Family Memories since 1989.

WHY: Swag bags, cocktails, giveaways, shopping and great times with friends!

Saturday, May 30th Race Day 7:30 am: Late Packet Pick up opens - Riverbend Park (race-day registration closes at 8:30am)

WARM UPS

Hayden Homes is a proud sponsor of the 2015 Happy Girls Run! For over 25 years, building wealth for hard working families throughout the Pacific Northwest. Stop in today, to any one of our area communities to tour a home and learn more about the Hayden Homes value!

8:40 am: Pre race dynamic warm ups led by the

Antler Ave.

126

Blvd

SW Highland Ave.

Wickiup Ave

10:30 am: First Half Marathon finishers expected

Black Butte

SW 27th St.

SUMMIT CREST

Helmholtz Way

Sisters

Cascade

SW 27th St.

VILLAGE POINTE

SW 31st St.

Village Meadows Rd

Brooks Camp

6th St.

SW 35th St.

242

y.

Roberts Field Redmond Airport

Cooley Rd. NOT TO SCALE

Mistral Ln B.

O.

WESTERLY II

Post-race expo and finish line activities

Rile Empire Blvd yR d

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Eagle Rd

9:00 am - 2:00 pm:

27th

Download the detailed athlete guide at HappyGirlsRun.com

Hw

9:30 am: 5K begins

McKinney Butte

am

9:15 am: 10K begins

nti

9:00 am: Half Marathon begins

97

Sa

Fitness Instructors of Bend Parks and Rec/ Juniper Swim and Fitness Center

Redmond

20

et rk

NE Wells Acres Rd

EAGLE CROSSING

Coming Soon!

Neff Rd

Greenwood

97

Bear Creek Rd

Bend

Azalia Ave

Capella Pl Vega St

Reed Mkt. Rd.

20 27th

Old Mill District

Pettigrew Rd

CENTRAL OREGON NEW HOME COMMUNITIES AND MORE COMING SOON!

P E T T I G R E W P L AC E

Contact Your Local Sales Team Today! B���

Amber Shults 541-516-4324

B���

Lindsay Klaasan 503-679-4080

B���/S������ Valerie Skelton 541-516-4303

R������

Linda Spittler 541-516-4302

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Amanda Johnson 541-241-6850

12:00 pm / 12:15 pm / 12:30 pm: Happy Little Kids Run The Happy Little Kids run is a non-competitive event for kids under 10 years old. There will be three distances; one for 3-4 year olds, one for the 5-7 crowd and a longer distance for the 8-10 age group. It will be spectator friendly for all of those photos you’ll want to take!

Visit us at www.hayden-homes.com New Home Star Oregon, LLC | OR CCB# 172526


30 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

HALF MARATHON •10K • 5K • HAPPY LITTLE KIDS RUN 4 / WWW.TSWEEKLY.COM

COURSE DESCRIPTIONS HALF MARATHON COURSE The Happy Girls Half Marathon course is a single-loop course, starting and ending in Riverbend Park – one of the jewels of Bend, right along the Deschutes River. The course will start on paved pathways, cross the Deschutes River and navigate around the scenic west side of Bend. There are a combination of surfaces including paved roads, gentle and wide trails as well as groomed paths. Fair warning that there are some climbs and no half marathon is complete without heartbreak hill! But rest assured, heartbreak is short and sweet… you’ll likely forget it by the time you cross the finish line.

10K & 5K RUN COURSE

Interactive and static maps marked with aid stations for each distance are available for download on the Happy Girls website:

The course will start on paved pathways, cross the Deschutes River and continue to wind along the banks of the De-

HappyGirlsRun.com

schutes River. Runners will cross the river again and navigate through the scenic west side of Bend, past the home of our renowned Deschutes Brewery and back down to the river to the finish.

Coolsculpting is the non-invasive way to lose unwanted bulges

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Any Medical Spa Service Excludes neuromodulators. Expires 7/31/15 May not be combined with any other offer.

One hour One treatment Lipo like results in as little as 3 weeks! No surgery. No anesthesia. No downtime

SERVICES

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115 SW Allen Road • Bend, OR 97702 • 541.330.5551 • EsthetixMD.com EsthetixMD Spa and Laser Center was recently awarded the Diamond Crystal Award. Top 12 Coolsculpting Centers in the Nation.


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 31

FREE

ADMISSION EVENTGUIDE

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MAY 30 & 31, 2015


32 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

renew. connect. inspire. Welcome to the Bend Women’s Weekend. Our intention is to provide the dynamic women of Central Oregon together for two days of connection, renewal and inspiration. We are excited to offer a range of interactive and informative experiences, and hope you will leave this show feeling motivated and energized.

Michael Fisher

Bend Women’s Weekend Promoter

SEMINARS & PRESENTATIONS SATURDAY, MAY 30, 2015 11:00 AM STAGE: Yvonne Ramage Yvonne Ramage is a singer-songwriter with a modern edge. Her sound is a polished, funky-folky mix of up-beat vibes, described as a powerful expression between folk, neo-soul, world and pop. Her music will leave you with a bounce in your step and hope in your heart. SEMINAR ROOM: Tending to Your Temple A one-hour discussion on how we can better care for ourselves, through foundational cellular health, to what we eat, plus some holistic self care for the mind, emotions and spirit. Primarily focused on physical health. Presented by Susan Nobles 12:00 PM STAGE: Yvonne Ramage Yvonne Ramage is a singer-songwriter with a modern edge. Her sound is a polished, funky-folky mix of up-beat vibes, described as a powerful expression between folk, neo-soul, world and pop. Her music will leave you with a bounce in your step and hope in your heart. SEMINAR ROOM: Two Inconvenient Truths of Modern Life Dr. Lu is the director of the Mt. Shasta and Redding Integrative Medicine clinics. Learn about the two Inconvenient Truths of Modern Life: Stress and Toxins. Dr. Lu

will describe how to restore the roots of health by awakening the doctor within. Presented by Shanhong Lu, MD, PhD, Mt. Shasta Integrative Medicine and Redding Integrative Medicine 1:00 PM STAGE: Precious Curves Fashion Show of Ladies Sleep and Lounge Wear Romance is back! See timeless designs with a classy fit in luxurious fabrics. This fashion show features a variety of Precious Curves lounge and sleepwear modeled by several valued customers. Presented by Janice Debo, Precious Curves SEMINAR ROOM: Meet Your Guardian Angel Our relationship with our guardian angel is one of the most profound and supportive relationships of our lives. This is a nondenominational introduction to your personal angel. Just about every belief system recognizes a form of protector that we come into this world with. Justine wants to introduce you to yours. Presented by Justine Gibb, Peaceful Heart and Soul 2:00 PM STAGE: Foam Roller Class Learn how to properly use a foam roller to reduce muscle soreness, increase flexibility and prevent injury. Using a foam roller offers many of the same benefits as massage, and is easy to do at home. All equipment is provided. Wear something comfy and join in! Presented by Debby Mandeville-Bowen, Bend Pilates SEMINAR ROOM: Understanding Detoxification Learn about the importance of cellular detoxification, and how to detox safely and effectively. Dr. Lu is the director of the Mt. Shasta and Redding Integrative Medicine clinics. Presented by Shanhong Lu, MD, PhD, Mt. Shasta Integrative Medicine and Redding Integrative Medicine 3:00 PM STAGE: intenSati intenSati is a transformational workout that will motivate you to live a life you

love in a body you love. Train your body, mind and spirit with this powerfully invigorating practice. intenSati combines empowering affirmations with interval training, martial arts, dance and yoga. Wear something comfy and join in! Presented by Liz Towill, Possibility Coaching SEMINAR ROOM: Pain Management with Young Living Essential Oils Essential Oils provide profound benefits and are easily accessible and enjoyable to use. Young Living Essential Oils are the purest oils backed by their Seed to Seal promise. Know your oils, know your options, and empower yourself with these beautiful oils. Presented by Julie Johnston, Peaceful Heart and Soul 4:00 PM SEMINAR ROOM: Self-Hypnosis for Pain Management Hypnosis is very effective for pain management, as well as allowing for more rapid healing from injuries or traumas. Visualizing numbness in the affected area, warmth flowing through, or “turning down the dial,” are just a few of the helpful techniques you'll learn for soothing and comfort. Presented by Susan Gilmore, Serenity by Susan STAGE: Are You as Healthy as You Want to Be? Learn how to increase your strength, energy and balance with a simple test you can perform to gauge the nutrient density of food and supplements. Presented by Mark Hemmerich, Hands of Healing Massage and Wellness Therapies

SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 11:00 AM STAGE: Yvonne Ramage Yvonne Ramage is a singer-songwriter with a modern edge. Her sound is a polished, funky-folky mix of up-beat vibes, described as a powerful expression between folk, neo-soul, world and pop. Her music will leave you with a bounce in your step and hope in your heart.


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 33

MAY &31, 31, May 30 30 and 20152015 10 am - 6 pm Saturday 10am-6pm-Saturday 10am-5pm-Sunday 10 am - 5 pm Sunday

2015 Bend Womenˇs Weekend at the Riverhouse Exhibit Hall Floor Plan

COVERED PATIO OVERLOOKING THE DESCHUTES RIVER

EXITS TO OUTSIDE ENTERTAINMENT AND DINING AREA ON THE RIVER

SEATING

KTVZ

STAGE

SEATING

SEMINARS WILL BE HELD UPSTAIRS IN CASCADE MEETING ROOM A

ENTRY

There is free admission to this two-day event focused on inspiration, renewal and connection. Find out what’s new in wellness, health, beauty, fitness, lifestyle, parenting and careers. Enjoy fashion shows, musical performances, samples of delicious food and drinks, fun group fitness classes and more. Register for door prizes and your chance to win a grand prize of 50,000 airline miles! Get inspired through fashion shows, a fine arts and crafts section, financial advice, makeovers, health screenings and more.

541.633.7115 info@bendwomensweekend.com

bendwomensweekend.com

Participating Vendors Arbonne International Arthritis Foundation ASEA Bend Pilates B-Line Clinic Combined Communications Country Financial – Fabian Clark Damsel in Defense doTERRA Essential Oils Farmer’s Insurance – Steve Hull Agency KTVZ Lots of Lavender Mary Kay Cosmetics Miche Bags Mt. Shasta Integrative Medicine New Priorities Family Services, NP NYR Organic Oils to Nourish Peaceful Heart and Soul Precious Curves Pure Romance Take Shape for Life The Blvd The Riverhouse The Source Weekly Therapy for the Body Massage Thrive by Le-Vel Trish Hanson Design Velata Wild Roots Vodka Young Living Essential Oils Younique

Amazing Enterprises Arbonne International Brenda Nevins Hands of Healing Massage and Wellness Therapies ITEX Lyoness Makeup Eraser Medifast Orenda International Possibility Coaching Redmond Alano Club Rock Gifts Run4Recovery Sunshine Jewelry Cleaner Yvonne Ramage


34 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

MAY &31, 31, May 30 30 and 20152015 10 am - 6 pm Saturday 10am-6pm-Saturday 10am-5pm-Sunday 10 am - 5 pm Sunday

2015 Bend Womenˇs Weekend at the Riverhouse Exhibit Hall Floor Plan

COVERED PATIO OVERLOOKING THE DESCHUTES RIVER

EXITS TO OUTSIDE ENTERTAINMENT AND DINING AREA ON THE RIVER

SEATING

KTVZ

STAGE

SEATING

SEMINARS WILL BE HELD UPSTAIRS IN CASCADE MEETING ROOM A

ENTRY

There is free admission to this two-day event focused on inspiration, renewal and connection. Find out what’s new in wellness, health, beauty, fitness, lifestyle, parenting and careers. Enjoy fashion shows, musical performances, samples of delicious food and drinks, fun group fitness classes and more. Register for door prizes and your chance to win a grand prize of 50,000 airline miles! Get inspired through fashion shows, a fine arts and crafts section, financial advice, makeovers, health screenings and more.

541.633.7115 info@bendwomensweekend.com

bendwomensweekend.com

Participating Vendors Arbonne International Arthritis Foundation ASEA Bend Pilates B-Line Clinic Combined Communications Country Financial – Fabian Clark Damsel in Defense doTERRA Essential Oils Farmer’s Insurance – Steve Hull Agency KTVZ Lots of Lavender Mary Kay Cosmetics Miche Bags Mt. Shasta Integrative Medicine New Priorities Family Services, NP NYR Organic Oils to Nourish Peaceful Heart and Soul Precious Curves Pure Romance Take Shape for Life The Blvd The Riverhouse The Source Weekly Therapy for the Body Massage Thrive by Le-Vel Trish Hanson Design Velata Wild Roots Vodka Young Living Essential Oils Younique

Amazing Enterprises Arbonne International Brenda Nevins Hands of Healing Massage and Wellness Therapies ITEX Lyoness Makeup Eraser Medifast Orenda International Possibility Coaching Redmond Alano Club Rock Gifts Run4Recovery Sunshine Jewelry Cleaner Yvonne Ramage


HALF MARATHON •10K • 5K • HAPPY LITTLE KIDS RUN

MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 35 MAY 17, 2012 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 5

AWARDS AND PRIZES 2015

Our cider makes girls happy

oom

tasting r

G N I N E P O GRAND

Y T R A P K BLOC 600 Industrial Way

June 12th. 6pmfo. od carts and more! Live music,Crux & Sunriver Brewing d by

sponsore

We welcome you to hang out and cheer on all competitors, check out the women’s active lifestyle vendors and savor your accomplishments. Finish line festivities will end at 2 pm. Post-Race festivities include:

Since 1995 Celebrating 20 Years of FootZone Downtown Bend

• 5K awards: 10:15 am (overall and masters)

FootZoneBend.com

• 10K awards: 10:45 am (overall and masters) • Half Marathon: 11:15 am (overall and masters) • Delicious gourmet post race food by Bethlyn’s Global Fusion & The Village Baker

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

• Cider provided by Atlas Hard Cider Company, cocktails provided by Bendistillery and beer provided by 10 Barrel. Please remember that Oregon State law requires all participants to have a current form of ID on them, while consuming alcohol.

Go to HappyGirlsRun.com

• Festive Music – BOOGIE DOWN!

“registration” tab click on

and under the volunteer to sign up.

THANKS for making HEALTHY choices.

Finisher’s Necklace Every half-marathon finisher will receive receive a beautiful piece of custom jewelry made locally by Stuart’s of Bend.

Ladies finishing 1st through 3rd in the 5K, 10K, and Half Marathon in both overall and masters divisions will receive: Additional Prizes Note: The definition of a masters winner is women 40 and over.

PacificSource.com


36 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

HALF MARATHON •10K • 5K • HAPPY LITTLE KIDS RUN 6 / WWW.TSWEEKLY.COM

RULES AND INFORMATION

RACE RULES

GEAR DROP

Before you start, it is important to know that we hold our racers to four

Be sure to attach the provided bag drop tag and

fundamental rules. Please only participate if you’re willing to honor

INCLUDE NAME, PHONE NUMBER AND BIB NUMBER.

them!

Bag drop location will be at the start/finish area. You

1. No Littering. Nada. We’re committed to this. If you’re caught toss-

can recover your bag after you have finished the

ing away that bit of gel pouch you ripped off as you were running down the trail, you’ll be disqualified. No exceptions. We are lucky to be

race. Avoid leaving valuables in your bag. We are not responsible for lost or damaged items.

Kindness and Respect – Please and Thank You. It all starts with us. Cheers.

race-day attire. They will be pacing several groups of women from 8-11 minute/ carrying a sign that indicates

Nature and the others using the trails behind you!

goals are for the race – and be kind to the event staff and volunteers.

Look for the pacers in special

mile pace. They will be

running in an inspiring, beautiful place. It’s about respecting Mother

2. Be Kind, Please. Be kind to your fellow runners – no matter what your

PACERS

their per mile pace.

INJURIES AND EMERGENCIES We are pleased to be partnering with Crackerjack First Response Specialists to maximize the safety and well-being of our participants at any point on the course. Crackerjack’s staff consists of skilled emergency medical technicians, paramedics, doctors, skilled field operators,

3. Stay On Course. Please stay on sidewalks or within the coned

and experienced and proven adult educators and trainers. All of their partners and staff are

boundaries. If you are caught in the streets where sidewalks are avail-

long experienced practitioners specializing EMS, critical response, and public safety training,

able, you will be disqualified. There will be course marshals enforcing

all who have a passion for service.

this on course.

Regardless of the reason, if you drop out of the race, it is critical and required that you notify

4. Choose Fun! This is your chance to thrive. If it’s not fun, then why do it?

the race director either by phone (phone# on back of bib) or in person, immediately.

Proud Presenting Sponsor of Happy Girls

Subaru of Bend CALL 877-266-3821 CLICK www.SubaruofBend.com VISIT 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend

Proud

Presenting Sponsor of Happy Girls


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 37

HALF MARATHON •10K • 5K • HAPPY LITTLE KIDS RUN MAY 17, 2012 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 7

BENEFICIARY OUR VISION We envision a world where every girl knows and activates her limitless potential and is free to boldly pursue her dreams.

CORE VALUES – Recognize our power and responsibility to be intentional in our decision making – Embrace our differences and find strength in our connectedness – Express joy, optimism and gratitude through our words,

OUR MISSION To inspire girls to be joyful, healthy and confident using a fun,

thoughts and actions

experience-based curriculum which creatively integrates

– Nurture our physical, emotional and spiritual health

running.

– Lead with an open heart and assume positive intent – Stand up for ourselves and others

Lay It Out Events is proud to support a local nonprofit at every one of our events, festivals and races. In 2014, we contributed close to $4,000 to the KIDS Center from Happy Girls Run, Bend and as a company, donated a total of $55,000 in 2014 to nonprofits such as Saving Grace, The Ronald McDonald House, The Center Foundation, DesChutes Historical Museum and Bend Endurance Academy.

2015

The

Effect:

Eat Good. Feel Good. Do Good.

A special THANK YOU goes out to our sponsors, community groups, and volunteers for supporting and contributing to the success of the 5th annual Happy Girls Run.


8 / WWW.TSWEEKLY.COM 38 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

Introducing a new collection of premium sofas, chairs and accents to create an eclectic mix that’s perfectly proportioned for modern living spaces. It’s a vibe that’s current yet completely at ease, with clean lines and stand-out details, for a look that reflects your individual style and makes you feel perfectly at home. Relaxed and elegant all at the same time; come in and see this exciting new collection today.

Bend, OR (Hwy 20 East) LZBcomfort.com

Medford, OR (I-5 at exit 24)


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 39

CLUBS

: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM

wednesday 27 Broken Top Bottle Shop Beer Geek Week Day 6 Day six of 10 days of beer tasting and live music! With Cascade Lakes Brewing Company, Sunriver Brewing Company, and Caldera Brewing Company. Music 7-9 pm by Voodoo Highway; rock, blues, jam, funk, country. 5-9 pm. Free. Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Ladies’ Night Jazz We’re offering appetizers and drink specials for the ladies along with live music featuring local female jazz vocalist fronting a full band. Come on down ladies and bring your gents! 6-8 pm. No cover. Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Rawkstar karaoke Wednesday nights. 9 pm. Free. Level 2 Allan Byer Americana. 21+. Fourth Wednesday of every month, 5:30 pm. No cover. M&J Tavern Open Mic Night 21+. 6:30 pm.

Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill Country Karaoke Pick from 1000s of songs and let’r rip! 7 pm. No cover. McMenamins Old St. Francis School Betty and the Boy Commentators who like to keep things neatly slotted into place have struggled with Betty and The Boy, precisely because they defy simple categorization. Though the quintet’s string-laden melodies occasionally anchor them in the territories of folk, bluegrass, or minim­ali­st rock, they’re more at home in the cracks in-between. 7 pm. No cover.

OFFERING A WONDERFUL VARIETY OF FURNISHING AND UNIQUE ACCESSORIES.

Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm. Riverbend Brewing Company Strive Roots Roots infused power groove. With Cascade Street Distillery, Atlas Cider, and Buena Bucha kombucha. 6:30-10 pm. Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke We like to try a little something different, so come and check out our

Continues on page 42

OUT OF TOWN

BY SARA JANE WILTERMOOD

COMPLIMENTARY IN HOME CONSULTATIONS AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST HEMP HISTORY WEEK IN SEATTLE 6/1-6/7.

portland wednesday 27

Cheryl Strayed interview It is a safe bet that the woman who hiked the Pacific Crest Trail with no experience and told her incredible story in her book, Wild, which was made into a major motion picture last year, just might have a few more tales up her sleeve. Of course some of them are already published and have been translated into more than 30 languages around the world—not to mention, her essay collection Tiny Beautiful Things and her novel Torch. She is also the co-host of the WBUR podcast “Dear Sugar Radio.” This exclusive interview will be a benefit for PlayWrite, an organization that empowers youth to write original plays based on their emotional experiences. 7:30 pm. Newmark Theatre. $31.75-$84.75.

friday 29 – tuesday 9 Festival of Flowers

It is time to celebrate one of Portland’s signature treats: doughnuts. And what better way to do that than a humongous art piece using only flowers and plant materials. Best viewed from the air, PLACE Studio will create a tribute to the tasty combo with 20,000 flowers dubbed “Doughnut Trip.” Local entertainment will perform from noon - 1 pm on the following days as a part of the Festival: Friday, May 29, Buckman Marimba Ensemble; Wednesday, June 3, Montavilla Guitar Studio; Thursday, June 4, East/West Sylvan Middle School Band; Friday, June 5, The Beat Goes On Marching Band. Pioneer Courthouse Square.

cottage grove sunday 31

Oregon Gran Fondo

The “Tour de Oregon” is a beautiful cycling route 117 miles long and includes some of the best scenic roads and hilltop views in our great state. “Gran Fondo” means “Big Ride” and the tradition of these long bicycle tours originated in Italy and France. As if completing the route isn’t enough of a reward, the registration fee also includes food, beer, and festivities after the Big Ride. 8 am. Downtown Cottage Grove. $75.

seattle

monday 1 – sunday 7 Hemp History Week

Before weed goes legal in our state on July 1, Oregonians have a lot more to learn about hemp, which is actually a high-growing variety of the cannabis plant from which the fiber, oil, and seed can be refined into food, wax, rope, cloth, paper, pulp, and fuel. Current legislation across the country is discussing whether or not hemp should be legalized to industrially cultivate as a useful fiber. Sure, we’ve all had a splash of hemp milk in our morning coffee and worn those flowing hemp gaucho pants, but how about a house built completely out of hemp? This event will feature workshops on the uses of hemp, including how to make “hempcrete” building material, and a showing of the award-winning industrial hemp documentary Bringing it Home. See hemphistoryweek.com for a full schedule and details.

541-330-5999 WWW.HAVENHOMESTYLE.COM LOCATED IN DOWNTOWN BEND AT THE CORNER OF BOND AND MINNESOTA


40 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

CLUBS

: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM

Hump Day Karaoke—it’s definitely not your normal karaoke party! 8 pm.

vored can of Texas refried. Originals and covers. Electric. 7:30 pm.

Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise Classic rock and oldies. 6-9 pm. Free.

Taelour, and Jeff Ingram. Classic rock. 7-9 pm. No cover.

Stihl Whiskey Bar Bobby Lindstrom Real blues with Ed the Whistler, the Breedlove acoustic, some resonator, and slide. 7 pm. No cover.

Domino Room Twista How many syllables can you recite in 55 seconds? Rapper Twista probably has you beat. The lyrical acrobat held the Guiness World Record in 1992 for fastest rapper—clocking in at 598 syllables in 55 seconds. Though his most popular song is called “Slow Jamz,” in his record-busting rap he crammed an average of 10 syllables into each second. This may be one show where you don’t have to worry about that dude behind you trying and failing to rap along in your ear. 8 pm. $20 general, $50 VIP.

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Karaoke 21+. 8 pm. No cover.

Seven Nightclub Rockstar Karaoke Join us downtown for Rockstar Karaoke every Tuesday. We’ve also got a weekly pool tournament at the same time so you can possibly win some cash, too! New menu—so stop in and check it out! 8 pm.

E BarGrill The Substitutes Join us for “dancing in the dungeon.” 8-11 pm. No cover.

Rat Hole Brewpub Zander Reese Singer-songwriter Zander Reese guitar playing is reminiscent of Jack White while his deep vocals add a taste of grungy blues to the mix. Zander’s songs range from soulful ballads of love and loss to grunge/indie beats exploding with angst and passion. 6-8 pm. No cover.

The Lot Open Mic at The Lot Young budding performers or seasoned professionals. Timid yet courageous or confident and commanding. Open mic is for one and all…step up to the open mic! Local favorite performer/artist MOsley WOtta hosts this fun night showcasing local talent. 6 pm. No cover.

thursday 28 Astro Lounge Cutz & Crater With DJ Harlow Weekly cocktail event hosted by DJ Harlow. Classy lounge electronica and Crater Lake products on special all night long. 9 pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop Beer Geek Week Day 7 Day seven of 10 days of beer tasting and live music! With Three Creeks Brewing Company, Plank Town Brewing Company, and Double Mountain Brewery. Music 7-9 pm by The Cutmen; soul and jazz. 5-9 pm. Free. Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards Lindy Gravelle Join us the last Thursday of the month for another great night of music! 6-9 pm. $5.

Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards Jeff Jackson If you like James Taylor, you’ll love Jeff Jackson! One of our favorites, Jeff does popular covers as well as the occasional original, and has a fantastic voice for them! Come see us and him for Fondue Friday! 6-9 pm. $5. Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Bobby Lindstrom Lunchtime blues. Noon-2 pm. No Cover. Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise Classic rock and oldies. 6-9 pm. Free.

Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Bobby Lindstrom Lunchtime Blues Blues. Noon-2 pm. No Cover.

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Coyote Willow Blends progressive acoustic, Americana, with Celtic influences for a foot-stomping good time! 7-9 pm.

Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise Classic rock and oldies. 6-9 pm. Free.

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

Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill Free Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Fun Bobby Fun is the name for this entertaining and highly spirited band. Light show, smoke machine, 80s music...What else could you ask for. See you at the dance floor. 8:30 pm. $3.

Northside Bar & Grill Kenny Blue Ray & the High Desert Hustlers Classic and progressive blues will fill the air. Very danceable. Fourth Thursday of every month, 7:30-10:30 pm.

The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele 21+. 9 pm. No cover.

Rat Hole Brewpub Junior Harris & Robert Lee Old school blues, R&B, and jazz. With an ear for the groove, this act offers a rich blend of blues and jazz classics with flair for roots R&B. 7-9 pm. Riverbend Brewing Company Jones Road Alternative rock band from Bend. With Bendistillery, Atlas Cider, and Buena Bucha kombucha. 6:30-10 pm. Seven Nightclub Flirty Thursday Karaoke A perfect date night karaoke party! 8 pm. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic with Hal Worcester Local singer-songwriters perform original songs. 6 pm. No cover. The Lot Doc Ryan & Eve Doc Ryan is now the #2 Americana artist in the Central Oregon Region on Reverb Nation. This will be an unplugged session in this very intimate outdoor venue. 6-8 pm. No cover. Tower Theatre Bob Schneider Driven in ways most people can’t understand, he creates in ways we can’t miss. Bob Schneider isn’t looking to change the world, just maybe make it a little more engaging for all of us. Pop, rock, folk, country. 7 pm. Res. seating: $23.50, $35.

friday 29 Astro Lounge Black Light White Out Party We are happy to announce this will be The 3rd Annual Black Light White Out Party! We promise this year we will be bringing out all the goodies! DJs: Codi Carroll, DJ Harlo, and more! Free raffle giveaway all night, photo booth, Neon and Absolut promo girls, and drink specials with Humm Kombucha. VIP booths are available, contact John@red-light-productions.com. 10 pm. $5. Broken Top Bottle Shop Beer Geek Week Day 8 Day eight of 10 days of beer tasting and live music. With Oblivion Brewing Co., Riverbend Brewing, and Ninkasi Brewing. Music 7-9 pm by Mark Ransom & The Mostest; rock and jam. 5-9 pm. Free. Checker’s Pub Long Tall Eddy With roots in Austin, and blending rockabilly, rock ‘n roll, blues, and country western, Long Tall Eddy creates their own retro-fla-

Tumalo Feed Company Burnin’ Moonlight Spirited bluegrass, blues, and swing from Scott Foxx, Jim Roy, and Maggie. 7-11 pm. Free. Volcanic Theatre Pub TEASE: Burlesque Revue Join us for an evening of eccentric cabaret starring Baby L’Strange, Dee Dee Pepper, Wanda Bones, Hyacinth Lee, and Rummy Rose. With MC Estacy Inferno and Nikki Lev! 9 pm. $12 adv., $15 door.

saturday 30 Astro Lounge Tony Smiley This musical savant loops his way through a unique genre of music that you won’t find anywhere else. All with a witty, engaging, and energetic stage presence. His cosmic dance of electric melodies range from rock, hip hop, reggae, 80s, and everything in between. With a dash of Mongolian throat singing and beat-boxing. 10 pm. $5 adv., $7 door.

Northside Bar & Grill Fun Bobby Fun is the name for this entertaining and highly spirited band. Light show, smoke machine, ‘80s music...What else could you ask for? See you at the dance floor. 8:30 pm. $3.

Silver Moon Brewing Patrimony, Hungry Skinny & Moon Room The boys are back in town. After making a splash in their hometown of Bend, the young retro rockers of Patrimony moved further afield. But tonight they return with San Francisco’s Hungry Skinny and Bend’s own Moon Room, dogpiling on an already we’re-not-worthy weekend of musical mayhem. 9 pm. No cover. The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele 21+. 9 pm. No cover. The Lifeline Taphouse The Bad Cats Live music and dancing, great food, 30 plus beers on tap, full bar, and a fun atmosphere make this the place to be in Redmond on a Saturday night! 9-11:45 pm. No cover. Tumalo Feed Company Burnin’ Moonlight Spirited bluegrass, blues, and swing from Scott Foxx, Jim Roy, and Maggie. 7-11 pm. Free. Velvet Greg Botsford & The Journeyman 10 pm-midnight. No cover.

sunday 31 Broken Top Bottle Shop Beer Geek Week Day 10 Finale Party with Payette Brewing Co., Hop Valley Brewing Co., and Bend Distillery. Music 7-9 pm by Jive Coulis; rock, funk, and blues. 5-9 pm. Free. Century Center Courtyard Scott Weiland & The Wildabouts Part of the Summer Concert Series at the Century Center. 6 pm. $25 adv., $100 VIP meet and greet. Dawg House ll Acoustic Jam Session & Open Mic A much needed outlet for singer-songwriters and musicians to develop/perform new material, improve improvisation and live performance skills, or just simply socialize with others that have similar interests. 3:30-6:30 pm. Free.

Bottoms Up Saloon Highway 97 Great new rock band in Central Oregon! 8-11:30 pm.

Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill Paul Eddy Country, folk. All ages. Every other Sunday, 3 pm. No cover.

Broken Top Bottle Shop Beer Geek Week Day 9 Day nine of 10 days of beer tasting and live music with Wild Ride Brewing, Mazama Brewing, Logsdon Farmhouse Ales. Music by Trailer 31; country, blues, and folk. 5-9 pm. Free.

Northside Bar & Grill Karaoke With DJ Chris! 7-9 pm.

Checker’s Pub Long Tall Eddy With roots in Austin, blending rockabilly, blues, and country western, Long Tall Eddy cooks up their own retro-flavored can of Texas refried. Originals and covers. Electric. 7:30-11 pm. Free. Hardtails Bar & Grill Live Music Saturdays Bands, duos, solo artists all summer long on our outdoor stage! (Weather permitting) 1-4 pm. Free. High Desert Martial Arts Dead at the Doj A celebration of the music of The Grateful Dead performed by Brent Alan, Mark Ransom & The Mostest, Rising Tide, DJ Grateful Kev (Kevin Byrne), and featuring Jive Coulis! This is a family-friendly event, and all-ages show. Bring your dancin’ shoes and come early! This is a fundraising event, supporting the High Desert Martial Arts Education Foundation. 7 pm-midnight. $10 suggested donation.

Featured Event May 28, 2015

BENDFILM BASH

Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill Free Dance Lessons Come learn the popular line dances to your favorite country songs every Saturday! 9 pm. No cover.

5th annual

monday 1 Volcanic Theatre Pub TWIN & Pachow Kabang Hypno alternative folk band TWIN from Canada with folk punk band Pachow Kabang 9 pm. $5.

tuesday 2 Astro Lounge Trivia Tuesdays Bring your team or join one! Usually six categories of various themes. 8 pm. No cover. Bamboo Room DJ Shane Drink specials, good food, and great music! 7 pm. No cover. Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Ukulele Jam All ages. 6:30 pm. No cover. Northside Bar & Grill Lori Fletcher and Deco Moon Jazz Lori Fletcher and Deco Moon Jazz bring you a relaxing evening of Jazz standards and dancing. First Tuesday of every month, 6-9 pm. Rat Hole Brewpub Stronghold Andy Armor, Richard

wednesday 3 Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Ladies’ Night Jazz We’re offering appetizers and drink specials for the ladies along with live music featuring local female jazz vocalist fronting a full band. Come on down ladies and bring your gents! 6-8 pm. No cover. Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Rawkstar karaoke Wednesday nights. 9 pm. Free. M&J Tavern Open Mic Night 21+. 6:30 pm. Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill Country Karaoke Pick from 1000s of songs and let’r rip! 7 pm. No cover. McMenamins Old St. Francis School Kris Lager Band Revivalist rock, heavy soul, and boogie trance. 7 pm. No cover. Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm. Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke We like to try a little something different, so come and check out our Hump Day Karaoke—it’s definitely not your normal karaoke party! 8 pm. Stihl Whiskey Bar Bobby Lindstrom Real blues with Ed the Whistler, the Breedlove acoustic, some resonator, and slide. 7 pm. No cover. The Lot Open Mic at The Lot Young budding performers or seasoned professionals. Timid yet courageous or confident and commanding. Open mic is for one and all…step up to the open mic! Local favorite performer/artist MOsley WOtta hosts this fun night showcasing local talent. 6 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Vampirates & Beerslayers A decade old punk band, and with showing no signs of growing up, Vampirates are fast-moving, relentless “classic” punk. Mixing adolescent glee with on-stage antics, their shows smack of the relentless energy of ‘80s California punk pioneers. Bring a helmet. Playing with Beerslayers. 9 pm. $5.

thursday 4

Astro Lounge Cutz & Crater With DJ Harlow Weekly cocktail event hosted by DJ Harlow. Classy lounge electronica and Crater Lake products on special all night long. 9 pm-midnight. Hey Joe Coffee Bar Leroy and the Gang Join us for a foot stompin’ good time as Leroy and his Gang play some old-time banjo favorites. First Thursday of every month, 5:30-7:30 pm. Free. Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise Classic rock and oldies. 6-9 pm. Free. Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill Free Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover. McMenamins Old St. Francis School Broken Down Guitars From Bend with roots in blues, folk, and classic rock with a jam sensibility. 7 pm. No cover. Northside Bar & Grill Tim Cruise Former musician with Crosby, Stills & Nash, plays classic rock and oldies. First Thursday of every month, 7:30-10:30 pm. Rat Hole Brewpub Junior Harris & Robert Lee Old school blues, R&B, and jazz. With an ear for the groove, this act offers a rich blend of blues and jazz classics with flair for roots R&B. 7-9 pm. Seven Nightclub Flirty Thursday Karaoke A perfect date night karaoke party! 8 pm. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Allan Byer Local singer-songwriters perform original songs. 6 pm. No cover. The Lot Paul Eddy Bedell artist Paul Eddy sings favorites and long forgotten gems. 6-8 pm. Free.

May 29

May 31

TEASE Burlesque Revue from Portland

Scott Weiland and the Wildabouts

June 6 Armature Presents

June 6

The Volvanic Theatre Pub Presents

Bend Summer Latin Dance Showcase 2015

The Century Center Presents

The Midtown Music Hall Presents

Renegade Roller Derby: Bend vs Los Angeles


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 41

EVENTS

: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM

THE BEND HAPPY GIRLS RUN WILL TAKE PLACE AT RIVERBEND PARK, 5/30, WITH A 5K, 10K, AND HALF MARATHON. PHOTO BY LAY IT OUT EVENTS.

Music

makers@gmail.com. Tuesdays, 6:45-9pm. Cascade Middle School, 19619 SW Mountaineer Way.

Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. Suite 3. 541-325-6676. $40 month (4 classes) or $12 drop-in.

Cascade Chorale—Best of Broadway Concert Features from The Phantom of the Opera, Les Miserables, highlights songs from Rodgers & Hammerstein musicals and more. Special guests include OperaBend, which will present excerpts from their upcoming production Into the Woods. For more information contact Aimee Svendsen 541-647-8720 or email cascadechorale@gmail.com. May 29, 7-9pm and May 30, 3-5pm. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE 9th St. Free.

Dance

Conscious Ecstatic Dance Celebrate the joy of free-form, expressive dance. Discover the power of movement for alchemical personal transformation. Dancing freely is the best practice for healing and liberating your body, mind, and spirit. Sponsored by PULSE: The Alchemy of Movement. Wednesdays, 7-8:30pm. 360-870-6093. $10.

Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice The Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band is a traditional bagpipe and drum band with members from the Central Oregon area. Experienced pipers and drummers are welcome to attend, along with those who are interested in taking up piping or drumming and would like to find out what it would take to learn and eventually join our group. Wednesdays. City of Bend Fire Department West Station, 1212 SW Simpson Ave. 541-633-3225. Free. The Solo Jazz Singing Class Each term students study jazz vocal elements and prepare a solo for a final performance. Their repertoire is primarily classic jazz standards but there a few re-vamped and rearranged pop tunes too. The soloists are backed by a full rhythm section. Minors are allowed until 8 pm. June 1. Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St. Free admission. Community Orchestra of Central Oregon Rehearsals The orchestra [COCO] welcomes all musicians who enjoy playing music with others. Auditions are not necessary, but there are monthly dues. For more information call 541-306-6768 or email cocomusic-

Adult Jazz Dance Class Love to dance? Join the Jazz Dance Collective for adult intermediate jazz dance class. Styles include Broadway, lyrical, Latin, and contemporary. May have opportunity to perform with JDC. JDC is part of Bend Dance Project, a nonprofit organization that promotes dance in Bend. Tuesdays, 7-8:30pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63076 NE 18th St. Suite 140. 541-410-8451. $10 drop-in donation (first class free). Argentine Tango Class & Práctica Beginning tango class 6:30-7:30 pm followed by two hours of practice from 7:30-9:30 pm. Individualized attention for beginner dancers in a friendly and supportive environment. No partner needed! Wednesdays, 6:30-9:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. $5. Bachata Dance Classes This Bachata dance class is beginner friendly, focusing on the fundamentals of the dance. Bachata is perfect for first comers to Latin dancing with very easy to learn basic steps. First Monday of every month, 6:30-7:30pm. Dance Surge Studio, 63220 O.B. Riley Rd. 541-325-6676. $40 month (4 classes) or $12 drop-in. Beginner Salsa Classes Learn to dance salsa in a friendly group class setting. This class focuses on the fundamentals of the dance, making it ideal for first timers and those looking to add a solid foundation to their exciting salsa dance skills. Progressive four-class series starting on the first Thursday of each month. Drop-ins also welcome. Thursdays, 6:30-7:30pm.

10% Off

All Flea,Tick & Heartworm Products. Mon - Fri 8-6

Open Saturdays Saturdays 9 - 3

19550 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 100 in SW Bend’s Brookswood Meadow Plaza 541.306.6991 | www.brookswoodanimalclinic.com Dr. Ruth Loomis | Dr. Ashley Portmann

Fun Salsa Patterns Dance Classes Learn Salsa pattern combinations in this friendly and encouraging class in which you will learn to put together salsa dance pattern sequences including some fun turns. We recommend you feel comfortable with your basic salsa steps for this class. Thursdays, 7:30-8:30pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. Suite 3. 541-325-6676. $40 month (4 classes) or $12 drop-in. Gotta Dance Spring Performance GDSC is proud to showcase amazing numbers in tap, ballet, hip hop, break, krump, jazz, and so much more! GottaDanceStudioAndCompany.com May 31, 4-7pm. Bend High School, 230 NE 6th St. $5-$12. Group Class & Ballroom Dance Get your dance on at our Friday night group class and dance! Class topic changes weekly. No experience or partner necessary. Ages 16-plus. All proceeds donated to Bend’s Community Center. Fridays, 7pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-314-4398. $5 per person includes the class & dance. Latin Wednesdays Come meet a group of welcoming Latin dance enthusiasts. Starting with a Latin dance lesson (salsa, bachata, cha cha cha, and merengue,

alternating every week). Followed by social dancing to fun energetic Latin rhythms. Come learn some new steps and dance, or just watch and enjoy. The place to get your mid-week Latin dance and music fix! Wednesdays, 7:30-9:30pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-325-6676. $5. Scottish Country Dance Weekly Class No experience or Scottish heritage necessary. Weekly classes include beginner & advanced dances. Mondays, 7-9pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. First class is free, future classes are $5. Sunday Soma Circle—Conscious Dance You are invited to dance your own dance, in your own way, to celebrate the gift of life. Follow your own authentic movement instincts into embodied prayer and sacred communion with yourself and others. Sunday, May 31, 11am-12:30pm. Armature, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 2. 541-610-7967. $10. Waltz Lessons Beginning waltz lessons. No partner necessary. Lessons will be every Sunday for the next eight weeks. Come join us for some fun and dancing. Lesson is an hour and a half with a couple of snack breaks. Feel free to bring something to share for snacks. Sundays, 4:30-6pm. Through May 31. Pine Forest Grange Hall, 63214 Boyd Acres Rd. 503-8564874. $5. West African Dance Class Every class taught to live drumming by Fe Fanyi Drum Troupe. Mondays, 7pm. Victor Performing Arts, 2700 NE 4th St. Suite 210. 818-636-2465. $10 drop-in.

Continues on page 44


42 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

EVENTS

: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM

FUNKY AMERICANA GROUP TRUCK STOP GRAVY WILL PERFORM AT HIGH DESERT MUSEUM’S OPEN ‘TIL DARK EVENT, 5/29. PHOTO BY ERICA SWANTEK.

Local Arts Art & Wine: Wine Cups Uncork your inner artist, and pour some inspiration into your life! In this session, make two ceramic cups using introductory hand-building skills. Cups will be glazed, fired, and ready for pick up the following Friday. May 28, 5:30-8:30pm. Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr. 541-617-1317. $50. Artist Reception Local artist featured for a full month in the Humm brewery. Artist receptions the first Thursday of each month are held with local music and snacks from Agricultural Connections and Locavore. Guests receive a complimentary glass of kombucha! First Thursday of every month, 4-6pm. Humm Kombucha, 1125 NE 2nd St. 541-306-6329. Free. Artventure with Judy Artist led painting event! No experience necessary! Fee includes canvas and supplies, food and beverages may be ordered from the Summit. Pre-register and see upcoming images at artventurewithjudy.com. Tuesdays, 6-9pm. The Summit Saloon & Stage, 115 NW Oregon Ave. $25 pre-paid. Clark @ 80: Six Decades of Marks This retrospective of master printmaker and A6 founder Patricia Clark features prints, drawings, and paintings spanning six decades. Mondays-Fridays, 9:30am7pm, Saturdays, 10am-6pm, and Sundays, noon-5pm. Through May 31. A6, 389 SW Scalehouse Ct. Suite 120. 541.330.8759. Free. CMS Student Art Show Artist’s from Cascade

Middle School will be hosting a Spring Art Show at the Armature Gallery during the “Last Saturday” event at the Old Ironworks District. There will also be artwork for sale to raise funds for UNICEF’s relief efforts in Nepal. May 30, 6-8pm. Armature, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 2. Free. Friends Art StarS Local Artists Claude Beterbide, Shandel Gamer, and Jae Yost are pleased to be exhibiting their work at Circle of Friends Art & Academy through May 31 in Tumalo. Tuesdays-Sundays, 11am-6pm. Through May 31. Circle of Friends Art & Academy, 19889 8th St. 541-526-5073. Free. May Last Saturday Second annual plant sale with natives, herbs, and vegetable starts from Clearwater Nursery and Whistle Stop Farm, yard art from Junk to Jems, paintings by Kathleen Dolyniuk and CamMara Akres, and a student photography show from our Intro to Digital Photography class led by Maria Fernanda of Casa Bay Photography! Cindercone Clay Center will be hosting two bands on the patio in honor of their anniversary! May 30, 6-10pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347-564-9080. Free. Sisters Area Photography Club Show Photography exhibit by Sisters Area Photography Club in the Community Room of Sisters Public Library. Sponsored by Friends of Sisters Library (FOSL). Tuesdays-Saturdays, 10am-6pm. Through May 30. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-382-1209. Free. Visions of Hope A local couple created a unique way to help orphans in Uganda through the sale of artworks completed by local inmates. In the process,

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In the old Trax building next to Stars Cabaret

the lives of the children are changed, as well as the inmates. Visions of Hope is the only organization in the world to bring together inmates and orphans in this unique and inspiring way. Come hear the inspiring story, see the art, and maybe help a worthwhile cause. June 4, 6:30-8:30pm. Trinity Episcopal Church/St. Helen’s Hall, 231 NW Idaho Ave. 541-617-3991. Free.

Presentations Central Oregon PubTalk Produced by Economic Development for Central Oregon (EDCO), Central Oregon PubTalk celebrates the spirit of entrepreneurship in Central Oregon and provides a unique forum where business leaders, investors, entrepreneurs, and advisers can network. Each month a different speaker and at least two pitches from local companies. Thursday, May 28, 5-7pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. 541-388-3236. $20 EDCO & OEN members. Cheers to Art! A6 hosts a monthly art appreciation night that blends books, presentations, local libations, and occasional surprises like live music, cinema, and theatre, for a lively look at great artists and art movements in history. Every third Wednesday, 7-8:30pm. A6, 389 SW Scalehouse Ct. Suite 120. 541-330-8759. $10 suggested donation. Cranial Injuries & Criminals Using famous cases like John Hinkley, Jr. as illustrations, COCC psychology professor Rebecca Walker-Sands explores brain anatomy and physiology and how damage to the brain contributes to maladaptive behavior. May 27, 6-7pm.

Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541312-1034. Free. The Alchemy Adventure Join us as we explore, along with the lovely Mollie Shea, a transformational relationship and the power of love. May 31, 5:15-6:30pm. Spiritual Awareness Community at Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Ave. 541-385-1332. Free. Summer Fun Ideas for You & Your Family Dave Nissen, founder and owner of Wanderlust Tours, will share facts and stories about the surrounding natural beauty of Central Oregon. His talk, “Family Fun in Bend’s Amazing Natural World” will be accompanied by slides where possible family outings for all seasons will be highlighted. May 27, 5:30-6:30pm. The Lotus Building, 300 SE Reed Market Rd. 541-330-9000. Free.

Theater Comedy Improv with Triage & the Reality Benders 100% improv! Help Triage and the Reality Benders make up characters, songs, and sagas. All ages appropriate. May 30, 7-8:30pm. CTC Cascade Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. 541-771-3189. $5. Kristine Levine & Adam Bathe Presented by Bend Comedy. Kristine Levine is a comedian based out of Portland. She has starred in the hit TV show “Portlandia.” Adam Bathe was born in Savannah, GA where he started his comedy career, but recently relocated to Portland. May 28, 8-10:30pm. The Summit Saloon & Stage, 115 NW Oregon Ave. 541-419-0111. $8 adv., $10 door.


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Declassified: Long Form Improv Adult show. Veteran improvisors from Triage create more multi-scened stories based on anonymous secrets received in the mail and at the show. Subjects explored so far have ranged from, “I cried at a Katy Perry Song” to “I have the three nipples.” Got a secret to spill? Send yours to: Declassified, 1455 NW Ithaca, Bend, OR 97701. Saturday, May 30, 9-10pm. CTC Cascade Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. 541-771-3189. $5.

Words Author! Author! Piper Kerman Literary series presents best-selling author Piper Kerman. The author of the memoir Orange is the New Black: My Year in a Woman’s Prison. The book has been adapted into a Peabody Award-winning original series for Netflix. For more information and tickets, visit the Deschutes Public Library Foundation website at dplfoundation. org. May 29, 7-9pm. Bend High School, 230 NE 6th St. 541-312-1027. $20.

Call For Volunteers Call for Volunteers & Cultural Ambassadors The Latino Community Association is seeking Central Oregon residents who would like to represent their cultural heritage at our 9th Annual Festival of Cultures on September 26th from 10am-5pm in Redmond. Host a booth with information about your heritage to educate our community. Table and chairs provided. $20 event food voucher offered in exchange for your participation. Mondays-Fridays. Latino Community Association, 412 SW 8th St. 541-382-4366. Gatekeeper Program Through the Gatekeeper program, you would help us train community business staff and volunteers who may come into contact with seniors and adults with disabilities, to recognize warning signs that can indicate abuse, neglect, or an increased need for services or care. We also give examples of Gatekeeper referrals and how COCOA is able to connect clients with needed services and programs. Typically training presentations are about 20 minutes and include a PowerPoint program. Wednesdays, 1-3pm. Central Oregon Council on Aging, 373 NE Greenwood Ave. 541-678-5483, Ext. 116. Mileage reimbursement at .56 a mile. Mentor Heart of Oregon Corps is a nonprofit that inspires and empowers positive change in youth through education, jobs, and stewardship. We are in need of caring adults who are willing to dedicate four hours each month to providing additional support and being positive role models to young people, helping them transform their lives and become successful members of society. For more information or to become a mentor, contact Susie at 541-526-1380. Mondays-Fridays. Heart of Oregon YouthBuild, 68797 George Cyrus Rd. 541-526-1380. Tech Expert for Short-Term Sharepoint Project Heart of Oregon Corps is seeking a Microsoft SharePoint savvy individual who would be willing to volunteer their time to help us set up, utilize, and maintain a SharePoint Team Site. The agency is spread across five separate sites in Central Oregon and rapidly growing in numbers. As we grow we must become more efficient for simple tasks such as sharing and updating our cross-agency calendar, collaborating on important documents, and general communication across our programs and sites. This will allow the staff more time to focus on our mission and the youth we serve. Mondays-Fridays, 8am-3pm. Heart of Oregon Corps, PO Box 279. 541-633-7834. How You Can Help Community Cats First Tuesday of every month, 6pm. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. 541-617-1010. Trail Crew Support Volunteer Heart of Oregon Corps is looking for a few volunteers interested in spending time with our crews as they work on projects around Central Oregon. The dream team of volunteers would have a natural history educator, a writer/journalist, a photographer, a local historian, etc. Regardless of skills or knowledge, if you are interested in getting outdoors this summer, please consider coming out on a project with HOC. We believe that everyone has something to offer, even if it’s simply lopper skills. So, come on out and see what we are about! Mondays-Thursdays. Through June 25. Heart of Oregon Corps, PO Box 279. 541-633-7834. Volunteer The Salvation Army has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for almost every age. We have an emergency food pantry, we visit residents of assisted living centers, and we make up gifts for veterans and homeless. If interested, please contact us. We can’t do what we do, without great volunteers like you! First Monday-Friday of every month, 8am-4pm. Bend, RSVP for address. 541-389-8888.

Volunteer—Advisory Board Partners in Service Advisory organization members are concerned men and women who voluntarily use their professional skills and knowledge of the community to make a practical difference for their neighbors, strengthening The Salvation Army’s ability to serve. Mondays-Sundays, 1-2pm. Bend, RSVP for address. 541-389-8888. Volunteer Drivers Needed Volunteer drivers needed to transport veterans to the Bend VA Clinic and Portland VA Hospital. Must have clean driving record and be able to pass VA-provided physical and screening. Transportation vehicle is VA-provided 10-passenger van. Call John at 541-309-9804 or Paul at 541-647-2363 for more details and information on the application process. Mondays-Fridays. Warehouse Sorting and Pricing The Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond is looking for volunteers to receive donations, sort, and price items. A variety of skills are appreciated from apparel to electronics. Share your knowledge and get a great workout, too! The Brightside Thrift Store’s success is critical to the operations of our high-save shelter and our volunteers at the thrift store contribute directly to the care of our animals by making sure that all of our donations are processed and ready to purchase. Mondays-Sundays, 9am. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St. 541-504-0101.

Best Venue for live music, dancing, food and libations every year since we opened!

Live Music 5 Days a Week Thu 5/28 Kenny Blue Ray and the High Desert Hustlers (Blues Night) 7:30 to 10:30 Fri 5/29 Fun Bobby 8:30 to 12

Race and Competition Calendar Happy Girls Bend Boasting courses that are enjoyable for first-time runners and seasoned racers, races includes a mix of trail, groomed paths, and paved surfaces. With 5k, 10k, and half marathon options plus goodie bags and a post-race party with beer/cocktails, it’s no wonder these runners are happy! Late entries are accepted up to the morning of the race and despite the name, men are welcome to join the ladies. May 30, 8am. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St. $40, $50, $90.

Classes Bee School 2015 We are very excited to bee working with Naomi Price and Richard Nichols (The Hive Man) of the Prineville Honey Bee Mentoring Partnership for a year of promoting a healthier ecosystem through organic beekeeping. Every other Saturday, 11am-1pm. Through Oct. 17. SmudgieGoose Farm, 19221 NE O’Neil Hwy. 541-215-0357. Beer Sip & Dip Drink and paint with beer! Spend a fun evening painting with beer artist Karen Eland. Basic painting techniques will be taught as we explore beer as a medium, all while enjoying delicious, local beer from Worthy Brewing. All skill levels welcome, but you must be 21 or older. June 4, 7-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347-564-9080. $35. Business Start-Up Do you have a great idea that you think could be a successful business, but just don’t know how to get started? Cover the basics in this twohour class and decide if running a business is for you. Wednesday, June 3. COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541-383-7290. $29.

Sat 5/30 Fun Bobby 8:30 to 12 Sun 5/31 Game Day

541.385.RIBS 2670 N Hwy 20 Near Safeway

Mon 6/1 Karaoke with DJ Chris 7 to 9 Tue 6/2 Lori Fletcher Deco Moon Jazz 6 to 9

Redmond:

950 SW Veteran’s Hwy Near Fred Meyer

541.923.BBQ1 www.baldysbbq.com

Saturday and Sunday Breakfast 62860 Boyd Acres Rd in Bend (541) 383-0889 www.NorthsideBarFun.com

Facebook.com/NorthsideBarAndGrill

Communicating for Life Join Bryn Hazell for this life changing workshop series. Topics: A Consciousness of Compassion and Our Culture, Four Tools to Create Compassion, Connecting with Ourselves So We Can Connect with Others, Appreciations, Celebrations, and Gratitudes, Viewing Conflict as an Opportunity to Connect, Understanding Empathic Listening vs. Our Cultural Habits, Clarifying Our Choices and Working with Anger and Thinking Habits, Creating a Compassionate Practice with a Personal Plan and Practice. Participants are asked to obtain the book Nonviolent Communication, A Language of Life. Tuesdays. Through June 23. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Dr. Suite 203. 541-728-0878. Suggested donation $80, no one turned away for limited funds. Contractors CCB Test Prep Course Contractors must take a 16-hour state-approved course to satisfy the educational requirement for Oregon construction contractor licensing. Take this two-day live class to prepare for the state-mandated test (not included) to become a licensed contractor. May 29, 8:30am-6pm and May 30, 8:30am-6pm. Redmond COCC Campus Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Loop. 541-382-7290. $359. Darkness to Light: Stewards of Children This training provides participants with steps to better protect children from sexual abuse. Learn how to recognize and respond to suspicions in your community. Wednesday, May 27, 5:30-8pm. KIDS Center, 1375 NW Kingston Ave. 541-306-6062. $20.

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Check us out at

www.bendsource.com


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We invite you to join us in our wooded setting 13 miles west of Eugene near Veneta, Oregon for an unforgettable adventure.

July 10, 11 & 12, 2015 Friday $23 ★ Saturday $25 ★ Sunday $23 Save! 3-Day Ticket only $59 Day of event: Friday $25 ★ Saturday $29 ★ Sunday $25 There will be a $1.25 TicketsWest service charge on all single day tickets sold. There will be a $3 Ticketswest Service charge on all three day tickets sold.

