Source Weekly September 1, 2022

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20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE/26VOLUME SAFEWAY SHOOTING DONALDREMEMBERING&GLENN WARM SPRINGS ART SHOP ADUS RIGHT FOR YOUR BACK YARD?

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S 2 You’re invited to a GrandCelebration!Opening OPEN Friday,HOUSESeptember 9, 5:00 - 7:30pm FREE PUBLIC CLASS Saturday, September 10, 9:30 - 11:00am INTRODUCTION TO SHADOW YOGA: WORKSHOP Sunday, September 11, 3:30 - 5:30pm ($35) 155 SW Century Drive Suite 112 Bend, OR 97702continuum-yoga.com

EDITOR’S NOTE: This week’s issue was long planned as the annual “Beer Issue,” and in this midst of that—which you’ll still find inside these pages—is a story that has made nation al news.Our community has barely had time to process the heinous murders of 18-year-olds Angela Pastorino and Alfredo Hernandez earlier in August before another tragedy is upon us, with the deaths of Glenn Bennett and Donald Surrett, Jr. in the shooting at Safeway this week. Undoubtedly, the family of the shooter is also experiencing overwhelming grief. Long after the national news has moved on to the next tragedy—because unfortunately, in the U.S., there will be another tragedy like this—local news out lets will be here, searching for answers and pushing for voters to make their voices heard at the ballot box. The status quo is not working, clearly, and it’s our young people who are both victims and perpetrators far too often. Anger, depression and disconnectedness are common threads among people who commit these crimes. So beyond thoughts and prayers and policy and change, are there ways we, indi vidually, can help foster connection? That’s what’s going through my mind as we process this grief and look forward to future stories. Thanks, as always, for reading. OR 97703

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t. 541-383-0800 f. 541-383-0088 bendsource.com info@bendsource.com Another day, another dog, and we aren’t complaining! Meet Remi who was caught soaking in views at Todd Lake. Thanks for tagging us this week @wisemove1, we look forward to seeing more of your adventures. Don’t forget to share your photos with us and tag @sourceweekly for a chance to be featured as Instagram of the week and in print as our Lightmeter. Winners receive a free print from @highdesertframeworks. LIGHTMETER: PRESENTED BY HARVEST MOON WOODWORKS INSIDE THIS ISSUE: @wisemove1, CUSTHARVESTMOONWOODWORKS.COMOM.CABINETS 4 - Opinion 5 - Mailbox 6 - News 10 - Feature 17 - Source Picks 19 - Sound 21 - Calendar 43 - Chow 47 - Screen 49 - Outside 50 - Craft 51 - Puzzles 52 - Astrology 53 - Column 39 - Real Estate BECOME investigativeYourSUPPORTER!Aone-timeorrecurringcontributionhelpssupportjournalismandfun,smartreportingonlocalfood,eventsandmore! bendsource.com/insider EDITOR Nicole Vulcan - editor@bendsource.com REPORTER Jack Harvel- reporter@bendsource.com REPORTER / CALENDAR EDITOR Chris Williams - calendar@bendsource.com COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts FREELANCERS Isaac Biehl, Jim Anderson, Jared Rasic, Jessica Sanchez-Millar, Burt Gershater, Ari Levaux, Brian Yaeger SYNDICATED CONTENT Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Brendan Emmett Quigley, Jen Sorensen, Pearl Stark, Tom Tomorrow, Matt Wuerker PRODUCTION MANAGER / ART DIRECTOR Jessie Czopek - production@bendsource.com GRAPHIC DESIGNER Nathan Elston - design@bendsource.com ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Ashley Sarvis, Ban Tat, Trinity Bradle advertise@bendsource.com DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Sean Switzer CONTROLLER Angela Switzer - angela@bendsource.com PUBLISHER Aaron Switzer - aaron@bendsource.com WILD CARD Paul Butler NATIONAL ADVERTISING Alternative Weekly Network 916-551-1770 Since 1993Labor Day should mean… just the opposite! Multiple options in-store now Hwy 20 East across from Pilot Butte • Locally Owned • FurnitureOutletBend.com Save now on quality Flexsteel recliners! Recline. Relax. Rejuvenate! Purchase discount gift certificates online perks.bendsource.comat 25% OFF $25 at Pacific Pizza and Brew $25.00 value for $18.75

Sales Deadline: 5pm, Mondays Editorial Deadline: 5pm, Mondays Calendar Deadline: 10am, Mondays Classified Deadline: 4pm, Mondays Deadlines may shift for special/holiday issues. On the Cover: Ali Mann is a mixed media artist living in Bend working with pen, ink, paint, paper and anything else that strikes her as Seeinteresting.moreof her work downtown and at The Box Factory. A selection of her original mixed media creations are currently hang ing over at Valentine’s Deli and can often be found at The https://ms-mann.squarespace.com/Podski.

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AOPINION

lthough we are afraid to confront it, we have all become familiar with gun violence in our public spaces. And, if we are honest, we know how the conversation around this violence will proceed. The faction of Ameri cans tired of the violence, the death, the senseless trauma will call, now, in the wake of a shooting that killed two innocent men in Bend, for people to finally ban AR-15s —the same type of gun that the 20-year-old shooter in this weekend’s tragedy was allegedly able to obtain just this summer. We recog nize, after reading some of the killer’s online manifesto, that he was suffer ing from anger and depression, and that his mental health concerns went unnoticed or unchecked. There will be calls for us all to recognize the signs of mental health distress and to seek help for those suffering. There will be calls for change surrounding our state and nation’s abysmal track record of man aging illness in general, let alone men tal illness, often so much more silent than cancer or diabetes. There will be pleas for ways to make things better, how we should ban automatic weapons and fund mental health or even univer sal health care that will take the finan cial burden out of the health equation. And people will be right to say all of theseWethings.know this, because all of these things are said every time there is a shooting like the one that happened at the east side Safeway Sunday night. And yet, we are living in an Ameri ca where shootings of this type have become so commonplace that there is a threshold for what Congress defines as a “mass shooting,” and Bend’s recent tragedy doesn’t even rate among that standard. We are not the only country with guns, and certainly not the only country that suffers from mental health concerns. But we are the only country that sees these shootings happen on a regular basis—the only place on the planet where we have a language and a standard for what constitutes a mass shooting. It is appropriate for us all to feel helpless and angry and frustrated and to feel like nothing gets done. And, sadly, we know how this is going to go. Even the people who shape public opinion by writing on topics of import every week are struggling to muster the sense of hope that is supposed to be prescribed at a time like this. In the U.S. Congress, it is ironic that the body can agree on what constitutes a mass shooting, but cannot agree on doing anything about it. It feels like creating false hope when we say that we can pressure our elected leaders to once again pass an assault weapons ban similar to the one that was in place from 1994 to 2004. The U.S. House passed such a bill last month, but it appears doomed in the Senate. However, the scope of the problem and its fallout demand that we perse vere. In Oregon, voters will be able to vote on Measure 114 this November—a measure that would require safety training and require law enforcement to sign off on gun permits, in addi tion to banning magazines larger than 10 rounds. This is progress and voters should pass it. It’s sensible and does not violate the rights of Oregonians. From now until November, the names of the two victims in this trage dy—Donald Ray Surrett, Jr. and Glenn Bennett—will be invoked in a number of different ways; to talk about hero ic acts and victimhood; to debate what one would do if put in the same situa tion; to use as a reminder about why we should pass this present gun measure. We cannot give up hope for incre mental change in the way of sensible gun policy. We hope that incremen tal change can happen in Oregon come November… and we hope this can be the beginning of the sea change in how we view health care, mental health care and access to assault weapons nationwide.

In the Wake of the Safeway Shooting, We Know How This Is Going to Go *SUBJECT TO CREDIT APPROVAL. SEE STORE FOR DETAILS. Wilson’s of Redmond Still the Oldest & Largest Furniture Store in Central Oregon! 2071 S. Hwy 97, Redmond 541 548 2066 Next to Olive Garden www.WilsonsOfRedmond.net Since 1962 FREE DELIVERY AND SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE* SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY60thSAVINGSONNOW

Lester: Hearing that Donald Sur rett, Jr., the man who tried to step in and stop the shooter, was an Army combat engineer did not sur prise me—though it tugged at my heart since my own dad was also a combat engineer during the same time period. Average citizens— even those trained in the mili tary—should not have to be called upon to stop a tragedy, and yet here they were. The story of how we will remember Donald Surrett and Glenn Bennett is only now unfold ing, but you can be sure the people behind this newspaper will attempt to do our part. Come on by for your gift card to Palate.

—Geoff Reynolds via bendsource.com

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Thanks for doing the research to explain where our City water goes. I bet by next year your listed residential users will change. You will have a pos itive impact. People are more likely to do unethical actions under the cover of anonymity.

All these residential and commer cial water users rely on groundwa ter (wells). As the surface water dries up, water companies will increasingly rely on groundwater mitigation credits to turn their surface water rights into ground water rights. They have trashed the river and now they will trash the aquifer. Please take a look at Roats and Avion water, to name a couple, and their connections to the irrigation dis tricts.

Letter of the week receives $5 to Palate!

Lester Simonson

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

LETTERS 8/25 In the August 25th, 2022 issue of the Source Weekly, Nancy Tyler com plained that the music volume blasting from the Hayden Homes Amphithe ater was keeping nearby residents from being able to enjoy many summer eve nings outdoors.  She wrote that “it is impossible to escape the music (espe cially the bass).” Let me state that as a lifelong con cert-goer, I agree with the saying “if it ain’t loud, it ain’t rock-&-roll.”  Let me also state that I live near the new high school, three miles in a direct line from the amphitheater.  But Thurs day, August 18th, at 8:01 p.m., as Atmo sphere & Iration were performing rap rhythm (rap isn’t music because there is no melody, just rhythm and hyperspewed poetry), I e-mailed this to friends:  “Tonight it sounds like some one is parked in front of my house with a sound system including sub-woofers turned up loud.  The drums and bass are loud enough to be annoying from three miles away!  TURN IT DOWN!” Even had it been rock music, it would have been disturbing—and I was indoors with the windows shut!  I sug gest that volume monitors be installed in neighborhoods, with maximum lim its (no 11’s on the amp knobs) enforced by stiff fines because that is the only way the Old Mill money-grubbers will do anything about it.  There are air quality monitors installed around Bend, so why not install volume quality mon itors?  People don’t just spend money here; some actually live here!

Letter of the Week:

specifically the one who gave his life directly in trying to disarm the subject, affected me greatly. I can’t fathom the courage these men summoned, and I feel that they should be revered as they both deserve. This is what the focus should be. I’d like to ask you to air a story calling for the burials of these two men to be treated with the highest of honors. A silent parade downtown, flags flown at half staff statewide, the day of their burials being hereby known as holidays of courage. This is what should be remembered about this time. Let the perpetrator's name be swift ly forgotten, and these heroes' names remembered in perpetuity. Let our small town be the catalyst that chang es how these events are reported upon. Sadly as they become more and more common, we can be the change that we want to see. Two regular guys, who in a time of severe trial, chose to act in a way to protect strangers they did not know. This deserves our utmost respect and reverence.

O Letters

EXCLUSIVE THIS WEEK IN: Start your day with Central Oregon's best source for news & local events. SIGN UP AT: BENDSOURCE.COM/NEWSLETTERS Get your summer tickets in the Reader Every Friday we give away a pair of tickets (and sometimes more than a pair) through our ticket giveaway in the Cascade Reader. will you be the next one to win? THE SOURCE WEEKLY'S E-NEWSLETTER

—Sam Handelman via bendsource.com IN RESPONSE TO “HAYDEN HOMES,”

FREEEVENTOREGONCENTRALYOURPROMOTEFORGOTO:CALENDAR.BENDSOURCE.COM

—Eddie Kinnamon HEROES AMONG US My name is Lester Simonson, and I moved to Bend in 1992. In the aftermath of the horrific events that unfolded Sunday evening. I have tried to limit my news intake. I care not to know the identity of the coward who perpetrated these acts, nor his reasons or struggles that supposed ly drove him to do what he did. I feel that the media can play a role in pro viding the notoriety that these people strive for. That being said, I understand that the business of news requires these events be covered, as the majority of the public strives for knowledge, and you would be called negligent if you failed to report on these types of sto ries.My reason for reaching out is regard ing another matter. The story of the two gentlemen who lost their lives, @sourceweekly   Keep in the know of what's going on in Central Oregon, follow us on Instagram and Twitter.

RE: WATER AT HOME FEATURE, 8/25

In the wake of the shootings, local and statewide officials mourned the loss of Bennet and Surrett Jr. Gov. Kate Brown asked Oregonians to keep the victims in their thoughts and hearts and praised Surrett Jr. for confronting the shooter.

A second update from the BPD released just before press time on Tuesday reported that it has recovered more than 100 shell casings from the gunman’s apartment complex, the Forum shopping center and inside Safeway. It’s con firmed Miller briefly worked at the Safeway. Surrett Jr. had opportunity to flee, but instead moved to hide from the attacker, and attempted to subdue him with a produce knife Surret Jr. kept on his hip. Bennett, who was shot in the entryway of Safeway, was recovered by two com munity members who re-entered the store to pull him out and deliver him to medics. Law enforcement will remain on scene at the Safeway, though the parking lot will be allowed to reopen.

ByandberedShootingGlennDonaldRememberingandvictimsremem-fortheirkindnessbraveryJackHarvel

Police arrived on scene within three minutes after shots were reported, entering the building while shots were still being fired, finding Miller deceased with an AR-style rifle and 12-gauge shotgun. PIO Miller said the time of first dis patch to the discovery of Miller’s body was around four minutes.Police began locking down the area after hearing reports of a second shooter. BPD says there is no evidence suggest ing there was a second shooter, or that shootings occurred in the Reed Market area, as was widely shared on social media the night of the shooting at Safeway. Statements from the shooter prompted BPD to contact the Oregon State Police bomb squad, who cleared Safe way and the shooter’s Fox Hollow apartment building. A search of the shooter’s vehicle found three Molotov cock tails, a sawed-off shotgun, “digital devices” and additional ammunition.Thescene was still being investigated and PIO Mill er expects the investigation in the area will remain active through Tuesday. It’s unknown how the shooter obtained the guns, and BPD has partnered with the Department of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms to determine how he obtained the guns. Miller asked anyone with relevant infor mation to contact them at 541-322-6380.

