VOLUME 19 / ISSUE 39 / SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
FREE
> NEWS / P.7
Rising to Bend’s Energy Challenge
> INDULGENCE / P.9 Top-of-the-line Treats
> SOUND / P.19
BEND FALL FESTIVAL GUIDE INSIDE
Chatting with Citizen Cope
> CHOW / P.31
Cooking with Cannabis
Fall
IT’S TIME TO PLAN YOUR Escape TO SUNRIVER RESORT
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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EDITOR-AT-LARGE Lisa Seales ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR Jared Rasic EDITORIAL ASSISTANT/CALENDAR EDITOR Hayley Jo Murphy COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts BEER REVIEWER Kevin Gifford LITERARY CRITIC Christie Hinrichs COLUMNISTS Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Matt Jones, EJ Pettinger, Pearl Stark, Kayja Buhmann, Steve Holmes FREELANCERS Eric Skelton, Anne Pick, Charlie Hunter, Allison Miles, Brennan Pertzer PRODUCTION MANAGER Annelie Kahn GRAPHIC DESIGNER Esther Gray ADVERTISING SALES DIRECTOR Amanda Klingman ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Ban Tat, Chris Larro, Kimberly Morse OFFICE/ACCOUNTS/CIRCULATION MANAGER Sarah Curran CONTROLLER Angela Switzer
BE AN ENERGY HERO In NEWS this week we talk to Lindsay Hardy, project director for the Bend Energy Challenge, and Gillian Ockner, senior policy analyst for the City of Bend, and learn about The Bend Energy Challenge. The BEC developed out of the Georgetown Energy Prize, a national competition that pits Bend against 49 other communities to develop lasting, sustainable, energy-saving innovations. The prize for winning is $5 million. Learn what is being done and how to get involved to make positive changes in your home, lifestyle, community, and the climate.
FREE
INDULGENCE Feel like it’s finally time to treat yourself to something special? We all deserve a little splurge now and then, and this week’s FEATURE unveils a variety of ideas about how to treat yourself right. No matter what you’re into—cars, booze, electronics, outdoor gear, or spas— we’ve got a little something for everyone. So relax and read all about your next big indulgence. GET READY TO ROCK This weekend is the Bend Roots Revival, a free, three-day music festival with six different stages scattered between the Art Station and the Deschutes Brewery Warehouse on Shevlin Hixon Drive. In SOUND, we catch up with Mark Ransom, co-founder and manager, and Joe Schulte of String Theory Music. Find out what these two have to say about the festival and life as a musician in a variety of bands performing this weekend. CROCK‘POT’ GOODIES With October 1 right around the corner, in this week’s CHOW we examine how to cook with cannabis. Sure, you can just add the leafy green stuff to your favorite boxed brownie mix, but our cannabis chef will show you how to take that recipe to the next level, all with the ease and simplicity of the crockpot. FUNGIS LOVERS' DELIGHT It’s that time of year again, mushroom hunting season! In OUTSIDE learn how to go about hunting delectable matsutake mushrooms, including permitting requirements, proper harvesting techniques, and cooking instructions. Unfortunately, we can only share so much, so you’re still on your own to find those secret hunting spots.
> NEWS / P.7
Rising to Bend’s Energy Challenge
> INDULGENCE / P.9 Top-of-the-line Treats
> SOUND / P.19
BEND FALL FESTIVAL GUIDE INSIDE
Chatting with Citizen Cope
> CHOW / P.31
Cooking with Cannabis
ABOUT THE COVER PHOTOGRAPHER BYRON ROE AND HIS INDULGENCE I've always been a Mustang guy and I'm especially a sucker for the 1967 Mustang Fastback. It's in my blood, I assume because my father couldn't stop talking about his '66 convertible every year since my birth. So when I found Rita— named for the American actress Rita Hayworth—three years ago in Rockford, Illinois, I jumped at the chance of owning a car that is not only one of the most iconic symbols of American muscle, but to me, one of the most stylish cars ever designed.
Mailbox 5 The Boot
6
PUBLISHER Aaron Switzer
News 7
WILD CARD Paul Butler
Feature 9
NATIONAL ADVERTISING Alternative Weekly Network 916-551-1770
3 VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
EDITOR Erin Rook
Cover Photo by Local Photographer Byron Roe | www.studio-br.com
VOLUME 19 / ISSUE 39 / SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
The Source Weekly 704 NW Georgia Ave. Bend, OR 97703 t. 541-383-0800 f. 541-383-0088 www.bendsource.com info@bendsource.com
IN THIS ISSUE
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Screen 38 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.
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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!
LIGHTMETER
OSU-CASCADES
5 VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Wow! I read the headlines of The Bulletin, “Truth in Site’s appeal fails,” it all seem so incredible to me. It seems to me that if you mention the magic words OSU-Cascades, suddenly everyone’s eyes glaze over and they start nodding their heads to everything. The university’s argument was that they might not buy the 46-acre property, even though they have spent over $600,000 holding the property and have researched what they would need to do to it and they speak of it as they envisioned it to add enough capacity to reach 5,000 students, but they might not. That reminds me of when my 6 year old son wanted to ride his bike, I told him to wear a helmet, because he might, by chance, fall. His brilliant comeback was, “I might not.” As adults we are supposed to think ahead and look at the future possibilities, and do what is best, The Big Picture. The other half of “might not” is “might.”
remember us next year for the publication, better yet, why not come in and visit us and see what you are missing? —John Aylward
BREAKFAST AND LUNCH GUIDE I look forward to reading the Source every week when it comes out. They have dropped two bundles of newspapers at our restaurant every week for many years for our patrons to read and keep up with current local events. Imagine my surprise today opening the paper and seeing a Bend Breakfast and Lunch Guide with many great options. Imagine my surprise thumbing through the pages once, then again but still not seeing our name in print in the guide. Sargent’s Café is a Bend tradition, going back some fifty years, many of our patrons remember their parents bringing them in and now they are bringing in their grandkids. No, we are not a new restaurant in Bend, yes, we still open at 6 am every day except Thanksgiving and Christmas. We are a local independent small business providing regulars, locals, and tourists affordable meals. We are the little place that posts birthday wishes on our billboard for our friends and celebrities. Nothing fancy, just good old fashioned food and old fashioned prices, seriously the best value in Bend. If you are looking for bacon and eggs, biscuits and gravy, pancakes or chicken fried steak we’ve got it. (We also serve Rueben sandwiches; I saw that mentioned in the intro to your guide.) Oh, I noticed our neighbors down the street made the guide, I did not realize Stars Cabaret served breakfast? Well, I guess we both are Bend institutions. Please
IN REPLY TO “SEVEN THINGS TO REFLECT ON AS THE FOREST FIRE FLAMES SUBSIDE” (9/23) As a professional forester with 33-years of experience in Oregon, I offer seven comments in response to Mr. Pedery’s opinion piece: 1. It is interesting that he criticizes the forest industry for using fires to advance its agenda even as he is using fires to advance his own. I encourage Oregon Wild to redirect its energy from criticizing others to direct participation in the many collaborative projects underway to promote landscape-scale forest restoration if it believes the priorities are wrong and money is being wasted. 2. He over-generalizes the fire tolerance of “old growth” (however that term is defined). Yes, for ponderosa pine and western larch, but not so much for lodgepole pine, mountain hemlock, and white fir. 3. He seems to forget that about a third of Oregon’s forests are privately-owned financial assets that the owners would like protected. Unless he is advocating converting all forests to public ownership, just thinning around homes and letting fire run its course everywhere else is not sustainable when environmental, economic, and social values are holistically considered.
4. I would argue that 100 years of fire suppression and the last 30 years of a lack of vegetation management on federal lands have done more to promote recent unnatural fire behavior than continued fire suppression coupled with more active forest management on non-federal lands.
will soon need to be repeated; or 3. Conduct more intensive, science-based, site-specific restoration treatments across the broader landscape, which in some cases might actually generate some revenue.
5. He seems to believe old growth continues to be under attack from logging. I am not sure where that is still happening at any scale close to the acres of old growth are being lost each year to fires than to chainsaws (think Santiam Pass). It is also important to remember that Oregon forests have always been affected by disturbances such as fire, windstorms, insects, and disease and were never an unbroken sea of large trees, but rather a mosaic of different age classes.
LETTER OF THE WEEK
6. His tired rhetoric about environmental damage caused by logging does not reflect modern forest practices regulated by state and federal governments. There are good clearcuts and bad clearcuts just as there are good thinnings and bad thinnings. In the right forest type, in the right location, and depending on management objectives clearcut regeneration harvesting and perhaps even (gasp) salvage harvests can be the best choice and conducted in a manner that protects and maintains forest ecological processes. 7. It seems that society has three choices: 1. Let fires run their course and live with the consequences; 2. Do tax-payer subsidized light fuel treatments near communities that may or may not be adequate to save them or to restore forests to healthier conditions and
—David Morman
David—We appreciate your thoughtful letter, backed by years of experience in forest management. We agree that at the end of the day it all comes down to making choices, choices based on values. Unfortunately, we can’t help douse the fires, but we can offer you a cup of copyrighted 2015 coffee on us from Palate. E.J. Pettinger’s
Mild Abandon
E.J. Pettinger’s
copyrighted 2015
Mild Abandon
“OHHH! Now I get it! It’s a septuple-entendre!” “OHHH! Now I get it! It’s a septuple-entendre!”
HIGHLIGHTS THIS WEEK TONS OF GREAT EVENTS TO LOOK FORWARD TO THIS WEEK
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Nine time US Freestyle kayak team member Dustin Urban enjoys the park’s bottom wave during testing recently. Three of the four waves are named for folks from the river community. This one is named to honor former Bank of the Cascades VP and avid raft captain Jason “TL” Mitchell. Photo courtesy of Jayson Bowerman.
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The idea that every college student will ride the bus or walk or bike. What about the winter below freezing, icy roads? Hey, here is a realistic possibility, when the roads are too icy, the city can add more water down the bike lanes and give ice skates to all the students and they can all ice skate to college. Perfect.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Legal Threat is a Wake Up Call
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s a society, Americans have a reputation for being litigious. This tendency to sue over every too-hot coffee or too-tall neighbor’s fence is tedious, time consuming, and expensive. But sometimes, lawsuits are the clearest and quickest path to justice. When attempts to work things out informally fail, the mere threat of legal action can be a powerful impetus for change. And when threats fall flat, seeking relief from a judge is not unreasonable, it’s what they’re there for. Take, for example, the notices of intent to sue, submitted by the environmental groups WaterWatch of Oregon and the Center for Biological Diversity, in response to concerns that local irrigators and the Bureau of Reclamation are mismanaging dams and killing the federally protected Oregon spotted frog. Representatives from the irrigation districts named in the letters have expressed disappointment over the notices, saying they don’t understand why a group they have collaborated with would take a legal approach. “WaterWatch is part of the [Deschutes] basin study workgroup,” Central Oregon Irrigation District Manager told the Source. “It was surprising that they filed the notice when they’ve been sitting with us at the table.” But WaterWatch Communications Director Jim McCarthy writes in a recent letter to the editor that this collaboration has fallen woefully short.
Your Local expert
“Representatives of the various irrigation districts have made statements about purported solutions for this stretch of river emerging from a Deschutes Basin Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) working group,” McCarthy says. “WaterWatch has been a participant in the HCP working group for approximately six years, during which time there has been little to no change in the management of the Upper Deschutes River or impacts to
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fish and wildlife.” He goes on to allege that after the irrigation districts set up monthly meetings with the HCP working group that WaterWatch understood were intended to address their concerns as well as those of the state and federal fish and wildlife agencies, those meetings were canceled for eight months straight. “WaterWatch has been extremely patient, but the time for the politics of postponement is over,” McCarthy concludes. “Solutions for the Upper Deschutes River are needed now, not years from now, and this is why WaterWatch was moved to act.” As much as we’d prefer a world with fewer lawsuits, we certainly can’t blame WaterWatch and the Center for Biological Diversity for turning up the heat. If the irrigation districts want to avoid a legal battle, they should ensure they are taking appropriate steps to protect the Oregon spotted frog and make those efforts clear and indisputable. A recent Bulletin editorial notes that, “lawsuits aren’t going to make it rain or snow more.” But the environmental groups aren’t asking for a meteorological miracle. They are asking dam managers to maintain a more consistent flow. And a lawsuit could force the hand of irrigation districts. We’re all for working things out around the table. But it’s harder to do if you don’t actually show up. The recent decision by the federal government not to list the sage grouse is a good example of how effective collaborations can lead to creative solutions that bypass government intervention. Perhaps instead of feigning shock and offense that a so-called collaborator would take legal action, irrigators should look to cattle ranchers and others who found a way to work with environmental groups to protect a vulnerable species in a way that works for everyone.
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NEWS
Race for the Climate Cure
Bend Energy Challenge aims for conservation and a cash prize
SIDE NOTES By Lisa Seales
7
By Lisa Seales
For the past five years an unparalleled, collaborative, science-based, landscape-scale conservation effort has been underway in 11 states across the western U.S. And, according to the USFW announcement, it’s been a success; across the 173-million acre range, grouse remain well distributed and relatively abundant. U.S. Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell describes the sage grouse effort as truly historic and says, “It demonstrates that the Endangered Species Act is an effective and flexible tool and a critical catalyst for conservation.”
Local Energy Hero, Owen Page. Photo courtesy of Bend Energy Challenge.
A
s the race against climate change continues, local efforts are well underway to make positive changes in Bend in support of the Bend Energy Challenge (BEC), an energy-saving competition, prompted by the Georgetown Energy Prize. As one of two Oregon semifinalists (including Corvallis), Bend is hoping its efforts will be enough to garner the top prize—$5 million. The competition pits Bend against 49 other communities around the country to develop lasting, sustainable, energy-saving innovations. To make it this far in the competition, The Environmental Center, which is spearheading the challenge, partnered with municipal folks including the City, Bend Parks and Rec, the Bend La Pine School District, and the power companies—who are pulling all the data for the competition—to implement strategies to increase energy efficiency over the twoyear period from 2015 to 2016. “They were all really excited to do it,” says Lindsay Hardy, project director for the BEC, “which shows how forward thinking we are here in Bend.” According to Gillian Ockner, senior policy analyst for the City of Bend, the City is participating through energy use reduction at its facilities, employee engagement, and policy changes. Many of these efforts are part of an ongoing attempt to better conserve energy at the City. For example, the City has been part of the Energy Trust of Oregon’s Strategic Energy Management Program since 2012. “We are on track to meet our goal of reducing energy consumption at our facilities by 15 percent from our 2012 baseline
within a three-year period, through 2016. To date, we have saved 9.4 percent in electricity and 6.5 percent in gas compared to our 2012 baseline,” Ockner explains. “Our estimated savings from reduction in energy consumption is $27,000 and we have received an estimated $5,600 in Energy Trust of Oregon incentives.” Thus far, she says, all those savings have come at minimal costs to the City. They’ve been able to achieve those reductions by simply fine-tuning building systems and educating staff in energy efficiency practices. The BEC started at the beginning of this year, so it’s well underway, but far from over. There are plenty of opportunities for Bendites to get involved and educate themselves about reducing energy usage, giving Bend a competitive edge for the competition—and the future. This week is a particularly good time to get involved because it’s the Bend Energy Challenge Week and the 15th annual Green Tour—a week of energy education and inspiration for the whole family and building community. “The tour is really exciting because we are celebrating people who are doing things right in the community, and these are great examples to see first hand what you can do. So even if you’re not building a new home, there are takeaways from the tour about what you can do in your own home,” Hardy explains. She also notes that there are two retrofits on the tour that show what’s possible when doing upgrades and improvements on existing homes. One home was built in 1971 and the other in 2013, “showing that your home is never too old or too new to have a tune-up.”
However, you don’t have to buy a new home or do a major renovation to participate in the BEC. Hardy encourages community members to start by taking the pledge to be a Bend Energy Hero at bend. wattzon.com. The website offers online tips for saving energy that don’t require a significant financial investment or a major behavior change. Next, she says, consider having an energy assessment done on your home. Local businesses like GreenSavers, Neil Kelly, and Button Up Energy are all available to do comprehensive analyses of how homes are using, and losing, energy. Another simple step: Get an energy kit from the Energy Trust of Oregon; the kits contain up to 12 free light bulbs, which provide instant energy savings. And finally, Hardy says, don’t underestimate the power of word of mouth. Every person who learns about the Bend Energy Challenge puts the group one step closer to its 5,200 engagement goal. “Just having this conversation is helpful,” she says. While $5 million is a good motivator for Bendites to make some positive changes in their homes, lifestyles, communities, and the climate, it’s not just about the prize. Whether or not Bend takes home the top prize, it’s already starting to reap rewards. While the data isn’t in yet, the preliminary accounting shows that the community may have already saved more than a million dollars this year through conservation. “If we win, we win,” Hardy says, noting, “but even if we don’t win, we still win.” Check out all the workshops and homes on the tour at bendenergychallenge.org/events.
Tom Vilsack, secretary of U.S. Agriculture, highlights that “Together, we have shown that voluntary efforts joining the resources of private landowners, federal and state agencies, and partner organizations can help drive landscape-level conservation that is good for sage-grouse, ranching operations, and rural communities.” Here in Oregon, Gov. Kate Brown called the decision a “big win” for Oregon, and stated that “Oregonians have reason to be very proud of the work done by partners supporting healthy Oregon ecosystems, rural communities, and economies.” Here’s hoping the positive momentum created by the impending listing continues into the future without the proposed threat. The City of Bend continues work on the Urban Growth Boundary (UGB) expansion, and once again they are looking for public input. They’re launching the second part of their online survey that asks the public to weigh in on which UGB expansion scenario they favor. The survey will be available from September 24 to October 14. For more information, check the City’s website, bendoregon.gov/bendugb. Additionally, there will be a community meeting on the topic of the proposed UGB expansion scenarios. The meeting will be held October 1, from 6:30-8:30 pm, at the Bend Parks & Recreation District’s Riverbend Community Room, at 799 SW Columbia St. The presentation will begin at 7pm, but participants are welcome to arrive anytime. Attendees will also be shown how to use the online survey to comment on the proposed scenarios.
Due to the rebuilding of the railroad crossing, Reed Market Road is scheduled to be closed in both directions from September 22 to October 6. After completion of the railroad crossing, Reed Market road will reopen in both directions.
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
More than a week shy of the deadline at the end of the month, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced that the greater sage grouse does not warrant protection under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). This marks a historic moment in conservation and resource management.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 8
e g l u d n I W
ith the craziness of summer behind us, the days are getting shorter, and we find ourselves settling back into a daily routine. After the frenetic energy of summer, now is the perfect time to relax a bit and indulge. What does it mean to truly indulge? The concept behind indulgence is doing something you really want, enjoy, or desire, and sometimes, but not always, that pleasure is thought of as wrong or unhealthy. If you were raised Catholic, an indulgence is seen as a way to reduce the amount of punishment for one’s sins. Putting religion aside, this issue of the Source focuses on a variety of ways to treat yourself to something nice. Whether, you’re interested in top-of-the-line electronics, automobile accessories, or active gear, or you’d rather sink into an indulgent experience and enjoy an amazing beverage or a trip to the spa, we’ve got a little something for everyone. If you’re looking for a massage while driving a fancy sports car, or want to sit out in the wildness in your portable hot tub, we’ve got you covered. So go ahead, sit back, relax, and indulge…..it’ll definitely make life a little sweeter.
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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By Lisa Seales
hen contemplating the idea of indulging or splurging on something nice for yourself, you might seek something tangible, like a new toy. However, another option is to seek out an experience. Sure, it’s nice to have a bright shiny new toy, but we all know that after a short time those new toys typically end up in a corner collecting dust. So, for those of you seeking to indulge in extravagant experiences, here are some great tips to do just that!
Cascade Center
of Photography
Brasada Ranch Staycation
The Spa at Brasada
Jinsei’s Nirvana
Looking to be pampered to the nines, but not wanting to spend hours or days getting to your destination? Then make the short drive east to Brasada Ranch. This place is rustic elegance at its absolute finest! Whether you are going alone or with your sweetheart, your whole family, or the entire staff from your office, Brasada has something for everyone, and if they don’t they’ll bend over backward to accommodate you. From unbeatable views of the Cascades to the playroom we all wanted as kids (or still want as adults), they truly have it all. Magnificent suites, one, two, three, or four bedroom cabins, two phenomenal restaurants often serving food harvested just miles away, an 18-hole golf course designed so you don’t keep bumping into other golfers, an equestrian center, a luxurious spa, two pools including a lazy river and water slide, a gym, a playroom, a regulation sand volleyball court, tennis courts, pickleball, hiking, biking, fishing, horseback riding…. the list really is endless. And they will cater to you, your group, your needs, and your greatest desires. Your wish really is their command! Lodging prices in the high season range from $220 (for a suite) to $880 (for the four-bedroom cabin), though deals can be found in the shoulder season, so this indulgence is one that might not be out of reach.