Tickets are available at all TicketsWest locations including most Safeway Stores Order online at: ticketswest.com Charge by phone: 800-992-8499 No tickets are sold on-site. You must have an admission ticket to enter the parking lot or gain access to the Fair site. Parking $8 advance / $10 on-site. Ride LTD to the Fair for FREE from two Eugene locations. For more information check out: oregoncountryfair.org

presented by

Tickets on sale Now at Newport Avenue Market Call 541-382-3940 or Online AT WWW.NEWPORTAVEMARKET.COM

Welcomes:

GregG allman BAND The Athletic Club of Bend | June 30th

Melissa Etheridge · “ This is M.E.” The Athletic Club of Bend | July 22nd

Punch Brothers The Athletic Club of Bend | September 4th www.peaksummernights.com

We’re going backstage with

Presented By

hosted by

Supported by


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KIDS EVENTS

HAPPY KIDS RUN AT RIVERBEND PARK, 5/30. PHOTO FROM LAY IT OUT EVENTS. Backpack Explorers New themes weekly! Parents and children ages 3-5 investigate science, art, music, stories, and culture in a fun and hands-on manner. Don backpacks filled with exciting artifacts and explore the Museum’s animal habitats and exhibits. Foster artistic expression in your little one and take home activities to continue the learning. Come be creative and inspired to explore your natural surroundings. Pre-registration and payment required online. Buy a four-class pass and save $5! Wednesdays-Thursdays, 9:30-10:30am. Through May 28. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Members, $10. Non-members, $15. Plus Museum admission for adult. Bend Boys Choir Sing everything from Bach to the Beatles while having fun and learning important musical concepts. For boys ages 7-12. Call or go online for more info or to register. Tuesdays. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-382-6866. East Bend Family Block Party All ages. LEGO® Universe: Start with a little inspiration and build away! Wednesday, May 27, 2:30-4pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-330-3760. Free.

PROFESSIONAL TRAINERS COMMITTED TO THE SUCCESS OF 17 RESCUE HORSES WILL SHOWCASE THEM AT RESCUE REVOLUTION—A TRAINER CHALLENGE, AT BRASADA RANCH, 5/30 & 5/31. PHOTO BY ROBERT AGLI PHOTOGRAPHY.

Family Carnival Benefiting Young People Connect. We are YPC, a group for young people ages 16-30 promoting mental health and overall wellness to reduce self-stigma around mental illness and increase youth empowerment and leadership. May 30, noon-4pm. Troy Field, NW Bond Street and Louisiana Avenue. 503-956-9922. Free. $5 donation appreciated.

Free Workout Saturdays Get ready for some outdoor fitness fun! Anytime Fitness of Bend is hosting fun-infused exercises like tug-of-war, relay races, obstacle courses, and more at Farewell Bend Park every Saturday during the month of May. Saturdays, 10-11am. Through May 30. Farewell Bend Park, 1000 SW Reed Market Rd. Free.

Happy Little Kids Run A non-competitive event for kids under 10 years old. There will be three distances; one for 3-4 year olds, one for the 5-7 crowd, and a longer distance for the 8-10 age group. It will be spectator friendly for all of those photos you’ll want to take! May 30, noon. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St. $5.

German Conversation Group With a tutor to learn conversational German. Mondays, 7-8pm. In Sisters, various locations. 541-595-0318. Cost is variable depending upon number of students. Japanese Group Lessons We offer group lessons for all ages, both beginners, and advanced students. Reservations required. Mondays-Tuesdays-Thursdays-Fridays, 3-5pm. Custom Built Computers Of Redmond, 439 SW 6th St. 541-848-1255. $20 lesson or $80 for five lessons. Japanese Group Lesson We offer group lessons for all ages, both beginners, and advanced students. Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. $10, plus $5 material fee. Jewelry Making—Cold Connections In this fun twohour class, you will be designing and fabricating your own pendant using your choice of copper, bronze, and/or nickel silver. Each person will leave class with their own unique pendant and some new skills. Get more details and sign up for the class at diycave.com May 28, 6-8pm. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St. 541-3882283. $36. Launch Your Business Are you about to start or are you in the early stages of running your own business? Avoid costly mistakes and position yourself for success by covering essential details. Three one-onone daytime business advising sessions combined with three Thursday evening workshop presentations

(5/28, 6/11 & 6/25). Initial advising sessions take place before first class during the week starting May 18; register early to set up your first meeting! Thursday, May 28, 6-9pm. Redmond COCC Campus Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Loop. 541-383-7290. $199. Note to Self: You Can Journal Too Graduate student members of OSU-Cascades Low-Residency MFA in Creative Writing want to help you tap into your best self through the words that emerge when no one else is watching. Join us in a safe and nurturing environment as we develop and employ strategies to get started on our own journeys to translate self-expression into self-awareness, goal-setting, and action. June 2, 6-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347-564-9080. $25. Oriental Palm Reading Class Discover how the brain, nerves, and lines connect in palmistry. Wednesdays, 6-7pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. $10. Open Gym Come play with us! Bring your aerial skills, acro ninja moves, juggling clubs, hoops, and more! We have lots of props to use, tumbling mats, and aerial equipment (experienced only) to play with and on. Mondays, 7:30pm. Bend Circus Center, 911 SE Armour Rd. $5. Sofa Sessions Would you like to have a meaningful conversation with others in a space where everyone is seen, heard, and accepted? Come join Carol Delmonico for facilitated conversations utilizing the consciousness of NVC, silent listening, and a framework that supports growth, acceptance, and truth. Register: compassionatecenter.org. Mondays, 6:30-8:15pm. Through June 15. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Dr. Suite 203. 541-385-7437. $60 donation. No one turned away for lack of funds.

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Rockie Tales Puppet Show & Lunch Ages 3-5. Help your child prepare for school with stories & puppets. Families welcome! Wednesday, May 27, 11:15am. Juniper Elementary School, 1300 NE Norton Ave. Free.

Kids Welding Workshop We have a welding workshop at DIYcave, tailored just for kids. In this “hands-on” class you’ll cut steel with a torch and weld those pieces back together. Parent or guardian is required to be on the premises during the entire class and is welcome sign up for the class as well. Sign up at diycave.com. June 3, 6-8:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St. 541-388-2283. $30. Kindermusik Summer Classes Come join the dancing, singing, instrument playing, laughing, learning, and more! Wednesdays 9-9:45 am ages 1-2 and 10:30-11:15 am ages 1-4. June 3, 9am. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-382-6866. $75 per month with discounts for siblings. La Pine Teen Territory Ages 12-17. Strategy games, crafts, Wii & more! Wednesday, May 27, 1pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. 541-312-1090. Free. Mommy & Me at the Farm For children ages 24 months to 4 years old. Mommy & Me classes incorporate art, storytelling, animal demonstrations, games, movement, music, and literature into an enjoyable class for both children and adults! At Juniper Jungle Farm there are chickens, turkeys, a pond, a tipi, greenhouses, compost piles, a stream, and many other exciting places to visit. The class is for children accompanied by an adult (dads welcome!). We hope you are as excited as we are to make nature come alive in this interactive and fun class series! Wednesdays, 10:30am-noon. Juniper Jungle Farm, eastern outskirts of Bend. 503-680-9831. $33 for four classes. $10 drop-in rate. Music, Movement & Stories Ages 3-5. Movement and stories to develop skills and encourage fun with music. Saturday, May 30, 10:15am. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-312-1070. Free. Youth & Family Outdoor Day Enjoy archery and shotgun shooting, craft projects, map/compass and GPS, wilderness survival/first aid, and many other events, and demonstrations. BBQ lunch included! May 30, 8am-3:30pm. Cyrus Ranch, 68395 Cloverdale Rd. 541-388-7337 or 541-480-7323. $10 per person, 5 and under free.

You a in but a ’t nothing hound dog

Music to the ears of your best friend! 541-382-0741 360 NE Quimby Ave Visit us at bendveterinaryclinic.com

Dr. Byron Maas, Dr. Lauren Stayer, Dr. Erin Miller and Dr. Alan Kelley


46 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

EVENTS

: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM

presented by

Welcomes FIRST FRIDAY

9th Anniversary Party June 5th, 5-9pm SAMPLING

Bridge 99 Brewery Wild Winds Ranch Smokehouse Crater Lake Spirits

Gregg allman BAND June 30th

LOCAL ARTISTS

Hopped Up Jewelry I’m One Creations Leather Girl Kelley Kathy Willis Pottery DJ Jude Forrest

Melissa Etheridge This is M.E. Tour July 22nd

BOB SCHNEIDER WILL PERFORM HIS OWN STYLE OF MUSIC, WITH HINTS OF POP, ROCK, FOLK, AND COUNTRY AT THE TOWER THEATRE, 5/28. PHOTO BY BOBSCHNEIDER. Sofa Sessions: The Art and Soul of Courageous Conversation Come join Carol Delmonico for facilitated conversations utilizing the consciousness of NVC, silent listening, and a framework that supports growth, acceptance, and truth. Each week we’ll have the opportunity to explore a specific topic. We’ll choose from topics like: gender, hierarchy, how do you take care of the world, what’s most important to you in relationships, and consumer versus citizen. Mondays, 6:30-8:15pm. Through June 15. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Dr. Suite 203. 541-385-7437. Donation $60 requested.

Punch Brothers September 4th

Tickets on sale now at Newport Avenue Market Call 541-382-3940 or Online at WWW.NEWPORTAVEMARKET.COM We’re going backstage with

www.peaksummernights.com Presented By

Hosted By

Supported by

Spirit Horse Journey: The Gift of Horse Medicine “Partnering with horses and calling upon their power, we are drawn into complete harmony with the strength of the equine essence.” Six sessions of horse guided learning and coaching in the stunning outdoors of the Central Oregon High Desert. This is a non-riding experience. A Midsummers Celebration included! Saturdays, 10am-2pm. Through June 20. Wild Hearts Ranch, 64682 Cook Ave. 541-350-8563. $577. Tai Chi Chuan & Qigong Beginners and all levels welcome, with weekly review of the form. Healing focus for body and soul, in movement like water, in stillness like a mirror. We will embrace natural breathing and the flow of Universal Life Force healing energy through gentle Tai Chi Chuan & Qigong movement. Wednesdays, 10:15-11:30am. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541-330-0334. $45/month or $15 drop-in. West African Drum Class David Visiko teaches rhythms from Guinea, Mali, and Cote’ de Ivory. Sundays, 3:30-5pm. Joy of Being Studio, 155 NW Hawthorne Ave. (behind address). $15 per class. What’s Hot in Franchising Explore how to make money and enjoy life in Bend with your own franchise. In this highly interactive two-hour workshop, find out about the top trends, the best industries and “What’s Hot” in franchising for 2015. Wednesday, June 3, 11am-1pm. COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541-383-7290. $29.

Events

Bend Chamber Business After Hours Hear a sneak preview of upcoming shows and exclusive member benefit. Go behind the scenes and experience the “real” Tower Theatre during this special mixer. Hear how the nonprofit Tower Theatre Foundation provides performing arts and education programs to our

community and area schools. Plus, enter raffles for Tower tickets, CDs, and autographed posters. Food and drink provided. Fourth Thursday of every month, 5-7pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. Always free, always fun. Bend Women’s Weekend Two days of renewal, connection, and inspiration for the women of Central Oregon. Workshops, demonstrations, live performances, fashion shows, art exhibits, and group fitness for attendees. May 30, 10am-6pm and May 31, 10am5pm. The River House Convention Center, 3075 U.S. 97 Business. Free for women of all ages. BendFilm Bash This year BendFilm celebrates its 12th anniversary by increasing the size, scope, and entertainment value of their mission-based annual fundraiser. The main bash attraction will be an interactive, mixed-media show presented by the wild and hilarious “Night Lights with Shanan Kelley” crew. Gourmet, heavy appetizers from Spork, GoodLife beer, wine, great prizes, and BendFilm merchandise. May 28, 6pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $55. Business After Hours The Summit Assisted Living invites you to their Mardi Gras Business After Hours Party! Come dressed in Mardi Gras attire for a chance to win a “Best Dressed” prize. There will be a great band, shrimp, jambalaya, drinks, prizes, and the whole Mardi Gras mother load. The staff and residents of Summit Assisted Living are excited to share their beautiful facility with you. Come prepared to have some fun. May 27, 5-7pm. The Summit Assisted Living, 127 SE Wilson Ave. Free. Community Healing Night Intuitive readings, energetic healing, and bodywork in exchange for canned and dry foods in support of Neighbor Impact food bank. First Thursday of every month, 5-7pm. Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Ave. 541-389-1159. Crystal Bowl Harmonic Sound Bath Join us for an experience of sound bathing your body and soul. Ten plus crystal and Tibetan bowls, and crystal pyramids. Bring a mat or pillow. Chairs available. May 31, 7:15-8:30pm. Spiritual Awareness Community at Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Ave. 509-456-8315. By donation. Deadly By Nature: Poison and Venom In our new exhibit you’ll get a live, close-up look at some of the world’s deadliest creatures, including some you would never expect. Join us for a walk through evolutionary


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: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM

time as we explore the adaptations of venomous animals including the long-spined sea urchin and the rear-fanged, ornate, flying snake. Exhibit open until June 29. Mondays. Through June 29. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Free with museum admission. DIYcave Grand Opening The festivities will include shop tours, welding demonstrations, 3D printing, food, live music all afternoon, and activities for kids. Four Alarm Fire Company will be there with a fire truck! There will be drawings throughout the day for awesome stuff like free shop access and DIYcave t-shirts. (We’re building our DIY t-shirt cannon now!) Come to DIYcave and celebrate Bend’s first makerspace! May 30, 10am-6pm. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St. 541-3382283. Free. Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers welcome. For info contact Sue at 541-382-6281. Mondays, 6-9pm. Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. $1 to $13. Green Drinks at the Makers District Every other month, The Environmental Center and our local business partners host Green Drinks—a casual networking event with a mix of business and community members. This Green Drinks will be a progressive-style event, co-hosted by Central Oregon Locavore, Sara Bella Upcycled, and Natural Edge Furniture. You’ll have the opportunity to stroll through the Makers District, tour these local shops, and learn all about their daily commitments to environmental stewardship and sustainability. (With yummy food and drinks, plus raffle prizes, along the way!) May 28, 5-7pm. Central Oregon Locavore, 1216 NE 1st St. 541-385-6908. Free. Happiness Sprinkling Today’s forecast: low 70s, partly cloudy skies, and a chance of happiness sprinkles. If you take to heart KTVZ Chief Meteorologist Bob Shaw’s daily recommendation to “Have a sparkling day,” this event is for you. Join a national movement of people wearing yellow shirts and holding signs of encouragement, like “You are delightful!” Or just drive by and absorb the warm fuzzies. May 29, 3:30-5:45pm. The Lotus Building, 300 SE Reed Market Rd. 541-390-2746. Smiles are free. Huge Rummage Sale Fundraiser for Central Oregon Youth Orchestra and Central Oregon Junior Symphony to raise money for a trip to New York. Sale will be held in a vacant retail space next to COACH. May 30, 9am4pm. Bend Factory Outlet Stores, 61334 S Hwy 97. Last Saturday at The Old Iron Works An amalgamation of creative intention, Armature, Cinder Cone, Stuarts of Bend, and The Workhouse, are all open late with music, eats, drinks, and art for everyone. This summer, the Workhouse has taken up teaching arts classes like recycled scrap metal reworking and art business pitching, only widening the variety of mediums that show themselves in the creative spaces. Last Saturday of every month, 6pm. The Old Iron Works, 50 SE Scott St. Free. A Life-Transforming Love—Never Too Late. The Christian Science Church presents a free lecture for veterans and active military about finding peace in the middle of war, and everywhere after. Come hear Josh Niles, CS, a former US Army Captain, share his story of healing and the promise of healing for all. May 30, 4-5pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-418-1176. Free. First Thursday Luncheon: The State of the City of Sisters The League of Women Voters of Deschutes County First Thursday Luncheon: The State of the City of Sisters. Our speaker is Sisters Mayor Chris Frye.

The speaker will begin at noon. Questions will be taken at the end of the presentation. June 4, 11am-1pm. Black Bear Diner, 1465 NE 3rd St. 541-382-2660. Free. Sip & Shop Vendor Blender Join us for another mom’s night out and vendor blender! Grab your girlfriends and co-workers, even the kids, and head on over. We’ll have free wine, appetizers, dessert, door prizes, raffle prizes, and over 14 vendors to shop with. For kids this event includes pizza, a drink, and a cookie as well as supervised play time with the fantastic BOTW staff. This event is open to the public. The more the merrier! May 27, 6-8pm. Bouncing off the Walls, 1134 Centennial Ct. 541-306-6587. Free for adults, $5 kids. Mind Body Food Summit The 1st annual educational and interactive event generating excitement and awareness to live a more balanced and harmonious life—using food, fitness, and holistic health practices to bridge our mind, body, and spirit. Many speakers including Dr. Marc Wagner who will speak on “The Pale American Table: Why Color Matters!” Healthy breakfast included by Chef Jennifer Barton, win prizes, play brain games, various vendors, and local food resources. This is a fundraising event, supporting the High Desert Martial Arts Education Foundation. May 30, 8am-noon. High Desert Martial Arts, 2535 NE Studio Rd. 541-647-1220. $20 adv., $25 door. Pool Tournament Cash Cup Join us every Tuesday for our Cash Cup Pool Tournament. Anyone can join in, regardless of experience! Grab some food from our new menu, and stay and have some fun. We also have karaoke going on every Tuesday and Thursday, so there’s a lot of fun going on all night! APA rules (if you’re curious, just ask). Winnings based on number of participants. Tuesdays, 8pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-760-9412. $5. Preventative Walk in Pet Wellness Clinic First come, first served. Vaccines, microchips, toenail trims, and de-worming available. Service fees can be found at bendsnip.org. Saturdays, 10am. Bend Spay and Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. Suite B-1. Public Bingo Every Thursday, doors open at 4:30 pm. Food and beverages available. Must be 18. Visit Bendelkslodge.org or call for info. Thursdays, 6pm. Through Dec. 3. Bend Elks Lodge #1371, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. 541-389-7438. Starter pack $21 (27 games), $10 minimum buy-in. Rescue Revolution—A Trainer Challenge The Humane Society reports some 100,000 horses are abused each year, whether by cramped lodging spaces, or underfeeding, or worse. Today’s event is a happy answer to that problem; a graduation of sorts for rescued horses. Throughout the day are obstacle course competitions, highlighting the prowess to which the horses have returned, and Sunday offers opportunities for adoption. Yeah, bring your hitch! May 30, 9am-8pm and May 31, 10am-2pm. Brasada Ranch, 16986 SW Brasada Ranch Rd. Free admission. River Stoke Let’s celebrate the new whitewater park with a gathering of the kayaking and surfing communities. The night will include “Pau Hana” social hour with design overview of the new waves to get the evening started, with beer from Deschutes and Humm Kombucha (6 -7 pm); Second Hand Soldiers for an hour set with their new lineup (7:15-8:15 pm); and raffle/auction with some amazing prizes including a river surfboard from WOW. The Coffis Brothers great roots rock at 9 pm. May 27, 6-11pm. Volcanic Theatre

Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $10. Spring Footwear & Handbags Elf Trunk Show Desperado in the Old Mill District proudly debuts Bend Footwear & Handbag Designer Melissa Kuchta. Kuchta’s unique line of handmade leather shoes and handbags are created in Bali using environmentally friendly manufacturing. Her exquisite line is in boutiques worldwide, but this is the first time her footwear will be available in Central Oregon. Tropical Bali inspired cocktails and fruity bites will be served at this free event. Custom ordering available. May 30, noon-7pm. Desperado Boutique, 330 SW Powerhouse Dr. Suite 120. 541-749-9980. Free. Trivia Tuesdays Pick your smartest friends to make teams of two-to-five people for a mind-bending game of trivia. A new host each week comes up with six categories with six questions in each category. The team with the most points wins swag! Another fun night at The Lot with great food, beer, and friends. Come join! Interested in being a trivia host? Email: info@ thelotbend.com for details. Tuesdays, 6-8pm. The Lot, 745 NW Columbia St. Free.