The first shots occurred at approximately 7:04 pm, police said, as Miller made his way from his home in the Fox Hol low Apartments down the sidewalk at the Forum Shop ping Center in Bend. He fired shots from an AR-style rifle into Big Lots before moving to Safeway. Miller shot and killed Bennet, a shopper in the entryway, before moving toward the back of the store. Surret Jr., a Safeway employ ee, reportedly tried to disarm Miller before being shot and“Surrettkilled. engaged with the shooter, attempted to disarm him and may very well have prevented further deaths. Mr. Surrett acted heroically during this terrible incident,” Bend Public Information Officer Miller said at a press conference. Police reported two other victims sustained non-life-threatening injuries. Miller died of a self-inflict ed gunshot wound in the produce section of Safeway, near where Surret Jr. confronted the shooter.

Bend Mayor Pro Tem Anthony Broadman released a state ment and later spoke during a press conference on Monday. “We need to guard against the cynicism of thinking these attacks on order and peace as regular unavoidable things, I won’t accept that, and I know the community of Bend won’t accept that either,” Broadman said during the press conference.Acommunity vigil was held in Drake Park Monday eve ning to honor Surrett Jr. and Bennet.

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 6 ENEWS

One victim, Donald Ray Surrett Jr., attempted to disarm the shooter during an attempted rampage

Both of those killed during the shoot ing at a Bend Safeway on Sunday, August 28, were veterans who are remembered for their kindness and bravery. Glenn Bennett, 84, served as an Army med ic during the Korean War. He moved to Bend in 1974 at the age of 36 and has lived with his sister for decades, according to a GoFundMe raising money for funeral and mortgage expenses. “I am raising funds for any funeral expenses and mortgage expenses for my grandma who lost not only her broth er but her best friend. Glenn was such a kind, generous, and well spoked man,” wrote Deidre C., the organizer of the fundraiser. “He was a veteran and lived with my grandma before I was even born. My grandma is widowed, and they shared the house Bennetttogether.”wasafrequent customer at Expressway Deli. in Bend, and sever al commenters on the GoFundMe page noted how kind he’d been. Diedre said he’d dedicated his life to helping people and that she’s shocked about what’s hap pened.“Inever would have thought this sweet small town of Bend I grew up in would become so tainted. No one should have to go through something like this,” she wrote. “We love you Glenn and I hope you are in a better place.” Donald Surrett, Jr., 66, a Safeway employee, attempted to disarm the gun man in the Safeway, and police noted he likely saved lives while doing so. Surrett Jr. served as a combat engineer in the Army from 1975 to 1995. “Don was a Veteran and his instincts kicked in trying to save others. He was shot and killed trying to subdue the young gunman,” Jerilynn Morra, Surret Jr.’s sis ter-in-law wrote on a GoFundMe page. Public officials across Oregon praised Surrett Jr.’s heroism, including Gov. Kate Brown and Sen. Jeff Merkley. People close to Surrett Jr. said they weren’t surprised he’d acted decisively. George McCart, who worked with Surrett Jr. At Central Oregon Disabled American Veterans told KOIN, “When you’re trained to do things like that, and he was trained, it becomes an instant reaction.” As of press time the GoFundMe for Bennett’s family raised over $30,000 of a $20,000 goal and the campaign for Sur rett Jr.’s family raised over $45,000 of an $8,000 goal.

Courtesy GoFundMe Donald Surrett, Jr.

By Jack Harvel

stationed at Mick’s Drive at the Forum to return property left at the store and cars left in the parking lot. Police didn’t confirm whether a since-removed manifes to attributed to Miller posted on Wattpad, an online social reading platform, just before the shooting was legitimate.

ighty-four-year-old Glenn Bennet and 66 year-old Don ald Ray Surrett Jr. were shot and killed by 20-year-old Ethan Miller at the Safeway on Highway 20 on Sunday, Aug. 28, according to police spokesperson Sheila Miller.

The manifesto outlined how the writer of the post pur chased an AR-15 and a 12-guage shotgun and built a sawedoff shotgun and Molotov cocktails, details unknown to the public until the press conference on Monday.

Two officers and mental health professionals will be

Rep. Jason Kropf (D-Bend) gave condolences to the victims and their families, shared appreciation for first respond ers, hospital workers and store employees who kept peo ple safe, and reaffirmed commitment to end gun violence.

The manifesto, titled “The Downward Spiral of Ethan Miller,” indicated that the writer of the post’s initial target was Mountain View High School on Sept. 8, the first day of the school year. In the manifesto he ranted against COVID laws, a lack of meaningful friendly and romantic relation ships and his distaste for modern society while fantasizing about committing mass violence against innocent people.

An archive photo of Glenn Bennett.

Victims and Gunman of Safeway Shooting Identified

By Jack Harvel

The fire has grown to nearly 8,000 acres as firefighters attempt to contain it in inaccessible terrain

Courtesy of Inciweb. Firefighters work along Black Creek Road to contain the Rum Creek Fire on August 27.

Cedar Creek Fire 12% Contained

Over 1,000 people are working to reduce the Cedar Creek Fire a month after it ignited on harsh terrain three miles west of Waldo Lake in the Willamette National Forest. Within a week it burned over 3,000 acres and as of Aug. 30 it reached 7,821 acres. The fire’s currently 12% contained, and helicopters are working to drop fire retardant on inaccessible ridg es. Trailheads and dispersed camping west and north of Waldo Lake are currently closed, though the lake, campgrounds and trails on the east side are still open. With the fire burning along roadless areas in steep terrain, firefighters have been using indirect strategies. “This means they have been constructing fire lines away from the active fire edge, along roads and trails, where they have a better chance of successfully stopping the fire,” according to the Willamette National Forest. The crews are focusing on drawing fire containment lines on the southeast flank. On the southwest edge burn operations are reducing fuel and attempting to connect it to the 2421 road. Favorable weather over the last couple days gave firefighters the chance to use more direct fire suppression tactics and could poten tially suppress the fire more than initially estimated. Smoke is expected to follow downslope air and could impact people in Oakridge and reach as far south as Crater Lake. The Cedar Creek Fire is the largest of 30 fires start ed by a lightning storm in the Willamette National Forest. It’s the second largest fire currently burning in Oregon, after the nearly 12,000-acre Rum Creek Fire in Josephine County. The Rum Creek Fire is not expected to be contained until October. The Wilamette National Forest is hosting a community meeting to update peo ple about the current status of the fire.

Flowers were laid at the stage at Drake Park to honor those killed in an Aug. 28 shooting. Police Spokesperson Sheila Miller gives an update on the Aug. 28 shooting of a Safeway in Bend on High way 20. Jack Harvel Jack Harvel

20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 7 NEWS

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 8

De acuerdo con el portavoz de la policía, Sheila Miller, el domingo, 28 de agos to, Glenn Bennet de ochenta y cuatro años y Donald Ray Surrett Jr de 66 años, fueron asesinados a tiros por Ethan Miller, de 20 años, en el Safeway localizado en la carretera 20. De acuerdo a la policía, los primeros disparos ocurrieron alrededor de las 7:04 p.m., cuando Miller se dirigía desde su casa, localizada en Fox Hollow Apartments, por la banqueta a la zona comercial Forum en Bend. Activó disparos con un rifle estilo AR apuntando a Big Lots antes de entrar a Safeway. Miller disparó y mató a Bennet, un cliente localizado en la entrada, antes de pasar al interior de la tienda. Surret Jr., un empleado de Safeway, aparentemente trató de desarmar a Miller antes que Miller le disparará y lo matará. “Surrett se enfrentó con el tirador, trató de desarmarlo y pudo haber evitado más muertes. El Sr. Surrett actuó heroicamente durante este terrible incidente,” indicó en un comunicado de prensa la agente de información pública (PIO por sus siglas en inglés), Miller.

“Surrett

La policía reportó que otras dos víctimas sufrieron lesiones que no pusieron en riesgo su vida. Miller murió de una herida de bala causada por sí mismo en la sec ción de frutas y verduras de Safeway, cerca de donde Surret Jr. enfrentó al tirador.

20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 9 NEWS Víctimas y el tirador de la balacera en Safeway indentificados Una víctima, Donald Ray Surrett Jr., intentó desarmar al pistolero durante un intento de ataque Por / By Jack Harvel Traducido por / Translated by Jéssica Sánchez-Millar 25 NW Minnesota Ave #6, Downtown Bend (541) 306-3177 info@pedegobend.com www.pedegobend.com #1 E-Bike Retail Brand in America. Best quality. Best warranty. Best service. END OF SEASON SALE From Now Until The End of SeptemberBig Discounts!

—SHEILA MILLER 360 NE QUIMBY AVE • 541-382-0741 • bendveterinaryclinic.com BYRON MAAS, TABITHA JOHNSTON, LAUREN HOFFMAN, LAURA ACEVEDO, COURTNEY MCLAUGHLAN, BRIAN LOUDIS, & KELLI SMITH DOCTORS: Open Daily for You and Your Pets H e a l t h y A d v e n t u r e s A w a i t !

La policía llegó al lugar de la escena tres minutos después que se reportaron los disparos, entrando a la tienda mientras que seguían los disparos y encontró muerto a Miller junto con un rifle estilo AR y una escopeta de calibre 12. La agente de infor mación pública dijo que los primeros enviados a la zona para encontrar el cuerpo de Miller llegaron en un lapso de alrededor de cuatro minutos. La policía comenzó a cerrar la zona después de escuchar los reportes sobre un segundo tirador. La policía de la Ciudad de Bend dice que no hay evidencia que indique que hubo un segundo tirador o que ocurrieron tiroteos en la zona de Reed Market, cómo se compartió ampliamente en las redes sociales la noche del tiroteo en

La policía no confirmo si una declaración publicada desde entonces por Wattpad, una plataforma de lectura social en línea, fue legítima antes del tiroreo. La declaración pública recalcó cómo obtuvo el escritor un arma AR-15 y una escopeta recortada calibre 12 y bombas Molotov, los detalles no los sabia el público hasta la conferencia de prensa del lunes.

La declaracion publica, titulada “Espiral Decandente” indicó que el escritor de la publicación inicial apuntaba a Mountain View High School el 8 de septiembre, el primer día de clases. En la declaración se pública en contra de las leyes relaciona das a COVID, la falta de relaciones románticas y amistosas y su falta al gusto por la sociedad moderna, mientras que fantaseaba en cometer violencia masiva en contra de gente inocente.

Safeway.Lasdeclaraciones del tirador dieron lugar a que BPD se comunicara con el escuadrón antibombas de la Policía Estatal de Oregon, quien despejó Safeway y el edificio de apartamentos del Fox Hollow donde vivía el tirador. Por medio de una inspección del vehículo del tirador se encontraron tres bombas Molotov, una esco peta recortada, “aparatos digitales” y más municiones. La escena aún estaba siendo investigada y PIO Miller espera que la investigación de la zona permanezca activa hasta el día martes. Se desconoce cómo obtuvo las armas el tirador y BPD está colaborando con el Departamento de Armas de Fuego, Tabaco y Bebidas Alcohólicas para determinar cómo obtuvo las armas. PIO Miller le pidió a las personas que tengan información importante que se comuniquen con ellos al 541-322-6380. Dos oficiales y profesionales de la salud mental estarán estacionados en Mick’s Drive en la zona comercial Forum para regresar las pertenencias que quedaron en la tienda y los carros que se quedaron en el estacionamiento.

Fue planeada una vigilia comunitaria de 6:30-7:30 p.m. el día lunes para honrar a Surret Jr. Bennet. se enfrentó al tirador, trató de desarmarlo y pudo haber evitado más muertes. El Sr. Surret actuó heroicamente duratnte este terrible incidente.”

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 10 Bold. Genuine. Innovative. Chef Jeff Kelly and Brewmaster Ryan Schmiege are putting the craft back into your brewpub experience. Taste the difference for yourself at our Bend and Redmond locations. CascadeLakes.com

“You encounter challenges that you normally wouldn’t in brewing, such as tartaric acid, malic acid, wild yeasts, molds, bacteria, etcetera.” Adds Van Wyk, “The point of our Terroir series is to showcase not only the grapes grown here, but also showcase our abilities in processing them. There are many ways you can use grapes in a beer.” Van Wyk points out brewers use juice or whole grape clusters, decided on various skin contact times, and when to age the results in oak or stainless steel. “And there are a host of things we can do during the aging process to accentuate flavors, colors and aromas. We’re trying to highlight all of those things, including the oak character, a valu able part of a wine’s personali ty…We are on a mission to find the best ways to use grapes withThere’sbeer.” an expression in the industry, “Grapes make wine; people make beer.” That idiom wasn’t prepared for someone like Brian Coombs, who worked at both a brew ery and a winery in the Willamette Valley before co-founding Alesong. Natural ly, he loves blending and blur ring the lines in his wine-inspired

“Our club members were used to our Ter roir series of beers even before we attended our first (Terroir Project Fest) in 2019,” says Van Wyk. “Brian, Doug, and I always wanted to work with grapes and do these co-ferments as part of Alesong.”

A festival fit for the current crush and hop harvests

gnoselAfoysetruoC

Co-fermented wine-beer hybrids fêted at The Terroir Project Festival

In Denver, there was an ephemeral brewpub called Liberati Osteria & Oenobeers. Founder, oenophile, and Italian brewer Alex Liberati focused exclusive ly what he called oenobeers. “An oenobeer is produced with grapes or grape products (must, pomace) and has nothing to do with wine barrel aging,” says Liberati.

Style TBD

Even at GABF, these beers are usually entered into competition as “Experimental Beer.” (When Alesong’s Terroir Pinot Noir took silver, it was Firestone Walker Barrelworks’s Feral Brut that bested it for gold.) Some call them wine-beer hybrids or just wine beers.