There are spas and then there are spas. If you’re looking to relax, unwind, and indulge, this is the place to do it! While most spas have similar offerings, Brasada has (at least) one thing that sets it apart from the competition…. the four-handed massage! Yep, you read that correctly. Lie back and relax while two massage therapists use choreographed, rhythmic movements to induce deep relaxation. The four-handed massage is $268 for 60 minutes, or $392 for 90 minutes. If you’re really looking to indulge, follow that with their replenishing body ritual ($269 for 120 minutes), which includes a lemongrass mimosa body scrub and detoxification seaweed wrap. Conclude your indulgent session relaxing in their steam room and nibbling on their signature lavender shortbread cookies made exclusively for Brasada.
Looking to stay in town and indulge? Well then, set aside four hours for an afternoon of decadence. Why stop at one spa treatment when you can have all the most powerful ones wrapped into one amazing afternoon of relaxation and rejuvenation? Jinsei’s Nirvana allows you to choose between the Hammam Ritual—a Turkish purifying and restorative treatment which includes a lemon coffee scrub, steam, a purifying jasmine clay wrap, and a cardamom and amber therapeutic massage—or a Sento Ritual—a Japanese treatment for releasing tension and stimulating vital flow, that includes a purifying gingergrass bamboo scrub followed by a softening cherry blossom rice buff, a visit to the steam room, and a massage using beautifully scented Kinmoxei wild lime silk oil. Follow all that indulgence with a skin-reviving oxygenating facial, and finish with lunch and a Jinsei pedicure. $350 for four hours of indulgence.
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M
Price: $1,820 and up
Mercedes air scarf Price: $510-3,750 It’s understandable that in today’s society the task of tying an actual scarf around your neck can be cumbersome and confusing. After all, you need to set down your iPhone and use both hands for about 20 seconds. Never fear! Mercedes-Benz has removed the need for actual scarves when you decide to drive your convertible with the top down after summer’s end. The automotive kings of comfort have invented a virtual scarf which blows hot air on the back of your neck while you drive, keeping you nice and cozy and looking like a royal ass who doesn’t know what season they’re in. This indulgence is $510 on a SLK55 AMG, or part of a $3,750 package on other models.
If you’re thinking about outfitting the car for resale value, you may want to check your head. With only a few exceptions, such as alloy wheels or a desirable performance package, most options add almost nothing to the value of a vehicle. Contrariwise, according to Car & Driver, it’s far more common that a vehicle will lose value because it’s lacking a common feature such as power windows, automatic transmission, or air conditioning.
Rolls Royce starlight headliner
But as long as you’re interested in decadent options for the sake of your own comfort, expecting little or no compensation, then there are many fine ways to spoil yourself—with many of them only available from Mercedes-Benz. It remains a sad fact that you can’t have your car seat massage you at the same time it blows hot air on your neck underneath the artificial starlight of your Rolls Royce. Not yet, anyway…
Price: $12,000 (similar feature also available in an Opel Adam for under $500) The king of expensive and useless indulgences has to be the Rolls Royce Phantom, which presents the option to have 1,600 starlight LEDs festooned on the headliner. The price of this unexpected pampering? An extravagant $12,000! However, it gets props for exclusivity, since it’s the only car offering such a feature. Wait, what’s that? You can get one on a European-spec GM car for under $500? Now I feel dumb.
I
t really depends on how we define indulgence to decide whether we should feel bad about indulging or not. If we’re playing by Catholic rules then we are in “partial remission of temporal punishment,” which means hell, because we still owe some form of penance. That sounds too stressful. Following the more...everyday definition, it is a little simpler: yielding to a desire. Treating yourself to something you want instead of need. The thing we indulge in might not save our lives, but it sure as hell will make that life sweeter. Tech toys walk a fine line between indulgence and necessity. Being alive in 2015 means having access to certain technologies will enhance not only our quality of life, but also the convenience and accessibility of interaction with culture, popular and otherwise. While having a 75-inch HD 4K flatscreen with 7.1 surround sound might be seen as incredibly unnecessary, if one of your true joys is
watching films, TV shows, or sports, then it’s basically a priceless investment in happiness. Life is stressful, dammit, and the moments where true bliss can be found are more important than we give them credit for. Someone who would spend $90,000 on a mountain bike might judge someone for spending $10,000 on a television (and vice versa), but, objectively, everyone has different things that keeps the doldrums away as we wait for that next paycheck or those next vacation days. Which, yes, makes us consumers. As much as we would all like to be organic farmers living in a yurt, sometimes we just want to watch Bruce Willis blow something up so loudly that we feel it in our toenails. With that said, here are a few things to consume that are absolutely, ridiculously, indulgent...and all the more beautiful for it.
by Jared Rasic
Home Theater
Camera
Smoke Products
Stereo Planet has a good reputation for indulgences and this setup is by far the most magnificent around. It’s a 4K, 75-inch Sony flatscreen with a 7.1 surround sound system ($5,000). But that’s just the icing, the cake is the accessories. That beautiful televisual behemoth is connected to a pair of 600W McIntosh monoblock amplifiers ($14,000 a pair) and a McIntosh preamp ($7,000), all coming through flawlessly on Sonos Faber speakers ($13,000). It has a turntable, so there is an analog source, as well. This set-up is mostly geared toward high-quality music, but the video quality from the television is gorgeous. Even the cabling, which is high quality silver wire, will run you around $5,500. All in all, this will set you back around $44,500, but a comfortable home theater is priceless.
The Canon EOS 70D DSLR ($1,299 at Best Buy) is a beast. It has 20.2 megapixels, a 10012,800 ISO equivalent, 7 frames per second, 1080p with Wi-Fi and multiple exposures while also having a casserole ready if you come home from work late and just need to take a little break. The screen on this bad boy shows you the picture you’re taking as opposed to having to look through the viewfinder and as you adjust the ISO, shutter speed, or aperture, the screen shows you exactly what the picture will look like. Maybe we’re not supposed to have this technology. Faces will become too clear and mountain ranges will look so beautiful, we won’t be inspired to climb them. Oh....AND YOU CAN MAKE MOVIES WITH IT, TOO!! Soon, the Canon will be our master, and we its vassals, sending images to its mother brain, deep beneath the Sierra Nevadas. Seriously though, this camera is amazing and will change your life.
Smoking weed is complicated nowadays with vapes, dabs, nails, and everything in between. For the health-conscious head, there is the D-Nail Ninja ($550) for concentrates. It heats the pen electronically via wall plug-in, so that way the clumsier stoners don’t kill themselves by torch or other extreme flame device. The 12-inch T-case comes with a digital control station, heaters, nails, a coil heater with kevlar sheath, and power cords. April Grow from A Piece of Mind reminded this reporter that, “Glass can be techy, too,” especially with the advent of the Hi Si ($350), a scientific approach to smoking. With a percolator design that induces maximum cooling to the smoke you inhale, it reduces the health risks inherent in inhaling hot, smoke-filled air. Walter White would love this thing. This way, you can have a pretty glass accessory, while also filling your tech quota.
... continues on page 12
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
While it’s not the greatest massage in the world, it’s still a massage while you’re driving your car, which is better than you’re getting unless you’ve hired a masseuse to sit in the seat directly behind you. Sometimes, putting a five-year-old with cramping legs behind you will net the same result for cheaper. The option comes stand-alone for $1,820 on a S550, or is part of a premium package on the CL550, or comes included if you buy anything with a V-12. While now available from other luxury manufacturers, Mercedes pioneered this luxury option in 2000.
There are a couple of decisions you need to make before your purchase. First, identify your reasons for wanting to outfit your vehicle. Is it for you, or are you doing it to increase resale value? Do you want a nifty doo-dad because you think it’s cool, or because you expect that somebody else will want it later on?
Tech Toys
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Mercedes-Benz massaging seats
odern auto indulgences can bring the great outdoors inside, and the comfort of a sedan into the world of topless automobiles. Everybody seems to want what they don’t have. Those with open tops want the comfort of a warm cabin. Those with a cabin want to see the stars. If you are torn between the decision to go indoors or outdoors with your next vehicle purchase, and especially if you are obscenely rich, a couple of new options may be able to make life just a little more convenient.
Barley wine Not a wine at all, but a type of very strong ale originating from England. Mirror Mirror from Deschutes is a barley wine, a sort of “mega” version of Mirror Pond Pale Ale featuring earthy toffee-like favors and an eye-popping 11.2 percent alcohol by volume. Anchor Brewing in San Francisco was the first to reintroduce the style to the American craft scene, but Sierra Nevada’s Bigfoot (an annual release since 1983!) is the most well-known barley wine in the country right now.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Barrel aging
by Kevin Gifford
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hat does it take to be a truly dedicated fan of craft ale and liquor? A welltrained palate? A temperature-controlled cellar? A bank account the size of the moon? All three help—but exploring the upper tier of alcohol requires some education, too. When it comes to beer, the biggest indulgence purchase you can make is undoubtedly Utopias. Produced on an on-and-off basis by Samuel Adams in Boston, Utopias is a barley wine-style ale, a blend of several beers aged in a selection of different barrels. Poured out of a metallic, potion-like bottle, it may technically be a beer, but it drinks more like a rye or some other sipping liquor—not the kind of thing you chug for summer refreshment, but a a drink meant to be savored over a roaring fire and a good book. It also costs $200 a bottle, ensuring that you’ll look very refined (or very rich) if you leave it laying out on the table for your friends to gawk at. On the local side, similar indulgent experiences can be found with barrel-aged or sour ales. The Abyss, Deschutes Brewery’s annual imperial stout release, is due out in November, offering heavy oak/wine flavors and a heavier hangover if you attempt to complete a 750-milliliter bottle by
yourself. (Hit the pub when it comes out—you’ll get to enjoy it alongside the past several years’ Abyss releases, giving you an insight into what aging certain beers can accomplish.) The Ale Apothecary’s lineup of wild-fermented ales is an exotic mix of flavors you’ll see with few other beers, and each one of them is worth the $20-30 a bottle. If you really want to exercise your wallet, however, Cascade Brewing is your jam—their line of sour fruit-flavored beers frequently cost over $30 a pop, and while the intense fruit and sour notes in their lineup is a love-it-or-hate-it thing, there’s no denying that it’s unique. Why stop at beer, for that matter? The Distiller’s Choice line from Oregon Spirit Distillers features a range of heady spirits, from a vodka flavored with Trinidad Scorpion peppers to a straight bourbon whisky aged in new American oak. If you want to go hardcore with it though, look up their Adopta-Barrel program. For a mere $1,300, you can purchase your own barrel, have them age whiskey in it at their facility, then reap the rewards when it’s ready for tapping. (Thriftier drinkers can just sample OSD’s line at their new Barrel Thief tasting room, staging their grand opening next Saturday.)
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Certain types of heavier beer, such as barley wines or stouts, can be aged in casks that once held bourbon or wine, granting it a woody oakiness and flavors from whatever liquor it used to hold. The Ale Apothecary ages all of their beer in oak, and Deschutes’ annual Abyss Imperial Stout is a blend of several beers, partially aged in bourbon, Oregon oak, and pinot noir barrels. Goose Island’s Bourbon County Brand Stout lineup is the stuff of dreams for beer fans, and it’s now regularly available in Oregon every fall.
Sour beer Using funky yeast strains and wild fermentation allows brewers to add hints of puckering funkiness to their beer, making it unlike any other style on the market. Portland’s Cascade Brewing is Oregon’s king of sour, with their $30 Kriek tasting precisely like liquid cherry pie in your mouth. Bay Area-based Almanac Beer Co. also provides a line of “farm-to-barrel” sour beers, all readily available around Bend.
Single-pass spirits Distillation is the step between fermentation and maturation when making whiskey. Phrases like “triple-distilled” often get bandied around by spirit makers, but generally speaking, the more distilling you do, the “lighter” and more aromatic the resulting liquor is. Oregon Spirit Distillers’ Straight Bourbon Whiskey is a single-pass drink, one matured in a smaller 30-gallon barrel to allow a larger surface area of contact between the bourbon and the oak.
Hours of
Funner October 3rd
WANOGA SNO-PARK: Shuttles for Funner, Tiddlywinks, Tyler’s Treverse and Stormking
Party at Elk Lake! SAVE $20, PRE-REGISTER AT
CancerBikeOut.org
Use promo code OCBO Like & Share on Facebook Oregon Cancer Bike Out
New This Year
Anna Vacca's “BIG FAT” Epic XC Ride
All Proceeds Benefit St. Charles Foundation, Partners in Care of Central Oregon, COTA, Candlelighters for Children with Cancer
Now at the Old Mill (In the former Orvis building by Naked Winery)
320 SW Powerhouse Dr.
541.382.0791
W
hen it comes to the outdoors, luxury is relative. If you’re suffering through a backpacking trip in the pouring rain or driving snow, for example, a pair of warm, fleece-lined waterproof gloves or a hot bowl of miso soup might be your idea of luxury—but those things aren’t indulgent. If you count the ounces in your pack and then toss in a couple beers at the last minute, that could be considered indulgent. But most indulgent outdoor items really aren’t meant for the backcountry. They’re designed for car-camping, backyard camping, or maybe a multi-day music festival. And when you take weight out of the equation, the sky’s the limit for indulgence in the outdoors. Here are a few items to take your camp to the next level.
Roccbox Pizza Oven
Heimplanet Cave Tent
$465
$545
$699
There’s no better way to enjoy the beauty of the great outdoors than from the comfort of your portable hot tub. Sure, a down sleeping bag is cozy enough when the temperature drops and the fire dwindles, but relying on your sleeping bag for warmth is a bit antisocial and the campfire can only keep you warm for so long. The Nomad Collapsible Hot Tub brings luxury to sleeping outside. Weighing just 20 lbs., the Nomad holds 225 gallons and can be filled in 10 minutes. Don’t slink away into your tent for warmth, move the party to the hot tub.
Put down the ramen noodles. Throw out the dehydrated lasagna. Step away from the easy mac. The Roccbox Pizza Oven means that sleeping in the woods and enjoying delectable, wholesome meals are no longer mutually exclusive. Roccbox is a compact and portable solution to the feeling of full, yet under satisfied at camp. It works with propane or wood-fire fuel and can cook up a 12-inch pizza in 90 seconds. It also works great for breads, desserts, veggies, fish, and other meats. Compact though it may be, it weighs in at a hefty 45 lbs., so don’t expect to carry it into the backcountry.
Say goodbye to camping’s biggest buzz kill: Finally getting to camp, finding that perfectly flat spot of soft dirt that’s void of rocks or sticks, and then fumbling around with awkward tent poles and a confusing rain fly when all you want to do is sit down, crack open a cold one, break out the snacks, and enjoy the view. The Cave tent from Heimplanet eliminates the physical effort and accelerates relaxation with a no-assembly-required setup that has your tent up in less than a minute. It’s made with extra-resistant rip stop nylon that won’t leak or tear, and it fits up to three people comfortably.
Slightly larger than a mailbox, the Roccbox features a stone plate that heats up to 500 degrees in about 15 minutes and can cook virtually anything. It comes with its own recipe book to inspire your inner foodie, it’s weatherproof, with a sleek silicone jacket for added durability. A smoker will be available soon, adding even more versatility to the Roccbox cooking system. The only downsides are the weight and, uh, the price tag, so it’s perfect for car-camping or tailgating but not practical for anywhere too remote.
It’s hard to beat no-assembly-required. The Cave is roomy, stable, and weather-proof, so it simplifies camping and traveling. However, it tips the scale at about 11.5 lbs., so you’ll earn the easy assembly if you backpack it in more than a couple miles. It includes pegs, guy lines, packsack, pump adapter, and a repair kit, but the pump itself must be purchased separately. Also, it’s still rather bulky when packed (20” x 12” x”8”), and this doesn’t include the pump, so it’s really not practical beyond the campground.
The hot tub itself costs $465, but unless you want to sit shivering in frigid water, you’ll need the heating coil, which costs an additional $535, though you can purchase the combo for $850. In addition, the combined weight of both the tub and the coil is 50 lbs., so don’t expect to lug this thing into the backcountry. The Honda WX10 portable water pump is recommended, and can fill the tub in 10-15 minutes. Depending on the outside temperature, it will take two and a half to three and a half hours to heat up the tub, so be sure to plan ahead.
13 VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
by Alli Miles
Nomad Collapsible Hot Tub
Help us kick off our 80th year in Bend. WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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September 29 at 2:30pm
PT80 Beerfest Challenge New owner, Bill McCormick, and the Pine Tavern staff thank Central Oregon for our first year of business and 80 years of patronage.
Beer Garden, Judging, and People’s Choice Award for the best IPA of 2016.
www.pinetavern.com Event proceeds benefit the Humane Society of Central Oregon.
sunday 27
HIP-HOP—Once he taught us how to jump around (jump up, jump up, AND get down), but then he showed us his softer side with Santana on the Grammy winning song “Put Your Lights On.” Those sides combine for his specific acoustic hip-hop sound that is simultaneously conscious rap and easy listening guitar licks. 9pm. Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood. $20 adv., $25 door.
CELEBRATION—Oregon Tai-Chi Wushu presents the 3rd Annual Mid-Autumn (Moon) Festival. Mid-Autumn is usually a time for family and friends to be together which, in China, means lighting lanterns and eating moon cakes with people you love. This is a fascinating way to learn Chinese traditions. 11:30am-2:30pm. Oregon Tai Chi Wushu. 2115 NE Hwy 20, Suite 108. Free.
friday 25
sunday 27
EVERLAST
ASIAN MID-AUTUMN FESTIVAL
BARRE3 IN THE PARK
CLASICAL MUSIC—High Desert Chamber Music presents Catgut Trio for the opening of the 2015-16 concert series. This dynamic group of musicians woos audiences with their inspired musicianship and innovative programming. Individually, these musicians perform on prestigious international stages and hold titles in world-renowned orchestras. Pre-concert talk at 6:45pm. Concert begins 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. $40 GA, $10 child & student.
BIRTHDAY—Barre3 is celebrating its fifth anniversary with a class in the park taught by founder Sadie Lincoln, with all donations going toward Saving Grace. After class participants can enjoy chair massages, a braid bar, a photobooth, food, and a raffle full of goodies from local businesses. 10am. Tetherow, 61240 Skyline Ranch Rd. $15 donation.
monday 28
friday 25
CITIZEN COPE
A THOUSAND HORSES
friday 25 - sunday 27 BEND ROOTS REVIVAL
tuesday 29
FESTIVAL—It’s Bend’s end-of-summer, blowout bash, featuring more than 100 bands, from blues to bluegrass, and funk and jazz to rock ‘n’ roll. This is a free, family-friendly, authentic, grassroots, community event featuring six stages. Beer and merchandise sales and donations from this event support art and music education through the local nonprofit Rise Up Presents. 4 pm– midnight, Friday. 10:30am–midnight, Saturday. 10:30am–10pm, Sunday. 313 Shevlin Hixon Dr. No cover.
MUSIC—Who’s up for some Ozark Stomp?! What’s that you say? Well if you combine the urgency of rock ‘n’ roll, the frenetic energy of bluegrass, the soul of the delta blues, and the haunted spirit of Appalachian mountain music into a unique musical stew, then you have yourself some Ozark Stomp. Come check out the Ben Miller Band’s Ozark Stomp. 8pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $5.
BEN MILLER BAND
tuesday 29
saturday 26
PT80 BEERFEST CHALLENGE
SISTERS HOP FESTIVAL
BEER—Pine Tavern celebrates its 80th birthday with a beer garden, food, and judgment for the people’s choice award for Best IPA 2016. There will be 16 local breweries participating, with the winner earning kudos, and also Pine Tavern will serve the award-winning beer (known as PT80) as its signature beer for 2016. 2:30-11pm. Pine Tavern, 967 NW Brooks St. $10 admission, includes pint glass and 5 tasting tokens.
BEER—The fifth year of this unique brew fest, that has an emphasis on hops and requirement that at least one entry to the festival is brewed with hops fresh from the vine. Over 20 breweries will compete for the People’s Choice award for the coveted Golden Bunny. Noon-8pm. Village Green Park, 335 S Elm St., Sisters. $5 tasting mug, $1 per taste.
Oct. 21
Notables Swing Band Nov. 11
Dave Mason Nov. 12
SEPTEMEBER 24 - 30
CONCERT—Cope’s sounds are southern rural, big sky lonely, concrete urban, and painfully romantic. Not only is this a not-to-be-missed show where he’ll be playing with a full band, but one dollar of every ticket will go to purchasing musical instruments for middle school students in Lame Deer, MT—a community on the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation—as part of Turnaround Arts, a program that is using arts education to help students succeed. 8pm. Midtown Ballroom, 51 NW Greenwood Ave. $34 adv., $38 door.