Senior Events National Senior Health & Fitness Day Bend Senior Center is celebrating the 22nd National Senior Health & Fitness Day. As part of the nationwide events, a free health resource fair will be hosted from 9-11:30 am. Visitors can take advantage of healthcare information, health screenings, nutritious food samples, and community resources information. May 27, 9-11:30am. Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Rd. 541388-1133. Free.

Meetings The Abraham Inspiration Group We will be viewing/discussing excerpts from Louise Hays film: You Can Heal Your Life with interviews, personal stories, astonishing testimonials, and amusing anecdotes by Louise, Wayne Dyer, Esther & Jerry Hicks, Gregg Braden, and others. Our open discussion allows us to share how the Art of Allowing and Law of Attraction work through us and those in our circle. May 30, 5-8pm. Rosie Bareis Campus, 1010 NW 14th St. 541389-4523. Donation basis. Adelines’ Showcase Chorus Practice For more information call Diane at 541-447-4756 or showcasechorus.org. Mondays, 6:30-9pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave. Al-Anon Family Groups 12-step group for friends and families of alcoholics. Check afginfo.org or call 541-728-3707 for times and locations. Ongoing. Various locations. Communicators Plus Toastmasters Thursdays, 6:30-7:45pm. DEQ Office, 475 NE Bellevue Dr., Suite 110. 541-388-6146. Community Fire Gathering Potluck meal followed by gathering around consecrated fire. Last Friday of every month, 6:30pm. Sacred Fire Community Hearth, 2801 NE Lapointe Ct. 541-241-6056. Free. Cool Cars and Coffee All makes, models welcome. Saturdays, 8am. C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Dr. Live Talk Moderated discussion group with voted topics. First Thursday of every month, 6:30pm. Free.

Have You

Lost a Authentic Vietnamese Cuisine

Child? Experience Comfort, Support, and Healing.

CRAWFISH FESTIVAL LOUISIANA STYLE W/ VIETNAMESE SAUCE

541.382.0772 • | 915 NW Wall St. Bend SweetSaigon.com

541.382.2929 • 1326 NE 3rd St. Bend PhoVietAndCafe.com

This is an offering for Grieving Parents or Grandparents. 8 weeks of participation in a peer support group. In sacred space with Darlene Gertsch,

NAMI Depression & Bipolar Disorder Support Group Mondays, 7-9pm. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-480-8269. Free. Overeaters Anonymous Meeting Mondays, noon; Saturdays, 9:30am; and Thursdays, noon. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-306-6844. Free.

Sports Event 5th Annual Ride for Two Rivers This benefit ride for the National Forest Foundation will take participants up the scenic McKenzie Pass and back (riders can choose to descend to Scott Lake or even Belknap Hot Springs if they choose). May 30, 9am. Sisters. $35 under 17, $45 adult. 7th Annual United Way Charity Golf Classic You are cordially invited to participate in Sunriver Resort’s 7th Annual United Way Charity Golf Classic at the celebrated Crosswater Golf Club. Thank you for supporting United Way: Bringing people and resources together to improve lives and foster a healthy and prosperous community with opportunities for all. May 31, 1-8pm. Crosswater Golf Course, 17600 Canoe Camp Dr. 541-389-6507. $195 per player; $780 per foursome. Adaptive Cycle Clinic The Adaptive Cycle Program is a three week program that includes training on hand cycles as well as other adaptive bikes and introductory level group rides. Equipment is provided as inventory allows, but you are welcome to bring your own cycle. Volunteers and staff will be on hand to provide instruction, motivation, and assistance as needed. Pre registration is required. Open to individuals with a physical disability, TBI, or mobility impairment ages 14 and up. Thursday, May 28, 4:30-5:45pm and Wednesday, June 3, 4:30-5:45pm. Oregon Adaptive Sports, 63025 O.B. Riley Rd. Suite 12. 541-306-4774. $30. CARGo Bike Rodeo A free, family-friendly, half-day event that invites the community and visitors to show off their own cargo bikes with a variety of performance and creativity centric competitions and an obstacle course created specifically for cargo bikes. Try a cargo bike for the first time through the free demos held during the event. Listen to live music, featuring B-Sides Brass Band & DJ Colonel. Create the power for the music via a pedal powered stage. May 30, noon. Bend Electric Bikes, 223 NW Hill St. Free. Central Oregon 500+ Five days of classic Central Oregon road rides. 100 mile and 100 km ride options each day. Ride guides provided for fast, medium, and slow pack. Frequent rest stops with gourmet food and lunch provided each day. SAG and bike support will also be provided each day. June 3, 8am. MBSEF, 563 SW St. Suite 201. $70 per day. Rescue Revolution: A Trainers Challenge Join us for the inaugural Rescue Revolution—a trainer challenge. Professional trainers committed to the success of 17 rescue horses. Saturday competition and freestyle. Sunday horse showcase and adoption event at Rim Rock Riders Event Center at Brasada Ranch. Family fun, tack sale, vendors, food, music, raffles, and silent auctions. May 30, 9am-8:30pm and May 31, 9:30am-1pm. Brasada Ranch, 16986 SW Brasada Ranch Rd.

LaPaw Animal Hospital, PC

Free Cat Treats per Cat Exam (2 per household)

Founder of GGG

JUNE SPECIAL Class to begin in June; space is limited.

Deborah A. LaPaugh, VMD Angie Untisz, DVM The Center for Compassionate Living www.goodgriefguidance.com goodgriefguidance@gmail.com

541-389-3902

1288 SW Simpson Ave. Bend


48 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

THE EVENT OF THE

SUMMER AUGUST 8, 2015

Mark your calendars and get ready for a night under the stars at Pronghorn, An Auberge Resort for Dinner on the Range, the largest culinary event in Central Oregon. Featuring locally-renowned chefs, wineries, breweries, spirit tastings, specialty desserts, cigar bar, a huge silent auction and one amazing dance band that plays into the night. Locals know: summer isn’t complete until you’ve experienced Dinner on the Range, the premiere non-profit event of 2015 that is in a word—unforgettable.

10 YEAR

anniversary

AN EVENT OF

www.GhostTreeInvitational.com The Ghost Tree Invitational (GTI) is a 501c3 non-profit event that benefits the community of Central Oregon, with an emphasis on charities for children. The GTI embarks on its 10th year. 100% of GTI net funds raised benefit the Ronald McDonald House of Central Oregon and The Assistance League of Bend.


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 49

CULTURE

ART WATCH

Serving Time, Serving Truth

BY COURTNEY STEWART

“Orange is the New Black” author Piper Kerman speaks in Bend BY ERIN ROOK

After graduating with a theater degree from an elite women’s college in the early 1990s, Piper Kerman was looking for excitement. She found it in a girlfriend who took her to exotic locales across the globe—and just happened to smuggle drugs. When Kerman’s relatively minor role in those illicit transactions caught up with her a decade later, she found herself facing prison time. In the years since that transformative experience, Kerman has published her New York Times Best Selling memoir Orange is the New Black, has seen that book turn into a wildly popular Netflix original series—with season three coming out June 12, and has filled her schedule with speaking gigs and other appearance aimed at raising awareness of the injustices faced by people both in prison and post-incarceration. Kerman talked to the Source from the Asheville, N.C., airport, en route to a breakfast in Detroit where she hoped to encourage Michigan employers to hire people with felony convictions like herself. She speaks in Bend as part of the Deschutes Library’s Author! Author! series May 29. Source Weekly: Oregon is one of the states that’s pushing to “ban the box,” and help end job discrimination against people with criminal convictions. Have you encountered any difficulties with that personally? Piper Kerman: I was so incredibly fortunate. I had this strong network of family and friends and former employers, and a guy that I knew ran a company and hired me. I started work the week after I came home from prison. It is impossible to overstate the importance of that first job I had coming home from prison. The data also shows that whether someone gets to work right away and whether they earn a living wage, obviously, has a huge impact on recidivism… And this is the number one thing that I hear from other people who, like me, have a felony conviction. They just apply for hundreds and hundreds of jobs and they can’t get a break. SW: In what ways do you feel your relative privilege impacted your experience with incarceration, and in what ways do you feel like incarceration had a leveling effect? PK: I think it had a huge amount to do [with it]. I always say that the most unusual thing about my story is not that I committed a crime…[it’s] that I was policed and that I was prosecuted and that I was punished with prison. And that has a lot to do with privilege—class privilege, racial privilege. And you know, that’s readily apparent to anybody who looks at the criminal justice system, and it’s ironic because of course we have this expectation that the system will treat all Americans equally and that every American will get a fair day in court, but that just doesn’t match up to reality… While you’re incarcerated, there’s a degree of leveling—everyone’s got eight numbers next to their name—but of course, if

With such a rich culture of art and creativity in Central Oregon, it’s no wonder talented artists from other parts of the country are looking for a way to have their work on display here. For Jim Peterson at the Mockingbird Gallery in downtown Bend, his hope is to provide such an avenue for these outstanding talents. Not only to display the art, but also to facilitate connection. At the next First Friday event on June 5, Mockingbird welcomes work from two out-of-region artists, and each in person: Romona Youngquist and Angela Mia De la Vega. “It’s always a thrill when the artists themselves are here for the opening,” Peterson said. “We feel like we are ultimately facilitating relationships in our business. Collectors absolutely love to meet and get to know the artists. The artists also love to be able to see their work in such a beautiful setting like this and connect with the art lovers who come. It really brings everyone closer together.”

DON’T FENCE HER IN; PIPER KERMAN SPEAKS ABOUT PRISONER RIGHTS, 5/29.

you have a family on the outside that is able to come and visit you and to put money on your commissary books, those things make a huge difference. Those lifelines to the outside world are important in terms of people returning home successfully and it seems like being able to afford soap and toothpaste and stamps and phone time are all really important as well. SW: You’re obviously a big advocate for prison reform. Are there a few reforms you’d most like to see move forward? PK: I think the number one most important thing is for us to stop putting so many people in prison and jail in the first place… There’s a lot of opportunity to get people out of prisons and jails who don’t need to be there without impacting public safety. We know, actually, that the states that have reduced their prison populations the most have also seen the biggest declines in crime, so no one should imagine that having a big prison population is doing a lot to increase public safety, in fact the opposite may be true. SW: What are the barriers to having more alternatives to incarceration? Are we reliant on the money that the system makes? PK: Yes. I think that we have built the biggest prison and jail population in human history, and when you build something so big, suddenly, a lot of people start to draw benefit out of it. And I think that is proba-

bly the single biggest obstacle to doing more common sense criminal justice, is that a lot of people are making a lot of money off the current system. So it’s incredibly important to address the fact that folks are making a lot of money off the status quo if we want to change the status quo. SW: To bring it back to the book, why did you feel moved to write it? PK: I just thought that if anybody experienced the things I experienced and saw the things I saw, they would think really differently about the criminal justice system. And they would think really differently about who’s in prison and why they’re there and what really happens to them there, which from my experience, really departed from what many people assume. SW: Did you ever worry that the after the book came out, that it could affect your career or other prospects? PK: I just always felt like I was fortunate to be able to be straightforward about my past, about my mistakes, and the fact of my incarceration. During that entire six years between pleading guilty and actually being sent to prison we spent a lot of that time trying to keep that under wraps and nobody wants to be living a lie, people want to be able to be honest about themselves, but they also want to be able to move past their past and be able to move forward, that’s a really important opportunity.

Romona Youngquist started out as a “child of nature,” exploring the woods in rural Oklahoma where she grew up. She found herself constantly immersed in the designs and colors that surrounded her. Technically self-taught, she attributes nature as one of her most valuable teachers. Using muted colors and blurred contours painted softly using anything unconventional, Youngquist likes to trick the eye. She has had numerous exhibitions, honors, and awards; and has firmly established herself with galleries and collectors throughout the United States. She lives with her family on a little farm in the middle of the Oregon wine country.

Angela Mia De la Vega sculpted her first bronze in 1994, and since has been creating figurative bronze sculptures for international collectors, corporations, and institutions. Exalting the human spirit through expressive faces and natural body movement has become her recognized trademark. De la Vega’s work is inspired by the curious and ever-changing individuality of her children. Examples of her public and corporate installations include Texas Christian University, Candlelighters Children’s Cancer Society, Providence Memorial Hospital, The Orange County Courthouse, and many public parks and town plazas throughout the country. She currently lives and works in Texas. The two artists will have their work on display for the entire month of June at Mockingbird Gallery (869 NW Wall). For the First Friday event on June 5, the gallery will offer free wine and live music.


50 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

CHOW

The Cobalt Reboot

The restaurant formerly known as Dojo says buh-bye to bro-vibe BY PHIL BUSSE

Providing private, compassionate euthanasia services for your cats & dogs in the privacy of your pet's home.

541-647-6810

www.MobileCatandDogVet.com Libby Hays, DVM DrLibby@MobileCatandDogVet.com

Cascade Center of Photography

COBALT IS THE NEW BLACK. PHOTOS BY COLE DAVIS.

Workshop Center - Workshops & Classes - Photo Walks - Private Tutoring - Half & Full Day Tours

Portrait Studio - Business Portraits - Family Photos - Lifestyle & Architecture

www.ccophoto.com Portrait Studio & Workshop Center

390 SW Columbia Street, Suite 110 Bend, Oregon 541-241-2266 welcome@ccophoto.com

When Boken opened some four years ago, it was a welcome addition to downtown dining. Justin Cook, owner of the popular westside sushi house Kanpai, brought high quality and thoughtful Japanese dishes to the restaurant, as well as an impressive flight of top shelf drinks, all rolled into approachable and urbane sophistication. Adjacent to the Mirror Pond Plaza, and with a low-key, but elegant, patio and fire pit, the space was a promising harbinger of good things to come. Yet, somewhere along the way, Boken strayed from its original intent. Shortly after the Source picked Boken as its Restaurant of the Year in 2013, the venue changed its name to Dojo, a name that the editorial staff here refused to acknowledge within our offices, as we thought it sounded too much like something parroted from Karate Kid III. More than a name change, though, the restaurant also added late-night service, thumping electronica music, a dance floor, and more than a sprinkling of backward hats and plunging necklines. But, two months ago, the restaurant formerly known as Boken-Dojo closed shop and took some time to reboot. The result is something wonderful: While the changes in décor may be subtle, the new menu and Cobalt’s overall mission are major game changers, and a welcome return to the original intent. Some hot-shit San Francisco bartender, I was told, redesigned the drink list—and that big city influence is evident. The La Vida Jar-

din—a tequila, ginger beer, and cucumber-based cocktail—is served smartly with a large ice cube and a sprig of mint; it is smoky, yet crisp and sweet, and my new go-to summer drink. The Mekong Daiquiri is another standout; Cruzan rum offset by lime juice and Thai basil. The menu itself does not necessarily have a centering idea, like Boken had Japanese fare; the only requirement seems to be “good food.” Although elegant and high quality, the food is still approachable and affordable. The most expensive item is $16, the Pacific Northwest mussels mixed with chorizo and served with a Sparrow baguette. Other small plates round out a limited but varied menu. Fried Brussels sprouts ($6), which seem a requirement for any highend restaurant these days, are almost as light and flakey as potato chips. Even better is the grilled asparagus ($8), tender, but crisp, and topped with a yolk-rich fried egg. And, the chili garlic honey shrimp ($9) is an excellent summer dish that could make Sunset magazine blush; tangerines and pineapple temper the garlic and chili. And, for the most traditional, a burger ($11) is deceptively simple. Cobalt’s chefs grind their own meat, three-quarters beef and one-quarter lamb; it is, like the rest of the reboot, quite simply, succulent. Cobalt 852 NW Brooks St. 4-10 pm Tuesday-Thursday, 4 pm-1 am Friday-Saturday


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 51

MICRO REVIEW

The Beers of Summer Swill and 3-Way IPA kick off the summer beer season BY KEVIN GIFFORD

FOOD & DRINK EVENTS Food Events Bend Farmers Market—Wednesday Wednesday farmers market in downtown Bend begins! The one stop shop for those who wish to connect with growers and producers, purchase local food, and agricultural goods. The Bend Farmers Market is also the first farmers market in Oregon to launch a Farm-to-School program. They work with the Bend-LaPine School District to incorporate market products into school lunch programs and educated students about healthy eating. June 3, 3-7pm. Brooks Alley, downtown Bend. Free to attend. Benefit for FAN (Family Access Network) On Friends and Family Nights, bring everyone you know out for burgers, beers, wine, cocktails, salads, sandwiches, tater tots, the day’s specials and more – because at the end of the night, 50% of the evening’s total sales are donated to the beneficiary! The more you order, the more is earned for a good cause! June 2, 5pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. Dine with Wine Wine tasting. 21+. Last Friday of every month, 6pm. Crossings at the Riverhouse, 3075 N Business 97. Free. Donna Nordin Cooking Class May 27, 6pm. Ginger’s Kitchenware, 375 SW Powerhouse Dr. $95.

SWILL: BACK AND LESS EXPLOSIVE THAN EVER! PHOTO BY KEVIN GIFFORD.

With Memorial Day behind us and tourists already flocking to the bars from all four corners of the world, it is clear that the summer season is almost here. And even as Central Oregon Beer Week presses on (see you guys at the Three Creeks factory opening on Friday, hopefully!), breweries across the region are ramping up production on beers meant to go with barbecues, hikes, and hardcore yard-work sessions. Leading the lineup so far is the new 2015 edition of 3-Way IPA, a collaboration brew between Fort George in Astoria, Pfriem in Hood River, and Georgetown Brewing in Seattle. It’s the third year Fort George has organized a three-brewer team-up IPA for the summer, and this time around, and after going on tap at Crow’s Feet Commons last weekend, it’s debuting in cans across Central Oregon this week. How is it? Mega-hoppy, yet quite approachable. It clocks in at a very reasonable 5.7% alcohol by volume, but still shares many traits from last year’s 3-Way—heavy hop aroma, a ton of Citra hop-driven tropical flavor, and a bit of fruitiness at the end. A highly refreshing summer IPA, in other words. (If you want a more intense seasonal IPA, look for 3-Headed Hop Monster on tap, a 9.5% beast of a collaboration from Boneyard, Barley Brown’s, and Melvin Brewing in Wyoming.) Not into hops? No problem. Also making a big comeback is Swill, the soda pop-like summer beer first introduced by 10 Barrel in 2013. Swill, a type of radler (a German-style mix of beer and fruit juice), was infamously recalled last year after unintended refermentation in the bottle turned bombers into impromptu, fizzling hand grenades. Now it’s back, with last year’s grapefruit kick replaced by a thirst-quenching lemon kick. It’s a beer, and a style, that people tend to either love or hate—some can’t get enough, others compare it to drinking flat Orangina—but with the hot summer looming, pairing a Swill with brats and chips could make the perfect outdoor lunch.