After the last two iterations of the festival were can celled due to coronavirus, Van Wyk says, “The brew ers involved with the collaboration project kept talking about what the future of the fest looked like. Jim Crooks of Firestone Walker brewing, who founded this co-fer mentation festival, suggested that maybe it needed to be moved to another location or perhaps even become a rotating festival, allowing other members to host it…

In Eugene, brewmaster Matt Van Wyk along with brothers Brian and Doug Coombs are the compos ers behind Alesong Brewing and Blending. They cre ate a wide range of barrel-matured beers from earthy saisons to viscous imperial stouts and, increasingly, vinous, wild ales that are music to sour beer lovers’ ears. Among Alesong’s six-years-running slate of nine Great American Beer Festival medals—Alesong opened six years ago in 2016—the two it earned in 2018 were for Terroir Pinot Gris and Terroir Pinot Noir. Given Alesong’s expertise in making wine-beer hybrids, one may suggest renaming the brewery Winealesong. What the Alesong crew didn’t know when they made (and named) those Terroir beers is that wine maker-turned-brewer Adam Firestone, along with his brother-in-law and Firestone Walker Brewing and Bar relworks co-founder David Firestone, were about to launch a glorious, intimate celebration of co-fermen tation called the Terroir Project. Admission is $80 and includes entry, a passport to sample every beer and wine available, and a commemorative glass. In addi tion to the beers, wines, and wine-beers, the event includes local chefs, musicians, and artists. After launching in California’s Santa Ynez Valley, Firestone Walker’s home, the nascent and pandem ic-postoned festival resurfaces in the Willammette Val ley this year, finding its 2022 home at Alesong’s bucolic aging facility and tasting room in rural Western Eugene on Saturday, Sept. 24. A total of 18 breweries have been selected to participate, and each one must use grapes grown within 100 miles of the respective brewery. Half of the attendees are Terroir Project alumni hail ing from around the world including Jester King (Texas), Fonta Flora (North Car olina) and Garage Project (New Zealand) as well as half that Ale song invited. As such, partic ipating Oregon breweries include Bend’s Deschutes Brewery and The Ale Apothecary, Hood River’s pFriem Family Brewers and Logsdon Farmhouse Ales, as well as de Garde Brewing (Tillamook) and Block 15 Brewing (Corval lis). The latter two have even launched winemaking cellars so their wines will be among the dozens also available and included with paid admission.

Is Wine the Next Hot Thing in Beer?

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The brewing industry has yet to land on a name for this niche style of beer. When malted barley and grapes ferment in unison, the fusion of the world’s two most popular adult beverages is said to be co-fermented.

By Brian Yaeger

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 12 740 NE 3RD ST SUITE 5, BEND • (541) 797-0028FEATURING3RDSTREETBEVERAGE.COMTHE LARGEST SELECTION OF BEER IN ALL OF CENTRAL OREGON! $30 = GLASS + 10 TOKENS $25 = GLASS + 5 TOKENSGET TICKETS:YOUR PRESENTED BY: And More! 20+ OREGON BREWERIES Music by: Hosted by: All AgesLive TunesLocal EatsFresh Brews 18th Annual Portland Fresh Hops Festival Friday September 30th from 4pm-8pm Saturday October 1st from 12pm-8pm Oaks Park, Portland oregoncraftbeer.orgOR

FREEEVENTOREGONCENTRALYOURPROMOTEFORGOTO:CALENDAR.BENDSOURCE.COM

Terroir Project: Antiquum Farm is co-fermented with Antiquum Farm Pinot Noir grapes while Terroir Cabernet, a beastly 10.5% ABV wild ale features grapes from Horse Heaven Hills AVA. The last one, Oregon Sunrise, goes in a mimosa direction as it features Iris Vineyards’ Pinot Gris grape juice and a splash of tan gerineBend’sjuice.Deschutes

Ale Apothecary is sending two beers: Ponderosa Lodgehouse (not a wine-beer hybrid, but a beer oozing with terroir as it’s made with hops from Goschie Farms in Silverton and foraged Ponderosa pine needles and bottle fermented using Oregon wildflower honey) and Farmhouse Vignoles. The vinous farmhouse ale oozes terroir in the form of three Mecca Grade Estate malts, more Goschie Farms hops, and whole, foot-crushed Vignoles grapes from Terrebonne. Ale Apothecary Brewmaster Paul Arney says his first wine-beer hybrid dates back to 2014 when, “Our first experiment with Chenin Blanc grapes we received from Chenin Carlton at Twist Wine Co in Pacific City. We put foot-crushed grapes into two Bull Run Whis key barrels and topped them off with La Tache,” refer ring to the brewery’s sour table beer. “With wild ales, we can’t count that every barrel will be a winner, so it’s best to hedge our bets by taking the beer one step at a time. We have tried numerous ways to incorporate wine characteristics into our beer…Beer is a unique beverage in this way, that it can be the nexus of all the other alcohols without losing the fact that it’s still beer. You don’t really hear about hybrids going the oth er direction and I’m just fine with that.” As an aside, a small handful of winemakers have experimented with dry-hopping wine—but certain ly not enough to warrant its own festival dedicated to beer-inspired wines.

Central Oregon’s premier country bar Open every day • Family Friendly Whiskey Tuesdays • Live Music Wednesdays • Line and Swing Dancing Thursdays 541.382.4270. @crosseyed.cricket

Brian jumped on the chance to host in the first year of this new setup. Arizona Wilderness Brewing (in Ari zona) will be hosting in 2023. It’s a great opportuni ty as we learn more about how to make them and also share our knowledge to keep this type of hybrid brew ingEachalive.”participating brewery will have at least one wine beer available. Naturally, host Alesong will be pouring four. Terroir Project: King Estate is a sour ale made with foot-stomped Pinot Gris grapes from the brewery’s next-door neighbor, King Estate Winery and Vineyard, aged on the skins to resemble an orange wine.

Best Brewery –1st - Deschutes Brewery 2nd place -10 Barrel Best Dark Beer Black Butte Porter, Deschutes Brewery 2nd place - S1NIST0R, 10 Barrel Best IPA –RPM, Boneyard Beer 2nd place – First Run, Bevel Brewing Best Light Beer –King Crispy, Deschutes Brewery 2nd place – Sweet As, GoodLife Brewing Best Sour Beer –Ching Ching Sour Ale, Bend Brewing Company 2nd place – Sahalie, Ale Apothecary Best Hazy Beer –Fresh Haze IPA, Deschutes Brewery 2nd place – Sippy Cup, GoodLife Brewing Best Seasonal Beer –Red Chair, Deschutes Brewery 2nd place – Jubelale, Deschutes Brewery

In honor of the Beer Issue, a recap of this year’s beer-related Best of Central Oregon winners When you live in Beer Town, USA, with dozens of breweries populating a small city of only around 100,000 people, competition can be fierce. Brewer ies churn out seasonals, specials, and every varia tion of IPA they can get in order to catch the eye of a thirsty public. So when those Beer Town, USA brew eries get voted “Best of Central Oregon” by their very own public, it’s kind of a big deal. Our Best of Central Oregon readers’ poll just came out in early August, but here’s a recap of the beer-re lated winners, rocking it out in Beer Town, USA.

Brewery is sending two beers made at its Portland brewpub by Ben Kehs. Intertwined is 60% beer wort, 40% Malbec juice from 2Hawk Win ery in Medford then co-fermented and blended with a portion of Deschutes’s The Dissident Boysenberry (alternately known as an Oud Bruin or Flanders Brown Ale). Deschutes is also pouring Maskerade, a collab oration with Alesong, that’s an imperial brown ale of which a portion was aged in brandy barrels, thus not a co-ferment but still has wine-like character.

Terroir Project Festival Sat., Sept. 24, 1-5 p.m. Alesong Brewing & Blending 80848 Territorial Hwy, Shuttlealesongbrewing.com/terroir-festivalEugeneGeneralAdmission:$80.DesignatedDriver:$15.fromdowntownEugene:$20

20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 13

Courtesy of Alesong

Best of Beer

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HOT TAPS

The Cellar

So, I googled “Bend wheat beers” and saw what I could find. There’s Goodlife Brewing Company’s Sweet As, Monkless Belgian Ales’ Peppercorn Imperial Wit and Sunriver Brewing Company’s Fuzztail Hefeweizen. Realizing I’ve had the Peppercorn Wit and Sweet As, both delicious but neither quite satisfying my Boule vard Wheat itch, I decided on Fuzztail.

Come for the beer selection; stay for the mac n’ cheese

The Fuzztail is easy drinking like Boulevard Wheat, it has notes of lemon like Boulevard Wheat and it’s wheaty like Boulevard Wheat. The big difference is Fuzztail does taste more German — I can’t explain what I mean by “more German” but it’s a vibe thing. Satisfied with my choice, I turn my attention to the dozens of other taps. Maybe there’s something that can match with my second favorite beer, Boulevard Tank 7.

Maybe it’s because I’m longing for winter after hav ing five weeks of above 90-degree heat, or maybe sub consciously I knew a cave-like setting also acts as an escape from the heat, but either way winding up back there this weekend reminded me to add it to my list of spots for summer and wintertime beers.  For those who haven’t been, The Cellar is owned by Redmond-based brewery Porter Brewing Co. Por ter has carved out its niche in the Central Oregon craft brewing scene by dedicating itself to cask style ales. Cask style ales are different in that they have a second fermentation process in which fermentation happens naturally in casks. Yeast consumes sugars, making its own carbon dioxide versus having CO2 added artifi cially. To get the bubbles, the ales rely on being dis pensed from hand-pump devices. Cask ales are served cellar temperature to bring out complex flavors that coldness and over carbonation can kill. Some complain that cask beers are warm, but it was cold enough to be a refreshing drink on a scorching hot day.

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A reporter tries to find a beer similar to a Midwest favorite in Bend’s coziest tap house

Sip and Sample Bend’s beer selection at a local watering hole Bend has more than its fair share of breweries offering up their own take on hops, malt and barley… but when you’re looking to get a bit more agnostic with your beer-drinking, finding a local watering hole that offers a selection of beers from around town (or around the region) is the ticket. Here, our staff stops in at a few places offering a wide selection of taps for those who want to sip and sample.

L

I made my way to Crosscut Warming Hut No. 5 to get a taste of the German-inspired beer. The lodge-like environment is cozy and almost makes you forget that there are 28 taps with some of the best local and region al beers and ciders. Had I not been on a mission to drink a Fuzztail I very well could’ve been tempted by the regional beers I haven’t tried; there’s plenty of options from Washington Breweries, western Oregon breweries and beers from as far away as Krebs, Oklahoma.

Brother Jon’s Alehouse

Although I usually opt for Porter’s hearty stout in the winter to warm my bones, this time I went for the Extra Special Bitter for a more summer feel. ESBs are more light-bodied than IPAs and provide more refresh ment on a hot day. The Cellar has eight pumps (taps) available with rotating seasonal beers making special appearances. For me this is the perfect number to have enough variety in choice but not overwhelm someone in a paralyzing quantity of selection.  Bend’s underground English-style pub has claimed its niche in a packed craft beer scene

Walking into The Cellar in downtown Bend always brings a nostalgia for winter. The cozy base ment location is an English-style pub that liter ally feels like putting on a cozy sweater when you walk inside to escape the blistering cold after a long ski day.

Nicole Vulcan Jack Harvel

By Chris Williams Chris Williams

By Nicole Vulcan For the beer lover visiting Bend for the first time, the natural place to go first would be to the Deschutes Pub, located on Bond Street in the heart of down town. First brewery in Bend, check. But for those who have sampled Deschutes’ favorites (and perhaps a sea sonal or two) and want to try a wider selection, across the street is Brother Jon’s Alehouse, a bit of a locals spot that also gets its fair share of visitors looking to down a pint and grab some food. Recently, readers of the Source Weekly gave this spot the distinction of “Best Mac n’ Cheese,” and while the food menu is sol id, it’s for the beers that I made my recent visit.

Replacing My Favorite Beer

ast week at the Kansas City airport I said goodbye to one of the things I love most in the world. No, not my newborn nephew, my folks or my childhood friends; I said goodbye to Boulevard Wheat — the best selling craft beer in the Midwest that’s not presently sold anywhere in Bend. One last pint at the airport bar held me over as I headed back to my new home that’s renowned for the number and quality of its breweries. Surely, I thought, some local brewery must make a wheat beer that can fill the pint-sized hole in my heart.

By Jack Harvel

On tap that day was a selection of about 17 different beers, about half of which represented Bend brewer ies including Boneyard Beer, Bevel Brewing, Boss Ram bler and Oblivion Brewing. Also on tap were far-flung options including a Coconut Porter from Maui Brew ing Co., a German pils from Weihenstephan Brewery in Germany… and for those looking for the old trusty, a Coors Light from the venerable city of Golden, Col orado. There was a bit of a fall chill in the air and I’m always a sucker for a porter, so I went for the Maui Brewing selection. Dark and full-bodied with a hint of sweetness, it was less bitter than the OG Black Butte I could get across the street at Deschutes, but still worth a stop.

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9/1 9/5

SATURDAY 9/3

LABOR DAY BASH W/PROUD MARY

TRIPLE B THREAT Bend’s favorite Burlesque troupe brings its show out doors to Bend’s only hostel. Go hang out in the yard but be prepared to dance! Fri., Sep. 2, 8pm. The Yard at Bunk+Brew. 42 NW Hawthorne Ave., Bend. $20.

FRIDAY 9/2

SUNDAY 9/4

COMEDY AT CRAFT: THE TEACHER SHOW DON’T LET THE CHILDREN KNOW

Jeff Plankenhorn experienced trial by fire playing in house shows and clubs around Austin. The cutthroat atmosphere bred a folk artist adept at playing slide blues and folk ballads that electrify audiences. Sun., Sep. 4, 7pm. The Commons Cafe & Taproom., 875 NW Brooks St., Bend. $15.

WHIPPOORWILL PRESENTS: JEFF PLANKENHORN LIVE FROM THE LISTENING ROOM

SOURCE PICKS

The Bend Beer Run is now an addition to Little Woody. Competitors will race in a 5k with local breweries providing beverages along the route. The finish line brings racers right into Little Woody to keep the fun going. Sat., Sep. 3, Noon-5pm. Deschutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend. $15-$35.

Ever wonder what really happens when you drop your kids off at school? Get a look behind the scenes as these teachers spill the beans. Sat., Sep. 3, 8-10pm. Craft Kitchen & Brewery, 62988 NE Layton Ave., Bend. $15.

SUNDAY FUNDAY WITH TONY SMILEY

BEND BEER RUN BEER IS BASICALLY WATER

MILO MATHEWS DID SOMEONE SAY LOOP?