CONCERT—Rolling Stone hailed A Thousand Horses as the best up and coming band they saw at the Austin City Limits Music Festival. With their bluesy, bar rock/country sound and deft, but instantly gripping songwriting, they are sure to make a ton of new fans in Central Oregon and beyond. 6pm. Century Center. 70 SW Century Dr. $20.
Back to the Future Part II
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VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
CATGUT TRIO
OUR PICKS
thursday 24
Ten Tenors Nov. 23
Community, Spirituality, A Feeling of Home, Something for Everyone, Positive and Welcoming, Positive Energy, Live Music
EVIDENTIAL MEDIUMSHIP Connect with Your Loved Ones in Spirit PSYCHIC READINGS Guidance on Your Life Path
Sundays 10a.m.
Youth Program, ages 4-17
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Rev. Jane Meyers Hiatt
Email now to schedule a private session. Join me for my next mediumship demonstration. GO TO CARLSEAVER.COM FOR DETAILS
Service held at The Grange
62855 Powell Butte Hwy [near the Bend Airport]
www.UnityCentralOregon.com
WE MOVED to a bigger and better location! Plus, we opened a COCKTAIL LOUNGE! • 2 for 1 Flights in the Tasting Room all day (noon to 7pm) • Tours All Day (on the hour from Noon to 6pm) • Special Grand Opening Food Menu (in the Barrel Thief Lounge)
Then Stay for The Outdoor
’ LOT PARTY! PARKIN6pm to 9pm TAIL K C O C ALS! I C E SP
Live Music with Great Local Bands! Isles, Space Logic and Joe Balsamo to perform!
Joe Balsamo GREENWOOD AVE
HAWTHORNE AVE
FRANKLIN AVE
NE 3RD ST
OregonSpiritDistillers.com 541.382.0002
NE 2ND ST
(previous home of the Habitat for Humanity ReStore)
BEND PKWY
Saturday September 26th
740 NE First Street
NE 1ST ST
Join us for a Grand Opening Party to go down in history!
S
THE SOURCE
Old Fashioned Revival SOUND An The ever-expanding Bend Roots Revival returns
SUGGESTS By Anne Pick
By Jared Rasic 17
photo by Susana Cobo
Bend Roots Revival is a free festival that features more than 100 bands, from blues to bluegrass, and funk and jazz to rock ‘n’ roll, 9/25 - 9/26.
W
hen asked how to describe the Bend Roots Revival to someone who has never been, co-founder and manager Mark Ransom had this to say: “When someone asks you what a poem is about it’s kind of like, well, you have to read the poem, right?” Since that description is pretty enigmatic and wonderful, it would be nice to leave it at that, but in case more information is needed, more will be given. The (refreshingly) free event is a three-day music festival on Shevlin Hixon Drive, with six stages between the Art Station and the Deschutes Brewery Warehouse. The music genres are wide and free ranging, with more focus given to quality AND quantity over similar-sounding bands on the same stage. Bend Roots Revival got started in the same way most wonderful things do...with friends. Ransom explains: “So, another local musician, who I’d been friends with for a long time, by the name of Brett Allen, around 2004-2005 he and I were talking about the number of really awesome internationally touring acts that were coming to town. They were getting off of the tour bus at the Les Schwab amphitheater stage, doing a show, and then getting back on the bus and going to the next town, and we were like, ‘That’s kind of cool,’ but there’s also this rich art community here, and we wish there was more of a stage for them. To its credit, though, Les Schwab has been great doing the summer Sundays shows with local bands. Anyway, our first event was a block party at Parrilla Grill. It was just 12 bands on a Saturday. We called it the Bend Roots Festival, but at our next planning meeting, someone said ‘It’s more than a festival, it’s more like a revival.’ The title stuck.” Mark Ransom looks at the festival as an amazing congregation of people, but also as something more: “It’s always a fun party and it’s always a fun celebration of the local scene. What people don’t know is that when they come to the Roots Festival, it’s a free event, but they’re supporting performing arts education in Bend, and that’s really more important than anything else.” Also in the business of musical education is Joe Schulte of String Theory Music, which teaches guitar, banjo, mandolin, cello, bass, violin/fiddle, piano, voice, and group performance to students of all ages. He is in an interesting position for the festival. He plays in Moon Mountain Ramblers, Tone Red, and Popcorn, which are
all performing at the festival...on the same day. Joe explains the differing qualities of his three bands: “Moon Mountain Ramblers were started almost 15 years ago when I was just starting to learn the mandolin. Dan McClung and I connected through a note he had left on a local bulletin board. We quickly made a friendship and had similar musical tastes, got some others on board to achieve full bluegrass instrumentation, and formed MMR, which to this day used those genres as a strong base for our general sound. Tone Red has a very different sound from MMR, being more electric, rock, and blues, rather than acoustic bluegrass and swing. Crystal Pizzola is our strong front singer in Tone Red. Born with a beautiful strong voice, she seems to turn heads no matter where, or what she sings. In Popcorn we like to say we play acoustic instrumental covers of the songs you do, and don’t want to hear. We like to have tons of fun in this band and bring humor into our stage act. Much of the humor comes simply from our song choices such as “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” or “Hit Me Baby One More Time” while also jumping into serious rock tunes like “Under the Bridge” or “War Pigs.” Schulte and The Ramblers have a long history with Bends Roots Revival. Schulte explains: “Being a longtime staple band of Bend and also being friends with Mark Ransom, The Moon Mountain Ramblers have had the honor of playing every Roots Fest to date. I feel the Ramblers have carried the torch and have really helped the other two bands get in with the town’s music scene, jump starting their ‘acceptance’ and popularity.” As Ransom compares this three-day event to a poem, he has a moment of intense clarity. “Just come to the event and wander around,” Ransom says. “Take it in and be a part of it. It’s an organic thing.” We really want to tell you more, but we just can’t find the words.
Bend Roots Revival Friday, Sept, 25, 4 pm-midnight Saturday, Sept. 26, 10:30 am-midnight Sunday, Sept. 27, 10:30 am-10 pm 313 Shevlin Hixon Dr. Free
TWISTED WHISTLE Few things go better with a crisp autumn evening that rootsy folk tunes. Portland-based band Twisted Whistle combines bluegrass, Irish folk, and rock elements to create rootsy-Americana music best enjoyed outside as the sun sets and the fire pit starts burning. Harmonious vocals blend with traditional folk elements to express the band’s range and depth. Featuring original songwriting and three-part vocal harmony. Closeout the last Friday in September with Twisted Whistle and an Off Leash brew from Crux. 5-8pm. Friday, Sept. 25. Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St.
PIGWAR With influences ranging from Teddy Pendergrass and Led Zeppelin to Parliament Funkadelic, Portland-based band pigWar plays a raw take on psychedelic-soul music. Their explosive live shows feature all original tunes that they have woven together to create a sound landscape listeners can shake their booties to. pigWar is a collaboration between Portland artists Teddy Presberg and Garett Brennan. The cool fall air may have arrived, but attend this show and leave sweating from the pure psychedelic heat generated by the pigWar dance attack. 10pm. Friday, Sept. 25. Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St. No cover.
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
STRANGE HOTEL On a Thursday night in Bend, there are some shows worth going to and some shows that can’t be missed for any reason outside of childbirth. This Thursday, San Francisco-based rockers Strange Hotel bring their vintage rock sound to the Volcanic and take notice, because this will be one of those can’t miss Thursday night shows. It doesn’t matter what time the alarm for work goes off in the morning, Strange Hotel’s “gothadelic” sound has to be heard to be believed. Singles “All the World’s a Strange Hotel” and “Tightrope” could be found either as B-sides to the Almost Famous soundtrack or a Black Keys album. Drunk Pilot also performs. 9pm. Thursday, Sept. 24. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $5.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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OCTOBER 14-15 2015
BEND DESIGN 2015 is a celebration of design thinking and design doing. We will stoke curiosity, spark innovation, empower collaboration, and make things happen, drawing inspiration from multidisciplinary design thinkers in Bend and across the country.
W EDNE SDAY OC T OBE R 1 4 G a t h e r a t T h e To w e r T h e a t r e f o r a f u l l d a y
o f d e s i g n i n s p i r a t i o n w i t h ke y n o t e s p e a ke r s , conversations, and enter tainment.
T HURSDAY OC T OBE R 15 Continue the inspiration with workshops,
tours and hands-on design oppor tunities. BENDDE SIGN.ORG
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Riding The Wave with Citizen Cope Inside the mind of a genre-crossing singer-songwriter By Eric Skelton 19 Dressed up as fairly simple and digestible acoustic pop music, multiple listens of his songs reveal meatier themes and socially conscious messages. “I think there’s a basic need to communicate and have a point of view within the context of pop music,” Greenwood says. “I wanted to incorporate something that
“I have a lot of limitations as far as my vocal range and my guitar playing goes. I’ve been around enough really good guitar players to realize that I shouldn’t be doing solos,” Greenwood laughs over the phone. “I always just wanted to do something from the heart to touch people, man. That’s where my strength lies. I’ll let the prodigies be the prodigies.” On the back of crisp hiphop inspired drums and bright acoustic guitars, Greenwood is happy to keep his music relatively simple and let the raw nature of his vocals guide the direction of the songs. With a long background writing poetry, that direction usually ends up being a strikingly honest and vulnerable one.
Turnaround Arts, $1 from every ticket he sells goes to Red Lake Middle School in Minnesota to help incorporate art and music into the school curriculum to turn around low-test scores. Of course, as happy as Greenwood’s fan base is to see him out on the road and contributing to charitable causes, anticipation has been building for new material since his last release in 2012. As we talk, he hints at signing with another major label soon (after spending some time on his own label following previous deals with DreamWorks, Capitol, Arista, and RCA) but he’s content being patient and letting the songs come to him for now. “As an artist, you’re always thinking about what’s next or what happened in your life,” he explains. “I’ve been studying a lot of philosophies about trying to be more conscious and being in the moment.”
Good things come to those who wait. Citizen Cope; Midtown Ballroom; 9/28.
“I’ve always been so intense and had really bad stage fright,” Greenwood reveals. “Some of the insecurities that you have as a person and the willingness to express those fears and joys are what draw you to being an artist—and I guess those carry on.” He continues, “I’m finally starting to accept that the audience is on my side now. I’m starting to learn to harness some of that energy and ride it like a wave as opposed to paddling directly into it.”
would be rebellious and protesting what I felt was wrong with the current state of human affairs while making it palatable and interesting and something you could nod your head to. That way people could still groove to it and I wouldn’t be talking down to them or trying to preach, while still having something with some substance.” Greenwood isn’t content limiting his social activism to his lyrics, however. Teaming up with an organization called
“It’s about taking your time and waiting for something to happen,” Greenwood notes. “I remember when Henri Cartier-Bresson, the great photographer from Paris, said, ‘You never want anything, you just wait. Wait for it to come to you.’ I think there’s an element of that in all art. You just have to be present and patient.”
Citizen Cope 8 pm, Monday, September. 28 Midtown Ballroom 51 NW Greenwood Ave. $34
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itizen Cope’s head-nodding blend of acoustic soul, hip-hop, and folk music has taken the singer-songwriter around the world over the last 15 years and earned him both critical and commercial success—but you wouldn’t know it by talking to him. Born Clarence Greenwood, the Washington D.C. native radiates a humble sensibility that complements the low-key charm found on his records.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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just come enjoy the variety of performers! 6:30-8:30 pm. No cover.
Plus karaoke at 9 pm with your favorite host Maryoke! 6-9 pm. No cover.
Kelly D’s Banquet Room Benefit Concert—Soldiers Songs & Voices Please join us for a great evening of local artists. We start the night with a song circle with three incredible performers. Stan Roach, Ellen Jakab,and Farrel Drokewill share songs and stories for the first hour. Then we have special guest Jeff Leslie from the River Pigs, and his mate Erin, performing a rare acoustic set. 7-9 pm. No cover.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free
Country Swing Dance Lessons 8 pm. No cover.
Hear the bluesy, bar rock, country sounds of A Thousand Horses at the Century Center Courtyard, 9/25.
23 wednesday Checker’s Pub Mic Tipitino Open mic night hosted by Mic Tipitino. 6-8 pm. No cover.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke With DJ Roseybabe and Stan the Man. 9 pm. No cover.
Hardtails Bar & Grill Rawkstar Karaoke 9 pm. No cover.
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke With your favorite host Maryoke! 9 pm. No cover.
Level 2 Allan Byer Americana 5:30 pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern Open Mic Night 21+. 6:30 pm. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Country
Karaoke 7 pm. No cover.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Honey Don’t The musical union of Bill Powers and Shelley Gray, perhaps better known as one half of the Colorado-based old-time bluegrass band, Sweet Sunny South. 7 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm.
Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke 8 pm. Soba Asian Bistro Karaoke Under The
Stars 8 pm. No cover.
The Lot Open Mic Open mic is for one and all! Local favorite performer and artist MOsley
WOtta hosts this fun night showcasing local talent. 6 pm. No cover.
Volcanic Theatre Pub The Shams Combining their hard rocking, punked-up beat and raw, powerful vocals. The Rum and the Sea also performing. 9 pm. $5.
24 thursday Astro Lounge Cutz & Crater Weekly cocktail event hosted by DJ Harlow. Classy lounge electronica and Crater Lake products on special all night long. 9 pm-midnight. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke With DJ Roseybabe and Stan the Man. 9 pm. No cover.
PICK Domino Room Everlast Once he taught us how to jump around (jump up, jump up, AND get down), but then he showed us his softer side with Santana on the Grammy winning song, “Put Your Lights On.” Those sides combine for his specific acoustic hip-hop sound that is simultaneously conscious rap and easy listening guitar licks. 9 pm. $20 adv., $25 door. Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards Reno & Cindy Join us for another oldie but goodie! Thirsty Thursday discounts are in effect, don’t miss out on a good time! 6-9 pm. $5.
Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Blues Jam Lively jam hosted by Scott Foxx and Jeff Leslie. Bring your instruments (drums provided) or
band playing all your classic favorites! They will get you up on the dance floor! 8-11:30 pm. No cover.
Country Catering Party On The Patio All you can eat BBQ with free live music. Family-friendly. Music starts at 6 pm. Visit our website for this week’s band. 4:30-8 pm. $11.95. Crux Fermentation Project Twisted
Whistle Say goodbye to September with this rootsy folk style band, lighting up the autumn evening. 5-8 pm.
Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards
Jupiter & Teardrop Small batch music brewed in Bend, featuring vocalist Sheila Neumann and guitarist John Irwin. Jupiter & Teardrop feature alt. country, Americana, and a little jazz. 6-9 pm. $5.
Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic with Hal Worcester Local singer-song-
Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise & Kara-
writers perform original songs. 6 pm. No cover.
Plus karaoke at 9 pm with your favorite host Maryoke! 6-9 pm. No cover.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Strange Hotel A San Francisco-based, four-piece rock band. With Drunk Pilot also performing. 9 pm. $5.
25 friday Astro Lounge PigWar Pure psychedelic soul. Their live shows are explosive with all-original tunes that pull from the obscure corners of Teddy Pendergrass, Led Zeppelin, The Faces, Lee Scratch Perry, Dilla, and Parliament Funkadelic. PigWar is a collaboration between Portland-based artists Teddy Presberg and Garett Brennan. 10 pm. No cover.
PICK Bend Roots Revival Bend Roots
Revival Festival It’s Bend’s end-of-summer, blowout bash, featuring more than 100 bands, from blues to bluegrass, and funk and jazz to rock ‘n’ roll. This is a free, family-friendly, authentic, grassroots, community event featuring six stages. Beer and merchandise sales, sponsorships, and donations from this event support art and music education through the local nonprofit Rise Up Presents. So come on down for a bootie-shaking good time! 4-midnight. No cover.
PICK
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Century Center Courtyard
A Thousand Horses Rolling Stone hailed A Thousand Horses as the best up and coming band they saw at the Austin City Limits Music Festival. With their bluesy, bar rock/country sound and deft, but instantly gripping songwriting, they are sure to make a ton of new fans in Central Oregon and beyond. 6 pm. $20.
oke Classic rock and oldies with Tim Cruise.
Jackson’s Corner Westside Coyote Willow Weaving genre-crossing lines to create an extraordinary musical journey. 7 pm. No cover.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Sunny Ledfurd Back in Central Oregon for another great show! It’s a don’t miss for a Friday night! 9 pm. $15.
Northside Bar & Grill Emerald City One of Bend’s favorite cover bands brings you classic rock from your favorite decades. 8:30 pm. northsidebarfun.com. Seven Nightclub Latin Dance Social 7:30 pm. Free.
The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele 21+. 9 pm. No cover.
PICK Tower Theatre HDCM Concert Series—Catgut Trio High Desert Chamber Music presents Catgut Trio for the opening of the 2015-16 concert series. This dynamic, Los Angeles-based group of musicians woos audiences with their inspired and moving musicianship, unusual communicative abilities, and innovative and attractive programming. Individually, these musicians perform on prestigious international stages and hold titles in world-renowned orchestras. Join the group for a pre-concert talk at 6:45pm. 7:30 pm. $40 GA, $10 child & student.
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21 VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise & Karaoke Classic rock and oldies with Tim Cruise.
Checker’s Pub The Edge Great rock ‘n’ roll
CLUBS 26 saturday Astro Lounge Sayer & Onhell Beat Lab
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
27 sunday PICK Bend Roots Revival Bend Roots
Radio, Cascade Sound Syndicate, and The Astro Lounge present Sayer from Oakland and Onhell from Oakland/Eureka. Sayer has spent his entire life creating and evolving from music. Heavily influenced by his punk and metal background, he’s carved out his own space between bass, trap, and grime in the electronic landscape, making some of the most unique dance music coming out of the west coast. With support from locals Lonely $tacks and Royal Louis. 10 pm-2 am. $5.
Revival Festival It’s Bend’s end-of-summer,
Bend Brewing Company Victory Swig
Bend Roots Revival Zander Reese Bend
Songs are that of a twisted and rusty barb wired coil with tales of killers, despair, and villainous situations. 6:30-9 pm.
singer-songwriter will perform his indie grunge rock at the Bend Roots Revival on the Ramblerland Stage. 2-2:45 pm.
PICK Bend Roots Revival Bend Roots
Revival Festival It’s Bend’s end-of-summer, blowout bash, featuring more than 100 bands, from blues to bluegrass, and funk and jazz to rock ‘n’ roll. This is a free, family-friendly, authentic, grassroots, community event featuring six stages. Beer and merchandise sales, sponsorships, and donations from this event support art and music education through the local nonprofit Rise Up Presents. So come on down for a bootie-shaking good time! 10:30-midnight. No cover.
Bend Roots Revival Jupiter & Teardrop After a short creative break in August, the duo is packing some tight original work in with its unique arrangements of lesser heard American, alt-country tunes, and some bluesy, jazzy, jelly-roll. 2-2:45 pm. No cover.
Broken Top Bottle Shop Pete Kartsounes Pete Kartsounes' music is armed with an acoustic or electric guitar, blazing skill, powerful voice, award-winning songs and relentless heart. 7 am-9 pm. No cover.
Checker’s Pub The Edge Great rock ‘n’ roll band playing all your classic favorites! They will get you up on the dance floor! 8-11:30 pm. No cover.
CHOW Paul Eddy Local troubadour Paul Eddy performs for the breakfast crowd at this hip and healthy brunch. 10 am-1 pm.
Hardtails Bar & Grill Live Music Satur-
days Bands, duos, solo artists all summer long
on our outdoor stage! 1-4 pm. No cover.
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke With your favorite host Maryoke! 9 pm. No cover.
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Karaoke 8 pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern Zander Reese Singer-songwriter with a sexy fusion of indie grunge rock. 9 pm-midnight. No cover.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free
Dance Lessons 9 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Emerald City One of Bend’s favorite cover bands brings you classic rock from your favorite decades. 8:30 pm. Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill Coyote
Willow Weaving genre-crossing lines to create an extraordinary musical journey. 1 pm. No cover.
The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele 21+. 9 pm. No cover.
The Workhouse BDY BAG BDY BAG to play with artist, Lisa Marie Sipe live painting to their set. Playing together for over a year now, BDY BAG is a talented trio of teens bringing a variety of acoustic covers to hear. Lucas Henry jams on six strings as the guitarist, while the drums are commanded by Drexell DJ Barnes Jr. The final member, Rylee McConnell, rounds out the band with vocals and upright bass. Together, this group of young musicians creates a blend of sound that is sure to please. 7-8 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Jive Coulis & MOsley
WOtta Bend Roots Revival after party! 10 pm. $5.
blowout bash, featuring more than 100 bands, from blues to bluegrass, and funk and jazz to rock ‘n’ roll. This is a free, family-friendly, authentic, grassroots, community event featuring six stages. Beer and merchandise sales, sponsorships, and donations from this event support art and music education through the local nonprofit Rise Up Presents. So come on down for a bootie-shaking good time! 10:30 am-10 pm. No cover.