Jesus * Buddha * Mother Teresa * St. Francis * Mother Earth * The power of prayer * The Secret * The Shekinah * one people one planet * Carolyn Myss * Unity * Don Miguel Ruiz * Rumi * Deepak Chopra * Your thoughts create your reality * forgiveness * love is my religion * Angels * Abraham *Dalai Lama * Wayne Dyer * Louise Hay Sundays 10 a.m. | Rev. Jane Meyers Hiatt | Youth Program, ages 4-17

The Grange 62855 Powell Butte Highway [near the Bend Airport]

www.UnityCentralOregon.com

Family Kitchen Fundraising & Awareness Event Portello Winecafe is partnering with Family Kitchen to raise funds for and spread awareness of the nonprofit’s work providing nutritious meals to those in need in Bend. A portion of the proceeds from the sale of food and drink as well as from sales of to-go wines and logo items will be donated to Family Kitchen during the event. June 2, 4-9pm. Portello Wine Café, 2754 NW Crossing Dr. Lamb 101 Cooking Class We raise a lot of lamb in Oregon. Some people love it and some people just don’t understand it. Frankly, it took me a long time to love it. Join us and we will make the recipes that turned me into a lamb lover. May 27, 6-8pm. The Well Traveled Fork, 3437 Greenleaf Way. $55. Locavore Food School: Healthy Fats and How to Use Them Come learn with Anna Witham of The Root Cellar about healthy sources of fats and the best ways to use them in your daily cooking projects. We will taste and discuss five important fats and demonstrate how to render lard. May 28, 4:30-5:30pm. Central Oregon Locavore, 1216 NE 1st St. 541-633-7388. $5 members; $8 non-members.

Beer Events 2015 Summer Beer Gardens Featuring local breweries, live music, open mic, and karaoke. Activities for kids during duration of Beer Garden. Come out and enjoy this completely local event. Thursdays, 4-7pm. Through Sept. 3. C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Dr. 541-388-1188. 5 Year Anniversary Come celebrate with Melanie and her crew! Five awesome years of food, beer, and fun. There will be lots of prizes to raffle, food, and drink specials all day. Big Troy will be grillin’ in the yard and there will be a few surprises. Grab your friends, bring the kids, and come play. May 30, 9am10pm. Riverside Market, 285 NW Riverside Blvd. 541-389-0646. Beer Geek Week Day 6 With Cascade Lakes Brewing Company, Sunriver Brewing Company, and Caldera Brewing Company. Music 7-9 pm by Voodoo Highway; rock, blues, jam, funk, country. May 27, 5-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. Suite 1. Free. Beer Geek Week Day 7 With Three Creeks Brewing Company, Plank Town Brewing Company, and Double Mountain Brewery. Music 7-9 pm by The Cutmen; soul and jazz. May 28, 5-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. Suite 1. Free.

Beer Geek Week Day 8 With Oblivion Brewing Co., Riverbend Brewing, and Ninkasi Brewing. Music 7-9 pm by Mark Ransom & The Mostest; rock and jam. May 29, 5-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. Suite 1. Free. Beer Geek Week Day 9 With Wild Ride Brewing, Mazama Brewing, and Logsdon Farmhouse Ales. Music by Trailer 31; country, blues, and folk. May 30, 5-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. Suite 1. Free. Beer Geek Week Day 10 Finale Party with Payette Brewing Co., Hop Valley Brewing Co., and Bend Distillery. Music 7-9 pm by Jive Coulis; rock, funk, and blues. May 31, 5-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. Suite 1. Free. Central Oregon Beer Week Central Oregon’s craft beer industry continues to thrive. Together with the region’s 26 (and counting) breweries—plus dozens of other businesses and events tailored for craft beer aficionados—COBW celebrates it all. Event details at centraloregonbeerweek.com/2015-central-oregon-beer-week-events/. Through May 31, 1-10pm. Central Oregon, County wide. Firkin Friday A different firkin each week. $3 firkin pints until it’s gone. Fridays, 4pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr. 541-639-4776. Geeks Who Drink Pub Trivia We have moved upstairs at Summit Saloon and Stage in downtown Bend! Play in teams of up to six or by yourself if you’re some kind of savant. If you want to play but don’t have a team, come anyway. We can usually get single players recruited onto an existing team. Prizes for winning teams! Wednesdays, 7-9pm. The Summit Saloon & Stage, 115 NW Oregon Ave. 541419-0111. Free. Irish Whiskey Dinner Irish whiskey and tasty Irish treats as well! 21 and over. May 29. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. Last Chance: Brewing Culture—The Craft of Beer Come enjoy the exhibit one last time! May 31. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Regular price of admission. Meet the Brewer Last Saturday of every month, 6pm. Crossings at the Riverhouse, 3075 N Business 97. Free. National Hamburger Day Featuring three bomb burger specials, a cheesy hamburger soup, and dessert. Special guest Matt Borlen (owner of Borlen Beef Company) will be hanging out at our pub from noon-2 pm to talk about how our spent grain is fed to his cows to make the tasty burgers we serve at our pub. May 28, 11am-11pm. Deschutes Brewery Public House, 1044 NW Bond St. Free admission. Open ‘til Dark The High Desert Museum is good to the last drop, and tonight’s event unofficially wraps up Beer Week, and a month-long exhibition of “Brewing Culture,” a fascinating collection of science tidbits about beer. Includes get-up-and-go music from funk(y)-Americana Truck Stop Gravy. May 29, 5-9pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. $10 beer tasting package (includes 5 tasting tickets). TCBC Brewer’s Dinner Indulge in a four course meal paired with our finest ales by our head brewer and chef. Space is limited. Reservations required. May 28, 7-8:30pm. Three Creeks Brewing Co., 721 Desperado Ct. 541-549-1963. $50. Three Creeks Brewing Co. Production Facility Grand Opening Party We thought there was no better time to celebrate the Grand Opening of our new production facility than during Central Oregon Beer Week. Stop by for some tastings, beer tours, and more. May 29, 5-8pm. Three Creeks Brewing Co. - Production Facility, 265 E Barclay Dr. 541-5491363.

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52 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

OUTSIDE

Reinventing The Bicycle Wheel

Knight Composites combines enthusiasm and technology for a new wheel design BY DELANO LAVIGNE

“We’re in this because we love cycling, because we have faith in the people we work with and a passion for innovation,” responds Bend resident Beverly Lucas when asked why she wanted to start Knight Composites, a world-class cycle wheel company in an industry already saturated with cycling companies producing products and components. That enthusiasm has been contagious, and has provided the nucleus for a bustling company. Mike Fusaro, Knight Composites’ sales manager adds, “The first time I saw the wheels I basically begged to be a part of the company.” Same goes for Scott Wolfe, Knight Composites’ product designer, who after leaving the industry to become an EMT was lured back into the world of cycle wheels when he found out about Knight Composites. “I enjoyed being a paramedic but I love wheels. And nobody is doing what [Knight Composites] is doing right now,” says Wolfe. Knight Composites, endearingly named after Lucas’ father, has been around for just about a year, and although nascent, it is quickly becoming a leader in an industry that is experiencing a wave of innovation. The proliferation of carbon fiber composites as a viable material for wheel construction and advancements in computer modeling (Computational Fluid Dynamics) has allowed Knight Composites to set new standards in terms of rim construction quality, performance, and safety. “After starting my career in the golf industry and then co-founding Reynolds Composites, I saw the innovations carbon could bring. And we would never have started this company had we not been able to bring something new to the table,” says Jim Pfeil, the company’s co-founder. So what is it about Knight Composites? Clearly the combined 30plus years of industry experience of co-founders Lucas and Pfeil, and the exuberant passion for cycling by all those now involved in the company, have helped Knight Composites move to the forefront of cycle wheel construction and performance. Specifically it is the emphasis on Trailing Edge Aerodynamic Manipulation Technology (TEAM tech) and the use of aerospace-grade Toray carbon fiber that sets Knight apart from its competitors. With the help of Mechanical Engineer Kevin Quan, Knight’s wheel designs treat the wheel as part of a system rather than an isolated component and have managed to create what any cyclist wants, a wheel that lets them move faster yet use less energy. “Knight Wheels are fantastic. They offer great performance for racing; fast, light, aerodynamic, and easy to accelerate, but also amazingly safe,” says Bend local and Grand Tour winner Chris Horner. With distribution spanning across the globe, Knight is quickly becoming an international company. But luckily for the Bend community, the company’s roots run deep and they have no plans of leaving. “Bend is the common thread in our company and we want to use our love for cycling as an opportunity to globalize Bend,” says Lucas.

Bike Events friday 29

Devinci Bike Demo Day Crow’s Feet Commons presents an all-day shred session. Bring a helmet, your pedals, and your passion for railing turns, going fast, and hitting jumps. Free shuttle from Cog Wild. 9 am-4 pm. Wanoga Sno Park, Cascade Lakes Highway. Free.

saturday 30 Ride for Two Rivers This benefit ride for the National Forest Foundation will take participants up the scenic McKenzie Pass and back (riders can choose to descend to Scott Lake or even Belknap Hot Springs if they choose). 9 am. Check-in Sisters Creekside Campground, Sisters. $35 under 17, $45 adult.

CARGo Bike Rodeo A free, family-friendly, half-day event that invites the community and visitors to show off their own cargo bikes with a variety of performance and creativity centric competitions and an obstacle course created specifically for cargo bikes. Try a cargo bike for the first time through the free demos held during the event. Listen to live music, featuring B-Sides Brass Band & DJ Colonel. Create the power for the music via a pedal powered stage. Noon. Bend Electric Bikes, 223 NW Hill St. Free.

wednesday 3 – sunday 7 Central Oregon 500+ Five days of classic Central Oregon road rides. 100 mile and 100 km ride options each day. Ride guides provided for fast, medium, and slow pack. Frequent rest stops with gourmet food and lunch provided each day. SAG and bike support will also be provided each day. 8am. MBSEF, 563 SW St. Suite 201. $70 per day.


OUTSIDE EVENTS 4-H DCLA Ranch Horse Show Come and spend the weekend with us! This is a great opportunity for 4-H participants to get their horses out and to gain show-ring experience. It‘s also a terrific place for locals to school their show and gaming prospects. May 30, 9am-4pm and May 31, 9am-4pm. Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond. Bend Bikes App Hutch’s Bicycles remembers what it’s like to be a beginner, not knowing where, how or what to ride. Biking is the best exercise to maintain healthy weight and a strong heart while reducing air pollution, but many new riders don’t know where to start. That’s why Hutch’s created the Bend Bikes app, the official guide to beginner biking in Bend powered by My City Bikes and Interbike. Download Bend Bikes free for Apple or Android at mycitybikes. org/oregon. Hutch’s, eastside, 820 NE Third St. 888-665-5055. Twin Bridges Ride Weekly group ride led by shop mechanic Nick Salerno in conjunction with Visit Bend. Riding the registered Twin Bridges Scenic Bikeway, this great road ride has a decent pace challenging all levels. Come a little early for a fresh pastry and a beautifully crafted Stumptown morning beverage. Saturdays, 9:30am-noon. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. 541-728-0066. Free. Devinci Bike Demo Day Crow’s Feet Commons presents an all-day shred session. Bring a helmet, your pedals, passion for railing turns, going fast and hitting jumps. Free shuttle from Cog Wild. May 29, 9am-4pm. Wanoga Sno Park, Cascade Lakes Highway. FootZone Noon Run Order a Taco Stand burrito when you leave and we’ll have it when you return. Meet at FootZone for a 3 to 5 mile run. Wednesdays-noon. Foot Zone, 845 Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Ah, Fudge Nuts Fun Run! Join FootZone, Picky Bars, and Lauren Fleshman for the first fun run of the season and be among the first to try Picky Bar’s new flavor—Ah, Fudge Nuts! We’ll meet at FootZone, take our run, and reconvene at the store where we’ll have a Cacao-abunga Brownie flavored Picky Bar for everyone, free Deschutes Pine Drops beer for the adults, ice cream for the kids, and raffle prizes from Picky Bar! May 28, 5:30-7pm. FootZone, 842 N Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free, please RSVP. Free Bird Walk Wake up early for a guided morning bird walk with local birder and bird photographer Tom Lawler. The Nature Center, with the nearby meadow and Lake Aspen, is a birder’s paradise, and this is an excellent opportunity to learn and observe! Registration is required. Bring binoculars and a bird book if you have them. Saturdays, 8:3010:30am. Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Rd., Sunriver. 541-593-4394. Free. Full Moon Hike—Metolius Preserve Challenge your senses on a moonlight hike with the Deschutes Land Trust and Gary Gustafson. While many creatures are turning in for the night, we’ll hike Land

BEND’S LOCAL INDEPENDENT OUTDOOR

Trust’s Metolius Preserve and search for owls, bats, and other animals who begin their day at dusk. Discover the secret lives of wildlife and how they operate seamlessly through the night. Registration is required. Moderate, 3 mile hike. May 27, 8-10pm. Metolius Preserve, near Camp Sherman. 541-3300017. Free. Lady Crows Road Ride Lovely ladies of Bend join us for another fun Sunday rolling on the roads. May 31, 10am. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. Last Thursday Growler Runs Last Thursdays on Galveston: live music, local artwork, and a 3-5 mile group run all topped off with beer from Growler Phils/Primal Cuts! Music starts at 5:30pm, run starts at 6pm. Last Thursday of every month, 5:308:30pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601. Free.

MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 53

GO HERE!

Tis The Season SUP paradise BY CORBIN GENTZLER

Last year Outside Magazine announced to the world that Bend, Oregon is, in fact, the best place on the planet to stand up paddle board. Thanks, guys. With our cover blown, it’s not surprising that paddling the stretch of river between Riverbend and Drake parks has become an activity not unlike Tinder meets bumper boats at a family fun center. For a little more elbow room check out these spots.

Moms Running Group Rain or shine, FootZone hosts runs from 3 to 4.5 miles every Thursday meeting at FootZone. Thursdays, 9:30am. Foot Zone, 845 Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Move it Mondays First and third Monday of the month will be a trail run, we will meet at FootZone and then carpool to the location. Second and fourth Mondays runs start and end at FootZone. 3-5 miles and paces between 7 and 12-minute miles can be accommodated. Mondays, 5:30pm. Foot Zone, 845 Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Birding Walks The Old Mill District and the East Cascades Audubon Society are again offering free weekly bird walks every other Friday. Walks are guided by an expert from the Society and wind around the trails that run along the Deschutes River. Appropriate for all ages and interested parties, from novices to experienced avian experts. Binoculars available for check out. Friday, May 29, 10am-noon. Ticket Mill, 475 SW Powerhouse Dr. Free. Wednesday Night Group Runs Join us Wednesday nights for our 3-5 mile group runs, all paces welcome! This is a great way to get exercise, fresh air, and meet fellow fitnatics! Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601. Free. Wilderness First Responder Recertification Training specifically designed to recertify the Wilderness First Responder. Three-day session includes CPR. Training takes place at Hollinshead Park in Bend. Pre-register through Bend Parks and Recreation. May 30, 8am-5pm. Bend Park & Recreation District, 799 SW Columbia St. 541-706-6116. $310. Wildflower Walk We’ll visit the upper meadows and springs to find sandlilies, larkspur, and other colorful wildflowers. Then, we’ll walk the banks of the restored Whychus Creek and dig deeper into the native plants, sedges, and shrubs that are being used to create much better habitat for fish and wildlife. Registration is required. Moderate, ~2 mile walk. May 27, 9am-1pm. Camp Polk Meadow Preserve, outside Sisters. 541-330-0017. Free.

OUTDOOR RESEARCH PATAGONIA PETZL PRANA RAB SALEWA SCARPA SIERRA DESIGNS SEA TO SUMMIT SMARTWOOL THERMAREST MOUNTAIN HARDWEAR ZEAL MONTRAIL ARC’TERYX FIVETEN HYDRO FLASK GARMONT KEEN LA SPORTIVA MAMMUT MERRELL RETAILER OSPREY CHACO SMITH DARN TOUGH DRAGON METOLIUS MONTRAIL OBOZ BLACK DIAMOND BOREAS

PHOTO BY LISA SEALES.

Little Lava Lake It’s hard to believe that this little lake is the birthplace of the Deschutes River. Though small in size, its shallow sapphire waters can easily occupy an entire day. With an average depth of eight feet, Little Lava is remarkably clear. The views aren’t limited to below the surface either, as Bachelor, Broken Top, and South Sister stand sentinel over the waters. There’s a campground on site too, if you decide one day just isn’t enough. To get there take Cascades Lakes Highway approximately 40 miles to Forest Service Road 500. Upper Deschutes This stretch of river between Bull Bend and Wyeth campgrounds is a gentle 1.8 mile run and affords a much better chance of seeing wildlife of the non-human variety than its downstream, through-town counterpart. It is critical to exit the river at Wyeth Campground as it is the last place to safely portage around Pringle Falls just beyond. Both campgrounds are accessible by taking 97 South to County Route 43 for 7.9 miles, follow the signs off Forest Road 4370 from there.

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thurSday, June 11 Slack 8 am

Friday, June 12 Rodeo 7 pm

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Sunday, June 14 Buckaroo Breakfast 7-11 am Cowboy Church 9 am Rodeo 1 pm

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54 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

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SCREEN Old Gold

Iris’ life lessons in style BY MARJORIE SKINNER

New Summer Bend designs and styles are here!

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909 NW Wall St.

Representing Bend in STYLE since 2007

Growing old has never looked as wonderful as it does on Iris Apfel. The 93-year-old is a style icon—so much so that the Metropolitan Museum of Art hosted an exhibition of her personal wardrobe in 2005. A retired textile mogul and interior designer who tweaked the White House for nine different presidents, Apfel’s style is mad, all color and huge jewelry draped over a slender frame and topped with her signature huge round glasses. She’s a diligent magpie collector, equally at ease snatching up cheap baubles at a Harlem hole-in-thewall as she is having a brand new Oscar de la Renta coat boxed up at Bergdorf’s. Her eye guides and propels her through life, and she’s definitely having more fun getting dressed than you are. Recently passed Director Albert Maysles has a sizeable legend of his own, as the co-director (with his brother David) of legendary documentaries Gimme Shelter and Grey Gardens. Maysles’ Iris, while delightful thanks to its subject, is nowhere near as dramatic: Apfel and her dear husband Carl are basically happy, inspiring, busy people; their cheerfulness is only occasionally clouded by concern, usually related to health and aging. This makes them excellent role models but tame film subjects, and so Iris dodders on pleasantly enough. If Maysles wanted to scratch a bit deeper, he might’ve addressed the economic elephant in the room: The Apfels are rich, and while Iris may be one of the originators of “high-low” style, her ability to collect whatever catches her eye goes a long way toward the final, striking result. That’s all sidestepped here, as Maysles contents himself with allowing Iris to simply encourage the world to follow their instincts and embrace individuality. And perhaps more importantly, to demonstrate that while beauty fades, style only gets better, if you let it. Iris Director Albert Maysles Opens Friday Tin Pan Theater


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 55

FILM EVENTS BendFilm Bash While technically not a film event, this evening’s bash supports a major film event, Bend Film Festival. It is a like a greatest hits of Bend: Shanan Kelley hosts a special edition of a wacky and wooly variety show, “The Night Light Show with Shanan Kelley,” Spork caters the event, GoodLife beer provides drinks, as well as Elixir wines and Bendistrillery mixed drinks. 6 pm, Thursday, May 28. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $55.