FAREWELL SUMMER EVENT DON’T BE SAD, JUST MEANS SNOW IS CLOSE Pre-game fall at Alpenglow Park! The party will fea ture music from local folk group Honey Don’t and will screen the Pixar movie, ”Luca” when the sun sets. Fri., Sep. 2, 6-9:30pm. Alpenglow Park, 61049 SE 15th St., Bend. Free. FRIDAY-SATURDAY 9/2-9/3

The Sunday scaries are a myth, especially when there is free music to be heard! Kill the afternoon listening to multi-instrumentalist Tony Smiley. Sun., Sep. 4, 2-4pm. 10 Barrel Eastside, 62950 NE 18th St., Bend. Free.

BUNK, BREW & BURLESQUE

Milo Mathews is a one-man music making machine. The musician takes the stage with a drum pad, bass and guitar creating loops which turn into rocking jams. Thu., Sep. 1, 6-8pm. River’s Place. 787 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend. Free.

LITTLE WOODY STRAIGHT FROM THE BARREL Barrel-aged aficionados, this event is for you! Little Woody features the best barrel-aged beers, whiskeys and ciders from around the Northwest. Be sure to don your best gnome costume for extra fun. Fri., Sep. 2, 5-10pm - Sat., Sep. 3, Noon-10pm. Deschutes Histor ical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend. $5-$40.

WHATEVER THE NIGHT BRINGS… Incubus rose to stardom in 1999 with its megabit album, “Make Yourself.” Since then, the band has experimented with a broad spectrum of genres that makes the group an ever-expanding sonic experi ment. Reggae giants Sublime with Rome will join the set. Sat., Sep. 3, 6pm. Hayden Homes Amphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr., Bend. $49.50.

BENDTICKET.COM BUNK, BREW & BURLESQUE at Bunk and Brew THE 2022 LITTLE WOODY Barrel-Aged Beer, Cider & Whisky Festival at Deschutes Historical Museum JEFF PLANKENHORN Presented by The Whippoorwill at The Commons Cafe & Taproom FRI, SEPT 2 & SAT, SEPT 3 SUNDAY, SEPT 4 AT 7PMFRIDAY, SEPT 2 AT 8PM

INCUBUS & SUBLIME WITH ROME

PRIDE HURRICANE A-BLOWIN’ Proud Mary is “the world’s queerest tribute” to Cree dence Clearwater Revival. The tribute band will play all of CCR’s hits and be sure to get the crowd groov ing. Mon., Sep. 5, 6-9pm. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., $10. Courtesy Lay It Out Events Brian Becker Courtesy Live Nation Unsplash Courtesy Bend Ticket

SMILE FOR SUNDAY

SUNDAY 9/4

THURSDAY 9/1

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SATURDAY 9/3

MONDAY 9/5

SATURDAY 9/3

FRIDAY 9/2

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 18 2022 CONCERT SEASON SEPTEMBER 6 SEPTEMBER 6 SEPTEMBER 1 SEPTEMBER 14 FRI. SEPTEMBER 23 SAT. SEPTEMBER 3 SEPTEMBER 18 OCTOBER 2 GET TICKETS NOW BENDCONCERTS.COM | LIVENATION.COM FOLLOW @BENDCONCERTS FOR 2023 CONCERT ANNOUNCEMENTS

20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 19 Locals Bin “Surf Yachats” - JJ Haaga “Flying” -- Olivia Knox “Bad For Me” - Austn The last time I wrote about Austin Brown (artist name Austn) was to cover his debut EP back in 2019. Talking to the Bend native back then revealed his love for unique songwriters in music and how he was Source Material August’s best in music features two young forces of pop and a surf-rock-meets-spaghetti-western instrumental album By Isaac BiehlSOUNDS THEATRE & TFILM HEATRE & TFILM HEATRE & FILM tuition free for members! cLASSES cLASSES cLASSES Teen & TAdult een & TAdult een & Adult CALL 541 389 C0803 ALL 541 389 C0803 389 0803CASCADESTHEATRICAL ORG/CLASSES CWORKSHOPS/ ASCADESTHEATRICAL ORG/CLASSES CWORKSHOPS/ WORKSHOPS/ Cascades Theatre 148 NW Greenwood Ave Downtown Bend CLASSES START SEPTEMBER 12, C2022 LASSES START SEPTEMBER 12, C2022 LASSES 2022 Enroll Enroll Enroll Now!! Now!! Now!! AUDITION ACTING LIGHTING & PSOUND LAYWRITING PRODUCTION Tur ning Your Fantasies into Reality 24/7! DVD SALES • RENTALS • VIEWING • •541-312-8100 197 NE THIRD ST, BEND NEXT TO STARS ACROSS THE STREET FROM LES SCHWAB ATM ANDNOVELTIESPARTYADULTLINGERIETOYSSUPPLIESSOMUCHMORE! Now Hiring! When worlds collide in music the stakes are high. You have multiple fan bases involved, which means more people to please. Sometimes your sounds or styles don’t mix. That’s why choosing collaborators is an important and risky task. This month two gigantic names of pop music pulled together for a successful and exciting rework: Sir Elton John and Britney Spears went and flipped some of John’s older classics, “Tiny Dancer” and “The One,” into a thrilling and danceable duet that is actually pretty fun to listen to. This mashup is Spears’ first piece of new music since her 13-year conservatorship ended in November. I’m not sure if this marks a fullfledged return to music for Spears, but it’s a moment a lot of people are taking joy in, and the reception to “Hold Me Closer” has gone over really well. With so much pop music in the air, it seems fitting that two of my local selections for this month’s Source Material are from young singers following in that line. Check out these local highlights from August below and a few other albums you should listen to. Five Other Albums You Should Listen To: • “Cheat Codes” by Danger Mouse & Black Thought - Boom bap rap from a pair of legends • “Get F*cked” by The Chats - Aussie punk from the Sunshine Coast • “Pre Pleasure” by Julia Jacklin - Soft alt-rock filled with compelling songwriting • “Reset” Panda Bear & Sonic Youth - Psych pop with influences from the ‘50s and ‘60s • “90 In November” by Why Bonnie - Indie rock, shoegaze and Americana

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1 Thursday Bridge 99 Brewery Thursday Trivia Night at Bridge 99 Join us each Thursday at six, for live UKB Trivia at Bridge 99 Brewery. Free to play, win Bridge 99 gift cards! .

The CO Show is a free comedy showcase!! ($15 Donation Suggested) Doors open at 7pm show starts at 8pm! Central Oregon Comedy Scene and Karaokaine productions have teamed up to bring this show to you!! Its CO Hosted with CO Produced for Central Oregon!! 8pm. Free.

The band plays an eclectic blend of folk, blues and country music. Their songs tell tales of daily living, love, loss and the high desert life. Advanced ticket pur chase required. 5-8pm. Adults $15 - Children 12 and Under Free. Hayden Homes Amphitheater Sammy Hagar & The Circle “Crazy Times Tour” w/guest George Thorogood For nearly five decades, Sammy Hagar, also known as The Red Rocker, has been one of rock music’s most prolific and charismatic artists. He broke into the scene in 1975 as Montrose’s lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist. Throughout the years, he reached multiplatinum in his solo career, was front man of Val Halen, moved on to supergroups Chicken foot, and The Circle. Hagar has accumulated 25 Platinum albums on sales exceeding 50 million worldwide, earned a Grammy Award and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. 6:30pm. $39.50-$349.50.

2 Friday The Yard at Bunk + Brew Bunk, Brew and Burlesque It’s time to bring burlesque to Bunk and Brew! Come hang out and have some awe some brews, and enjoy a local food cart while you’re entertained by some of your favorite Bend Burlesque dancers! $20. 8pm start time! Come early and eat! 8pm. $20. Hub City Bar & Grill DJ/Karaoke Nights Dj dance music intermingled with karaoke! 8pm. Free.

Silver Moon Brewing DJ GRITS It’s going down! The biggest dance party to ever hit Bend Oregon. DJ GRITS live In the mix, playing all the hits from the ‘90s to 2022. You do not wanna miss this Event. 5$ at the door tell a friend to tell a friend. 9-11:45pm. $5.

Faith Hope & Charity Vineyards Live at the Vineyard: Opal Springs

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your go-to karaoke tune? 8pm-Midnight. Porter Brewing Co. Live Music with The Ballybogs! Grab a pint, sit back, relax, and enjoy live music by an amazing group of artists who bring us the best Irish Trad Music in Central Oregon! Every Thursday from 6-8pm at Porter Brewing! 6-8pm. Free. River’s Place Milo Matthews By using a drum pad, effects pedal, and a looping machine Milo can provide his own rhythm, bass line, keys and lead guitar turning him into an unstoppable oneman show. Milo’s styles range from jazz to blues, rock, pop, funk and even folk performing covers as well as his. 6-8pm. free.

3 Saturday Bend Cider Co. Jacks Whitehurst- Acoustic Folk The weather is just right for sitting in the butterfly garden, sipping cider and listening to live music! Jacks Whitehurst will serenade audi ences with his lovely vocals and acoustic guitar. Come try new cider flavors! Snacks availableOutside food OK. 5-7pm. Free.

Craft Kitchen and Brewery Comedy @ Craft: The Teacher Show Have you ever worked in, was a student at, or dropped off a child in front of a school? Then this show is for you! Come enjoy a great lineup of comedians, who also happen to be educators - share a few of their funniest lessons and experiences from the head of the class. Please don’t be tardy. 8-10pm. $15.

Bevel Craft Brewing Live Music at Bevel Join Bevel Craft Brewing on the patio for free live music every Wed. night through the summer! 6-8pm. Free. Cabin 22 Trivia Wednesdays at Cabin 22 Trivia Wednesdays at Cabin 22 with Useless Knowledge Bowl Live Trivia Game Show. Bend 6:30pm. Free. Craft Kitchen & Brewery Comedy Open Mic Sign-up 7:30. Starts at 8. Free to watch. Free to perform. If you’ve ever wanted to try stand-up comedy, this is where you start! 8-10pm. Free.

Mic w/ Derek Michael Marc Head down to the Northside Bar and Grill Wednesdays to catch local artists perform live. 7-9pm. Free.

LIVE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE

20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 21

> Tickets Available on Bendticket.com

Zero Latency Bend Karaoke Thursdays & Friday Nights at Zero Latency Entertainment Venue That’s right! Karaoke is coming to Zero Latency in Bend. Download the SINGA app and sign up for your time slot and song. Note: The venue will show up on the SINGA app by Monday, 8/29 to sign up. $7 at the door, includes a do mestic beer.

The Bite Erin Cole-Baker at The Bite Erin Cole-Baker plays an evening of original music with a few covers on electric and acoustic gui tars. 6-8pm. Free. Worthy Brewing Live Music Wednesdays Enjoy free live music every Wednesday at Worthy Brewing’s Eastside Pub! 6-8pm. Free. The Yard @ Bunk + Brew Ben Jam Wednesdays w/ Ben Dead Open mic meets live music... with a twist! Catch the boys from Ben Dead as they take the stage and play all kinds of covers. And then.. JAM WITH THEM. Wed. is your chance to get on stage and play with the band. An amazing night. Don’t miss it! 7-10pm. Free.

CALENDAR

CourtesyNoon-5pm.LayItOutEvents

Monkless Belgian Ales Monkless Belgian Ales - Food Truck Wednesdays Join Monkless every Wed. from 4-9pm! The brewery is throwing it back to the old days with food trucks, live music & games! “OG Taproom” vibes but at The Brasserie! 4-9pm. Free. Northside Bar & Grill Accoustic Open

Zero Latency Bend Karaoke Thursdays & Friday Nights at Zero Latency Entertainment Venue That’s right! Karaoke is coming to Zero Latency in Bend. Download the SINGA app and sign up for your time slot and song. Note: The venue will show up on the SINGA app by Monday, 8/29 to sign up. $7 at the door, includes a do mestic beer.

Submitting an event is free and easy. Add your event to our calendar at bendsource.com/submitevent

Crosscut Warming Hut No 5 Eric Lead better Duo @ Crosscut - Warming Hut No. 5 Join Crosscut Warming Hut for music in the garden with Eric Leadbetter. 6-8pm. Free.

Seven Nightclub & Restaurant The CO Show

Crater Lake Spirits Distillery Tasting Room Spirit of Summer Concert SeriesWoodsmen Join Crater Lakes Spirits for live music played by Woodsmen. Route 20 food

Though Little Woody couldn’t get anymore fun? Think again! This year there will be a 5k Beer Run race/fun run taking place alongside the barrel aged beverage festi val. Participants will sip beer along the race course, and finish at the Little Woody Festival to keep the party rolling! Race day is Saturday, Sep. 3 from

The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse Thursday House Band Sisters-based musician, Benji Nagel showcases his talented friends every Thu. all summer long! Pull up a chair on the big lawn, grab some dinner and soft-serve from The Boathouse, and enjoy some of Central Oregon’s favorite musicians. 6-8pm. Free.

M&J Tavern Open Mic Night Downtown living room welcomes musicians to bring their acoustic set or turn it up to eleven with the whole band. Bring your own instruments. Goes to last call or last musician, which ever comes first. (21 and over) 6:30pm. Free.

Silver Moon Brewing Still House Junkies & Jonathan Warren & the Billy Goats Born in a distillery in Durango, CO, 2021 IBMA Momentum Band of the Year and two-time Telluride Blue grass band contest finalists Stillhouse Junkies play a delirious, head-spinning mixture of original roots, blues, funk, swing and bluegrass music. 7-10pm. $10.

Cross-Eyed Cricket Al Hare Live music every Wednesday from 8-10pm. Free. Hayden Homes Amphitheater Alice In Chains and Breaking Benjamin + Bush with special guests Alice in Chains both epitomized the solemn, heavy Seattle sound of the 1990s and stood apart from the grunge hordes. What separated Alice in Chains from their alt-rock brethren was how their roots lay in heavy metal, not punk. 4:30pm. $59.50.

31 Wednesday

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke What’s your go-to karaoke tune? 8pm-Midnight.

Pour House Grill Ultimate Trivia Night with Clif Come to Pour House Grill for the BEST trivia night in town, guaranteed. With new questions every week written by the host Clif, and inter esting gameplay including wager style Double Jeopardy and Final Jeopardy questions, Pour House Trivia Night will have you on the edge of your seat! 6-8pm. Free.