Bend Roots Revival Coyote Willow Bend Roots Festival, Art Station stage. 4:15 pm. No cover.
Bend Roots Revival Allan Byer Project All original Americana music with his all-star band featuring Rosemarie Witnaur on banjo and vocals, Jimmy Jo Mckue on electric guitar, Hal Worcester on bass and lead guitar, and Santiago on percussion. 8:30-9:15 pm. No cover.
Broken Top Bottle Shop Jake Tittle Folk, bluegrass, singer-songwriter. Jake Tittle approaches songwriting in a deeply personal and existential way. Accompanied by folk-rock and quasi-bluegrass arrangements, Tittle sings of family, friends, and spiritual skepticism in a manner that feels almost conversational. 7-9 pm. No cover.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke With DJ Roseybabe and Stan the Man. 9 pm. No cover.
Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Cin City (Cabin
Industry Night) Drink and food specials for local service industry workers, plus board games and DJ DMP (Indie, R&B, hip-hop, and electronica). 9 pm.
Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill Paul
Eddy Country, folk. All ages. Every other Sunday, 3 pm. No cover.
28 monday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke With DJ Roseybabe and Stan the Man. 9 pm. No cover.
PICK
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Midtown Ballroom Citizen Cope
Born Clarence Greenwood, Cope’s roots are complex; his sounds are southern rural, big sky lonely, concrete urban, and painfully romantic. Not only is this a not-to-be-missed show where he’ll be playing with a full band, but one dollar of every ticket will go to purchasing musical instruments for middle school students in Lame Deer, MT—a community on the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation—as part of Turnaround Arts, a program that is using arts education to help students succeed. 8 pm. $34 adv., $38 door.
Northside Bar & Grill Karaoke With DJ Chris! 7-9 pm.
29 tuesday Astro Lounge Trivia Tuesdays Bring your
The Blacksmith Restaurant NTT— Deb&Kev Playing re-interpretations of your favorite music from the 50s to the present! Come early for the best seating in the lounge and bar area, or make reservations for main seating. Cheers! 7-9 pm. No cover.
PICK Bt Volcanic Theatre Pub Ben Miller Band Who’s up for some Ozark Stomp?! What’s that you say? Well, if you combine the urgency of rock ‘n’ roll, the frenetic energy of bluegrass, the soul of the delta blues, and the haunted spirit of Appalachian mountain music into a unique musical stew, then you have yourself some Ozark Stomp. Come check out the Ben Miller Band’s Ozark Stomp. 8 pm. $5.
30 wednesday Checker’s Pub Mic Tipitino Open mic night hosted by Mic Tipitino. Local songwriter, entertainer. 6-8 pm. No cover.
Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke With DJ Roseybabe and Stan the Man. 9 pm. No cover.
Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Michelle
Van Handel & the Q Vocalist and her band play up-tempo jazz, Latin flavors like samba and bossa nova, original tunes, and blues. No cover.
Hardtails Bar & Grill Rawkstar Karaoke 9 pm. No cover.
Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke With your favorite host Maryoke! 9 pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern Open Mic Night 21+. 6:30 pm. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Country
Karaoke 7 pm. No cover.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Matthew Szlachetka Full of soulful melodies and rootsy arrangements that evoke the folk, blues and rock ’n’ roll influences that inspired Szlachetka, while pushing past them to establish a sound all his own. 7 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm.
Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke 8 pm. Soba Asian Bistro Karaoke Under The Stars 8 pm. No cover. The Lot Open Mic Local favorite performer and artist MOsley WOtta hosts this fun night showcasing local talent. 6 pm. No cover.
1 thursday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke With DJ Roseybabe and Stan the Man. 9 pm. No cover.
Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Blues Jam Lively jam hosted by Scott Foxx and Jeff Leslie. Bring your instruments (drums provided) or just come enjoy the variety of performers! 6:30-8:30 pm. No cover.
Hey Joe Coffee Bar Leroy & the Gang Join us for a foot-stompin’ good time as Leroy and his Gang play some old-time banjo favorites. 5:30-7:30 pm. No cover. Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise & Karaoke Classic rock and oldies with Tim Cruise. Plus karaoke at 9 pm with your favorite host Maryoke! 6-9 pm. No cover.
team or join one! Usually six categories of various themes. 8 pm. No cover.
Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Country Swing Dance Lessons No partner
Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Allan Byer
needed. 8 pm. No cover.
& Hal Worcester 6-9 pm. No cover.
Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Ukulele Jam All ages. 6:30 pm. No cover.
M&J Tavern The Friar Scott Tuesday Tunes featured artist bring a jovial presence to the stage. Covering songs of the ages, singing melodies most will recognize, and sing along with. Harvest is upon us, and the Scott sets the chill zone before go time! 9 pm. No cover. Seven Nightclub Ruby Tuesday Karaoke 8 pm.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Beach Fire Sloan Martin’s new project Beach Fire mixes elements from indie psych, back beat soul, pop, and disco to fuse such disparate elements and influences as Daft Punk, Sade, Beck, and Pink Floyd into lush, lyrical, and atmospheric forays that are danceable, too. 7 pm. No cover.
Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic with Hal Worcester Local singer-songwriters perform original songs. 6 pm. No cover.
EVENTS
CALENDAR MUSIC Big Band Tuesday & Lunch People over 60 years of age can enjoy big-band music and dancing performed by Alley Cats, 10:30-11:30 am. Free or low-cost lunch served from 11 am12:30 pm. Join us for a fun-filled day of great music and food. Tuesdays, 10:30am. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St.
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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. Mondays, 5:30-7pm. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St. 541-633-3225. Free.
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 cocomusicmakers@ gmail.com. Tuesdays, 6:39-8:30pm. Cascade Middle School, 19619 SW Mountaineer Way.
PICK HDCM Concert Series—Catgut Trio High Desert Chamber Music presents Catgut Trio for the opening of the 2015-16 concert series. This dynamic, Los Angeles-based group of musicians woos audiences with their inspired and moving musicianship, unusual communicative abilities, and innovative and attractive programming. Individually, these musicians perform on prestigious international stages and hold titles in world-renowned orchestras. Join the group for a pre-concert talk at 6:45pm. Sept. 25, 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. 541-306-3988. $40 GA, $10 child & student.
Music in Public Places—Go For Baroque Be transformed to the 1700s with this chamber ensemble that features a hand-painted harpsichord, flutes, violin and bassoon. Go For Baroque will feature music by Baroque period greats Bach, Telemann, Couperin, Scarlatti, and Rameau. Performing in the ensemble are Helen Jones, Krista Aasland, Kyle Ruggles, Natalya Johnston, and Wendy Bloom. This event is open to the public and tickets are not required. Sept. 27, 2-3pm. COCC Campus Center - Wille Hall, 2600 College Way. 541-317-3941. Free.
DANCE Adult Jazz Dance Class Intermediate level adult jazz dance class with members of Jazz Dance Collective. First class is free. Tuesdays, 7-8:30pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63076 NE 18th St. $10.
Argentine Tango Class & Práctica Beginning tango class 6:30-7:30 pm followed by two hours of practice from 7:30-9:30 pm. No partner needed! Wednesdays. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. $5.
Experience the high-energy stomping music of the Ben Miller Band, which the band labels as Ozark Stomp, at the Volcanic Theatre Pub, 9/29.
Argentine Tango Milonga For all levels of dancers. No partner needed! Fourth Saturday of every month, 7:30-10:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. $5.
Ruby Tuesday Karaoke Tuesdays, 8pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-7609412.
complimentary glass of kombucha! First Thursday of every month, 4-6pm. Humm Kombucha, 1125 NE 2nd St. 541-306-6329. Free.
Scottish Country Dance Weekly Class
salsa in a friendly, group-class setting. Thursdays, 6:30-7:30pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. $40 month (4 classes) or $12 drop-in.
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.
Edward Curtis Exhibit An extremely rare exhibit with more than 50 original Edward Curtis photos and prints of Native American tribal members will be on display through Oct. 31, 9:30am-7pm. Atelier 6000, 389 SW Scalehouse Ct. Suite 120. 541-330-8759. Free.
Two-Step Round Dance Lessons Begin-
Social Dance This dance will feature music
Fourth Friday Art Stroll Featuring Scratch-
ning two-step lessons. No partner necessary. Sundays, 4:30-6pm. T Pine Forest Grange Hall, 63214 Boyd Acres Rd. $5 per lesson.
for most ballroom partnership dances. Sat, Sept. 26, 7-9pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. $7, $5 if participating in theme.
life.com artist Jennifer Hartwig of Sisters. With refreshments. Sept. 25, 4-7pm. Sisters Gallery and Frame Shop, 252 W Hood Ave. Free.
Conscious Ecstatic Dance Celebrate the joy of free-form, expressive dance. Discover the power of movement for alchemical personal transformation. PULSE: The Alchemy of Movement. Wednesdays, 7-8:30pm. $10.
Sunday Soma Circle—Conscious Dance
JoAnn Burgess Fourth Friday Art Stroll at
Beginner Salsa Classes Learn to dance
Fun Salsa Patterns Dance Classes Learn Salsa pattern combinations in this friendly and encouraging class. Thursdays, 7:30-8:30pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. $40 month or $12 drop-in.
Group Class & Ballroom Dance Ages 16plus. All proceeds donated to Bend’s Community Center. Fridays, 7pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. $5. Latin Dance Social Hosted by the Latin Dance Academy of Bend. Fourth Friday of every month, 8-9:45pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-760-9412. Latin Wednesdays Come meet a group of welcoming Latin dance enthusiasts. Wednesdays, 7:30-9:30pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-325-6676. $5.
Featured Event October 3, 2015
“ROCK MUSICAL” COCKTAIL CABARET
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. 11am-12:30pm. Armature, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 2. 541-610-7967. $10.
West African Dance Class Taught to live drumming by Fe Fanyi Drum Troupe. Mondays, 7:15pm. Victor Performing Arts, 2700 NE 4th St. Suite 210. 818-636-2465. $10 drop-in.
LOCAL ARTS Art & Wine, Oh My! In a relaxed, social setting, our local artists will guide you through replicating the evening’s featured painting. Tuesdays, 6:30-8:30pm. Level 2, 360 SW Powerhouse Dr. Suite 210. 541-213-8083. $35-$45. 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
Hood Avenue Art features plein air and studio pastel landscapes by Sisters’ artist JoAnn Burgess. Also included are new collaborative mixed media assemblages of Burgess’s pastels layered with fused glass by Susie Zeitner of Zglass Act studio. Images and natural elements are mounted on barn wood or scrap metal. Reception 4-7 pm, music by Tony Lompa, refreshments. Exhibit runs September 25-October 19. Sept. 25, 4-7pm. Downtown Sisters, Hood Avenue. 541-719-1800. Free.
Journeys Art Quilters Artist Reception An opening night artist reception as they present “Personal Spaces.” The show highlights the work of these diversely talented quilters as they create images of their personal or favorite space. Exhibit continues through October. Sept. 25, 4-6pm. Sisters Artworks, 204 W Adams Ave. Free.
Mimesis & Mourning Mimesis and Mourning is a record of emotional responses to the process of bereavement through the creation of collage and book structures by Beth I. Robinson. Thursdays-Saturdays, 1-4pm. Piacentini Studio and Gallery, 1293 NE 3rd St.
September 25
September 28
A Thousand Horses
Citizen Cope
Century Center Presents
Midtown Ballroom Presents
September 29
October 2
Ben Miller Band w/Bravey Don
Summit Express Jazz Band
The Volcanic Theater Pub Presents
The Belfry Presents
Dance party
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice The Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band is
Home and Business Interior Decorators Welcome Tailgate Trading will be allowed in parking lot Saturday 9am to 3pm
Central Oregon
Old West Auction
LIVE AUCTION PREVIEW Saturday noon
ONLINE BIDDING: www.bidnw.com Starts September 21st to 26th Live Bidding with Webcast starts September 26th - 3:57PM Photos and Descriptions Online Live Bidding Buyers Fee 10/13% Online Bidding 18%
Live and Online Crook County Fairgrounds
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
24
4H Clover Club Building 498 SE Lynn Blvd, Prineville, OR.
Saturday September 26th - 3:57PM
EVENTS
Paint & Sip Judy brings her canvases and all the supplies to BTBS and guides you in painting a mini-masterpiece while enjoying delicious brews from BTBS! Tues, Sept. 29, 6-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. $25, doesn’t include drinks.
Early Sample of Collectibles Les Garcia bits and spurs * Fleming bits * Vogt bits and spurs * Navajo Rugs * American flag beaded gauntlets * Buermann and North and Judd spurs * H.H. Heiser Chaps and Taps * Pendleton blankets and memorabilia * Bridle Glass Rosettes * Vintage Saddles * Boots * Cowboy + Cowgirl Hats * Contemporary bit and spur makers * Vintage Chaps * Card Suite Chaps * Western Art Prints * Lots of Western Memorabilia
Dennis Turmon Enterprises, LLC
WORDS
Powell Butte, Oregon Cell: 541.480.0795 Fax: 541.923.6316
The Memory Weaver Jane Kirkpatrick’s
www.dennisturmon.com
DOCTOBER LUNCH DEAL
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Fourth Friday Art Stroll at Hood Avenue Art features Sisters’ artist JoAnn Burgess.
MaryLea Harris Parent, educator, author, and founder of Pink and Green Mama, an award-winning arts, and crafts website for caregivers of young children, MaryLea Harris will show her most recent work. Sept. 26, 6-10pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. 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. Thurs, Sept. 24, 5-7pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. 541-388-3236. $20 EDCO & OEN members.
Horses, Dogs, & Oreodonts: Professor Thomas Condon & His Fossils Presented by Bob Hart, Executive Director, Lane County Historical Society. Self-taught, observant, and a sought-after public speaker, Condon brought the mysteries of ancient Oregon flora and fauna to national geological attention (the John Day fossil beds). Sept. 29, 7pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. Free.
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Know You: Learning to Use Intuition
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Intuition can be used to access new information to give clues and insights to yourself, people, animals, emotions, health, career, decision-making, and more. Author, international teacher and intuitive Karen Grace Kassy will teach you a fun exercise and share accessible research to develop the practical skill of intuition to use in your everyday life. Sept. 23, noon-1pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-312-1032. Free.
Switzerland—Land of the Giants Join us for an inspiring hour of photos, travel, and tales! A photo journey of hiking through the Berner Oberland presented by alps guide and photographer, Hilloah Rohr. Come early and enjoy a glass of wine or beer. 21+. Sept. 30, 7-8pm. The Wine Shop and Tasting Bar, 55 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-389-2884. Free. Save up 40% o to selec ff ted items !
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541.317.9407
Zombie Bootcamp Tap into your inner zombie! All Aspects Teen Theatre at CTC and BTYP are offering a workshop for ages 8 and up. Movement and character work leading to a zombie walk down Bond Street. Possibility of casting in All Aspects Teen Theater's Production of William Shakespeare and the Land of the Dead, as an afflicted undead. Call Brad Thompson for more information. Sept. 26, 10am-noon. CTC Cascade Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. Free.
805 SW Industrial Way, Suite 6 Bend, Oregon 97702
THEATER PICK An Ideal Husband Scandal! Blackmail! Corruption! Full of Oscar Wilde’s well-known wit, rapid fire repartee, and social commentary, An Ideal Husband is a scathing satire of the British aristocracy filled to the brim with temptations, betrayals, and secret liaisons. Thurs, Sept. 24 through Sun, Sept. 27, 2-4pm and Thurs, Oct. 1, 7:30-9:30pm. CTC Cascade Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. 541-3890803. $20 adult, $16 senior, $13 student.
newest historical novel explores the life of Eliza Spalding, who, as a child, survived the Whitman Massacre. How did this incident and her memory of it shape her life? And how accurate were her memories. Later in life, she journeyed back to the site of her harshest memories. Would the journey bring her peace and healing? Sept. 23, 6:30-8pm. Paulina Springs Books-Redmond, 422 SW Sixth St. 541-526-1491. Sept. 23, 6:30-8pm. Paulina Springs Books-Sisters, 252 W Hood Ave. 541549-0866. $5.
CALL FOR VOLUNTEERS 350Deschutes Climate Advocacy & Education Use your special talents to encourage awareness of the need for meaningful climate action. We organize with leaders at schools, faith communities, nonprofit groups, and people in the community. Speak or organize educational events, attend rallies, write or do art about the climate. 206-498-5887. Free.
Fences For Fido Help free dogs from chains! We are seeking volunteers to come out and help us build fences for dogs who live on chains. No experience is required. Post sets take place on Tuesday or Wednesday and fence builds take place on Saturday or Sunday mornings and are complete in a couple of hours. Volunteers determine their own schedule. Sign up on Facebook: FFF Central Oregon Region Volunteers or Bend Canine Friends Meet Up group. More information can be found at fencesforfido.org.
First Swing Adaptive Golf Volunteer Training An opportunity to learn how to facilitate adaptive golf instruction for individuals with disabilities. Clinic will be led by instructors from the Amputee Golf Association. Attendees are invited to return on Sept. 26 to put the new skills learned into action during the Heroes in Summer Disabled Veterans golf clinic. Sept. 25, 9am-3:30pm. Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Rd. 541-306-4774. Free.
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. 541-678-5483. 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 Amanda at 541-526-1380.
EVENTS
Mentor a Child with an Incarcerated Parent This six-hour training covers program
NeighborImpact Boomer Buddies Help build relationships through positive guidance by spending quality time with preschool children from low-income communities. Buddies volunteer in our classrooms, playing and reading with little ones aged 3-5. Opportunities available in Bend, Redmond, LaPine, and Prineville. Contact Kathy at 541-323-6503 or kathypa@neighborimpact.org.
Stop OSU Live Protest Bring your protest signs and your spirit to let our community know that we can still save our city. At the traffic circle in front of Cascades Lakes Brewing. Mondays-Fridays, noon-1pm.
Volunteer—BCC Bend’s Community Center has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for individuals over age 6. BCC serves meals Monday-Friday to seniors over 60 years of age from 11 am-12:30 pm. Every Sunday BCC hosts its Feed the Hungry program serving free breakfast and lunch to the needy in Central Oregon, as well as on Thanksgiving and Christmas. BCC also is looking for individuals to join our committees, including special events/marketing, programs, and fundraising. Go to bendscommunitycenter.org or call 541312-2069 for more information.
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. 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 541647-2363 for more details and information on the application process.
Warehouse Sorting and Pricing The Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond is looking for volunteers to receive donations, sort, and price items. 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. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St. 541-504-0101.
CLASSES Art & Wine, Oh My! Donating a percentage of the proceeds to Whole Foods Market’s Whole Kids Foundation. Create your own painted set of two wine glasses with stepby-step instruction. No painting experience needed. Enjoy wine samples and one full glass of your favorite! Sept. 25, 6:30-8:30pm. Whole Foods Market, 2610 Highway 20. $45. 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
Building Techniques for Zero-Energy Homes How can you build a home that uses no energy for heating, cooling, lights, or appliances? Today it’s possible to build a zero-energy home using readily available products and proven techniques. Zero-energy homes are going up across America, with many good examples right here in Central Oregon. In this one-hour seminar, learn what it takes to take your next project all the way to zero. Guest presenters Bruce Sullivan, BASE Zero. Sept. 24, noon-1pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. $6.24.
Coffee Sip & Dip Drink and paint with coffee! Dip your nose and your paintbrush into a delicious cup of coffee from Sparrow Bakery while artist Karen Eland walks us through creating beautiful images with this ingenious medium! Basic techniques will be taught and Karen will give one-on-one help, too. Sept. 27, 1-3pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347-564-9080. $40. Creating A Blueprint for Retirement Interactive workshop covering topics regarding the personal side of planning for retirement as well as financial guidance. Explanation of what a Certified Financial Planner can help with the retirement transition. Take away onepage written blueprint to guide the dynamic process of planning and creating a satisfying stage of life. Presenters Stephanie Costello, MSW, LCSW and Susan Butler, CFP. Sept. 26-25, 12:30-5pm. Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Rd. 541-389-7275. $59 per person, $39 for spouse or partner.
Creative Expression For Self-Discovery Learn how to use collaging and other creative activities for self-discovery from an experienced art therapist and certified life coach. No art experience necessary. Find out who you are under all the layers of life’s expectations. Start the journey of creating the life you want. Oct. 1, 6-8:30pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347-564-9080. $45.
Drywall Repair A two-hour class on how to repair the most common drywall maladies. Popped nails, bashed corner bead, holes, scratches, and bad seams. Get hands-on with drywall sheets, drywall compound, and texture. Learn from a 20-year journeyman in the drywall trade. Use the tools that professionals use and learn the best tricks of the trade! Sept. 26, 2-4pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. $35. Building for Today, Adapting for Tomorrow For today’s buildings to play a role in tomorrow’s communities, they need to be built to last and adaptable, rather than simply demolished. The objective of this presentation is to explain the credit and demonstrate how to achieve it as an Innovation in Design credit on buildings in the US. Guest Presenters: Steve Vinci, Principal, Senior Sustainability and Building Science Specialist, Morison Hershfield Sept. 23, 10-11am. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. Free.