The Healthcare Movie Canadians are proud people, and this film rubs Americans faces in our still-lousy health care system. The narrative is structured around an American husband and a Canadian wife who are separated by their different health care plans. It is a side-by-side comparison and, in true haughty Canadian style, the film points out the many ways—financially, spiritually, culturally—that the Canadian system is so superior. It is a tough pill to swallow, but an important hour-long documentary that helps provide details, not just accusations, about the ways in which many Americans’ health care falls short, and the many ways in which a Canadian system could be achieved. Kiefer Sutherland narrates the film, which gives a certain “24” urgency as well as a growing threat to the crisis. 6:30 pm, Tuesday, June 2. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE 9th St. Free.

June 26 Randy McAllister Band July 3 TBD July 17 Abbey Road Live July 24 JZ Band

2015 Summer Music

Line-up!

July 31 Tumbleweed Peep Show August 7 Moon Mountain Ramblers August 14 Hobbs Band August 21 TBD August 28 Dennis McGregor and The Spoilers September 4 Brent Alan and His Funky Friends

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56 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

FILM SHORTS

BY JARED RASIC

THE AGE OF ADALINE THE AGE OF ADALINE It’s not uncommon for women, when questioned about their age, to claim they are perpetually 29. But for Adaline (Blake Lively) it’s a fact. For nearly a century, she’s been celebrating her 29th birthday. She’s successfully kept her strange secret largely by keeping to herself. But when she meets the handsome Ellis (Michiel Huisman), she faces a turning point. Also starring Harrison Ford and Kathy Baker. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

We would like to Thank our retired and current military service members. Please join us

Memorial Weekend 5/23-5/25

and get a Riverbend Burger and Brew for $10 military members only

Live Music Schedule

Tuesday May 26 6:30-9:30 Harley Bourbon Band / Avery James and the Hillandales Wednesday May 27, 6:30-9:30 Strive Roots Thursday May 28, 6:30-9:30 Jones Road

ALOHA It’s the new Cameron Crowe film! You know what that means? Outsized emotions will clash with a script that wears its heart on its sleeve and a soundtrack made from the most popular tunes of the ‘70s and ‘80s. Aloha stars Bradley Cooper as a military contractor who climbs smack dab in the middle of a love triangle between Rachel McAdams and Emma Stone. Poor bastard. Old Mill

Stadium 16 & IMAX

AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON The time is now! The film every nerd has been waiting for since the closing credits of the first Avengers. This adventure has Cap, Iron Man, Hulk, Thor, Black Widow, and Hawkeye teaming up with the Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver to take on one of Tony’s inventions gone wrong, Ultron. With Ultron being a somewhat sympathetic villain, expect some deep moral ambiguity from your favorite cinematic superhero team as well as Hulk smashing things in a way that makes you giggle. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Red-

mond Theatre, Sisters Movie House

THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT Even if you try to give Divergent (and its sequels) the benefit of the doubt that they aren’t just Hunger Games rip-offs, by the time you reach the end of the first book your optimism will be shredded. While Shailene Woodley is a fine actress, the Teen Post-Apocalyptic genre hits the wall pretty hard here and flails every which way with its pat ideas about freedom, individuality, and painfully generic love. In this installment the factions start going to war and Kate Winslet cashes extra paychecks. St.Francis Theater

ENTOURAGE All the douchebags are back! Vince, Drama, Turtle, E, and Ari are back in the film no one really knew they wanted or asked for. This film follows Vince as he puts it all on the line making his directorial debut and E as he prepares to become a father. It does raise the cackles a bit to know HBO has made movies off of this and Sex in the City, but we still don’t have a conclusion to “Deadwood” or “Carnivale.” This is why we can’t have nice things. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

All menu items are now Local Organic Cage Free Chicken, Beef and Pork.

Featuring 15 RiverBend Craft Brews bEST SPORTS VIEWING IN TOWN • FREE WI-FI FAMILY FRIENDLY ‘TIL 11 PM EVERYDAY Happy Hour Mon • Fri 3:30•6pm

Granite Fire TabLe on Patio (Dog Friendly) Corn Hole Court

HOME Home is the new film from DreamWorks Animation, home to How to Train Your Dragon, Kung-Fu Panda, and Shrek One through Fifty. This one tells the story of an alien (voiced by The Best Amigo Steve Martin) whose race is hiding from their mortal enemy on Earth, which they decide to invade. Obviously, wacky hijinks ensure because Jim Parsons is also part of the voice cast and that man has two modes: wacky and faux-nerdy. If they exterminate the human race by accident, then this should be a children’s classic. Old Mill Stadium 16

& IMAX

HOT PURSUIT Reese Witherspoon and Sofia Veraga star in this female-centric homage to films like Midnight Run and Running Scared. Since this is from the director of 27 Dresses and Step Up, it is hard to know whether this will be an action filled, crowd pleasing comedy, or a vapid attempt to cash in on a genre that has not seen a successful odd couple pairing in years. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX THE LONGEST RIDE It’s a new year so that means it’s time for a new Nicholas Sparks adaptation. This one sounds like a turgid romance novel as a bull rider falls in love with an art student with big dreams of New York City. Can their love handle the stresses of having different dreams while also

being two completely different human beings? Will the boy look good in his Wranglers while she unburdens her soul with desires of becoming the new Rothko? Who the hell cares? St.Francis Theater

MAD MAX: FURY ROAD Guaranteed to be THE movie of the summer, the entirety of Fury Road is an extended chase boasting some of the finest cinematography, filmmaking, and action sequences ever put to film. Tom Hardy replaces Mel Gibson as Max, who teams up with Charlize Theron to save some young women from a massively insane warlord. If you only go to one film this summer, this is the one. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Pine The-

ater, Redmond Theatre

PITCH PERFECT 2 The Barden Bellas are back and all the way at the bottom once again. Starring the delightful Anna Kendrick, 2012’s Pitch Perfect was a surprisingly hilarious and heartfelt musical comedy smash and the sequel is poised to be just as insanely popular. When the Bellas are banned from competing in the US, they enter an international competition that no American team has ever won. Expect more awesome A cappella hijinks from the ladies and more fat jokes from Rebel Wilson. Old

Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Theatre, Sisters Movie House

POLTERGEIST Remakes tend to be terrible with John Carpenter’s The Thing being one of the few exceptions. The Poltergeist remake, with a script by brilliant playwright David Lindsay-Abaire, directed by the guy that did Monster House and a cast including Sam Rockwell, Rosemarie DeWitt, and Jared Harris, Poltergeist 2015 could also buck the trend. The trailer is chilling, so count me in on opening night. I’ll bring the diapers if someone else brings the whiskey. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX THE SALT OF THE EARTH A powerful and moving documentary by Wim Wenders about the brilliant photography of Sebastian Salgado. Every frame is filled with incredible imagery of humanity living, dying, loving, and existing in a collection so profoundly beautiful that the film is hard to shake off for days afterwards. Tin Pan Theater SAN ANDREAS While the trailers for San Andreas don’t do much to set it apart from other disaster flicks like 2012 or The Day After Tomorrow, the biggest distinguishing feature it has is a 280lb Samoan badass named The Rock. America is ready for a movie where The Rock has to save the world and can’t use punches to do it. Will he use his beastly strength to grab both sides of the fault and close it, or will he fly everyone to safety, proving once and for all he’s the superman we all know he secretly is? Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Theatre TOMORROWLAND Tomorrowland is the new film by Brad Bird, director of The Incredibles, The Iron Giant, and Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol. As wonderful of a filmmaker as he is, the trailer and description for the film make it sound like some Objectivist fantasy straight from the brain of Ayn Rand herself. Hopefully the script by Damon Lindelof (co-creator of “Lost”) will focus more on the fantastic and less on the mundane. Old Mill Stadi-

um 16 & IMAX, Pine Theater, Redmond Theatre, Sisters Movie House

WELCOME TO ME Kristen Wiig plays a mentally ill woman who wins the lottery and spends most of her money buying a talk show where she can share her bizarre opinions. The combination of cringe inducing humor and heartfelt characterization make Welcome to Me an unconventional and interesting movie on every level. Tin Pan Theater WOMAN IN GOLD The divine Helen Mirren stars in this true story of one woman’s quest to recover a family portrait by Gustav Klimt stolen by the Nazis in the 1940s. That battle makes its way to the U.S. Supreme Court. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 57

I ♥ TELEVISION

Hippie Cop! BY WM.™ STEVEN HUMPHREY

May we take a moment to appreciate the plight of the “undercover cop”? [EDITOR’S NOTE: May we also take a moment to remind you that Humpy knows absolutely nothing about police work? Grain of salt, people.] As we all know, being a cop is tough work—except for bossing people around all day and carry a gun and a Taser. (OH BOOHOO-HOO, POOR COPS!) But they do catch a lot of crap from no-goodniks like me, and yet still seem happy to drop by my home or office to dispose of my many stalkers/angry ex-lovers…for which I shall ever be appreciative. But while regular cops have a hard row to hoe, the undercover cops have it super tough! Imagine you were undercover and investigating some skinhead Nazi organization. First, you have to get a haircut that looks like someone ran over you with a lawnmower. Second, you have to get a bunch of Nazi tattoos—which ruins every family holiday photo. Third, you can’t listen to any Taylor Swift or Ariana Grande. And fourth, you have to pretend like you’re super racist—which limits your dating options to other skinheads or Florida Republicans. THIS IS AN UNTENABLE SITUATION! HOWEVER! The only thing worse than being a skinhead undercover cop is being a HIPPIE undercover cop. I don’t need four reasons to describe why this is horrible— just one: You have to dress like a hippie and smell like you’ve been sleeping inside the intestines of a pig. It’s the WORST possible job any cop could ever have, and in my opinion, EVEN MORE UNTENABLE. Well, TV is finally getting around to dramatizing the nearly impossible plight of the hippie undercover cop in NBC’s new show, “Aquarius” (debuting Thursday, May 28, 9 pm). This crime drama set in 1967 stars

David Duchovny (“The X-Files” and “Red Shoes Diaries”…everyone always forgets about “Red Shoes Diaries”), as a jarhead old-timey cop in the Mickey Spillane tradition who sees his beloved Los Angeles being polluted by free love, LSD, and stink foot hippies. He’s partnered with a young vice cop (“True Blood’s” Brian Shafe), who’s been ordered to grow his hair and infiltrate the counterculture—but eventually begins to see the hippies’ side of things. Obviously, this makes Duchovny’s character DESPISE his young partner—though smelling like the inside of a hog doesn’t help. BUT THEN! Trouble brings them back together when the daughter of an old friend disappears, and they discover she’s fallen under the spell of a certain upcoming cult leader named [pause for dramatic effect] CHARLES MANSON (“Game of Thrones’” Gethin Anthony) who in two short years will become the most famous hippie murderer the world has ever known! (BOOOO! Hippie murderers are the worst!) As you can probably guess, this show will probably be terrible—because who gives two craps about a hippie cop show even if Charles Manson is involved, right? However, TV should definitely give more love to undercover cops—which is why I’ll be pitching my new show, “Swift Cop” about an officer who stops crime by going undercover as Taylor Swift. (And unlike some people, he smells fantastic.)

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2015

CATCH LOUIE SEASON FINALE 5/28.

WEDNESDAY 27

8 PM CBS THE BRIEFCASE Debut! Poor people are given a briefcase of money and a choice to give part of it away to someone needier. THIS IS A RICH PERSON’S TRAP. 9 PM FOX BULLSEYE Debut! A game show where people are dropped out of things and try to hit a target. ANOTHER RICH PERSON’S TRAP.

THURSDAY 28

10 PM SPIKE LIP SYNCH BATTLE Season finale! This fun lip synch show pits Queen Latifah against Marlon Wayons. 10:30 PM FX LOUIE Season finale! The final episode of the season followed by a 90-minute Louis C.K. stand up special!

FRIDAY 29

11 PM IFC COMEDY BANG! BANG! Scott welcomes the sexy and nerd-tastic Karen Gillan (“Doctor Who”).

SATURDAY 30

8 PM HBO ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME The induction ceremony and concert honoring Bill

Withers, Joan Jett, Lou Reed, and more! 9 PM STARZ OUTLANDER Season finale! Jamie is rescued from his sadistic captor—but Claire wonders if his brain will ever recover.

SUNDAY 31

9:30 PM SHO HAPPYISH A new store at the mall sends everyone into a tailspin. (No store is better than Hot Dog on a Stick.) 10 PM HBO SILICON VALLEY Richard wants his company to have the same brand loyalty as Hot Dog on a Stick. IMPOSSIBLE.

MONDAY 1

10 PM ABC THE WHISPERS Debut! Lily Rabe stars as an investigator who learns aliens are telling our children to do terrible things.

TUESDAY 2

3 AM YAHOO COMMUNITY Season finale! Community ends their sixth season stranger than ever. Hurrah! 9 PM CW IZOMBIE Liv eats the brains of a high-schooler, and all she wants to do is visit Forever 21 and Hot Dog on a Stick.

TM

TM


58 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

ASTROLOGY

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played drums for the rock band the Who. He was once voted the second-greatest drummer in history. But his erratic behavior, often provoked by drugs or alcohol, sometimes interfered with his abilities. In 1973, the Who was doing a live concert near San Francisco when the horse tranquilizer that Moon had taken earlier caused him to pass out. The band appealed to the audience for help. “Can anybody play the drums?” asked guitarist Pete Townshend. “I mean somebody good?” A 19-year-old amateur drummer named Scot Halpin volunteered. He played well enough to finish the show. I suspect that sometime soon, Aries, you may also get an unexpected opportunity to play the role of a substitute. Be ready!

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The weta is a

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try to see your shadow as it’s cast on the ground by the moon. Not by the sun, mind you. Look for the shadow that’s made by the light of the moon. It might sound farfetched, but I suspect this experience will have a potent impact on your subconscious mind. It may jostle loose secrets that you have been hiding from yourself. I bet it will give you access to emotions and intuitions you have been repressing. It could also help you realize that some of the deep, dark stuff you wrestle with is not bad and scary, but rather fertile and fascinating.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The ancient Greek statesman Demosthenes was regarded as a supremely skilled orator. His speeches were so powerful that he was compared to a “blazing thunderbolt.” And yet as a youngster he spoke awkwardly. His voice was weak and his enunciation weird. To transform himself, he took drastic measures. He put pebbles in his mouth to force himself to formulate his words with great care. He recited poems as he ran up and down hills. At the beach, he learned to outshout the pounding surf. Take inspiration from him, Virgo. Now would be an excellent time for you to plan and launch strenuous efforts that will enable you to eventually accomplish one of your long-range goals.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Long-distance flirtations may soon be just around the corner or across the street. Remote possibilities are taking short cuts as they head your way. I swear the far horizon and the lucky stars seem closer than usual. Is it all a mirage? Some of it may be, but at least a part of it is very real. If you want to be ready to seize the surprising opportunities that show up in your vicinity, I suggest you make yourself as innocent and expansive as possible. Drop any jaded attitudes you may be harboring. Let the future know that you are prepared to receive a flood of beauty, truth, and help. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): I suspect that

marriages of convenience will begin to wither away unless they evolve into bonds of affection. Connections that have been fed primarily on fun and games must acquire more ballast. In fact, I recommend that you re-evaluate all your contracts and agreements. How are they working for you? Do they still serve the purpose you want them to? Is it time to acknowledge that they have transformed and need to be reconfigured? As you take inventory, be both tough-minded and compassionate.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Petrarch

was an influential 14th-century Italian poet whose main work was Song Book. It’s a collection of 366 poems, most of which are dedicated to Laura, the woman he loved. For 40 years he churned out testaments of longing and appreciation for her, despite the fact that he and she never spent time together. She was married to another man, and was wrapped up in raising her eleven children. Should we judge Petrarch harshly for choosing a muse who was so unavailable? I don’t. Muse-choosing is a mysterious and sacred process that transcends logic. I’m bringing the subject to your attention because you’re entering a new phase in your relationship with muses. It’s either time to choose a new one (or two?) or else adjust your bonds with your current muses.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “The soul moves in circles,” said the ancient Greek philosopher Plotinus. Modern psychologist James Hillmans agreed, and added this thought: “Hence our lives are not moving straight ahead; instead, hovering, wavering, returning, renewing, repeating.” I bring this to your attention, Capricorn, because you’re now in an extra-intense phase of winding and rambling. This is a good thing! You are spiraling back to get another look at interesting teachings you didn’t master the first time around. You are building on past efforts that weren’t strong enough. Your words of power are crooked, gyrate, curvy, labyrinthine, and corkscrew. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): It’s no coinci-

dence that your libido and your mojo are booming at the same time. Your libido is in the midst of a deep, hearty awakening, which is generating a surplus of potent, super-fine mojo. And your surplus of potent, super-fine mojo is in turn inciting your libido’s even deeper, heartier awakening. There may be times in the coming week when you feel like you are living with a wild animal. As long as you keep the creature well-fed and well-stroked, it should provide you with lots of vigorous, even boisterous fun.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “I always arrive late at the office, but I make up for it by leaving early,” quipped 19th-century English author Charles Lamb. I invite you to adopt that breezy, lazy attitude in the coming weeks. It’s high time for you to slip into a very comfortable, laidback mood . . . to give yourself a lot of slack, explore the mysteries of dreamy indolence, and quiet down the chirpy voices in your head. Even if you can’t literally call in sick to your job and spend a few days wandering free, do everything you can to claim as much low-pressure, unhurried spaciousness as possible. Homework: Your Future Self comes to you and says, “You must get rid of two beliefs that are holding you back.” What are they? Testify at FreeWillAstrology.com. © Copyright 2015 Rob Brezsny


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 59

ADVICE GODDESS

WELLNESS DIRECTORY

Feral Hugs

AMY ALKON

After casual sex, why do some men spend all night spooning and cuddling? This just happened for the second time, and it really messes with my head. My nesting inclination kicks in, and I start fantasizing about engagement rings. And I’m not some needy little thing. —Confused

It’s like when the plane’s landing gear is malfunctioning and a person grabs the hand of the stranger seated next to them…not because that person means something to them but because it feels better than possibly dying alone in a fiery explosion. Casual sex, like grain alcohol and ladies’ clingy knitwear, isn’t for everyone. In research by anthropologist John Marshall Townsend, many women who just wanted sex from a guy still woke up the morning after with worries like “Does he care about me?” and “Is sex all he was after?” This is perhaps because of the release of the bonding hormone oxytocin—upon orgasm or from intense cuddling. (In men, testosterone goes all defensive lineman, tackling the oxytocin and blocking it from getting to its receptor.) Understanding this may lead you to rethink hooking up. At the very least, you should take precautions for safe sex—like asking “Where’s the fire escape?” and telling a guy about the tender talk you need immediately afterward…such as “You can let yourself out” and “Don’t forget to leave the parking pass in my mailbox.” (c)2015, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave, #280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (advicegoddess.com).