Silver Moon Brewing Lurk & Loiter + Left Slide Two of Bend’s favorite fast and loud punk bands Lurk & Loiter and Leftslide bring the party to Silver Moon Brewing! Lurk & Loiter are a 2-piece surf punk band that never cease to bring the party. Leftslide is a rock ‘n’ roll band built up from the bones of energetic tight rhythm & blues and swampy dense rock. 8-11pm. $10.

Oregon Spirit Distillers Live Music with Bobby Lindstrom Join Oregon Spirit Distillers every Friday for live music on the dog-friendly outdoor patio. Each week will feature a local or regional artist from 6-8pm. Free and all ages welcome when accompanied by a 21+ adult. Guest Food Truck: Primo 6-8pm. Free.

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 22 Wine PairingLiveTastingsMusicClassesCheeseChocolateVendors SEPTEMBER 16 & 17 Benham Hall at SHARC WE’RE BACK! Early Bird Tickets: $20 After September 1: $25 Ticket includes admission for both days, 1 tasting token & souvenir wine glass (while supplies last) Tickets & Information: sunriversharc.com/uncorked & Sunriver Owners Association Fall term APPLYSeptemberstarts19.TODAY! Transfer Degrees Career & Technical Education Options Community Education | GED Prep Classes Small Business Development Center Adult Basic Skills | English Language Learning COCC is an affirmative action, equal opportunity institution. cocc.edu • 541.383.7700 9am to 3pm thru 9-17-22 Open Saturday & Sunday on Labor Day Weekend www.dtbam.com • 650-771-3544 DowntownBend Artisan’s Market World Central Kitchen fundraiser benefitting the people of Ukraine. The LARGEST selection of artisans & craftmasters East of the Cascades! Help your SecretsSurprisessurprisesdifferenceunderstandchildthebetweenandsecrets.arefun.arenot. Learn more ways to prevent child abuse. Visit kidscenter.org/get-trained

lawn for free live music with Tony Smiley! Since 2000, Tony Smiley has captured audiences with raw rhythms of all live looping. This musical savant loops his way through a unique genre of music that you won’t find anywhere else. 2-4pm. Free.

Midtown Yacht Club Live Music with Some thing Dirty With influences including Dinosaur Jr., Screaming Trees, Pixies, Pearl Jam, Toadies, Sonic Youth and similar artists that span the the late ‘80s and ‘90s, Something Dirty’s origi nal music features a rhythmic, guitar-driven, modern alt-rock sound with hooky pop elements.

Silver Moon Brewing 4.In.X 4.In.X is a Seattle-based house music DJ/producer, whose energetic sets include a mix of funky house, latin house, tech house and dance/EDM. He plays at breweries and beer festivals throughout Seattle, and has played internationally as well. (IG @ 4inx_musik) 8-11pm. $5.

Flights Wine Bar Trivia at Flights Wine Bar Join Sundays from 4-6pm for trivia with King Trivia! Free to play! Get a group together and come get nerdy! Awesome prizes and as always, delicious food and drinks! Free.

Worthy Brewing Live Music Saturdays Every Saturday Worthy Brewing will put on a live show! Come enjoy beers and music. 6-8pm. Free.

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

10 Barrel East Side Sunday Funday with Tony Smiley Join 10 Barrel on the biergarten

Hub City Bar & Grill DJ/Karaoke Nights Dj dance music intermingled with karaoke! 8pm. Free. M&J Tavern Aaron & The Rehnegades Rock n' roll styles pulled from all generations meld together for a red-hot Labor Day Saturday night. 9pm. Free. Northside Bar & Grill HWY 97 Classic rock and pop. 8-11pm. Free. On Tap Beer Garden & Food Trucks Sweet Motor at On Tap Southern rock/rhythm & blues. Join Sweet Motor for an evening of authentic, soul stirring music!! Jennifer BrazilVocals, Steve McKinnon - Guitar, Don Williams - Drums, Matthew Finfer - Guitar, Eddie Hastings - Bass Guitar. 6-8pm. Free.

Faith Hope & Charity Vineyards Live at the Vineyard: Major Dudes Spend the evening dancing and singing to your Steely Dan favorites! These guys know how to rock out. Advanced tickets purchase required. 6-9pm. Adults $25Children 12 and under free. Hayden Homes Amphitheater Incubus with Very Special Guest Sublime with ROME In cubus became one of the most popular alt-metal bands of the new millennium, setting themselves apart from a crowded field with a tireless touring ethic and a broad musical palette. Employing a versatile blend of heavy metal, funk, jazz, hip-hop, techno, post-grunge, and alternative rock, the band hit the mainstream in 1999 with their multi-platinum third album, Make Yourself, which featured the chart-topping single, “Drive.” 6pm. $49.50.

Oregon Euphorics Sir Mix-A-Lot Sir MixA-Lot might be best known for “Baby Got Back” but, what most saw as a pop-inspired track aimed at the mainstream was actually a song written about his distain for how Hollywood viewed & casted women of color in the 80s and early 90s. “ Even before "Baby Got Back", MixA-Lot was a platinum-selling album artist with a strong following in the hip-hop community, known for bouncy, danceable, bass-heavy tracks indebted to old-school electro. 6-11pm. $35.

River’s Place Saturday Jazz Sessions Tommy Leroy Rhythm Collective slingin’ Latin and Afri can-inspired jazz and funk. 6-8pm. Free.

20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 23 truck will be serving some amazing food that compliments our cocktails! El Yunque will be our featured pop-up shop! $1 per cocktail will be donated to High Desert Food & Farm Alliance. 6-8:30pm. $5-$10. Elk Lake Resort Derek Michael Marc at Music on the Water Summer Series Head to Elk Lake for the 9th Annual Music on the Water Summer Series sponsored by Boneyard Beer and Crater Lake Spirits and enjoy free great mu sic from extremely talented local and regional bands! Music starts at 5pm in-between the lodge and the lake. 5-8pm. Free.

Flights Wine Bar Live Music at Flights Come grab a great glass of wine, have an incredible dinner and enjoy live music every Sun. from 6-8pm at Flights Wine Bar. Free.

CALENDAR Incubus has been one of the most popular alt-metal bands to emerge in the 2000’s. The group continues to grow and redefine its genre, not scared of exploration and discovering new sounds. The group will play with special guest Sublime with Rome Sat.,Sep. 3. on

Hub City Bar & Grill Big Band Open Jam

4 Sunday Silver Moon Brewing Open Mic at the Moon Silver Moon Brewing’s open mic is back now on the big stage! Get a taste of the big time!! Sign up is at 4pm! Come checkout the biggest and baddest Open Mic Night in Bend! 5-8pm. Free.

Courtesy Live Nation TICKETS AVAILABLE AT (cont.

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The Commons Cafe & Taproom The Whippoorwill Presents Jeff Plankenhorn This will be an intimate, seated, listening room style concert inside The Commons. Jeff Planken horn, singer-songwriter and all things strings multi-instrumentalist—guitar, lap steel, mando lin, piano, upright bass—began his career as a boy soprano in Ohio. After studying music theory and composition at the University of Michigan, Texas beckoned when Ray Wylie Hubbard en ticed Jeff to join his band. Slide guitar virtuoso, Jeff spent his early career backing the likes of Hubbard and Joe Ely. 7-10pm. $15.

The Outfitter Bar at Seventh Mountain Resort Live music with Soul’d Out Join Labor Day Weekend outside on the rink for live music from Soul’d Out! Soul, R&B & funk are the influ ences with over 30 years of professional playing & touring experience each. 4-7pm. Free.

All welcome to sing or play an instrument, just come on in and get on Gordy’s sign-up sheet. 5-8pm. Free.

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2022 LITTLE WOODY FESTIVAL8 Gnome Sweet Gnome ENVISION YOUR NEXT HOME WITH TEAM VANCE LOANS. Synergy One Lending, Inc., NMLS 1907235. 3131 Camino Del Rio N 150, San Diego, CA 92108. Toll Free#: (888) 995-1256. Synergy One Lending, Inc. is licensed in the following states: AK, AL, AR, AZ, CALicensed by the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation under the California Finance Law License., CO, CT, DC, DE, FL, GA- Georgia Residential Mortgage Licensee., HI, IA, ID, IL- Illinois Residential Mortgage Licensee., IN, KS, KY, LA, MA- Licensed by the Massachusetts Division of Banks as a Broker and Lender as #MC1907235, MD, MI, MN, MO, MS, MT, NC, ND, NE, NH, NJ-Licensed by the N.J. Department of Banking and Insurance, NM, NV, OH, OK, OR, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, WA, WI, and WY. All Loans are Subject to Credit and Property Approval. Equal Housing Lender. www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org Randy Vance Branch Manager | NMLS-1455628 296 SW Columbia St. Ste A, Bend, OR 97702 Cell: www.teamvanceloans.comEmail:541-280-8294rvance@S1L.com

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East Bend Public Library Open Hub Singing Do you sing in the car? Have you sung out in full harmony with a group of neighbors? If not, this is, we believe, a timeless human experi ence. We are Bend’s all-voices-welcome singing group. Songs are taught in the ancient, practical method of call and response. See openhubsing ing.com for more. First Tuesday of every month, 6-7:30pm. Free.

Elixir Wine Group Locals Music Night Enjoy live musicians, great wine and small bites. 6-9pm. Free.

The Suttle Lodge is a perfect stop for touring bend and musicians, allowing the venue to showcase incredible artists from near and far. catch a variety of tunes on the Lodge’s big lawn every Mon. from 6-8pm. 6-8pm. Free.

Initiative Brewing Trivia Tuesdays in Red mond Trivia Tuesdays in Redmond, with Useless Knowledge Bowl. 6:30pm at Initiative Brewing, 424 NW 5th St. Join in to win top team prizes! It’s free to play. Bring your team this week! Great new food menu. Arrive early for best seating. . Free.

FreeMUSICFirstFriday

with Emilee Reyn olds at High Desert Music Hall High Des ert Music Hall is excited to be apart of Downtown Redmond’s 1st Friday every month! From 4-8pm with Dry Canyon Arts Commission features artists from the community. As they rotate their work and have artist booths for purchase and to view. With free live music by Emilee Reynolds in the lounge. Sept. 2, 4-8pm. High Desert Music Hall, 818 SW Forest Ave, Redmond. Contact: 541-527-1387. highdesertmusichall@gmail.com. Free.

All are welcome to join at Alpenglow Park as everyone says farewell to summer with games, activities and music by Honey Don’t. The movie Luca will be shown on a big outdoor screen! Bring blankets and chairs if you plan to stay for the movie. Popcorn provided. Sept. 2, 6-9:30pm. Alpenglow Park, 61049 Southeast 15th Street, Bend. Contact: 541-389-7275. kristinc@ bendparksandrec.org. Free.

The Galveston Street Market is a local vendors' market with the goal of bringing community together while men toring new and seasoned makers alike. Vendors change each week for a variety of locally made products so there’s something for everyone. Shop local! Shop small! Fridays, 5-9pm. Through Sept. 30. Big O Bagels - Westside, 1032 NW Galveston Ave., Bend. Contact: galvestonstreet market@gmail.com. Free. Kreitzer Art Gallery and Studio Open Daily by Appointment 55-year profession al artist David Kreitzer displays sublime and stunning water, landscape, city, figure, floral and fantasy oil and watercolor masterworks. Medita tive, healing and soul-satisfying. Mondays-Sun days, Noon-7pm. Through Sept. 30. Kreitzer Art Gallery and Studio, 20214 Archie Briggs Road, Bend. Contact: 805-234-2048. jkreitze@icloud. com. Free. Local Tribal Art Shop, Tananawit, Grand Reopening

On Tap Locals’ Day Plus Live Music Cheaper drinks all day and live music at night, get down to On Tap. 11am-9pm. Free.

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT

Sunday Brunch and Karaoke

Bridge 99 Brewery Monday Night Trivia Now playing Mondays (Thursdays too!) at 6 it’s live UKB Trivia at Bridge 99 Brewery. Free to play, win Bridge 99 gift cards! 6-8pm. Free.

Join us every Wednesday for Tango classes and dancing! Your first class is free. 6:30-7pm Tango 101 Class, no partner needed! 7-8pm All Levels Class. 8-9:30pm Open Dancing. Wednesdays, 6:30-9:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. Contact: tangocentraloregon@gmail.com.541-728-3234.$5-$10.

Dance Open House Come meet the ABC community and tour the studio! There will be mini classes and dance games, plus teachers and current students on site to answer any questions you and your child might have about dancing at ABC! Aug. 31, 4-6pm. Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-382-4055. dance@abcbend.com. Free. Line and Swing Dancing Lessons Line and Swing dance lessons every Thu. night at The Cross-Eyed Cricket! Thursdays, 7-9pm. Cross-Eyed Cricket, 20565 NE Brinson Blvd., Bend. Free. Soul in Motion Conscious Dance Move, dance, breathe, connect....with all that moves within you. Guided and facilitated to support you to let your body take the lead, enjoying a deeper connection with yourself and others. All bodies welcome, no experience necessary....come see what this practice has to offer you! Terpsichore an Dance Studio, 1601 NW Newport Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-948-7015. soulinmotionbend@ gmail.com. $20.

FILM EVENTS

Visit Sagebrushers Art Society in beautiful Bend to see lovely work, paintings and greeting cards by local artists. New exhibit every 8 weeks. Visit Sagebrushersartofbend.com for information on current shows. Wednesdays, 1-4pm, Fridays, 1-4pm and Saturdays, 1-4pm. Sagebrushers Art Society, 117 SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-617-0900. Free. Beginning Mosaic Learn the basics of mosa ic while creating an artistic and functional piece. Participants have a choice of making a mirror, wall plaque or trivet. Second session covers grouting. Sun, Sept. 4, Noon-4pm and Sun, Sept. 11, Noon-2pm. Carleton Manor, 1776 NE 8th St., Bend. Contact: 907-230-1785. jesica@carleton manormosaics.com. $75. Dorothy Freudenberg Digital Media in September “Quiet Moments & Lively Inter actions”, a retrospective by photographer and digital artist Dorothy Freudenberg, opens Sep. 2, from 3-7pm, during the Old Mill District’s First Friday Gallery Walk. Juxtaposing introspective images with expressively vibrant digital composi tions, Dorothy blends different artistic mediums by incorporating them all in her imagery. Sept. 2, 3-7pm. Tumalo Art Co., 450 SW Powerhouse Dr., Ste. 407, Bend. Contact: 541-385-9144. art@ tumaloartco.com. Free.