Encaustic Collage In an afternoon you’ll learn the basics of how to collage using encaustic (wax) instead of glue. Prepare your surface, fuse encaustic, layer photographs and paper, image transfer, create surface texture, achieve a high-gloss finish. At the end of the day you will go home with up to two encaustic collage artworks. Sept. 24, 6-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. $70.
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25 VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
policies, how to establish a mentor relationship, the impact incarceration has on families, and communication skills. Volunteers are matched with a child in Central Oregon who shares similar interests and activities, and commit to spending a few hours a week together for a minimum of one year. This time is often spent going to community events, working on homework, or simply hanging out and talking. 541-388-6651.
while enjoying delicious, local beer from Worthy Brewing. Sept. 23, 6-8pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. $40.
EVENTS
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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The third annual Asian Mid-Autumn Festival at Oregon Tai Chi Wushu, 9/27
Entering the Dream of Nature An experiential taste of two powerful and complementary modalities that can bring you back into the dream of nature: plant spirit medicine and healing in the Huichol tradition of Mexico. Lawrence Messerman, PhD is an initiated healer and ritual leader in the Huichol tradition. Jessica De la O is a plant spirit medicine healer. For more info, contact bendfires@gmail. com or 541-241-6673. Oct. 1, 7-9pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. $5 donation.
Figure Drawing Salon Develop your skills at our live model figure drawing salon. This drop-in salon features a live nude model. Tuesdays, 8-10pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. $15.
ROBERT SELIGER
IS HONORED TO ANNOUNCE THAT HE HAS WON THE HIGHEST AWARD GIVEN IN NORTH AMERICA FOR FURNITURE MAKERS AND ARTISTS
1ST PLACE WINNER
Best Artist 2015 WESETERN DESIGN CONFERENCE JACKSON HOLE
IN
For furniture making classes and to view more of his work visit:
WWW.ROBERTSELIGER.COM WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/ROBERTSELIGERFURNITURE WWW.HOUZZ.COM/PRO/ROBERTSELIGER/ROBERT-SELIGER-CUSTOM-FINE-FURNITURE
Garden/Yard Art Welding Project Create an elegant stand to display an orb or potted plant. You’ll learn how to cut, bend, shape and weld steel. Materials are included. Sept. 25, 6-9pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. $45. Getting to Know Your Home’s EPS This one-hour presentation provides a basic understanding of what energy efficiency and high performance means in today’s building industry by examining the leading energy label, EPS (Energy Performance Score), and other Energy Trust of Oregon resources that are available to builders, brokers, and consumers in the region. Introduction to Energy Trust of Oregon, explanation of EPS label. Guest pre-
senter Matt Douglas, Earth Advantage. Sept. 23, 5-6pm. COBA, 1051 NE 4th St. Free.
Guitar Build Night This group-led session is for anyone interested in building a custom, handmade guitar. Tuesdays, 4-8pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. $30. Free for DIYcave members.
Hiking the Cascades Experience the beauty of the Cascade Mountains as you learn about the flora, fauna, cultural, and natural history of the Central Oregon Cascades. You’ll be hiking to lakes, meadows and through forests to vistas. Pace is moderate with stops as needed with an average distance of 6-10 miles. Many Lakes Hike 9/23, Wickiup Plain Hike 9/30. Wednesdays, 8:30am-4pm. COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave. $39.
Homeschooling Help Parents who homeschool are invited to learn about the variety of online resources Deschutes Public Library offers to help their children thrive. Register online. Sept. 29, 6-7pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-617-7089. Free. Honest Expression in Challenging Conversations Learn how to move from wholeness in all your communications, especially those that you sense may be challenging. Wednesdays, 6:30-8pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Dr. A suggested donation $65.
EVENTS
Know You: Genealogy 101 Interested in
West African Drum Class David Visiko
finding out about your family’s history, but don’t know where to start? Learn the basics of genealogy and find out what resources the library has to help you in your quest. Sept. 26, 11am-noon. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1055. Free.
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.
Marketing Efficiency This event is part of
Mosaic Glass Happy Rocks Glass artist, Teri Shamlian will teach you how to cut glass, how to create a great design, and how to make beautiful and unique happy rocks to decorate your special space or to give as gifts. Sept. 23, 5:30-8:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. $45.
Nonprofits Open Lab Search for grants using Foundation Directory Online with staff assistance. Prerequisite: Introduction to Finding Funders. Sept. 24, noon-1pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-617-7089. Free.
EVENTS Alan Watts—Sports Climbing at Smith Rock Alan Watts is considered to be the furu of Smith Rock and has written the Climber's Guide Book of all 1,800 routes. Join us as Alan talks about his climbing and Smith Rock— past, present, and future. Wed, Sept. 30, 7:30pm. River Run Events Center, 1730 Blue Heron Dr. Free.
Green TourOrganized by The Environmental Center as part The Bend Energy Challenge Week. The Green Tour will educate Central Oregon homeowners on ways they can use less energy and expose the building and real estate industry to the latest trends in green building. The tour will feature seven homes packed with energy saving features. They vary from new zero energy homes to a 1971 energy retrofit. Addresses can be found here: bendenergychallenge.org/tour. Sept. 26, 10am-5pm. Various locations - Bend. 541-3856908. Free.
Shop Safety Orientation You’ll be introduced to how the shop functions and get a tour of the space including the basics of how the equipment works. At the end of the tour, completing the shop orientation safety test will give you access to begin working on your projects at DIYcave. Tues, Sept. 29, 5-6pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. $10.
Getting to Know the Basics of Solar Learn how solar works, what incentives are available, investigate if your home is a good fit for solar, and check out the latest solar panels. Guest presenters: The Bend Energy Challenge, Energy Trust of Oregon, Department of Energy, E2 Solar, Neil Kelly Solar, and Sunlight Solar. Sept. 23, 4:30-6:30pm. Bend Parks & Recreation District Office, 799 SW Columbia St. Free.
Welding Workshop This hands-on class is perfect for beginners or anyone needing a refresher class in cutting and welding. You’ll cut steel with a torch and weld those pieces back together. You’ll be introduced to arc, MIG, and gas welding. Wed, Sept. 30, 5:30-8pm and Thurs, Oct. 1, 5:30-8pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. $40.
Cribbage For Rusty Players Let’s get together and enjoy a few rounds of cribbage. For more information please contact Nancy at 541-999-4561. Sept. 24, 2-4pm. Bandits Cafe, 3113 S Hwy 97, Suite 105. 541-233-3273. Geeks Who Drink Each week geek teams of up to six challenge one another in eight rounds of all-out fun and randomness! Tuesdays, 8-10pm. The Platypus Pub, 1203 NE Third St. 541-323-3282. Free.
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Coming mid October we will offer
THE COTTONWOOD SUPPER CLUB Friday/Satuday eves, a set menu, 3 course, casual dinner Watch here for future dates and details.
Breakfast or Lunch 7am - 3pm 541.549.2699 403 E. Hood Avenue Sisters, OR
Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers welcome. For info contact Sue at 541-3826281. Mondays, 6-9pm. Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. $1 to $13.
toward getting you safely and comfortably out on your own wild and scenic adventures! We’ll discuss proper shoe fit and common foot problems, as well as great high desert adventures for your happy feet! Oregon Natural Desert Association will raffle off two tickets to the film festival! Sept. 30, 6:30pm. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. Free, please RSVP.
musical and opera theatre class is designed to give participants opportunities to develop their vocal and acting skills. Participants will perform works from Johann Strauss Jr. comedic operetta Die Fledermaus (in English) and Georges Bizet’s tragedy Carmen. Students will also perform in the New Year's Eve Gala performance of Die Fledermaus under the direction of David Malis, Director of Opera Studies at the University of Arkansas. Mondays, 6-8:30pm. Pinckney Center, COCC, 2600 NW College Way. $110.
meditation, express dance with high-frequency music, and finish class with a deep, peaceful silence. Angelica Rose, a certified hypnotist and author, and an author of ebooks, relaxation CDs, DVDs, an online series on spiritual awakening, and more. Fri, Sept. 25, 6:30-8:15pm. Juniper Yoga, 369 NE Revere Ave. 541-389-0125. $11 adv., $15 door.
A Community of Smiles photography event, showcasing families and children with diverse abilities. Event will include a photo booth with props, treats from Nancy P’s, and wine. Event is family friendly. Resources and information will be available for families who have children experiencing disabilities. Sept. 27, 4-6pm. Nancy P’s Cafe & Bakery, 1054 NW Milwaukee Ave. 541-548-8559. Free, photo booth $5.
Happy Feet An educational evening geared
Opera Theatre Performance Class The
Pamper-Nurture Through Movement & Meditation Experience a nurturing heart
Community of Smiles Awareness Event
Last Saturday at The Old Iron Works An
Switzerland—Land of the Giants presentation, at The Wine Shop and Tasting Bar, 9/30.
PICK Asian Mid-Autumn Festival Oregon Tai Chi Wushu presents the 3rd annual Mid-Autumn 中秋节 (moon) Festival. Join us for this traditional event that includes mooncakes, snacks, Chinese tea, live local music, martial arts, and Polynesian dance performances. Family friendly! Sept. 27, 11:30am2:30pm. Oregon Tai Chi Wushu, 2115 NE Hwy 20 Suite 108. 541-639-8898. Free. Author! Author! Bringing our country’s top authors to Bend for a lively discussion of the author’s current works, literature and writing process. All proceeds benefit the Deschutes Public Library. This week Timothy Egan, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter. Oct. 1, 7pm. Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St. $25 per event, $80 for four-author series.
Baker Charter School—Open House Open House forum to meet our regional staff, parents, and students. Learn more about our web academy for grades K-12 or our early college program for grades 10-12. Oct. 1, 6:30-7:30pm. Baker Charter Schools - Drop-in Center, 1352 NE 2nd Ave. 541-663-6488. Free.
Bend Chamber Business After Hours Hear a sneak preview of upcoming shows and exclusive member benefits. Go behind the scenes and experience the “real” Tower Theatre during this special mixer. Fourth Thursday of every month, 5-7pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. Free.
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. Last Saturday of every month, 6pm. The Old Iron Works, 50 SE Scott St. Free.
Bioluminescence in the Sea Join researcher and educator Dr. Anne Carwile in a fascinating exploration of bioluminescent organisms and learn how this trait helps plants and animals survive. Bring a lunch or enjoy one from the Rimrock Café. Sept. 24, noon1pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Free with admission.
MC Fall Fest Join us for this completely free event open to the public. Hayrides, inflatables, pumpkin patch, and more. Food trucks are available for cost. Plus prizes! Sept. 25, 4-8pm. Taylor Ranch, 22465 McArdle Rd. 541-3066209. Free.
Oktoberfest—Sisters Science Club We are a community based organization that strives to enhance science, math, and health in the schools and community through seven main areas. Sept. 29, 5-9pm. The Belfry, 302 Main St., Sisters.
Pool Tournament Cash Cup Tuesdays, 8pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541760-9412. $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.
Best Venue for live music, dancing, food and libations
Live Music 5 Days a Week Thu 9/24 the Jeff Leslie Blues Band 7:30 to 10:30 Fri 9/25 Emerald City 8:30 to 12 Sat 9/26 Emerald City 8:30 to 12 Sun 9/27 GAME DAY Bears @ Seahawks 1:25 to 4:25 Mon 9/28 Monday Night Football
Saturday and Sunday Breakfast 62860 Boyd Acres Rd in Bend
(541) 383-0889
www.NorthsideBarFun.com Facebook.com/NorthsideBarAndGrill
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Bend Energy Challenge Week. This session is geared toward those in the real estate industry with a focus on brokers. A soup and salad lunch buffet will be provided. This onehour seminar will help you communicate with clients about the value and benefits energy efficient and green certified homes. Learn about green home features and how to sell them. Sept. 23, noon-1pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. 541-3856908. $6.24.
Zumba Focus on the smooth and dance oriented Zumba. Mondays-Tuesdays-Thursdays, 5:30-6:15pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. Suite 3. $7, $60 for 10 class pass.
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
EVENTS
Public Bingo Thursdays, 6pm. Bend Elks
Recreational cannabis celebration featuring free beer, food, and giveaways. Open to anyone over 21. Oct. 1, noon. DiamondTree, 2715 NE Hwy 20. 541-706-9340. Free.
can carry a tune you are welcome to join the Gospel Choir of the Cascades! We are a community choir going on our ninth season of joy-spreading and soul-lifting. We sing old spirituals and modern gospel songs by groups like Chicago Mass Choir. For more info email bendgospelchoir@gmail.com. Tuesdays. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St.
Trivia Tuesdays Pick your smartest friends
Italian Language Group Mondays, 1-2pm.
Recreational Cannabis Celebration
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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to make teams of two-to-five people for a mind-bending game of trivia. Tuesdays, 6-8pm. The Lot, 745 NW Columbia St. Free.
Saturdays, 11am-12:30pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-639-7513. Free.
MEETINGS
NAMI Depression & Bipolar Disorder Support Group Mondays, 7-9pm. First United
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.
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, 6:30pm. Sacred Fire Community Hearth, 2801 NE Lapointe Ct. 541-241-6056. Cool Cars and Coffee All makes, models welcome. Saturdays, 8am. C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Dr.
Economic Forecast Breakfast Today, Deschutes County’s economy is in a much better place than it was before the Great Recession. We have a more diverse and stable economy that is less reliant on construction and tourism. But, what can we expect tomorrow? Oct. 1, 7:30-10pm. The Riverhouse Convention Center, 3075 Hwy 97. 541-382-3221. $49-$640. Free doTERRA Class Fri, Sept. 25, 6:308pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541-330-0334. Free.
Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. Free.
Overeaters Anonymous Meeting Mondays-noon, Saturdays, 9:30am and Thursdays-noon. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. Free. Shaping Our City—Bend’s UGB & You As Bend prepares to develop a new Urban Growth Boundary (UGB), we must take into consideration how expansion will impact housing availability, wildlife habitat, traffic congestion, and vibrant neighborhoods. Join us to learn how your input can help create the city you want to see. Sept. 30, 6-7:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-647-2930. Free, please RSVP. SMART Recovery Meeting For people who want to overcome addictive habits, using scientific and motivational principles for long-lasting change. Every other Monday, 6-7pm. Smart Recovery Meeting, 920 SW Emkay Rd. Suite 104. 541-977-7754. Free.
Socrates Cafe Group People from different backgrounds get together and exchange thoughtful ideas and experiences while embracing the Socratic Method. Open to all comers. Fourth Thursday, 6-7pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541749-2010. Free.
Spanish Club Spanish language study and conversation group. All levels welcome. Thursdays, 3:30-5pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-749-2010. Free.
KIDS’ EVENTS
Lodge #1371, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. 541-3897438. Starter pack $21 (27 games), $10 minimum buy-in.
Backpack Explorer—To Be a Badger
Gospel Choir of the Cascades—New Member Welcome If you love to sing and
Badgers are fast, furious, and smart. These clever creatures have a remarkable way of getting what they want. Find out how. Sept. 30-Oct. 1, 10-11am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Members $10; non-members $15.
Bend Boys Choir The Cascade School of Music is offering a choir class just for boys who love to sing! We will sing everything from pop to folk with a little classical thrown in as well. Grades 2-5. Call or visit our website for more information. Sept. 24Oct. 9. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-382-6866. $145. Discover Nature Festival With more than 30 fun, nature-based activities, the festival offers children and families the chance to explore new ways to enjoy time together outside. There will be something for everyone—whether you are active and athletic, curious about the natural world, or want to get your hands dirty making art. Fly fishing practice, archery, live birds of prey and reptiles, fort building, nature arts and crafts, and much more. Sept. 26, 10am3pm. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St. Free.
Horse Crazy All about horses, their language, and their family relationships. Join Coach Nancy and the horses for four weeks of activities with horses (non-mounted) and nature. Tuesdays, 4-5pm. Wild Hearts Ranch, 64682 Cook Ave. 541-350-8563. $75 for four weeks.
Kids Lead Leadership education and development for ages 11-14. Art, horse and nature activities for developing the skills of leadership. No horse experience needed for these non-mounted activities. Located 8 miles north of Tumalo. Wednesdays, 3-4:15pm. Wild Hearts Ranch, 64682 Cook Ave. 541-350-8563. $75 for four weeks. Kids Welding We have a welding workshop tailored just for kids (ages 8-17). In this hands-on class, kids will cut steel with a torch and weld those pieces back together. They’ll learn some amazing skills and take their creations home with them. Sun, Sept. 27, 5-7:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. $35.
Kids Woodshop For ages 7-17. Kids will learn some great skills in this class including measuring, cutting with a saw, and building their project. Materials will be supplied and the kids will go home with a handcrafted box. Sun, Sept. 27, 11am1:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. $25. La Pine STEAM Team Ages 9+. Balloon race cars, build and race a variety of prototypes. Register online. Sept. 23, 1:30pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. Free. LEGO Block Party All ages. Read! Build! Play! Join other builders and a gazillion LEGO pieces. Sept. 23, 2:30pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Free. OBOB Book Club Grades 6-8. Discuss titles from the Oregon Battle of the Books list. Sept. 23, 4-5pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Free. Pajama Party Ages 0-5. Evening storytime with songs, rhymes, and crafts. Wear your PJs! Wed, Sept. 30, 6:30pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St. Free. Redmond Teen Advisory Board Ages 12-17. Plan library programs, meet new people, eat snacks! Sept. 23, 2:30-3:30pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free.
Redmond Teen Territory Ages 12-17. Hang out, mess around, geek out. Games, crafts, and more! Sept. 30, 2-4pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free. Teen Writing Group Ages 12-17. Plan year-long writing project that ends with a self-published anthology. Sept. 25, 4-5pm. Downtown Bend Library, 601 NW Wall St. Free. Tween Yoga 10-12 year olds. The basics of yoga to help build strength and flexibility. Flowing sequences and physically challenging postures can help increase self-confidence, balance, and compassion. Breathing exercises can increase mental awareness and focus which can help with school work and challenging everyday situations. Wednesdays, 4-5:15pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. $5-$6.
CULTURE WATCH
Something Wilde
C
An Ideal Husband opens CTC’s theater season
By Jared Rasic
By Jared Rasic 29
An Ideal Husband mostly focuses on honor and how that ideal fits into society, politics, and romance. The somewhat complicated plot is as follows: Sir Robert Chiltern (a very dignified Jim Mocabee) and his wife Lady Gertrude Chiltern (a strong Emily Cady) are having a very fancy dinner party with some of London’s very upper crust. One of the dinner guests is Mrs. Cheveley (a fantastic Kelley Ryan), an old enemy of Lady Chiltern’s. Cheveley has come to the party to engage in a bit of blackmail with Sir Chiltern, who initially made his fortune by selling a Cabinet secret that suggested he buy stocks in the Suez Canal days before the government announced its purchase. She wants Chiltern to support a scheme to build a canal in Argentina, a fraudulent one, and if he won’t, then evidence of Chiltern’s past misdeeds will come to light.
Meanwhile, Chiltern’s best friend, Lord Arthur Goring (a scene-stealing Will Futterman) is biding his time as a layabout dandy, but gets pulled into the middle of the intrigue, as Mrs. Cheveley is Goring’s first love and destroyer of his heart. His father wants him to get engaged in the next few days, but he can’t seem to find the energy to care. Mabel Chiltern (a lovely Annie Trevisan) enters as Robert’s
sister, a snarky Disney princess, avoiding as many proposals as she can. All of these disparate storylines combine, with the added intrigue of a stolen broach, mistaken identities, and a lord’s honor, to make for a delightful and fastpaced romp through high society. The cultural phenomenon that is “Downton Abbey” should prepare audiences for theater that luxuriates in language. Wilde was a master at writing flowery dialogue that was pointed underneath, showing the aristocracy as shiftless layabouts that only really ever came alive when sniping at each other. The barbs traded in this show had the audience rolling and secretly pocketing a few of them to use against a neighbor or co-worker later.
Director Brian Johnson has staged the show well, in a non-flashy way that brings the attention to Wilde’s words more than his direction. The moments of physical humor show remarkable restraint, as the show has sometimes been staged as goofy, while this production rests on the words and performances. A performance of Oscar Wilde material lives and dies by its cadence, rhythm, and pacing. CTC’s production had a rocky first 10 or 15 minutes (which is completely understandable since it was their first performance for an audience), but once the actors all synchronized, the show became an absolute delight, with a wonderfully paced second act and several laugh-outloud moments. An Ideal Husband is dialogue heavy enough to probably go over the heads of most kids, but if they are fans of theater, the sumptuous costume design by Kelley Ryan, the stunning set design by Nicholas May, and the subtle and evocative lighting by Jim Mocabee make for a beautiful play to look at, even if the story is out of reach.