WELLNESS CLASSES 40 Days to Personal Revolution A breakthrough program to radically change your body and awaken the sacred within your soul. A daily combination of asana practice, meditation, diet, and personal reflection will cultivate a solid foundation from which you can live and grow. Regardless of your level of experience, this program will reveal mental clarity, lightness of body, and an illumination of spirit. WEEKLY MEETINGS: Every Tuesday night at 7pm. We will gather for a one hour holistic life coaching session, learning about balancing the body using Ayurveda, healing energy through chakras and more! Recommended that all participants attend. Tuesdays, 7-8pm. Through June 9. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $40. Alleviate Stress with Essential Oils Learn how to manage stress effectively, how to use the oils safely, sample and experience the purity and potency of doTerra essential oils. RSVP: 541-420-5730. First Wednesday of every month, 1-2pm. Spirit of Pilates, 61419 Elder Ridge St. BodyFit BodyFit is a weight free, prop free training program that increases total body strength, and torches calories using nothing but your own body weight! This style of training combines calisthenics, plyometrics, and yoga! June 2, 7-8am. Thin Lizzy Athletics’ Studio, 800 NW Wall St. Suite 202. 541749-0048. $10 drop in. Healing Flow Yoga class Everyone is welcome to this donation-based Healing Flow class. A gentle flow yoga that everyone can follow and enjoy. All proceeds from donations are given to a local charity. Come meet and enjoy the other people in your community! Fridays, 4-5:15pm. Through Aug. 28. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr., Ste. 113. 541-322-9642. Free. Donations given to local charities. Fit Camp Meet at Pilot Butte on Monday, Fitness 1440 South on Wednesday and Friday. Get fit and get healthy. Mondays-Wednesdays-Fridays, 6-7pm. GOT CHI, 365 NE Greenwood Ave. 541-639-2699. Free. Free Weights Strength Class Every Tuesday and Thursday get toned and increase total body strength! These 45 minute classes include exercises using free weights (or dumbbells) with an emphasis on proper form and safety. All levels are welcome. Tues, June 2, 8:15-9am and Thurs, June 4, 8:15-9am. Thin Lizzy Athletics’ Studio, 800 NW Wall St. Suite 202. 541749-0048. $10. Functional Fitness If you like variety this is the class for you! Functional Fitness is a type of workout that prepares your body for real life activities by training your muscles to work together rather than in isolation. Classes combine multiplaner movement exercises, plyometrics, and strength training using

free weights, kettles, physio balls and other props. Workouts are different every time to keep your body guessing and keep you interested! June 1, 5:306:30pm. Thin Lizzy Athletics’ Studio, 800 NW Wall St. Suite 202. 541-749-0048. $10. Laughter Yoga Come Laugh with us on your Tuesday lunch hour: Just a half hour of simple movements that facilitate laughter and child like playfulness. It’s fun, energizing, and healing! Tuesdays, 12:30-1pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Dr. Suite 203. 541-382-7543. Donation Basis. Pilates for Golf A six-week series of classes designed specifically for golfers who want to improve their game through increased strength, power and flexibility. Open to both men and women. $20 each or $229 for the series. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 4:305:30pm. Through June 18. Bend Pilates, 143 SW Century Dr. 541-647-0876. $20 each. Recovery Yoga Wherever you are on the road of recovery, this yoga class offers a safe and confidential place to explore how meditation, pranayama (breath work), journaling, and yoga can aid in your recovery and enhance your life. The format is organic and will evolve with the students and teachers involved. This gathering is not limited to drug and alcohol dependence, as we are all on the road to recovery from something! Thursdays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. By donation. Roller Yoga A new “twist” on yoga. The focus is on proper use and techniques of foam rollers with yoga inspired stretches. Wednesdays, 6:30pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601. Free. Saturday Morning Group Runs Join us Saturday mornings for our group runs, all paces welcome! We meet at the store and run a combination of road and trail routes. A great way to get exercise, fresh air and meet fellow fitnatics! Saturdays, 8-9:30am. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601. Stretch & Restore Grace-ful Yoga Take a break mid day and join in this noon hour restorative, relaxing, stretch and breath yoga session for all ages and all levels. Bring your own yoga mat. Please RSVP to 541-382-6862. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 12:15-12:45pm. Through June 5. Grace First Lutheran Church, 2265 NW Shevlin Park Rd. Free. Tuesday Performance Group Maximize your time with focused, intense efforts. All ages and ability levels welcome. Sessions led by Max King, one of the most accomplished trail runners in the country. Email Max for weekly details and locations: max@ footzonebend.com. Tuesdays, 5:30pm. Foot Zone, 845 Wall St. Free.

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Police said they received their “strongest investigative lead” in the case of 80 frozen pizzas stolen from a warehouse in Gambell, Alaska, when John Koozaata, 29, and Lewis Oozeva, 21, called the police station and tried to sell the pizzas to on-duty officers. (Anchorage’s Alaska Dispatch) Police who found a 43-year-old man covered with blood in Suffern, N.Y., said the victim said his son stabbed him several times in the head with a screwdriver during an argument. After putting out a description of suspect Jared Hudson, 23, officers received a call from police headquarters that a man fitting Hudson’s description had just been spotted running into the station to use the bathroom. He was promptly arrested. (New York’s The Journal News)

BETTER WORLD WITHOUT PEOPLE

Nevada granted permission for Daimler to test self-driving trucks on public roads. Daimler’s Wolfgang Bernhard said autonomous trucks were likely to be on the road before driverless cars because they operate “in a less complicated traffic environment” on open highways, whereas passenger cars spend more time in congested urban settings. The 18-wheelers still need human drivers to perform more challenging off-highway maneuvers, such as backing into loading docks. Bernhard said he expects other states to join Nevada, resulting in a regulatory framework and providing an incentive to truck operators, who would save on fuel and wages. “These guys have to make money,” he pointed out. (Reuters) Google Inc. disclosed that 11 of its driverless vehicles have been involved in minor accidents on California roads since testing began six years ago. The incidents involved “light damage, no injuries,” Chris Urmson, director of Google’s self-driving car project, explained. “Not once was the self-driving car the cause of the accident.” (Associated Press) Google announced that its self-driving cars are capable of interpreting the hand signals of bicyclists. A patent issued to the company says its system uses a combination of sensors to determine when a bicycle is present and to track arm angles indicating a turn. (The Washington Post)

SONS OF BEACHES

THE THERMALS Stage Schedule Friday, June 19th 6:30pm: Woebegone 8:30pm: The Thermals

Saturday, June 20th 12:30pm: Notables Swing Band 2:00pm: Second Son 3:30pm: Corner Gospel Explosion 5:00pm: Wilderness 6:30pm: Franchot Tone 8:30pm: Common Kings

The world is running low on sand, a finite resource that’s the material basis of glass and concrete. Both are vital to construction, the prime user of sand. Sand is also used in detergents, cosmetics, toothpaste, solar panels and silicon chips. Demand is causing riverbeds and beaches worldwide to be stripped bare to provide the more than 40 billion tons of sand that people consume every year. That figure is increasing due to the worldwide construction boom, particularly in the Arab world, whose abundant desert sand is unsuitable for concrete. As a result, criminal gangs in some 70 countries are dredging up tons of sand to sell on the black market. In India, for example, “sand mafias” have killed hundreds of people, including police officers and government officials, to capitalize on demand for sand. “The fundamental problem is the massive use of cement-based construction,” said Ritwick Dutta, an Indian environmental lawyer. “That’s why the sand mafia has become so huge.” (Wired)

FRIDAY LITIGATION NATION

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James Brickman filed a lawsuit against Fitbit, claiming that his wrist-worn Fitbit Flex “consistently overestimated sleep by 67 minutes per night.” The suit, filed in a San Francisco federal court, accused the company of misleading consumers by touting that its gadgets present “exact” sleep data. “Thinking you are sleeping up to 67 minutes more than you actually are can obviously cause health consequences, especially over the long term,” the lawsuit states. Fitbit insisted the suit has no merit, pointing out, “Fitbit track-

ers are not intended to be scientific or medical devices, but are designed [to help users] reach their health and fitness goals.” (Britain’s Daily Mail) Dominique Sharpton, 28, is suing New York City for $5 million, insisting she was “severely injured, bruised and wounded” when she stumbled over uneven pavement on a downtown sidewalk. “I sprained my ankle real bad lol,” Sharpton posted on Instagram after last fall’s incident. She claims “permanent physical pain,” even though subsequent social-media postings show her wearing high heels and climbing a ladder to decorate a Christmas tree. Sharpton is the eldest child of Al Sharpton, whom critics accuse of using threats of protests and boycotts to shake down major corporations for cash donations to his causes. (The New York Post) Fred Habermel, 72, filed a lawsuit against Norton Healthcare for losing part of his brain. The complaint said doctors at Norton Cancer Institute in Louisville, Ky., extracted a piece of brain tissue to use to develop a vaccine to inject into Habermel’s head in an experimental procedure to fight a brain tumor that had resisted previous treatment. “I can see losing a blood sample, but how do you lose brain tissue?” his attorney, Gary Weiss asked. “I can’t imagine worse negligence.” Weiss said Habermel doesn’t have enough of the affected tissue left in his brain to undergo the procedure again. Despite his client’s poor prognosis, Weiss noted one silver lining: The hospital told them they wouldn’t have to pay for the surgery. (Louisville’s The Courier-Journal) Jennifer Burbella, a nursing student at Pennsylvania’s Misericordia University, is suing the school after failing a required course twice because, she claims, her professor didn’t do enough to help her pass. She acknowledged that he provided a distraction-free environment and extra time for her final exam the second time, but said she “broke down and wept more than once” because he didn’t respond to telephoned questions as he had promised. (Wilkes-Barre’s The Citizens Voice)

CORPSE FOLLIES

Shaynna Lauren Sims was arrested for illegal dissection at a funeral home in Tulsa, Oklahoma, for cutting a deceased woman’s hair, smearing makeup on the woman’s face and using a box cutter to make “a large vertical cut starting from the hairline stretching to the tip of the nose,” according to the arrest report. Sims is dating the dead woman’s ex-boyfriend. (Tulsa World) Melanie Nash, 53, admitted smashing the concrete vault that held her father’s corpse, along with three other people, and rifling through the casket in search of his “real will” because she felt she hadn’t received her proper inheritance. Instead, she found only vodka and cigarettes. Police in Colebrook, N.H., discovered the crime the next day when a patrolman reported “the gravesite of Eddie Nash did not look right,” Judge Peter Bornstein said when he sentenced Nash to 1-1/2 to three years in prison. “That is the understatement of the century.” (Associated Press)

Compiled from mainstream news sources by Roland Sweet. Authentication on demand


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 61

SMOKE SIGNALS

CANNABIS CORNER

And What About Medical Marijuana? LEAH CHATTERJEE

In just one month, Measure 91 legalizing recreational marijuana will go into effect— and with it will come major impacts for Oregon dispensaries. According to Lizette Coppinger, one of the owners of local medical marijuana dispensary Cannabend, located on N. Hwy 97 in Bend, the way that the new laws are currently slated, medical shops will not be able to sell recreational products in July. “Right now we don’t know if they will do away with medical marijuana completely and just have recreational, or if stores will be able to do both. Everything is up in the air,” she says. For example, Senate Bill 964 places new grow limitations on medical marijuana dispensaries. When asked about how that bill, if enacted, would affect the medical dispensaries, Cannabend’s Person Responsible for Facility (PRF) Lyle Coppinger says, “It’s just going to increase the number of houses full of weed in neighborhoods, versus just one house. Limiting growers doesn’t make it sustainable for anyone other than those who can afford multiple properties.” He adds, “What they’re doing, you know that they don’t want medical stores to sell recreational because, if they did, they wouldn’t be limiting them so much.” Ultimately it is the patients, some of whom require quite large quantities of pot to cope with their illnesses, who will suffer from these new limitations. Lizette says that their hope is to remain a medical dispensary, but if the new state laws makes it so hard for them to conduct business, they will switch to selling pot for recreational purposes. “Ideally,” says Lizette, “we want to do both, but we don’t want to hurt the medical patients.”

125

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Open 7 Days A Week 817 NW HILL STREET, BEND, OREGON 97701 | 541.550.7777 Free Gift For First Time Patients

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Veterans Always Receive 10% Off

CENTRAL OREGON’S NEWS LEADER

YOUR LEADING SOURCE FOR

LOCAL NEWS & WEATHER Seven days a week on:

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806 NW Brooks St., Suite 100, Bend, Oregon


62 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

REAL ESTATE Otis Craig Broker, CRS

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• 15 years experience in Central Oregon • Specialize in Custom Install, Sanding & Staining • We have Dust Containment Systems • Maintenance Coat to bring your floor back to life • We have Earth Friendly finishes with no VOCs

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541-480-3345 pinnacle_hardwood@yahoo.com Licensed-Bonded-Insured

TUMALO HOBBY FARM

PRIVATE, TRANQUIL SETTING

18.57 Acres w/ 16 Acres Irrigated 1/2 in pasture and 1/2 in hay Beautiful custom home with mountain views. Guest cottage

14.70 Acres w/ 8 Acres Irrigated Fenced, crossed fenced with beautiful pond and pasture.

65880 93rd Street, Bend OR $595,000

22855 McGrath Road, Bend OR $639,000

Natalka Palmer Principal Broker 541-480-1580

Glenda Mackie, Broker 541.410.4050 glendacmackie@gmail.com

920 NW Bond St., Ste 107 | Bend, OR 97701

For Sale Nancy Dyer

Principal Broker Licensed Realtor® in Oregon Since 1980

The Plaza 2 master suites Great views! $550,000 Deborah Posso

Specializing in NW Bend: Listings • Sales • Rentals

Broker, Licensed in the State of Oregon

541-388-9973

stay@desertpineproperties.com | 415 NW Hill Street | Bend, OR 97701

RIVER FRONT PROPERTY

LIVE ON PAULINA LAKE

ENERGY EFFICIENT HOME

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1084 NE Hobbs Ct .

Serene 3 BR home is located on the Deschutes River has 120 ft of river frontage.

Don't let this rare opportunity to live on Paulina Lake pass you by.

Green Building at its finest! Allergy free home has 3 BR plus an office.

$629,000

$195,000

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$499,000

CLASSIC NW COTTAGE

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NORTHWEST CROSSING HOME

63154 Riverstone Dr.

2853 NW Nightfall Circle

1118 NW 18th St.

Welcoming home with timeless finishes and Great Room floor plan & main level master.

5 BR, 5 BA home with unobstructed, panoramic Cascade Mountain views.

3 BR, 2.5 BA Frank Lloyd Wright inspired home. Great location in NWX!

$1,299,000

$669,500

$615,000

AGENTS

7th Mountain Resort 1 bedroom, 1 Bath Whole ownership $ 89,000

THE BEST RESOURCE FOR YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS & BEYOND.

GET BETTER EXPOSURE! The Source Real Estate listings reach 38,000 readers each week in three counties across Central Oregon!

Call 541- 38 3- 0 8 0 0

SERVICES

1033 NW Newport Ave. Bend, OR 97701

THE BOMB SQUAD REMOVAL OF K9 © LANDMINES

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Mary Shrauger Proffessional Pet Sitter

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Special Needs Animals Accepted Veterinarian Recommended Licensed • Bonded • Insured

Check us out at

www.bendsource.com


MAY 28, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 63

THE REC ROOM

CROSSWORD

PEARL’S PUZZLE

“What If?”--oh, that if. Matt Jones

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

H O T D I N E R S

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

“Conscience is what makes a boy tell his mother before ________.” -Evan Esar ANSWER TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE:

ANSWERS AT BENDSOURCE.COM Across 1 Baymax’s friend in a Disney movie 5 Art Spiegelman graphic novel 9 Dress like 13 More put-together 14 Convention center event 15 Banish from office 16 Members of the peerage who stay that way forever? 18 “Close My Eyes Forever” singer ___ Ford 19 Test that’s all talk 20 “Jaws” sighting 21 Irregular way to get paid 23 Come calling 25 Singer Josh 26 Aid in finding the Titanic 27 Go door to door, perhaps 28 2, 3, or 4, usually, in miniature golf 29 Robot comedian’s scanning command? 34 Wear down 36 Clumsy bumpkin 37 “Raw” pigment 38 Places that are lush to the max? 41 Walgreens alternative 42 Marketplace in ancient Greece 43 Blockheaded 45 Gold measures 47 Journalist Joseph 48 Actress Tomei 49 1040 expert 50 “Game of Thrones” actress Chaplin 53 “Little Things” singer India.___ 54 Device for processing flour in the distant future? 57 Caliph’s title 58 Racing pace 59 Vegas table option 60 Bull, for one 61 “Happy Motoring” company of yore 62 ___-majesté

Down 1 Salon sweepings 2 Pro 3 Catch, as a fish 4 Round figure 5 Badge justification 6 Impulse transmitter 7 “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” station 8 “My apologies!” 9 “Jurassic Park” actor 10 Board for fortune-seekers 11 ___ Martin (Bond’s car) 12 Semi-educated guess 13 ___-mo 17 “Hearts ___” (‘90s TV series) 22 Numskulls 24 Demonstrates fuel efficiency 25 Blunder 26 Indian woman’s attire 27 R&B singer of “Oh” and “Promise” 28 “As ___ instructions” 30 Pride sounds 31 Airer of the Triple Crown and the Summer Olympics 32 “Scream” actress Campbell 33 ‘01 and ‘10, e.g. 35 “Heavens to Betsy!” 39 As desired, in recipes 40 1960s U.N. ambassador Stevenson 44 Prank performed on someone in a headlock 45 Word in a Lennon title 46 Common font variety 47 Probably will, after “is” 48 Mangle 49 Companies’ money execs 51 Handle 52 Pro vote 55 Auditing gp. 56 Lightning org.

©2014 JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS (EDITOR@JONESINCROSSWORDS.COM)

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We’re Local! Questions, comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark at pearl@bendsource.com © Pearl Stark


64 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / MAY 28, 2015

Get out there and Vaporize 1341 ne 3rd • 541-317-3566 Open 7 days a week!

The Summit, new from Vapium

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ALL AREAS - ROOMMATES.COM Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: http://www.Roommates.com

STAFF WRITER The Source is seeking a staff writer to fill a position in our editorial department. The successful candidate will have excellent writing and communication skills and the ability to manage multiple tasks on deadline. You must have a strong knowledge of and passion for all things Central Oregon. Send resumes and writing samples to editor@bendsource.com. No phone calls please.

BEND COMMUNITY ACUPUNCTURE LOW COST, SLIDING SCALE 388-4999 www.bendcommunityacupuncture.org

BEND INDOOR SWAP MEET SATURDAY MARKET 10AM-5PM THU-FRI-SAT-SUN N 694 SE 3rd Street between Grocery Outlet & Rite Aid. 317-4847.

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CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET “Where the seller is the maker” since 1974. Opening this Saturday and Sunday, Memorial Day Weekend, in Downtown Bend across from the Public Library from 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM. 100 vendors! The largest selection of local artists and crafters East of the Cascades with music, food and free promotion of various community non-profit groups every week. Call (541) 420-9015 or visit us on Facebook

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