Come check out Something Dirty at Midtown Yacht Club! 6:30-8:30pm. Free. Niblick and Greenes at Eagle Crest Erin Cole-Baker at Niblick and Greenes Niblick and Greenes presents an evening of music with New Zealand artist Erin Cole-Baker. 5-8pm. Free. Obie Oasis Obie Oasis Concert Sundays Bring a chair, picnic and beverage to the Obie Oasis Amphitheater and enjoy talented regional mu sicians. This is a house concert with performer donations encouraged. All proceeds go to per formers. Sound system provided by Spark Music Gear. For artist information go to CalvinMann. com/shows 2pm. Donation.

River’s Place Bill Keale Hawaiian music, slack key guitar, pop & folk, Bill Keale’s smooth vocal style adds a special touch to audiences everywhere. 6-8pm. Free. The Yard @ Bunk + Brew The Rum Peppers Take Bunk+Brew Labor Day Weekend be prepared to have the Rum Peppers melt your face off with killer jams and vocals. This young talented band ripped through Central Oregon Pride in Drake Park wowing audiences, and now you can catch them in the backyard of Bunk+Brew! Don’t miss it! 7-10pm. Free. 5 Monday

Wake up right with brunch and karaoke! Sundays, 10am3pm. General Duffy’s Waterhole, 404 SW Forest Avenue, Redmond. Free.

Galveston Street Market

Silver Moon Brewing Labor Day Bash with Proud Mary Proud Mary is the world’s queer est tribute to the much-loved ‘60s-‘70s rock band Creedence Clearwater Revival. The band performs CCR’s many hits, including “Fortunate Son,” “I Heard It through the Grapevine,” “Bad Moon Rising,” “Down on the Corner,” and, of course, “Proud Mary.” Plus many more! 6-9pm. $10.

Tananawit is launching a grand reopening of its art shop. There will be a sale of works, including paintings, photography, jewelry, and beadwork. There will be outdoor displays, and the suite will be packed with local art. Tananawit artists’ work reflects their values of family, creativity and Warm Springs culture. Fri, Sept. 2, 10am-6pm, Sat, Sept. 3, 10am-6pm and Sun, Sept. 4, 10am-6pm. Indian Head Casi no, 3240 Walsey Lane Suite #5, Warm Springs. Contact: deb@warmspringsartists.org or sara@ warmspringsartists.org. Free.

On Tap Beer Garden & Food Trucks

The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse Big Lawn Series

Silver Moon Brewing Comedy Open Mic Free to watch. Free to perform. Sign-up 6:30. Starts at 7. Hosted by Jessica Taylor and Katy Ipock. 7-9pm. Free.

The Commons Cafe & Taproom Story tellers Open-Mic StoryTellers open-mic nights are full of music, laughs, and community. In the old house Bill Powers of Honey Don’t and several other projects in town hosts one of the best open mics in town. Sign ups start at 5pm sharp in the cafe and spots go quick. Poetry, Comedy, and Spoken Word welcome, but this is mainly a musical open mic. Performance slots are a quick 10 minutes each, so being warmed up and ready is ideal. 6pm. Free.

ArgentineDANCETango Classes and Dance

The Astro Lounge Open Mic Mondays Amazing top-notch talent, jaw dropping! All musicians and comedians are welcome from first-timers to pros. Hosted by Nancy Blake and Danny Guitar Harris, two longtime local musi cians. Very supportive and can provide instru ments if needed. Free.

6 Tuesday

Blackflowers Blacksun Blackflowers Blacksun plays blues jumped up and electrified. 3-5pm. Free. River’s Place Trivia Sunday at River’s Place @ 12 Noon Live UKB Trivia Win gift card prizes for top teams! It’s free to play, Indoor and out door seating available. Noon-2pm. Free.

The Yard @ Bunk + Brew The Hasbens Presents: Labor Day Show w/ a Lil Bit of Reg gae The boys from the Hasbens have crushed Bunk+Brews Halloween party back to back years. And now, the group is back to jam and rock all Labor Day night. The audience will hear some epic covers, amazing originals and a lil bit of reggae. 7-10pm. Free.

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

Farewell Summer Event at Alpenglow Park

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

ARTS + CRAFTS Art Viewing

CALENDAR

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 34 541-694-1110 YellowBrewBus.com Hop on board Yellow Brew Bus Tours! Book your tour today! Make Friends, Earn Money, Gain Job Experience Are you between the ages of 16-24 and struggling to finish school or experience barriers to employment? At Heart of Oregon, we want to help you navigate these challenges—our supportive staff are here to help you achieve your goals and find your pathway to success. Check out heartoforegon.org to learn more about our program opportunities, and find out which one is right for you. Apply now to start this October Have questions about applying? Call 541-633-7834. WORK-EARN-LEARN at Heart of Oregon Corps Opportunities available for youth ages 16-24

Creative Nonfiction Critique Group

Join an intimate group of likeminded women ready to critique each other’s writing. Gain feedback, confidence, and encouragement as we dive deep into what’s working and what’s not. This is an MFA-style course focused on creative nonfiction (memoir, essays, etc.). We’ll meet weekly via 10:30am. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-3066564. julie@roundaboutbookshop.com. Free.

AdventureEXHIBITSVanExpo

CallVOLUNTEERforVolunteers-Play with Par rots! Volunteers needed at Second Chance Bird Rescue! Friendly people needed to help socialize birds to ready for adoption, make toys, clean cages and make some new feathered friends! Located past Cascade Lakes Distillery, call for hours and location. Contact: 916-956-2153.HSCO

Thrift Store Donation Door is the perfect place to combine your passions while helping CALENDAREVENTSTICKETS AVAILABLE AT COUNTY COMMISSIONSEPT. 6 STATE REPRESENTATIVESSEPT. 14 CITY COUNCIL & MAYORSEPT. 19 C A N D I D A T E F O R U M S 2 0 2 2 H e a r f r o m t h e c a n d i d a t e s a b o u t p o l i c i e s t h a t a f f e c t y o u r b u s i n e s s . 5:00 7:30 PM | OPEN SPACE EVENT STUDIOS Register Today at BendChamber.org! Powered by Stillhouse Junkies is a string band trio that plays fast, foot-stomping Americana and roots music. The group hits like a shot of Grandpa’s finest bathtub gin and will get crowds swinging around the Silver Moon Brewing dance floor. The group will take the stage Wed., Aug. 31. Courtesy Still House Junkies

Enjoy the focus of a quiet space with the benefit of others’ company. This is an in-person pro gram. Masks are recommended at all in-person library events. Bring personal work, read a book or answer emails. Come when you can, leave when you want. Free, open network WiFi avail able. Tuesdays, 1:30-4:30pm. Deschutes Public Library-Downtown, 601 NW Wall Street, Bend. Contact: 541-312-1063. paigef@deschuteslibrary. org. Free.

Northwest Crossing Farmers Market Saturday Farmers Market in Bend’s NorthWest Crossing neighborhood. Find fresh produce and support local growers and businesses! Satur days, 10am-2pm. Through Oct. 1. NorthWest Crossing, NW Crossing Dr., Bend. Contact: farmersmarket@c3events.com. Free.

Humane Society Thrift Store

Please join us for a launch, party with Jane Kirkpatrick for her new book, Beneath the bending Skies! RSVP on her debut book. Sept. 1, 6-7pm. Roundabout Books, 900 NW Mount Washington Drive, #110, Bend. Contact: 541-306-6564. julie@roundabout bookshop.com. Free.

Last chance for Raptors of the Desert Sky, Des ert Dwellers and other summer programs! Sept. 5, 9am-5pm. Museum admission.

Sept. 3-4, Saturday: 10am-5pm Sunday: 10am-3pm Join us for a fam ily friendly weekend open to all ages celebrating the van life community and the opportunity to view an array of van vendors and overland products. Sep. 3-4, 10am-5pm. Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond, Redmond. Contact: lisa@adventurev anexpo.com. Free. Bend Ghost Tours Your Spirit Guide will lead you through the haunted streets and alleyways of Historic Downtown Bend where you’ll learn about the city’s many macabre tales, long-buried secrets and famous ghosts. Wednesdays-Sun days, 7:30-9pm. Downtown Bend, Downtown Bend, Bend. Contact: 541-350-0732. Bendghost tours@gmail.com. $25.00. Community Conversations: Let’s Talk About Water Discuss water issues in Central Oregon. This is an in-person program. Registra tion is required. Masks are recommended at all in-person library events. What can we do about the strain on water supplies in Central Oregon? Sept. 1, 5:30-7:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541312-1032. lizg@dpls.lib.or.us. Free. Know PNW - Indigenous History of Celilo Falls Learn about the history of Celilo Falls, a tribal fishing area along the Columbia River that was used for centuries until being flooded by the Dalles Dam in 1957. Aug. 31, 6-7pm. Contact: 541-312-1029. laurelw@de schuteslibrary.org. Free. Third Thursday Open Mic at the High Desert Music Hall Spoken word open mic night for all poets, storytellers and writers. This is an in-person program. Join us at the High Desert Music Hall for a spoken word open mic night the third Thursday of the month. All writers and readers and word-lovers invited to attend and read. Every third Thursday, 6-8pm. Contact: 541-312-1063. paigef@deschuteslibrary.org. learn more about themselves than they do about acting. Sept. 2, 7-9pm and Sept. 3, 7-9pm. Scalehouse Collaborative for the Arts, 550 NW Franklin Ave, Bend. Contact: info@etcbend.org. $20.

AuthorWORDSEvent:"Beneath the Bending Skies" by Jane Kirkpatrick

Writers Writing: Quiet Writing Time

Not Cho Grandma’s Bingo Not Cho’ Grandma’s Bingo is back at Silver Moon Brew ing! We host our famous bingo event for good times and a chance to win some cold hard cash! Sundays, 10am-1pm. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. Free.

Volun teers Needed Do you love animals and discov ering “new” treasures? Then volunteering at the

20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 35

PRESENTATIONS +

LastETC.Chance for Summer Programs

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 36

GROUPS + MEETUPS

Movie Nights Under the Stars - Faith Hope & Charity Vineyard Come enjoy big movies under the big sky of Central Oregon. The Saturday, September 10th

Let’s play LeftCenterRight! Bring friends and make new friends. More people the bigger the pot. Simple game, one dollar table and 5 dollar tables. The winner of each game takes the pot. You're not going to get rich but you will have fun. Happy Hour $4 Beer & Wine Wednesdays, 5-7pm. Zero Latency Bend, 1900 NE 3rd St STE 104, Bend. Contact: 541-617-0688. Zerolatency bend.com. Kirtan & Sacred Sound Kirtan and Sacred Sound with Bend Bhakti Collective and special guests through the month. Find out why chanting mantra is beneficial. No singing or other experi ence needed! Thursdays, 7-8:30pm. Through Oct. 6. Heritage Hall, 230 NE 9th Street, Bend. Free. Non-specific grief support group Small Support Group (4-5 people) for those who need a safe space to share a grief difficult to share with one’s friend and family, long term grief for a death, loss of relationship, loss from suicide, loss of health, loss of function, etc Sundays, 5-6pm. Free. Parkinson’s Resources of Oregon Support Group This support group offers a safe space for all people involved in caring for or managing Parkinson’s Disease. Please contact Kay Terzian if you wish to join or have further questions 541-388-1706. Fridays, 9:45-11:45am. Through Jan. 1. Bend Coffee & Books, 155 NE Greenwood Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-388-1706. kaymarie.terzian@gmail.com. Free.

Tickets: https://www.bendticket.com & Smith Rock Records More Info: www.bigstockfundraiser.org

EVENTS

Backcountry Brew: Coffee with the Hunting Curious Are you curious about hunting, but not sure where to begin? Backcoun try Hunters and Anglers of Central Oregon is chock full of friendly, ethically-minded hunters and the group is eager to meet you! Dress warm, grab some morning caffeine and come about the outdoors & what it takes to get started. First Sat urday of every month, 9-10am. Through Dec. 3. The Commons Cafe & Taproom, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend. Contact: oregon@backcountryhunters. org. Free. Become a Better Public Speaker! Do you struggle with public speaking? You’re not alone! Come visit Bend Toastmasters Club and learn how to overcome your public speaking fears. Wednesdays, Noon-1pm. Contact: 503501-6031. bend.toastmasters.club@gmail.com. Free.

AVAILABLE AT growing. Your experience and knowledge will be valued by both new and existing businesses in our community. To apply, call 541-316-0662 or visit centraloregon.score.org/volunteer. Fri, Aug. 26 and Ongoing.. Volunteer Here! Gratifying opportunity avail able! all aspects of daily horse care and barn maintenance for Mustangs to the Rescue. Mon days-Sundays. Mustangs to the Rescue, 21670 McGilvray Road, Bend. Contact: volunteer@mustangstotherescue.org.541-330-8943.Free.

TICKETS

Volunteer with Salvation Army

First on the Butte! Join Central Oregon LandWatch staff and other folks for a bright and early casual hike up Pilot Butte each month, while learning about Central Oregon Land Watch’s work to defend the region. Hikers will meet at the main trailhead at 7am and keep an accommodating pace. All are welcome! RSVP suggested: kavi@colw.org 1st of every month, 7-8:30am. Through Dec. 31. Pilot Butte State Park, Bend. Contact: 302-690-3420. kavi@colw. org. Free.

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

Free Fall Tinkergarten Trial Class

Blacksmith Forge Basics Come have fun and try your hand at forging steel. Learn proper hammer strokes, anvil techniques, stance, shap ing, tapering, splitting, twisting and punching steel to create art, jewelry, and functional items. Forge etiquette/management, history of the craft and safety are all covered in this 2 week class. Wednesdays, 6:30-8:30pm. Through Aug. 31. DIY Cave, 444 SE Ninth St. Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-388-2283. info@diycave,com. $245. Celebrate With the Bend Bhakti Collective Kirtan, sacred song, dance and community. Celebrate with the Bend Bhakti Collective. Thursdays, 7pm. First Presbyterian Heritage Hall, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. Contact: 541-382-4401. Free-$20. County Commission Forum — Sep. 6 Join us to hear from the candidates running for Deschutes County Commissioner. Before and after our speakers, we’ll have plenty of time for networking — plus bites and beverages. Sep. 6, 5-7:30pm. Open Space Event Studios, 220 NE Lafayette Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-382-5792. cyrus@bendchamber.org. $25 Members | $40 Non-members.