An Ideal Husband 7:30 pm, Sept. 18-Oct. 3 Cascades Theatrical Company 148 NW Greenwood Ave. $15-$20
T
he ninth annual Latino Community Association’s Festival of Cultures returns to Redmond’s Centennial Park September 26 with more culture than ever before. According to Executive Director Brad Porterfield, the festival will include 15 cultural booths, 10 sponsor/ business booths, nine informal Street Fair booths, 21 nonprofit Kid’s Area booths, nine food vendors, and 10 performers. “Hosting a Festival of Cultures is a gesture toward the community as a whole that says, ‘You are welcome here,'” Porterfield explains. “It says we’re interested in you no matter what your background is or even because of what your background is. Hospitality is a traditional American value, even if we haven’t always practiced it in equitable ways throughout our history.” To illustrate that welcome, the community will witness 19 neighbors from 14 countries—including Mexico, the Philippines, Benin, China, India, Israel, Jordan, the Netherlands, Peru, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand, Venezuela and the United Kingdom—as they take their oaths of citizenship.
The day’s festivities are as follows: 10 am: Welcome/Bienvenida 10:05 am: Official Citizenship Oath Ceremony 10:45 am: Keynote: José Balcazar 11 am: Central Oregon Showcase Chorus (Patriotic songs) 11:20 am: Parade of Cultures Noon: Chiringa 12:45 pm: Hokule’a Ohana Polynesian Dancers
HAPPY HOUR $ $ $ $
1:45 pm: Academie de Balet Clasique
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2:10 pm: Miquel de Alonso 2:45 pm: Celtic Dancers
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Thurs 12-8 pm, Fri-Sat 12-9 pm, Sun 12-8 pm & Mon 4-9 pm
El Sancho Taco Shop 335 NE DeKalb Ave. (458) 206-5973
Tues-Thurs 3-9 pm, Fri-Sat 3-10 pm, & Sun 3-9 pm
3:15 pm: Zumba Dancers
Not a member of
ATHLETIC CLUB OF BEND? WE INVITE YOU TO BE A MEMBER FOR A DAY! On the day of your massage appointment you will receive Full use of our facility! 61615 Athletic Club Dr. • 541-385-3062
4 pm: Bachata Dancers 5 pm: “Ayayat Idait Tena Numu” Warm Springs Children’s Dancers Come down to this rich, diverse and important festival and become worldly, if only just for an afternoon.
Latino Community Association’s Festival of Cultures 10 am-6 pm. Saturday, Sept. 26. 412 SW 8th St., Redmond.
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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scar Wilde was the world’s first genre mash-up artist. He loved comedy, he loved horror, he loved tales of high society, and he loved farce. At any given moment in one of his works, he might dive from drawing room comedy to farce, dash it up with some romance, and maybe throw a villain in for the hell of it. His unpredictability as a writer—and his uncommon knack for scripting consistently deft witticisms—is what keeps his work popular and relevant over a hundred years after his death.
HolidayVillage Grand Opening Saturday October 3rd at 10:00 am Refreshments, adoptable animals & discount coupons for first 50 shoppers.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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With Cannabis CHOW Cooking Putting the ‘pot’ in crockpots By Charlie Hunter 31
In truth, records show that people have been making food and drink with cannabis for well over a thousand years. From the narcotic drink bhang of 10th century India to the cannabis cafes of Amsterdam, pot has a long and seasoned history in the kitchen. It’s used as an herb to accent flavors, as a butter or oil for baking and cooking, and it makes an undeniably pretty garnish! Variety is the spice of life. When it comes to the culinary arts, the uses of cannabis are endless. All it takes is a love of cooking, an affinity for this most versatile of herbs, and an imagination as diverse as one's tastes. As with any project, getting started is often the hardest part. Many uninformed folks jump on the brownie recipe for its simplicity. They buy pre-made mix, follow the directions on the box, grind up a handful of weed, and toss it in as the magical ingredient. Is this wrong? No. But it certainly isn’t the right way to do it. For one, the taste of the weed comes across as overpowering and its effects are minimal if felt at all. In essence, our canna-cook has wasted perfectly good herb. It should be noted that while THC is not water-soluble, it is most certainly fat-soluble. This means that things like milk, butter, olive oil, and coconut oil are your best friends in the kitchen. So, back to those brownies.
turn that fun green ingredient into something usable and universal: weed butter or oil. With this, one can convert nearly any recipe into its happier, THC-enriched version. Making oil or butter is incredibly simple, and while it is a bit time consuming, it takes minimal effort. There are more than a few ways to do this, but for the sake of being concise, break out that crockpot. The key is to use low heat for a prolonged duration, and the crockpot is the preferred tool for this. The next step is to decide what type of oil or butter to use. Get some butter, olive oil, coconut butter, coconut oil, or whatever suits your fancy. Now for the weed. There is certainly nothing wrong with grinding up a pile of hearty, crystal-studded buds. In fact, this will produce a significantly more potent product. But, in the thriving world of the cannabis growing culture, trim is an abundant and cheap resource. It also works fine for making cooking supplies. Toss the weed and the butter into that crockpot and set it on low heat. Once the butter melts down, it is ideal to have it just covering the plant matter. Let the crockpot do its thing for at least 12 hours and as many as 24. Kill the heat and pour it all off through a nice tight-mesh
strainer or cheesecloth to remove the stripped plant matter. This can be discarded. You will be left with a pleasant, green end product that can be used for almost anything, and when refrigerated, lasts for ages. Now, all our canna-cook needs to do is follow any run-of-the-mill recipe and substitute their pot product in place of its non-intoxicating version. Obviously, one can increase or decrease these portions to facilitate proper dosage. The extracted product will have a much more palatable taste, and depending on the quantities used in making the butter or oil, a significantly more effective and scrumptious edible. Now, suddenly, those pot brownies are very simple. A fair warning regarding the consumption of pot brownies, and pot food in general: While there are many urban myths associated with weed, the munchies are very real. Be aware that while smoking weed brings about the effects nearly instantaneously, edibles require digestion. The effect from edibles is usually felt as a body high rather than a head high. So as delicious as that first brownie was, it’s advisable to hold off on the second until the full effects of the first have begun to abate, or one might find one’s self as immobile as the couch they have fused with. With that in mind, good luck in the kitchen and bon appétit!
Before beginning any culinary endeavor, even our aforementioned brownies, there is a very important step. The best thing to do is to
CLARIFICATION: In our recent Breakfast & Lunch Guide, Bend-o Bento is listed under the category Japanese/Sushi. However, while they do serve Japanese dishes, they do not offer sushi.
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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e’ve all heard about the magic brownie. There has been a comical association between pot and the beloved chocolaty desert for as long as I can remember. Popular culture has latched onto this and taken it for quite the ride. Whether it’s Eric Cartman of “South Park” warning his friends about the dangers of hippies and their brownies, or a YouTube video of police officers consuming the delicious edible evidence after a raid, we’ve all seen it somewhere. Magic brownies get people loaded. Thanks pop-culture.
MICRO REVIEW Stop and Smell the Beer WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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Bend’s Bouquet of Beer, the thoughtful gift for craftheads By Kevin Gifford
L
ike beer? Fed up with all the pesky driving around and going to the store required to purchase beer? If you live in metro Bend, your prayers have been answered.
way to show someone that you care about them. Maybe the beer won’t last as long as a dozen roses, but it’s 100-percent guaranteed to make you feel better, or at least drunker.
Bouquet of Beer, founded this summer by Andrew Gorman and Daniel Brewster (with a last name like that, it’d be a crime if he wasn’t involved with beer somehow), is a Bend company with a concept that’s brilliantly simple. Go to their website (bouquetofbeer.com) and use their interface to select six bottles, broadly divided into light, dark, IPA, cider, and gluten-free varieties. Pay for your order, and the beer will be delivered straight to your door, complete with a pint glass and metal opener, in a snappy cardboard holder that looks a bit like a flower bouquet; all this for $39.99, with free delivery anywhere within Bend. (On the same day, even, as long as you order by noon.)
Twenty-six different beers are available from Bouquet of Beer, with the selections changing over time. Here are a few recommendations on what to buy, depending on who the bouquet’s for:
Thoughtful of them, isn’t it? And to a dyed-inthe-wool Bend beer fan, there’s no better
- Keep It Local (Deschutes Mirror Pond, Deschutes Twilight, Deschutes Inversion, GoodLife Descender, GoodLife Sweet As, 10 Barrel Apocalypse): For patriotic Central Oregonians who feel guilty whenever they order a beer hailing from more than fifty miles away. All of these selections offer a nice quaffing experience, with enough hops to keep your mouth happy—and they won’t knock you on the floor, either. Good for those new to beer. - Dark and Brooding (Oakshire Espresso Stout, Sierra Nevada Porter, Three Creeks Fivepine Chocolate Porter, Deschutes Obsidian Stout, Deschutes Black Butte Porter, Cascade Lakes 20” Brown): If someone you know is feeling gloomy, why not cheer them up with some beer that’s a good color match for their feelings? Fivepine is one of the best porters made in all the Pacific Northwest, and Oakshire’s stout offers a fairly startling amount of coffee flavor while remaining fairly light and accessible. - Off the Beaten Path (21st Amendment Hell or High Watermelon, 10 Barrel Pub Beer, Sierra Nevada Nooner Pils, 2 Towns Outcider, Ace Hard Pear Cider, Ground Breaker IPA No. 5): Want to surprise someone? Treat him or her to a grab bag of beer that marches to the beat of its own drum. Hell or High Watermelon is like a beer version of Hi-C, 2 Towns and Ace both produce excellent cider, and—well— gluten-free beer is certainly different, anyway.
FOOD & BEER EVENTS FOOD EVENTS Dine with Wine Wine tasting. 21+. Last Friday of every month, 6pm. Crossings at the Riverhouse, 3075 N Hwy 97. Free.
our heritage meats with potluck side dishes, veggies, and desserts you contribute. Low waste containers will be much appreciated! At 7 pm, Mare Wakefield and Nomad from Nashville will perform a private concert on our South porch. Sept. 27, 5:30-9pm. Anker Farm, 61900 Anker Ln. 541-241-7793. $15 donation.
Meet the Roaster Come and try the various Bellatazza coffee blends and talk with our Bellatazza roaster, Nate Decker. Have you ever wondered about the life and adventures of a coffee bean? This is your chance to learn about the different paths that a coffee bean can take from field to cup. Wednesdays, 2-7pm. Through Sept. 30. Bellatazza, 869 NW Wall St. 541-318-0606. Free.
Mid-Autumn Festival Pre-Fixed Dinner Come celebrate Mid-Autumn Festival. Menu includes: Shanghai xiao long bao, walnut shrimp, steamed halibut, lychee cucumber cooler, mandarin braised duck leg, and mooncake trio with ginger creme brulee. Fri, Sept. 25, 4-9pm, Sat, Sept. 26, 4-9pm and Sun, Sept. 27, 4-9pm. Chi Chinese & Sushi Bar, 70 NW Newport Ave. 541-323-3931. $45 per person, $80 couple.
A Sustainable Approach to the Kitchen Learn practical techniques for how to prepare savory plant-based foods that nourish both body and soul. Join Chef Richard Hull and Barbara Troyer in a five-course brunch tasting of seasonal foods from the garden. A portion of the proceeds from this workshop will benefit Harmony Farm Sanctuary. Saturdays, 10am-noon. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Dr. Suite 203. 541-350-1553. $95 donation.
Taste Local Thursdays Join the High Desert Food and Farm Alliance and participating HDFFA partner businesses for a fall Restaurant Series featuring specials made from Central Oregon ingredients. Go in on the listed dates and ask for the “Central Oregon Special.” The series is free to join, however prices and specials will vary depending on the restaurant. Use the #TasteLocalThursdays and #HDFFA on Facebook and Instagram to be entered to win a local food gift bag! Find out more at hdffa.org. Sept. 24, 3-9pm. 900 Wall, 900 NW Wall St. 603-831-3148. Oct. 1, 11am-10pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 603-831-3148. Cost varies. Wood Fired Cuisine Cooking Class Back by popular demand, our best-selling class is back again. And we have added new pizzas and a new twist to dessert. Sept. 30, 6pm. Chef Bette’s Home, NW Greenleaf Way. 541312-0097. $85.
BEER EVENTS Beer & Wine Tastings We always have a wonderful selection of beer and wine! Come join us every Friday and Saturday. Fridays-Saturdays, 3:30-5:30pm. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave. 541-382-3940. Free.
Brews with Views Work up a thirst on a hike at the Metolius Preserve as you explore old-growth ponderosas and look for early fall
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Community Pint Night—Family Access Network Deschutes Brewery will donate $1 per pint sold every Tuesday of the month of September to the Family Access Network. The Family Access Network helps families connect to and navigate the often confusing social service system. They work hand in hand with families to connect them to food, shelter, clothing, heating, school supplies, health services, or whatever they need. Tues, Sept. 29, 11am-11pm. Deschutes Brewery Public House, 1044 NW Bond St. 541-382-9242. Free admission.
Firkin Friday A different firkin each week. $3 firkin pints until it’s gone. Fridays, 4pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr. 541-6394776. Hood River Hops Fest An annual celebration of beer’s bitter friend, freshly harvested hops. Hood River County is surrounded by world-renowned hop growing regions and since 2003 brewers have gathered each September in downtown Hood River to share their fresh-hop beer creations. The family friendly event features a variety of food vendors, over 40 breweries with over 60 fresh hop beers, rocking live music, and an awesome collectable mug. Sept. 26, noon-8pm. Downtown Hood River, 5th Street and Columbia Street. 541-386-2000. $5. Meet the Brewer 21+. Last Saturday of every month, 6pm. Crossings at the Riverhouse, 3075 N Hwy 97. Free.
PICK PT80 Beerfest Challenge Inaugural PT80 Beerfest Challenge. 80th birthday celebration with a beer garden, food, judging, and a people’s choice award for the best IPA 2016. Sixteen Central Oregon breweries will be competing for the best IPA and judged by local celebrities. The aim of the competition is to select a winning beer and brewery and celebrate and recognize the craft beer industry in Bend. In addition, the Pine Tavern Restaurant and Bar will serve the award-winning beer known as PT80, as its signature beer for the year 2016. Sept. 29, 2:30-11pm. Pine Tavern, 967 NW Brooks St. $10. Rugby World Cup Watch Party Bend Rugby club fundraiser, we’ll have two live World Cup games and have breakfast from Hola and bloody mary’s from Crater Lake Vodka, in Silver Moon’s taproom! Sept. 26, 8am-2pm. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave.
PICK Sisters Fresh Hop Festival The fifth year of this unique brew fest, that has an emphasis on hops and requirement that at least one entry to the festival is brewed with hops fresh from the vine. Over 20 breweries will be competing for the People’s Choice award for the coveted Golden Bunny. Sept. 26, noon-8pm. Village Green Park, 335 S. Elm St. $5 tasting mug, $1 per taste. Fresh Hop Celebration & Tasting Sample two fresh hop brews from Three Creeks Brewing Company! Hop Wrangler Fresh Hop Red and Coenlick’r Fresh Hop Pale Ale! Sept. 24, 5-8pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. Free.
Fall into the Grill
Happy Hour Open to Close 541-382-2200
395 SW Powerhouse Drive • View our Menu at www.gregsgrill.com
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Early Fall Feast We will prepare and serve
colors. Learn more about the Metolius and its iconic river and forests. Then, finish off with a taste of outstanding beers handcrafted by Bridge 99 Brewery and named for features in the Metolius. Registration is required. Sept. 23, 4-7pm. Metolius Preserve, near Camp Sherman. 541-330-0017. Free.
Fall Extravaganza
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OUTSIDE
Matsutake Madness! Hiking with a purpose By Kevin Sperl
Fortunately, the matsutake mushroom hunting season is currently underway in Central Oregon, a season that, according to Danny Weinrich, special forest products coordinator for the Crescent Ranger District, has drawn a “larger-than-usual” number of license applications. “The Crescent Ranger District sold 151 mushroom permits on the first day that the season opened this year,” he said. “Last year we sold 166 permits in total for the entire season.”
If the cost of the permit seems high, it is worth noting that some harvested mushrooms sold around the world, especially in Japan some have been known to sell for up to $1,000 per pound. Weinrich said that this year’s mushroom season is “typical.” It benefits from moisture and is hurt by dry
“To properly harvest matsutake mushrooms and not impact future harvests, people should try to harvest by hand and gently rock the mushroom back and forth to remove it,” he added. According to a Japanese mushroom hunting guide, the highest grade is given to mushrooms that have an even plumpness and measure six inches in length. More important than size, however, is to make sure that the cap has not yet opened. The Japanese say to choose those that look like the male organ, instead of an umbrella.
A commercial permit is required for those seeking the delicacy and is available at each of the four district offices during regular business hours.
Nelson-Dean reminded harvesters that they must be 18 or older and have valid identification to purchase a permit.
“They tend to like areas with western hemlock, lodgepole pine, Douglas-fir, noble fir, Shasta red fir, sugar pine, and ponderosa pine,” said Weinrich. “To find matsutake mushrooms, look for telltale bumps or cracks in the forest duff among the roots of trees.” Weinrich emphasized that care must be taken by harvesters, gently searching for the mushrooms with their fingers. If harvesting tools are used, they must be less than 18-inches long and a half-inch wide, similar to a weed popping tool.
Jean Nelson-Dean, public affairs officer for the Deschutes National Forest, explained that the season began on Tuesday, Sept. 8 and will end on Nov. 8. “Four national forests in Oregon — the Deschutes, Fremont-Winema, Umpqua, and the Willamette — are included in this season for the taking of the matsutake mushroom,” she said.
“Permits cost $200 for the 62-day season or $100 for a consecutive 31-day, half-season permit,” noted Nelson-Dean. “An $8 per day, three-day minimum, permit can also be bought that does not require picking days to be consecutive.”
California to British Columbia.
conditions and early frosts. “In the last week when it was dry, it was harder to find them,” he noted. “But with some wetting, and cooler, but not frost weather, we should be seeing more mushrooms.” To find mushrooms, Weinrich explained that matsutakes tend to grow concealed under duff, the dead plant material on the forest floor of coniferous forests from Northern
Weinrich cautions harvesters to always cover the hole in the duff made during harvest in order to preserve the mycelium that will produce next year’s crop. “No raking or ground disturbance is allowed for harvesting of matsutake mushrooms,” he added. For eating, Nelson-Dean suggested an even simpler recipe for enjoying the seasonal treat. “A popular way to make them is to broil them for a few minutes on each side and add a bit of rice wine vinegar or soy sauce either before or after broiling,” she noted.
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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or a simple autumn meal, sear matsutake mushrooms in a hot cast iron pan seasoned with canola oil and salt. Finish up with a sprig of thyme and some butter. The ingredients are straightforward and easily purchased at your favorite grocery store. Collecting the mushrooms could take a bit more work.
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GO HERE!
Going to Great Heights High-elevation hikes in the Cascades
36 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
By Lisa Seales
W
ell, it’s that time of year; the kids are back in school, the leaves are changing color, and there’s a pleasant nip in the air signaling that indeed fall has arrived. For many, this means it’s time to hang up your hiking boots and dust off your ski gear. But wait, not so fast! Now that the crowds are gone, it’s the perfect time for a last-minute climb to one of the area’s highest peaks.
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Oregon’s third-highest peak draws crowds from all over the world, and from the top, it’s easy to tell why: On a clear day the views are unbeatable, you can see half the state. Though the climb isn’t technical, it is difficult. It’s more than 11 miles round trip, and about 5,000 feet of elevation gain. You can access the trail from Devils Lake Trailhead, which is off the Cascades Lakes Highway, approximately 27 miles from Bend, and seven miles from the Mt. Bachelor turnoff.
Diamond Peak Set slightly farther west than the other mountains in the Cascades, carved by glaciers, and pinnacles by lava peaks, Diamond Peak is well worth the climb. Although there are several ways up the mountain, the shortest is along the south ridge. It’s about a 12-mile climb round trip, and just under 4,000 feet of elevation gain. To get there, just east of Oakridge on Hwy 58, turn south at the sign for Hills Creek Dam and bear right onto Road 21, which you will follow for about 30 miles. Just beyond Indigo Springs Campground, turn left on Pioneer Gulch Road 2149, then right on Rockpile Road 2160, and head to the Rockpile Trail to start the hike.