Let’s Talk About It Training with KIDS Center Examine child development through a social, physical, and developmental lens. You can attend this program online or in person. Registration is required. Register by using the “Register Here” link above. Masks are required at all in-person library events. Tuesdays, 10am. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Contact: 541-312-1032. lizg@ deschuteslibrary.org. Free. Moms + Groms Meetup Moms + Groms is officially back @ Boss Rambler 3-6pm every Wednesday! Moms, it’s simple: show up with your grom(s) to socialize and drink beer (or whatever you want) with other moms while the kiddos make new friends! All moms get $1 off drinks! Wednesdays, 3-6pm. Boss Rambler Beer Club, 1009 NW Galveston Ave., Bend. Free.

Game Night Let’s Play LeftCenterRight

HooDoo Area Doors Open at Food2:00pm&Drink

FAMILY + KIDS

How can you help your kid fall in love with the outdoors and build the habits, connections and skills that help kids thrive throughout life? Join Tinkergarten for its fall series, Body, Mind & Heart! Thu, Sep. 1, 9-10am and Wed, Sept. 14, 2:30-3:30pm. Tumalo State Park, 64120 O. B. Riley Rd, Bend. Contact: 458-231-3395. sherry. cardot@mail.tinkergarten.com. Free. Kids Open Play Our Kids Ninja Warrior gym is a wonderful space for kids to stay active and have fun! We offer both Toddler Open Play for the littles and Kids Open Play for kids– babies and toddlers are welcome too. Our clean, bright and fully padded space is full of fun-filled move ment Saturdays-Sundays, Noon-3pm. Free Spirit Yoga + Fitness + Play, 320 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 150, Bend. Contact: 541-241-3919. info@ freespiritbend.com. Kids Open Play 1-Pass $15 Kids Open Play 10-Pass $130.

Ski

First Thursdays! Come support local ven dors and herbal craft makers! Sample medicinal teas that will support your health and listen to live local sounds. Creative plant medicine at its finest! First Thursday of every month, 4-7pm. Through Dec. 1. The Peoples Apothecary, 19570 Amber Meadow Dr, Bend. Contact: 541-7282368. Free.

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Fried Chicken

Thursdays at Flights Wine Bar! Dine in with a 2-piece plate with sides and a biscuit for $18 or take an 8-piece bucket and a bottle to-go! Upgrade to the ‘Balla Bucket’ to get a Somm se lected bottle of Champagne. Thursdays, 3-9pm. Flights Wine Bar, 1444 NW College Way Suite 1, Bend. Contact: 541-728-0753. flightswinebend@ gmail.com. $38. Sisters Farmers Market Sisters Farmers Market runs every weekend from the first Sun day in June through the first Sunday in October. Explore the market this season to shop for fresh, micro-local produce, pantry staples and artisanal goods throughout Fir Street Park in the heart of Sisters, Oregon. SNAP and EBT accept ed! More information at sistersfarmersmarket. com. Sundays, 11am-2pm. Through Oct. 3. Fir Street Park, Sisters, Sisters. Contact: 541-9040134. sistersfarmersmarket@gmail.com. Free.

Vineyard’s big outdoor screen will have three spectacular blockbusters! Vineyard opens at 7pm and the movie starts at dusk. Bring a blan ket or a low backed beach chair for a movie night only the lawn. Sun, Sept. 4, 7-9pm. Faith Hope & Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne. Contact: 541-526-5075. events@ fhcvineyards.com. Adults/$20 Children 3-13/$15 Children Under 3/Free. Preparing Your College Essay In this four-week course, rising seniors with the inten tion of applying to college will begin to reflect on their hopes, fears, anxieties and goals for the upcoming school year. Through journaling, discussion, and writing exercises the group will explore the structure of the personal essay and the question: Who Am I? Wednesdays, 11am12:30pm. Through Aug. 31. Open Space Event Studios, 220 NE Lafayette Ave, Bend. claire.brislin@writenowprograms.com.Contact:$450.

Redmond Farmers Market Featuring locally grown produce, artisan foods, prepared foods and crafts. Redmond Farmers Market shares a dedication for supporting local farms and eating delicious and healthy foods. Thurs days, 3-7pm. Through Sept. 15. Centennial Park, Evergreen, Between 7th and 8th St., Redmond. Free. Stream Stewards Student Video Contest by the Upper Deschutes Wa tershed Council Calling all Central Oregon student filmmakers! Be entered to win two free tickets to the Jack Johnson concert on Sun., Sep. 25, by submitting your video to the Stream Stew ards Video Contest. All contest applications are due by September 15th. Please visit our website for specific contest details. Aug. 16-Sept. 15, Midnight-11:59pm. Contact: cboylan@restoreth edeschutes.org. Free.

BEER + DRINK 2022 Bend Beer Run Enjoy this Bend clas sic now as a part of the Little Woody! The Bend Beer Run sends participants along a 5K race loop enjoying the fine beer from local breweries along the way. Finish at the 2022 Little Woody celebrating all things barrel-aged. This is a 21 & over event. Please note: there are no refunds for Beer Run tickets.Event location and time are subject to change. Check the Bend Beer Run website for more details.Tag us in one of your videos and photos so we can share your fun with the rest of the world! Sept. 3, Noon-5pm. De schutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend. $15-$35. Beach Parties at Walt Reilly’s Walt Reilly’s is throwing a beach party every Sun, this summer! Join the patio for tropical cocktails, delicious beachy bites and music guaranteed to make you forget the Sunday Scaries. Hawaiian shirts encouraged! Sundays, 4-10pm. Through Sept. 4. Walt Reilly’s, 225 SW Century Dr, Bend, OR 97702, Bend. Contact: 541-546-0511. karley@ waltreilly.com. Free. Cross Cut Warming Hut: Locals’ Day! Tuesdays are Locals’ Day. Every Tuesday enjoy $1 off regular size draft beverages. Come by the EVENTS

Thursdays Fried Chicken

FOOD + DRINK

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 40 LIVE IN CONCERT ATHLETIC CLUB OF BEND COURTYARDHOSTED BY THERAPY WORKS SCAN TO BUY TICKETS BUY TICKETS ONLINE AT WWW.NEWPORTAVENUEMARKET.COM/CONCERTS OR IN PERSON AT NEWPORT AVENUE MARKET BEN D ʼS LOCALLY P R ORECNOCETAMITNI,DECUD T S E RIES CSN TITLE SPONSOR SUPPORTED BY PRESENTED BY STAGE SPONSOR CLOSING SPONSOR AUTO SPONSOR NIGHTLY CONCERT CLOSING BROUGHT TO YOU BY COLDWELL BANKER BAIN OF BEND CARRIE DITULLIO REALTOR

This fun and moti vating outdoor fitness class will get your blood flowing and leave you feeling empowered! Class will contain circuit, interval training and breath work. Adaptable to all levels. Parking pass, mats and equipment included. Reservation required, please visit website. Wednesdays, 5:30-6:30pm. Through Sept. 28. Pilot Butte State Park, Pilot Butte State Park, Bend. Contact: wildlandguidingcompany@gmail.com.503-888-3674.$20.

ITIES + SKILLS

Led by Nancy Nelson a Exercise Specialist for

CALENDARTICKETS AVAILABLE AT OR 223388 • ID RCE - 53749541-449-9806 Cannot be combined with other offers. Valid for new projects only. Offer expires 09/30/2022. Eliminate Visual Clutter with Webfoot Cabinets

Saturday Morning Coffee Run Come join CORK for a Saturday long run at 9am. We will meet outside Thump Coffee on York Dr. for a long run. Feel free to run or walk, whatever “long” means to you! Whatever your pace and distance, Thump hopes you’ll join us for the run and stay afterwards for food and drinks! Satur days, 9-10am. Thump Coffee - NW Crossing, 549 NW York Dr., Bend. Free.

Community Acupuncture Join Haw thorn Healing Arts Center every Wed. and Fri. 10:30am-1pm for community style acupuncture with acupuncturist, David Watts LAc. Acu puncture helps reduce stress, increase vitality and energy, treat acute and chronic pain and strengthen your immune system. Community acupuncture makes it possible for more people to access affordable healthcare. Wednes days-Fridays, 10:30am-1pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend. Contact: 541-330-0334. info@hawthorncenter. com. $60.

HEALTH + WELLNESS Access Bars and Body Process Gifting and Receiving Did you know your body’s first language is energy? Group trade of Access Bars and Body Processes is a great way to connect with others in the area and receive! If you have taken a Bars or Body Process class, join us! What’s possible if we receive bodywork regu larly? Everything! First Tuesday of every month, 5-7pm. The Blissful Heart Hidden Garden, 105 NW Greeley Ave, Bend. Contact: 541-848-7608. jenniferevemorey@gmail.com. Free. Bend Zen Meditation Group Bend Zen sits every Mon, evening at 7. Arrive at 6:45pm to orient yourself and meet others. We have two 25-minute sits followed by a member-led Dharma discussion from 8:05-8:30pm. All are welcome! Learn more and sign up for emails at www.bendzen.net Mondays, 6:45-8:30pm. Brooks Hall at Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 Wall St., Bend. Contact: bendzensitting@gmail.com.

Drop In Monday Meditation - open to all Come join us in the beautiful gardens for meditation and healing! Mondays, 6:30-7:30pm. Blissful Heart Wellness Center, 45 NW Greeley Ave, Bend. Contact: 510-220-2441. cathleen@ blissful-heart.com. Donation Based.

Couples Massage Classes! Learn to give your partner a great back, neck, hand and foot massage! Nurture your relationship, your part ner and yourself. Single-session, one couple, 2 or 4-hour massage classes in Tumalo. Summer classes now scheduling. Book today to reserve your perfect day/time! www.taprootbodywork. com Fridays-Sundays. Through Sept. 4. Taproot Bodywork studio, Tumalo, Tumalo. Contact: 503481-0595. taprootbodywork@gmail.com. Varies. Dance Meditation Transformation Dance Meditation Transformation is held every Thu. at 6pm at the Hanai Center. The experience of meditation going through the 5 stages of preparing your body and mind to flow freely is a unique experience. The session ends with a free flow dance set of world music. Suggested Do nations $15-$25 Thursdays, 6-7:30pm. Through Sept. 22. Hanai Foundation, 62430 Eagle Road, Bend. Contact: 310-420-5873. seedofnothing ness@gmail.com. $15-$25.

Group Meditations in Redmond These group meditations are for connection, breathing and being. Join Spark Wellness Mon. evenings to foster connection to others, connection to self and connection to the world. Learn breathing techniques that help to ease anxiety and depres sion while quieting the mind. Sept. 5, 6:30-8pm. Spark Wellness, 210 Southwest 5th Street, Suite 4, Redmond. Contact: 541-604-2440. hello@ sparkwellness.love. Donation. Impact Parkinson’s Disease Exercise Program Impact PD! is a high energy exercise class designed for people with Parkinson’s. Whole body activation, voice work, facial expres sion, counteract your symptoms, dual tasking, fine motor skills and increase your daily activity.

41 Half Marathon Training for and completing a Trail Half Marathon (13.1mi) is a challenging and rewarding endeavor. Participants benefit from FootZone’s experienced head coach and mentors. The half marathon program will also include informational clinics on nutrition, hy dration, gear, injury prevention, stretching tech niques and more. Safe. Community. Accountabil ity. Fun. Friends. Tuesdays-Saturdays, 8am and Tue, Aug. 16, 6pm. Through Nov. 12. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-317-3568. col@footzonebend.com. $150.

Planet Fitness Home Work-Ins Planet Fitness is offering free daily workouts via lives tream! The best part? No equipment needed. Get your sweat on at least four times a day. Valid even for those without memberships! Visit the Planet Fitness Facebook page for more details. Ongoing, 4-5pm. Free. Redmond Running Group Run All levels welcome. Find the Redmond Oregon Running Klub on Facebook for weekly run details. Thurs days, 6:15pm. City of Redmond, Redmond, Or., Redmond. Contact: rundanorun1985@gmail.com.

Outdoor Fitness Class

OUTDOOR ACTIV-

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Coaching Group Build your dream life while connecting to a supportive, motivating commu nity. Clarify your goals - internal or external, immediate or long-term, self or other focused. Learn new skills, techniques, and insights to make it happen! Led by Diana Lee, Meadowlark Coaching. Mondays, 6-7:30pm. Contact: 914-9802644. meadowlarkcoaching@yahoo.com. $15-25.

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

BigCLASSESButteChallenge

8 Buttes. 8 Brewer ies. Tons o’ Perks. The Big Butte Challenge combines two of Central Oregon’s finest attri-buttes…Buttes and Brews. On their own schedule, participants hike or run each Butte Challenge using a GPS-enabled activity tracker, unlocking a free pint of beer with every summit. Do you like Big Buttes? Aug. 17-Sep. 5. Contact: info@cascaderelays.com. $20.

Donations accepted. Buddhism: Start Here This informal talk is designed to introduce the basics of the Buddhist point of view as expressed in the Vajrayana (Tibetan) tradition, led by Natural Mind Dharma Center director Michael Stevens. First Monday of every month, 7pm. Natural Mind Dharma Center, 345 SW Century Drive, Suite 2, Bend. Contact: info@naturalminddharma.org. Free. Capoeira: A Martial & Cultural Art Form of Freedom Free yourself from everyday movement and thought streams, push your boundaries and find joy in community. This Afro-Brazilian art combines music and acro batics in a constant flow of movement, attacks and creative defense. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 7-8:30pm. High Desert Martial Arts, 63056 Lower Meadow Dr. Ste. 120, Bend. Contact: 541-6783460. ucabend@gmail.com. $30 intro month.