Broken Top This climb won’t quite get you to the top of the mountain, but instead to a beautiful turquoise pool in the midst of the crater, with views of all three Sisters. The hike is roughly 14 miles round trip and about 2,500 feet of elevation gain. Although there are shorter ways up the mountain that require a four-wheel drive vehicle with significant clearance—the road is not for the faint of heart—the easiest way to hit the trailhead is to turn right at the sign for Todd Lake, off the Cascade Lakes Highway, just past the Mt. Bachelor ski area, and take the trail from the parking lot. A word of caution: When planning any high-elevation hiking, but particularly at this time of year, you must watch the weather forecast carefully, and only attempt to hike in good conditions. No matter what the forecast, always be prepared with layers of appropriate clothing (hopefully it goes without saying that cotton is a no-no), plenty of water and food, and a map and compass or GPS. The weather can change very quickly at elevation, and what you thought might be a hike in 70-degree weather can end as a trudge through snow and blowing wind. That being said, there’s still time to take advantage of these high-elevation adventures, so have fun, but be careful out there!
OUTSIDE EVENTS Alan Watts—Sports Climbing at Smith Rock Alan Watts is considered to be the furu
PICK Barre3 is Turning Five Join us for an outdoor class to celebrate our fifth anniversary! Class taught by barre3 founder Sadie Lincoln. Stick around after class for photobooth fun, snacks, and giveaways. Bring your yoga mat and a water bottle. All donations benefit Saving Grace. Sept. 27, 10am. Tetherow, 61240 Skyline Ranch Rd. $15 donation. Bird Walk Explore this Sisters-area preserve that is considered a birding hotspot with more than 160 species observed! Registration required. Sept. 26, 9am-noon. Camp Polk Meadow Preserve. 541-330-0017. Free.
FootZone Noon Run Meet at FootZone for a 3 to 5 mile run. Wednesdays-noon. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free.
Free Bird Walk Join the Nature Center every Saturday for a free morning bird walk! Registration required. Saturdays, 8:3010:30am. Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Rd. 541-593-4394. Free.
Green Ridge Raptor Migration Count Help count and identify hawks, eagles, and other raptors as they migrate south for the winter. Green Ridge (NW of Sisters). Everyone welcome. Directions and more info: ecaudubon.org. 9 am carpool to site from Indian Ford Campground, Hwy 20 & S Pine St. Sat, Sept. 26, 10am-5pm and Sun, Sept. 27, 10am-5pm. 541-241-2190. Free.
John Day Fossil Beds History Walks Short interpretive walks of up to 1/2 mile will get you into the geology and history of the Clarno and Painted Hills units of the John Day Fossil Beds Monument and surrounding areas. Preregister for one or both outings at bendparksandrec.org. September 24, Clarno Unit; October 1, Painted Hills unit. Thursdays, 8:30am-4pm. Bend Park & Recreation District, 799 SW Columbia St. 541-706-6116. $30.
Lake Creek Trail We’ll walk through the
bike ride. This ride is open to experienced riders who want to explore the crowd-free trails of Skyline Forest while learning about the potential trail network that could connect Bend and Sisters. Registration is required. Oct. 1, 4-7pm. Skyline Forest, Bull Springs Tree Farm. 541-330-0017. Free.
Move it Mondays First and third Mon-
A new story is about to unfold.
day 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. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free.
Super Moon Hike Explore this privately owned and permanently conserved ranch under the light of a super moon. See how the super moon’s close proximity to Earth make it even bigger and brighter. Registration is required. Sept. 27, 4-8:30pm. Rimrock Ranch, outside Sisters. 541-330-0017. Free.
Tuesday Hikes. Hikes cover 4-6 miles at an easy pace. Preregister by the day at bendparksandrec.org. Tuesdays, 9am-2:30pm. Bend Park & Recreation District, 799 SW Columbia St. $18.
NOW is our time!
Wednesday Night Group Runs Join us Wednesday nights for our 3-5 mile group runs, all paces welcome! Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. Free.
SPORTS EVENTS Crush Cancer Run Third annual 5k and 10k fun run and walk through the farmland and vineyards of our winery. Runners and walkers will be treated to extraordinary views of onsite vineyards and the Three Sisters Mountains. A post race celebration will include great music, food, and of course, wine and beer! The racers start at the venue’s tasting room and tour through our vineyard. Sept. 27, 11am-2pm. Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Dr. 541-526-5075. $45 5k, $55 10k. Cops & Robbers Fun Run Meet at Foot-
preserve’s ponderosa forests and follow Lake Creek to Suttle Lake. Learn more about the fascinating plant life of the Metolius region, while searching for colorful blooms like rose, lupine, and scarlet gilia. Registration is required. Sept. 27, 9am-3pm. Metolius Preserve, near Camp Sherman. 541-330-0017. Free.
Zone to get your list of loot to steal and a chance to size up your competition. You will have one hour to gather all the items on your list. FootZone’s own patrol will be wandering the streets of Downtown Bend looking to catch any robbers in the act! Sept. 24, 5:30pm. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. Free, RSVP requested.
Last Thursday Growler Runs Last Thurs-
Fleet Feet Scavenger Hunt Assemble
days 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. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. Free.
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your team (limit 4 per team—considerations made, just ask), sign-up fleetfeetbend.com! Clues will be given, horn sounds, and off you go! Winner winner gets a chicken dinner! Sept. 25, 6pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601. Free.
Metolius Preserve Hike The hike will explore new loops and trail connections created by recently added bridges across Lake Creek. Explore the preserve’s ponderosa pine forests and cross all three forks of scenic Lake Creek. Registration is required. Sept. 26, 9am-3pm. Metolius Preserve, near Camp Sherman. Free.
walk with 493 feet of elevation gain. Its status as an uphill sprint makes it a fairly unique race. Sept. 26, 9am. Pilot Butte State Park, Pilot Butte State Park. $15 adult, $10 kids and seniors.
Moms Running Group Rain or shine, FootZone hosts runs from 3 to 4.5 miles every Thursday meeting at FootZone. Thursdays, 9:30am. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. Free.
Thrilla Cyclocross Series Wed, Sept. 23 and Wed, Sept. 30. Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Dr. Juniors (12-18) $10, $50 for the series. Adults $20, $90 for series.
Bend is celebrating an exciting new chapter.
21 degree programs at the new campus starting Fall 2016. Imagine the possibilities! Our Story. Our Future. Our NOW.
Pilot Butte Challenge A 1-mile run/fitness
Celebrate OSU Cascades campus. Visit NOWFORBEND.COM and share your “Why Now.” #mywhynow
NOW FOR BEND SIGN. JOIN. SHARE.
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
of Smith Rock and has written the Climber's Guide Book of all 1,800 routes. Join us as Alan talks about his climbing and Smith Rock—past, present, and future. Wed, Sept. 30, 7:30pm. River Run Events Center, 1730 Blue Heron Dr. Free.
Mountain Bike Ride An 8-12 mile mountain
S
Into Thin Air SCREEN Back Everest aims high
FILM EVENTS
By Jared Rasic
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
38 LGBT Movie Night This month's film is Route of Acceptance, a concept film about destiny. When Ryan has trouble deciding what college to attend, the film explores all three choices, showing how different life could be now matter what decisions are made. Sept. 28, 6pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $5.
TGR Paradise Waits Premiere
E
verest has a disaster picture vibe along the lines of the old Irwin Allen flicks like The Poseidon Adventure. The main difference is that the story being told in Everest is true and that the lives lost were gone forever, not just off of the call sheet for the rest of filming. The film plays closer to movies like A Perfect Storm and Alive than The Towering Inferno, although with less melodrama than the other flicks combined. Everest tells several stories at once, with the most time spent on that of Rob Hall (played by the always solid Jason Clarke), the famed Mount Everest guide and his agency, Adventure Consultants, as they take a group up in hopes to summit the behemoth. A deep bench of actors filled with the likes of John Hawkes, Josh Brolin, Naoko Mori, and Michael Kelly (as Jon Krakauer) are just a few of the people heading up the mountain for the doomed summit attempt. Director Baltasar Kormákur does a surprisingly good job with the material. He previously helmed the decent Contraband and the almost decent 2 Guns, but with Everest he almost starts approaching subtlety. While the vistas and mountain climbing sequences in the film are breathtaking in 3-D IMAX, none of it would work without a deft hand with the characters and action. When things start going badly in adventure films, most filmmakers tend to over-do just about everything. The music gets louder and more dramatic, the performances become bombastic and maudlin, and the camera starts operatically sweeping through everything like a TMZ reporter searching for tears. Kormákur stages everything, while not perfectly, with enough subtlety to keep the film feeling unsentimental and factual.
frailty instead of script contrivances to keep the film moving along. Jon Krakauer does not come across very well in this, but in some ways, not many of the people do. The script and finished film does not lionize any of these men. Some of the men (and women) died because of mistakes they made and some died because they were trying to save the people who made the mistakes. The film treats the dead as victims of a massive and implacable lethality that trying to climb a mountain inherently brings. Climbing Everest was a thing that these people felt that they HAD to do, not just wanted to do, and the senselessness of their deaths is shown in the faces of the friends and family left behind. The film is nonjudgmental in some respects, but only in the silent and haunting photography of the deaths are we allowed as viewers to make up our own minds about these people. Everest is not perfect. There are too many characters to focus on sometimes, and character motivations are cloudy, while the script leans heavily on cliché when some proper simplicity would do. Also, the film is only showing in 3D IMAX, so if that isn’t your bag then waiting for video (or for Regal to put it into a 2D auditorium) might be the only way to catch it. But the 3D is grand and impressive, making it worth the extra shekels. It is a solid film, intense and harrowing, making the whole experience look miserable, but the questions it raises about man’s ambitions to climb a mountain just because it’s there are somewhat more interesting than the film itself.
Everest
It’s obvious where Kormákur and writers Simon Beaufoy (127 Hours) and William Nicholson (Unbroken) land on the events of that day. All of these real people are shown to be painfully human, whose mistakes and triumphs come out of strength and
BendFilm Kickoff Party Goes Glam Crisp autumn air in Bend means a number of things, but perhaps most exciting is the return of the BendFilm Festival. This year’s festival, which takes place October 8-11 and marks its 12th year, includes 15 narratives, 16 documentaries, and 50 shorts. For the second year in a row, G5 hosts the BendFilm Kickoff Party at their offices on Franklin Avenue in downtown Bend on Thursday, September 24. “G5 has always supported us financially and last year we came up with this idea,“ says BendFilm Director Todd Looby. “G5 came up with the idea of hosting the kickoff party. There was so much good energy last year that this year we wanted to go
Directed by Baltasar Kormákur Grade: B Now Playing at Old Mill Stadium 16
The one-night-only premiere of our new ski and snowboard film, Paradise Waits. Whether you are coming for the family-friendly early show or the rowdy late show, come kick-off winter with TGR on the big screen, more prize giveaways than ever before, and even a chance to win our tour grand prizes—a trip to shred Japan with SASS Global Travel, a trip to TGR’s hometown resort Jackson Hole, or an Atomic Skis/Sony Action Cam prize pack. Oct. 1, 5-7:30 and 8-10:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. $12 adv., $15 day of. $7 ages 16 and under (early show).
This is Your Day Film & Athlete Panel Please join UltraRunning Magazine and Picky Bars for the Oregon premiere of This Is Your Day, followed by a panel discussion including film subjects Rob Krar and Karl Hoagland, along with Erika Lindland (9th Female) and others TBA. Deschutes Brewery beer and light snacks provided, along with cool door prizes and other giveaways. Space is limited to 100 people. You must have a ticket to guarantee your seat. Doors open at 6 pm, film starts at 6:30 pm. Oct. 1, 6:30-8:30pm. Picky Bars, 50 SW Bond St. Suite 3. Free, registration required.
By Anne Pick
bigger and better.” “At G5, we support the creative part of Bend and the creative people in Bend. We want Bend to be a more creative place,” says G5 CEO Dan Hobin. In going bigger and better, the kickoff party follows an old Hollywood press junket theme and has expanded to be able to accommodate up to 200 people. Going with the theme, attendees can expect a
red carpet leading to a photo booth inside the party, a photographer roaming around taking pictures, as well as libations and hors d’oeuvres from Deschutes Brewery, Elixir, Bendistillery, and The Drake. Watch clips from this year’s films, get a sneak peek at the official festival guide, and enter to win two festival passes. Partygoers will have the chance to buy vintage BendFilm
merchandise at discounted prices. The most exciting addition to the party is the attendance of the Future Bend Filmmakers. They’ll present some of their work and may direct some partygoers in a short film. “This is the best way to get a sense of what to expect at the fest,” says Looby. “This will help people who’ve never been to the fest and show them how we do it. It’s a great way to see what’s going on and how best to enjoy your time at the fest.”
BendFilm Kickoff Party 6 pm Thursday, Sept. 24 G5, 550 NW Franklin Ave. Suite 200 $25 adv., $30 door
FILM SHORTS By Jared Rasic BLACK MASS: Critics are saying that Black
THE END OF THE TOUR: This important and beautiful film follows the story of a fiveday interview between David Lipsky of Rolling Stone and David Foster Wallace right after publication of his masterwork, Infinite Jest. At turns heart-breaking, profound, and hysterical, The End of the Tour also presents Jesse Eisenberg and Jason Segal at the very top of their game. Not to be missed. Sisters Movie House, Tin Pan Theater
EVEREST 3D: The true story of one of the hairiest attempts to summit Everest in history. For once, the use of 3D (which I think we can all agree now isn’t a fad anymore) should actually enhance a film. Seeing the depth of frame as thousands of feet separate men from the ground should make for a white-knuckle, film-going experience. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
Himalayan range. The film boasts breathtaking climbing footage along with interviews with some of the most respected climbers on the planet. A must-see for any mountaineer. Sisters Movie House, Tin Pan Theater
take his weird personality and cult membership as him not being one, but he is. The man does most of his own stunts and gives 110% every single time he is on camera, whether the film deserves it or not. Considering Mission: Impossible-Ghost Protocol was the strongest entry in the franchise yet, being cautiously optimistic for this one would not be foolhardy. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
NO ESCAPE: This is not, I repeat, this is NOT a remake of the super badass 1994 post-apocalyptic thriller with Ray Liotta and Ernie Hudson. Put your wallets and other monetary carrying devices away. This one is about an American couple in a scary foreign country caught in the middle of a coup where all Americans are being killed. Hopefully, this will ring out a new era of xenophobia and fear to replace our current one. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON: From the
al kids crash land in the Amazon and have to contend with the cannibalistic tribe that finds them. Apparently the film is so frightening, someone fainted at the last festival screening. Maybe they just got low blood sugar watching all the sweet person flesh getting consumed. Old Mill Stadium 16
director of Friday comes the story of N.W.A., told from the point of view of their importance to history. Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, Eazy-E, DJ Yella, and MC Ren came out of the gate swinging and simultaneously gave an entire generation of black youth a voice, while also putting a target on the back of the FBI, LAPD, and just about every white guy with power possible. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 2 3D: While
THE TRANSPORTER REFUELED: An
THE GREEN INFERNO: Young white liber-
the first one has its moments, Adam Sandler isn’t having a great year and this animated sequel will most likely follow that trend. In this one, Dracula has a brand-new grandson, who disappointingly isn’t showing any monster tendencies. No matter what, it won’t be worse than Pixels. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
THE INTERN: Robert De Niro grows bored with retirement and becomes the intern of Anne Hathaway, the CEO of an online fashion magazine. Of course, he doesn’t like computers or technology of any kind, which makes perfect sense for him to work for an online magazine because it’s a comedy. Old Mill Stadium 16
THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E.: Rogue-ish CIA operative Napoleon Solo (Henry Cavill) and dour KGB agent Illya Kuryakin (Armie Hammer) team up to stop a nefarious criminal organization from releasing nuclear weapons into the world. Director Guy Ritchie’s obsessively-detailed style should work wonders for a light-hearted spy romp. Or this could be a disaster. Either way. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
MAZE RUNNER: THE SCORCH TRIALS: The sequel to the surprisingly good Maze Runner from last year. The surviving maze runners now have to contend with the outside world, a post-apocalyptic, nightmare desert that no one can survive in. Hopefully, this one can capture the excellent pacing and intense storyline from the first one, even though we know what the mystery is now. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
MERU: A gripping documentary about three climbers struggling to face Mount Meru, one of the most challenging mountains in the
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MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE—ROGUE NATION: Tom Cruise is a badass. You can mis-
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Mass is Johnny Depp’s return to "real" acting with real character work and less of a reliance on props. While he still is using make-up heavily, Depp’s portrayal of Whitey Bulger should be enough to return him to the world of relevance in one fell stroke. Although, he is playing the Mad Hatter again next year, so who knows. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House
unbelievably bad reboot of the Transporter franchise sans Jason Statham. Not only the worst film of the series, but easily in the bottom barrel of films from the entire year, boasting not only some of the most sexist, puerile, and wooden dialogue ever written, but it’s also unforgivably boring. Even the martial arts sequences and car chases are staged so poorly that it’s painful to watch them. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
THE VISIT: In what could hopefully be a return to form for M. Night Shyamalan, The Visit tells the tale of two youngsters going to stay at their grandparents’ house. The twist: the biggest rule is that they are not to leave their room after 9:30 because if they do, terrible, creepy things will occur. Boasting a darkly hilarious trailer, The Visit has this film buff cautiously optimistic. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
SKI & SNOWBOARD FILM
A WALK IN THE WOODS: Robert Redford and Nick Nolte play old friends who team up after years apart to hike the Appalachian Trail. Advanced reviews of the film are fairly negative, but this is a chance to see these two old pros walking around in nature and ruminating on mortality and whatnot, especially after this somewhat lackluster blockbuster season. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
WAR ROOM: The controversial new faithbased movie War Room has arrived in Bend. When Tony and Elizabeth start realizing their rocky marriage is putting their young daughter in the middle of a war zone, they seek help from a wise woman that teaches them the power of prayer. Judging from some current reviews, it’s actually much worse than it sounds. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
BEND OREGON TOWER THEATER | THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1st EARLY SHOW: 5:00pm doors / 6:00pm show LATE SHOW: 8:00pm doors / 9:00pm show
Get Your Ticket: TETONGRAVITY.COM/BEND Thanks to our local sponsors:
more! Get less. Drive More Money. More Exercise. More Fun! WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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What will you get by driving less? Oct. 5 -18
DriveLessConnect.com
PLEDGE TO GO ON TOUR.
Bring your groupies and check out the most energy savvy homes on the block at the 2015 Green Tour. Explore 7 homes, new and old, packed with green and solar features. Walk away with the tools to make your home a model of energy efficiency, too.
15th ANNUAL GREEN TOUR LINE-UP SATURDAY, SEPT. 26, 10 AM - 5PM 1. 1639 NW Scott Henry Pl. 2. 3995 Lower Village Rd. 3. 424 SE Emerson Ave.
ickupapassportatyourfirst P stop and visit at least 5 of the 7 homes to get your FREE LED light bulb and get entered to win other energy-saving prizes. Look for our KID’S CORNER activities in four of the homes!
4. 1657 NW Mt. Washington Dr. 5. 61649 Hosmer Lake Dr. 6. 107 SE Cessna Dr. 7. 1090 NE Hobbs Ct.
Brought to you by:
bendenergychallenge.org/tour
ADVICE GODDESS Do I Look Infatuated In This?
—Speedy Ah, yes…your love is like a summer’s day—if a summer’s day chased its lemonade with two Red Bulls and a five-shot latte. It’s easy for you to assume you’re in your right mind, just because you haven’t started throwing peanuts at people in the park while debating abortion with a squirrel. But there are three stages of love: the “falling in it” stage, the “figuring out how it’ll work” stage, and finally, the “you’re the one!” commitment stage. You’re in the starting days of the “falling in it” stage—getting hit by rushing hormones and neurotransmitters—which is to say that you’re chemically dazed. Which is to say that making any sort of decision about what you two have is like getting really high and going off to sign papers for a bank loan. In fact, according to research by psychiatry professor Donatella Marazziti, it’s likely that right now, you and this guy are each chemically different people—and thus behaviorally different people—than you will be once the chemical storm dies down. Marazziti found significant shifts in testosterone levels in both men and women who’d recently fallen in love. Compared with single people and people who’d been in relationships awhile, women newly in love had elevated testosterone, likely making them more sexually tigress-y, while the T levels of men newly in love dropped, likely making them more gooey and emotional—to the point where even a Navy SEAL might start sounding like a Valentine’s Day card. How long the biochemical inebriation lasts varies, but Marazziti’s research suggests that couples are pretty much out of the falling in love daze a year to two years later. It’s only then—once you sober up— that you find out what you actually have together. The kind of love that sticks around is not just a feeling but a feeling that inspires loving action. As novelist Marlon James, quoting a former lover, put it: “Love isn’t saying ‘I love you’ but calling to say, ‘Did you eat?’” Love that lasts should also inspire a sort of loving inaction—loving the person enough that you don’t hate them
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Growing Mold Together I’m a 70-year-old man, and my wife is 68. I suffer from ED, and we both seem to have lost our sex drive. Don’t get me wrong; we are still very loving and affectionate with each other. We just don’t have sex. Is this a problem I should be addressing or just a side effect of aging? My male ego keeps telling me that I should still be a horndog. —Older Dude No need to pull out the hose if there’s no fire. So, on date night, you have a romantic dinner (early-bird special!) and then retire to bed for some rough hugging. Assuming your ED doesn’t stem from some more serious medical condition, the only thing that’s wrong with you is your thinking that something’s wrong with you. Okay, your sexparts aren’t as perky as they were back when Warren G. Harding (or whoever!) was president. Would you deem yourself less manly if you got osteoarthritis in your elbow? Probably not. But predictably, your elbow has probably stopped working as well as it did when you were 22—just like Mr. Winky Senior. The reality is there’s much more to physical intimacy than being all Vlad the Impaler—a point sex therapist Dr. Marty Klein makes in his book Sexual Intelligence. Touch and affection are essential, and you have those. So instead of lamenting what you don’t have, focus on what you do. You might also consider that your level of manliness is reflected in your character—what you do when the chips are down—not by how, lately, your favorite thing to do in bed is sleep through the night without getting awakened by the twins: your bladder and your prostate.
AMY ALKON
(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).
AFFORDABLE HOUSING Everyone Wins! Join our campaign http://igg.me/at/korclt
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Is there anything inherently bad about getting into a serious relationship quickly? I met this guy about a month ago. We hit it off instantly, became boyfriend and girlfriend two weeks later, and have been dropping I-love-yous. It all feels pretty great; I don’t have a history of poor relationship judgment; and I wasn’t desperate or even looking for a new partner. However, popular opinion seems to run against getting involved so fast. Your thoughts?
for all the ways they turn out to be a total idiot: how they can’t seem to understand that pee goes in the big white porcelain thing, not on the floor; that those gross phlegm-clearing sounds are not a mating call; and that socks left on the bedroom rug will not grow tiny legs, crawl up the hamper, and fling themselves in.
WELLNESS DIRECTORY
Acu-Aroma Yoga Workshop A threepart workshop exploring the integration of yoga, Chinese acupressure points, and the profound effects of therapeutic-grade essential oils with Loren Mahaffey, LMT, RYT. Classes on 3 successive Tuesday’s, 4-5:30pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. $35, $85 for three sessions.
PICK Barre3 is Turning Five Join us for an outdoor class to celebrate our fifth anniversary! Class taught by barre3 founder Sadie Lincoln. Stick around after class for photobooth fun, snacks, and giveaways. Bring your yoga mat and a water bottle. All donations benefit Saving Grace. Sept. 27, 10am. Tetherow, 61240 Skyline Ranch Rd. $15 suggested donation.
Community Healing Flow to Benefit ONDA Come join this gentle flow class
MASSAGE. COUNSELING. BODYWORK . PHYSICAL THERAPY. AND MORE
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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WELLNESS CLASSES
and meet others in our yoga community. All proceeds will benefit ONDA, the Oregon Natural Desert Association, a great local nonprofit doing wonderful work to restore Oregon’s wild landscape (onda. org). Fridays, 4-5:15pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. Donation.
Cravings, Weight Gain & the Blood Sugar Rollercoaster Achieving your healthiest weight is not about dieting or even pure willpower, but rather understanding how certain foods affect blood sugar levels and appetite. Learn how nutrient-dense meals support healthy metabolism and which nutrient supplements support healthy blood sugar levels. Oct. 1, 1-2:30pm. Natural Grocers, 3188 N Hwy 97. Free.
Essential Oils Education Learn more about your amazing body and how to use oils to support the wellness of your body, mind, and heart. Tuesdays, 6-8pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. $5.
Fit Camp Meet at Pilot Butte on Monday, Fitness 1440 South on Wednesday and Friday. 6-7pm. GOT CHI, 365 NE Greenwood Ave. 541-639-2699. Free.
Foam Roller Clinic Restore proper biomechanics while addressing the muscles of all the major joints through myofascial release. Sept. 27, 9:30am. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. $5.
Grief Support Group When someone you love dies it can be hard to understand your complex and painful thoughts and feelings. This program creates a safe and supportive environment. Pre-registration requested. Wednesdays, 2:30-4pm. St. Charles Medical Center Redmond, 1253 N Canal St. Free.
Healthy Back Class Join Dr. Raymond for a weekly class that will introduce a self-treatment system to eliminate and prevent chronic pain, erase the signs of aging, and help you feel fantastic in just 10 minutes per day. Thursdays, 8-8:30am. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. $9 drop in or $30 month.
Kundalini Workshop You will learn: Breathing techniques, movements, postures, meditation, and chanting to strengthen your immune and nervous systems. Sat, Sept. 26, 1-3pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave.
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Connecting with the Juniper Herbalist Wendy Griffin will lead us on a field trip to the Oregon badlands to connect with and learn about the energetics of the juniper tree. This will be an interactive workshop, packed with opportunities to learn how to connect deeply with and to use medicinal plants in our dayto-day lives. Meet at Bend Community Healing, carpool to the Oregon badlands. Sept. 26, 1-4pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. $30 adv., $35 door.
COLON HYDROTHERAPY Hydrate • Cleanse • RESTORE BOBBYE ROTELLO, CNC, CCT, CMT Owner of Digestive Wellness 22 years - I-Act Advanced
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The Power of Probiotics Eating
Offering Full Detox Retreats
fermented, probiotic-rich foods keeps your gut and you healthy. For thousands of years, humans have relied on these superfoods for overall health, but today our diet is often lacking in them. Sept. 23, 3-4:30pm. Natural Grocers, 3188 N Hwy 97. Free.
Recovery Yoga This yoga class offers a safe and confidential place to explore. The format is organic and will evolve with the students and teachers involved. Thursdays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. Donation. Roller 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. Free. Saturday Morning Group Runs Saturdays, 8-9:30am. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave.
Sing Here Now Sing Here Now is a community choir that provides an opportunity for people in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease, as well as their care partners, to enjoy music and socialize with other people living with Alzheimer’s. Screening and registration required. Tuesdays, 10:30am-noon. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 800-272-3900.
Structural Reprograming / The Vance Stance Join Vance Bonner, Ph.D., creator of Structural Reprogramming, and author of The Vance Stance ® for a 10-week series to learn her ground-breaking posture and flexibility work. Great success with back, neck, shoulder pain, scoliosis, bunions, bad knees, hips, and migraines. Call 541-3309070 to register. First Thursday of every month, noon, Wednesdays, 6pm, and Mondays, noon and 6pm. $150 for ten 2-hour classes.
Tai Chi Chuan & Qigong Embrace meditation in movement with Tai Chi instructor Cheri Lee Helfenstein. Wednesdays, 10-11am. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Dr. Suite 203. $15 drop in or $45 for four classes.
Tuesday Performance Group Maximize your time with focused, intense efforts. All ages and ability levels welcome. Email Max for weekly details and locations: max@footzonebend.com. Tuesdays, 5:30pm.
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LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I feel like a wet seed wild in the hot blind earth,” wrote author William Faulkner. Some astrologers would say that it’s unlikely a Libra would ever say such a thing—that it’s too primal a feeling for your refined, dignified tribe; too lush and unruly. But I disagree with that view. Faulkner himself was a Libra! And I am quite sure that you are now or will soon be like a wet seed in the hot blind earth—fierce to sprout and grow with almost feral abandon.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You and I both know that you can heal the sick and raise the dead and turn water into wine—or at least perform the metaphorical equivalent of those magical acts. Especially when the pressure is on, you have the power to attract the help of mysterious forces and unexpected interventions. I love that about you! When people around you are rendered fuzzy and inert by life’s puzzling riddles, you are often the best hope for activating constructive responses. According to my analysis of upcoming cosmic trends, these skills will be in high demand during the coming weeks. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Some astrologers regard the planet Saturn as a sour tyrant that cramps our style and squelches our freedom. But here’s my hypothesis: Behind Saturn’s austere mask is a benevolent teacher and guide. She pressures us to focus and concentrate. She pushes us to harness and discipline our unique gifts. It’s true that some people resist these cosmic nudges. They prefer to meander all over the place, trying out roles they’re not suited for and indulging in the perverse luxury of neglecting their deepest desires. For them Saturn seems like a dour taskmaster, spoiling their lazy fun. I trust that you Sagittarians will develop a dynamic relationship with Saturn as she cruises through your sign for the next 26 months. With her help, you can deepen your devotion to your life’s most crucial goals. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The coming
The apocalypse begins
Friday at 6pm October 30th
Downtown Bend
BEN
D
weeks will be a favorable time to break a spell you’ve been under, or shatter an illusion you have been caught up in, or burst free from a trance you have felt powerless to escape. If you are moved to seek help from a shaman, witch, or therapist, please do so. But I bet you could accomplish the feat all by yourself. Trust your hunches! Here’s one approach you could try: Tap into both your primal anger and your primal joy. In your mind’s eye, envision situations that tempt you to hate life and envision situations that inspire you love life. With this volatile blend as your fuel, you can explode the hold of the spell, illusion, or trance.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “Go to the edge of the cliff and jump off. Build your wings on the way down.” So advised author Ray Bradbury. That strategy is too nerve-wracking for a cautious person like me. I prefer to meticulously build and thoroughly test my wings before trying a quantum leap. But I have observed that Aquarius is one of the three signs of the zodiac most likely to succeed with this approach. And according to my astrological calculations, the coming weeks will be a time when your talent for building robust wings in mid-air will be even more effective than usual.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You are being
SAT
12:00 AM
are you a zombie or a survivor? bendzombierun.com
tempted to make deeper commitments and to give more of yourself. Should you? Is it in your interests to mingle your destiny more thoroughly with the destinies of others? Will you benefit from trying to cultivate more engaged forms of intimacy? As is true for most big questions, there are no neat, simple answers. Exploring stronger connections would ultimately be both messy and rewarding. Here’s an inquiry that might bring clarity as you ponder the possibility of merging your fortunes more closely with allies or potential allies: Will deeper commitments with them inspire you to love yourself dearly, treat yourself with impeccable kindness, and be a superb ally to yourself?
ARIES (March 21-April 19): You are destined to become a master of fire. It’s your birthright to become skilled in the arts of kindling and
warming and illuminating and energizing. Eventually you will develop a fine knack for knowing when it’s appropriate to turn the heat up high, and when it’s right to simmer with a slow, steady glow. You will wield your flames with discernment and compassion, rarely or never with prideful rage. You will have a special power to accomplish creative destruction and avoid harmful destruction. I’m pleased at the progress you are making toward these noble goals, but there’s room for improvement. During the next eight weeks, you can speed up your evolution.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Taurus-born physicist Wolfgang Pauli won a Nobel Prize for his research. His accomplishment? The Nobel Committee said he discovered “a new law of nature,” and named it after him: the Pauli Principle. And yet when he was a younger man, he testified, “Physics is much too difficult for me and I wish I were a film comedian or something like that and that I had never heard anything about physics!” I imagine you might now be feeling a comparable frustration about something for which you have substantial potential, Taurus. In the spirit of Pauli’s perseverance, I urge you to keep at it. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In 1921, the French city of Biarritz hosted an international kissing contest. After evaluating the participants’ efforts, the panel of judges declared that Spanish kisses were “vampiric,” while those of Italians were “burning,” English were “tepid,” Russians were “eruptive,” French were “chaste,” and Americans were “flaccid.” Whatever nationality you are, Gemini, I hope you will eschew those paradigms— and all other paradigms, as well. Now is an excellent time to experiment with and hone your own unique style of kissing. I’m tempted to suggest that you raise your levels of tenderness and wildness, but I’d rather you ignore all advice and trust your intuition.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): The astrological omens suggest you could get caught up in dreaming about what might have been. I’m afraid you might cling to outworn traditions and resuscitate wistful wishes that have little relevance for the future. You may even be tempted to wander through the labyrinth of your memories, hoping to steep yourself in old feelings that weren’t even good medicine for you when you first experienced them. But I hope you will override these inclinations, and instead act on the aphorism, “If you don’t study the past, you will probably repeat it.” Right now, the best reason to remember the old days is to rebel against them and prevent them from draining your energy. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You may laugh more in the next fourteen days than you have during any comparable fourteen-day period since you were five years old. At least I hope you will. It will be the best possible tonic for your physical and mental health. Even more than usual, laughter has the power to heal your wounds, alert you to secrets hiding in plain sight, and awaken your dormant potentials. Luckily, I suspect that life will conspire to bring about this happy development. A steady stream of antics and whimsies and amusing paradoxes is headed your way. Be alert for the opportunities.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): It’s a favorable time to fantasize about how to suck more cash into your life. You have entered a phase when economic mojo is easier to conjure than usual. Are you ready to engage in some practical measures to take advantage of the cosmic trend? And by that I don’t mean playing the lottery or stealing strangers’ wallets or scanning the sidewalk for fallen money as you stroll. Get intensely real and serious about enhancing your financial fortunes. What are three specific ways you’re ignorant about getting and handling money? Educate yourself.
Homework
Formulate your game plan for hunting down happiness during the last three months of 2015. FreeWillAstrology.com. © Copyright 2015 Rob Brezsny
43 VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Radiant Health Acupuncture & Massage
ASTROLOGY
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19470 Lone Cow Drive, Bend, OR 97702 4.75 acres in South West Bend located in a private setting with mature Ponderosa and Lodge Pole Pine trees. Existing well is 470' deep at 20 GPM. Existing manufactured home has no material value, several outbuildings are in good condition. Cascade Mountain views and close to town.
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Price $425,000
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Tips for buying a great rental property By Kayja Buhmann
Buy below market value. This sounds easy, but it usually isn’t. The days of having bunches of bank-owned homes to choose from are gone, and that means buyers need to be patient, well connected, and probably willing to get their hands dirty. Patience is a virtue that will come in handy not only while you wait for a good deal to hit the market, but also when you have trouble making a deal come together.
Buy a well-built house. Sometimes saving a few thousand dollars on the purchase price isn’t worth the pain and suffering that could come later with a poorly built house. Find out who built the house you want to make an offer on. If the seller doesn’t know, you should be able to find it in county records on a site like Deschutes County DIAL. Do you already have an opinion about the builder? If not, your real estate agent probably does or at least knows someone who does. If the builder passes the sniff test then put the house through the wringer and get a professional home inspection. Don’t be cheap here, because there is too much money at stake to not know up front what issues the house might have. There is no such thing as a “sure thing” in real estate, but if you follow these tips then you can say: 1) You bought at a discount, which means you made money on the house the day it became yours. 2) You bought in a desirable location, which makes it more likely the value of the property will go up between the time you bought it and the time you sell it. 3) You bought a home that was well built so you didn’t have to spend every penny of cash flow on repairs.
HOME PRICE ROUND-UP
‹‹ LOW
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MID
61710 Darla Place, Bend, 97702 4 br, 3.5 ba 2228 sf, 0.12-acre lot, built 2006 $319,900 Listed by Bend Premier Real Estate
‹‹ HIGH
2499 NW Brickyard St., Bend, 97701 3 br, 2.5 ba, 2984 sf, 0.31-acre lot, built 2004 $749,900 Listed by Preferred Residential Real Estate
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Buy in a desirable location. While you are being patient, use that time to check out neighborhoods that you might have overlooked. Midtown Bend is booming now, and Redmond has a great market for investment homes. Purposefully buying a rental property in a desirable location doesn’t just improve the odds that it will rent quickly, it also improves the odds that it will stay rented. With Bend’s
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current rental market this may seem like a non-issue, but plan for the future. Appreciation will be much more likely while you own it and a house in a great location will be easier to sell.
There’s no place like home
CENTRAL OREGON'S NEWS LEADER
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
Finding a great rental property to buy isn’t rocket science, but it shouldn’t be taken lightly either. There are a lot of factors that can come together to create a snowball effect, which determines whether or not you make money on your investment. Here are a few tips to keep that snowball from running you over and emptying your wallet. There is a saying in real estate circles that goes: “You don’t make money when you sell a home, you make money when you buy it.” Since it is unlikely that you will find yourself owning a rental property without first buying it, this is a great mantra to adopt.
WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / September 24, 2015 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE
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City’s new committee begins drafting regulations for cannabis businesses By Steve Holmes
T
he City of Bend has appointed a 10-member Marijuana Technical Advisory Committee to guide it in adding a third, local layer of regulation of Oregon’s new cannabis businesses. The City describes its pending regulations as “reasonable time, place, and manner regulations” and hopes to have them in place by Jan. 1 2016. The Committee will meet several times over the next few months (details are available on the City’s website), and its task, as Council Member Victor Chudowsky put it in addressing committee members at the inaugural meeting on Sept. 17, is “to help us figure out what legalized cannabis in Bend should look like.” The City’s regulations will include a new chapter of the City’s Development Code and a new licensing regime on top of the licenses already required for cannabis businesses by the Oregon Health Authority and the Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC). The rules in the Development Code will, according to City Attorney Mary Winters, address issues such as where businesses can locate when doing production (growing), processing, wholesale and retail sales, and laboratory analysis of cannabis samples. The regulations will also impose a minimum distance between cannabis retail stores, something the City has made no attempt to do with breweries or bars. The City’s cannabis business licensing rules, like those of other state authorities, will address operational aspects of the businesses. For retail stores, according to Winters, this will mean rules for operating hours, display of
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
OC TO B E R 1 s t 2 1 + y e a r s o l d / d r i e d fl o w e r & c l o n e s
free joint to the
products, disposal of remnants, and similar matters. The license will need to be renewed annually. And of course, these City requirements will be in addition to the general City law that all businesses obtain and display a City business license. The OLCC will eventually have complete statewide regulatory authority over adult-use cannabis businesses, and the OLCC is not expected to release its much-anticipated draft regulations until the second week in November. Those regulations are expected to address things such as store operating hours and co-location of different business processes (e.g., growing or processing at the same site as retail sales), so the City Committee may have a difficult task of not creating duplicative or conflicting rules. At last Thursday’s meeting, City representatives stated that they wanted to craft “balanced” regulations, but the City seems to be attempting to regulate anything left out of the forthcoming OLCC regulations. Fortunately, the Committee seems to include a broad set of perspectives, so it seems likely that both the needs and potential impacts of cannabis businesses will be considered in the Committee’s deliberations. Nevertheless, I have a hunch that cannabis stores in Bend will not be allowed to stay open as late as the bars.
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Crossword
THE REC ROOM Answers at bendsource.com
“Up With People!”--no, not the halftime show group. By Matt Jones
Pearl’s Puzzle R O N E
Difficulty Level
★★
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The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote; “I’m not a very good ______. But you know what? I’m willing to put in a few extra hours every day to get better. That’s just the kind of hard worker I am.” - Jarod Kintz ANSWER TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE C
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6 Bit of turf
2 Mauna ___ (Hawaii’s highest peak)
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3 German pronoun
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4 Adopt
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5 Pixar movie with an entomological theme
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6 Can recycler, sometimes
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7 Beirut’s country: Abbr.
19 Show set in Las Vegas
8 Not at all transparent
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9 It may start as a flat ring
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10 Hoist one player in a chess game?
23 Los ___ (“La Bamba” group)
11 Balance sheet heading
26 Public expressions of thanks
12 Helicopter sounds
28 Bit of wishful thinking
14 Place for relaxation
30 Before, for poets
18 Descendants of 31-Across
31 Stacks of wax
22 “You’ve got mail” hearer
32 Bit of hair gel
23 Pot tops
33 “___ my keep”
24 In the blink ___ eye
35 Society page newcomer
25 Carnival announcer that surfaces from the
36 Extinguished, as a candle
water?
38 Meet in the middle?
27 “Ready ___ ...”
42 Dessert often served a la mode
29 “___-haw!”
43 Many, with “a”
34 Austrian psychiatrist Alfred
45 Prefix for pressure
35 The accused
46 “Honest” guy
37 Guy who might try to put whiskey in your meal
47 Address from a rev.
39 “I shall return,” e.g.
48 Skyping accessory, maybe
40 Antioxidant-rich berry
50 Hay dummy?
41 Mountain cat
53 Giant from Finland?
44 Full-voiced
54 Louisiana subdivision
46 Tree in a giraffe’s diet
55 Blue movie material, slangily
47 It may “let out” in the afternoon
57 “Ew!”
49 Gets on the plane
58 Program that just notifies you without blocking?
50 Knocked over, as milk
63 Mendacity
51 Annual sports awards since 1993
64 “Strange Condition” singer Pete
52 “Trap Queen” rapper Fetty ___
65 Like Aconcagua
56 Focus of “Straight Outta Compton”
66 Old salt
59 Start to exist?
67 Downhill runner
60 Jazz Masters org.
68 Former Russian sovereigns
61 Word with plug or bud 62 Some hosp. employees
©2015 JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS (EDITOR@JONESINCROSSWORDS.COM)
“I never leaf through a copy of National Geographic without realizing how lucky we are to live in a society where it is traditional to wear clothes.” -Erma Bombeck
We’re Local!
© Pearl Stark
Questions, comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark at pearl@bendsource.com
VOLUME 19 ISSUE 39 / September 24, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY
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