GIFTS GALORE

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 42 Have a burrowing rodent problem? Who you gonna call? gopherbusters@live.com TRAPPING • GASSING • RESULTS Office 541-205-5764 cell 541-331-2404 Moles, Voles, Gophers and Squirrels Residental • Commercial • Farm & Public Lands “Your Success Is Our Business” Check Out our Website for more Info www.prepbend.com Call for a tour 541-797-4459today! Central Oregon’s Full Service Culinary Facility Prep Can Help Expand Your Business! CATERERS, PERSONAL CHEFS, FOOD TRUCKS, RETAIL VENDORS & VIRTUAL RESTAURANTS visit www.prettypussycat.com 1341 NE 3rd Street, Bend 541-317-3566 Say it Loud, Say it Proud! PartySexLingerieToysSupplies Costumes & Wigs Pole Shoes Gifts Galore ONLINE SHOPPING NOW AVAILABLE! Your One Stop Adult Fun Shop! Join us thisatSaturday, June 25that Drake Park River Floaties Summertime means Funner Times! Your One Stop Adult Fun Shop! Funky Floaties & NowSwimwearinStock! Get em while its HOT! ONLINE SHOPPING NOW AVAILABLE! 1341 NE 3RD ST • 541-317-3566 • PRETTYPUSSYCAT.COM PARTYSEXLINGERIETOYSSUPPLIES COSTUMES & WIGS POLE SHOES

Overeaters Anonymous (OA) Meeting Zoom meeting Password: 301247 For more in formation: centraloregonoa.org/ For assistance, call Terri at 541-390-1097 Sundays, 3-4pm. Con tact: 541-390-1097. oacentraloregon@gmail.com.

Love Thy Camp Yoga Studio Classes in Tumalo

Parkinson’s In Person Exercise Class

Feeling Pandemic Blues? It’s a great time to redesign your life. Make use of your time at home by setting and reaching goals in a free Zoom Workshop. Certified Life Coach, Jacquie Elliott is hosting a motivation and accountability workshop on the first Monday of the each month. First Monday of every month, 5:30-7pm. Contact: coach@jacquieelliottclc.com. Free. Outdoor Yoga Class All-levels Vinyasa Flow class. Our community yoga classes take place outside, with the sun shining, the birds chirping and the river flowing by. For visitors, new to Bend and locals - build strength and flexibility in community, in nature! Parking pass, mat and props included. Reservation required, please visit website. Fridays, 8:30-9:30am and Wednes days, 8:30-9:30am. Through Sept. 28. Tumalo State Park, 64120 O. B. Riley Rd, Bend. Contact: 503-888-3674. wildlandguidingcompany@gmail. com. $20.

Mommy & Me Breastfeeding Support Group

This experiential yoga class explores vibra tion through movement, music and meditation. Through the use of gongs, crystal and Tibetan bowls, chimes, flutes, and drums we explore the healing journey of experiencing sound on a deep profound level. Please bring a yoga mat, cushion and blanket for max comfort. All levels Wednesdays, 7pm. Hanai Foundation, 62430 Ea gle Road, Bend. Contact: 808-783-0374. Kevin@ soundshala.com. $15-20. This experiential yoga class explores vibration through movement, music and meditation. Through the use of gongs, crystal and Tibetan bowls, chimes, flutes and drums participants explore the healing journey of experiencing sound on a deep profound level. Please bring a yoga mat, cushion and blanket for max comfort. All levels Tuesdays, 7-8:30pm. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central OR, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd, Bend. Contact: 808783-0374. Kevin@soundshala.com. $15-20.

Motivation and Goal Setting Workshop

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

Parkinson’s. Call with questions and to sign up 503-799-5311. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:1510:30am. High Desert Martial Arts, 63056 Lower Meadow Dr. Ste. 120, Bend. Contact: 503-7995311. nancyn.pdex@gmail.com. $119 a month. In-Person Yoga at LOFT Wellness & Day Spa In-person yoga classes at Bend’s newest yoga studio! Tuesdays: Vinyasa with instructor Kelly Jenkins. 5-6pm. Limited to five participants. Thursdays: Foundation Flow with instructor Kelly Jenkins. 5-6pm. Limited to five participants. Schedule online or give us a call to reserve your spot! Tuesdays-Thursdays, 5-6pm. Loft Wellness & Day Spa, 339 SW Century Drive Ste 203, Bend. Contact: 541-690-5100. info@ loftbend.com. $20.

PWR! Moves Group Exercise Class. Please join Nancy Nelson- Parkinson’s Exercise specialist for this whole body in person, function-focused exercise that will push you to do more than you think. You will be challenged physically and cognitively while working through fitness goals: strength, balance and agility. Call Nancy 503-799-5311 Tuesdays-Thursdays, 1-2pm. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. Contact: 503-799-5311. nancyn.pdex@gmail.com. $160 for 8 weeks. Praise & Worship In the Vineyard Join the vineyard for praise and worship in the vineyard with live music. This is a beautiful way to start your Sunday morning. Sit in the Vineyard with a backdrop of the Three Sisters Mountains for praise and worship. Please bring a chair for this event. Sundays, 11am-Noon Through Sep. 25. Faith Hope & Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne. Contact: 541526-5075. events@fhcvineyards.com. Free. Scottish Country Dance Scottish Country Dance class is on Mon. from 7-9pm at the Sons of Norway Building, 549 NW Harmon. A chance to socialize and get a bit of exercise, too. Beginners are welcome. All footwork, figures and social graces will be taught and reviewed. Mondays, 7-9pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend. Contact: 541-508-9110. allely@bendbroadband.com. $5. Sunday Yoga Wind down your summer weekends with playful grounding outdoor yoga classes steps away from the lodge. Yoga classes are taught by Ulla Lundgren owner of the Yoga Lab in Bend. Yoga classes are accessible and fun for all ages and abilities. Sundays, 4:30-5:30pm. Through Sep. 4. The Suttle Lodge & Boathouse, 13300 Hwy 20, Sisters. Contact: 541-638-7001. info@thesuttlelodge.com. $20. Tai Chi for Health™ created by Dr. Paul Lam This two-day per week class is appropriate for anyone who wants a slower Tai Chi class or those dealing with chronic health conditions. The gradual, gentle and simple movements help facilitate healing and improve motion, flexibility and balance. The entire class can be performed in a wheelchair or a chair. Any student may sit for all or part of the class. Half of our time is gentle warm-ups. “Tai Chi for Health” classes are traditional moves, modified and ad justed by Dr. Paul Lam and his team of medical experts. We also explore using our knowledge of Tai Chi to help us stay safe and balanced, as seniors. Mondays-Wednesdays, 8:45-9:45am. OREGON TAI CHI, 1350 SE Reed Mkt Rd Ste 102, Bend. Contact: 541-389-5015. $55-$65. Tai Chi with Grandmaster Franklin The focus is on the individual. I teach the original form as it was taught in the monastery: un changed—Taoist Tai Chi Chuan 108 movements. This holistic approach focuses on the entire body as well as the mental and spiritual aspects. Each movement is fully explained. Neogong, Baoding & Sword are taught. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:45-10:45am. Grandmaster Franklin, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd, Bend. Contact: 541-797-9620. arawak327@gmal.com. $80 The Vance Stance / Structural Re programming Is pain preventing you from activities you love? Can you no longer “power through?” Mondays-Wednesdays-Thursdays, 6pm. EastSide Home Studio, 21173 Sunburst Ct.,, Bend. Contact: 541-330-9070. 12 classes/$180

Mind Bath Yoga & Gong Meditation with Kevin & Pete K A transformative jour ney of healing and deep relaxation, bathe every cell of the body in therapeutic sound. The ancient sounds of gongs, crystal and Tibetan bowls, drums and flutes, combined with the intergalac tic sounds of Pete K will leave you feeling tuned, refreshed and connected with your intuitive personal power. Sept. 2, 7-8:30pm. Bend Hot Yoga, 1230 NE 3rd St. UnitA320, Bend. Contact: yoga@bendhotyoga.com. $15 BHY members; $25 non-members.

CALENDAREVENTS

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

Love Thy Camp has opened a small (4 yogis max) yoga studio in Tumalo! One of the ways we raise money is through yoga classes. So, come support your health and a great cause! Check the schedule below for dates/times. Private one-on-one available too! First class $5 Off with code: GetSomeYoga. Mondays-Fridays, 9:30-10:30 and 11:30am-12:30pm. Love Thy Camp, 20039 Beaver Lane, Bend. Contact: 541948-5035. info@lovethycamp.com. $20 Drop-in.

The Mommy & Me Breastfeeding Sup port Group meets weekly in the Central Oregon Locavore event space. Lactation consultants on hand from St. Charles and WIC to weigh babies and answer questions. All are welcome, includ ing partners and siblings, no matter how you are feeding your baby. Thursdays, 6-8am. Central Oregon Locavore, 1841 NE Third St., Bend. Free.

Live Music Yoga & Gong Bath Medita tion

Basil carbonara, a summertime treat. Ari Levaux VISIT VUS! ISIT US! 706 NE GREENWOOD AVE FOLLOW FUS! OLLOW US! @blueeyesburgersandfries BURGERS BURGERS- FRIES FRIES- ONION ORINGS NION RINGS- SOFT SSERVE OFT SERVE- COCKTAILS COCKTAILS- WINE WINE OPEN EVERY DAY O12-9P PEN EVERY DAY 12-9P RING RUS! ING US! 541-BURGERS

With tomatoes beginning to ripen, now’s the time for a dose of garden-fresh pasta

This sauce is as fresh as your ingredients. And this time of year, freshness has no limit. The tomatoes should be the ripest you can pos sibly find, soft and heavy enough to almost split their skins.

Serves 2 • 1 pound of tomatoes, either culled from your personal farmstand or otherwise acquired, cores removed • ½ pound of semolina pasta, dried in cold air • ½ pound cured pork belly, such as bacon or pancetta. Bacon ends, which can easily be chopped into cubes, would be ideal • ¼ cup olive oil • 1 medium onion, minced • 1 carrot, sliced thinly – optional, but it’s a nice addition from the garden and adds earthy sweetness • The leaves from several sprigs of fresh thyme • 2 cloves of garlic, minced • ½ cup of wine • Salt and pepper • ½ cup grated Pecorino Romano or Parmesan cheese • 2 – or more – cups of fresh basil Heat enough water in a pot to cover the bottom of the pasta insert by a few inches. Add a tablespoon of salt to the water. Turn the flame to high.While the water heats, chop the cured pork belly. It’s often easier to do this cutting if the meat is partly frozen. Fry the pork on medium, stirring occasionally, until brown and crispy all around. When the water in the pasta pot reaches a boil, add the cored toma toes. As they simmer for about five minutes, prepare a bowl with cold water, ideally with a few ice cubes floating in it. When it’s time, remove the pasta cooker and roll the tomatoes into the ice bath. When the tomatoes are cool enough to handle, remove them from the water. Slip off the wrinkled skins and put the tomatoes in a bowl.

Turn the heat under the pasta boiler and bring it back up to boiling, and add the dried pasta. Cook for the required amount of time. Drain the pasta and toss it with a shot of olive oil and the remaining garlic.

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C

Garden Delight: Basil Carbonara

My children have an arrangement with an area farmer. After the weekly farmers market, he supplies them with surplus produce, which they sell at a roadside stand in front of our house. They split the proceeds 50/50, with the farmer getting half, and the boys dividing theWhat’sother. in it for me, you ask? One of the things that is nice about having a farmstand at the end of your driveway is that you will never run out of onions. And then there is the slippage—produce that we have to pull if it gets a little soft, even though it’s totally edible. Each night, for example, I’ll go through the unsold tomatoes and cull the ones that are too soft. I’ve been using these extra-ripe balls of flavor in a certain pasta dish that comes together amazingly quickly, especially given how from-scratch it is. For this and many other dishes, a pasta basket is very helpful. It’s basically a perforated pot that slides inside of a larger, non-perforated pot, allowing you to cook and remove things from boiling water without having to pour it through a colander each time. I use my pasta boiler in many ways, some of which have nothing to do with pasta. When making soup stock, for exam ple, but that’s a different story. Today we are here for the marinara that’s also a carbonara. And then I smother it with fresh basil. In the end, it’s a fresh, summer summertime basil pasta salad that comes together as fast as you can chop and stir.

When the tomatoes have melted into the sauce and it’s simmering nicely, add the pasta and stir it in. Add the cheese and allow it to cook down. If the pan is drying out, dip a cup into the noodle and tomato cooking water and pour it into the pasta.

Simmer for about five minutes. Then turn off the heat and allow it to cool. When still warm but not hot, toss in the basil leaves and serve.

Soft Tomato Sauce

By Ari Levaux CHOW

There should be a decent amount of grease in the pan from the pork. If not, or if you aren’t using pork, add 2-4 tablespoons of olive oil so the pan is plenty greasy, and add the minced onions to the browned pork pieces, with the heat still on medium, and cook until the onions become translu cent. Add the carrots, thyme, half of the garlic and the wine. Season with salt and pepper and let the sauce sizzle for a few minutes. Then add the tomatoes, mash them with a fork, and stir it all together to simmer.

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Saturday, September 24th 10:00am to 4:00pm after party and People's Choice Award to follow Discover unique Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs), a geothermal greenhouse, net-zero ready affordable townhomes, passive and net-positive homes, and more! The 2022 Green Tour invites you to... Kick off the Tour at Open Space Event Studios, Tuesday, September 20th Learn the ABCs of ADUs over lunch at The Environmental Center, Wednesday, September 21st Take a guided bike tour with Bend Bikes to sites from 1-4pm Demo the latest Electric Vehicles with Forth Mobility Stemach Design | Sunwest Builders | North West AeroBarrier Thank sponsors:you, LEARN MORE AND REGISTER AT ENVIROCENTER.ORG/TOUR.     Find your copy of the Green Tour Guide in the 9/22 issue of The Source! $5 OFF $15 OFF $30 OFF

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20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 45 C An Artists’ Shop Reopens in Warm Springs Tananawit art shop features painting, photography, beadwork and more

CULTURE PPerfect, erfect,You're You're S E P T 9 - 2 4 I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals www concord theatricals com T H U R S A T 7 : 3 0 P M S U N D A Y 2 : 0 0 P M Music by Jimmy Roberts Directed by Jacob Smart B o o k & L y r i c s b y J o e D i p i e t r o C a s c a d e s T h e a t e r P r e s e n t s 148 NW Greenwood Ave cascadestheatrical org 541 389 0803

By Nicole Vulcan

An estimated 250 to 300 people on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation are artists—and with the grand reopening of an art shop on the reserva tion, those artists will have another place to share and sell their Tananawit,works.the nonprofit organization aimed at supporting Warm Springs artists, will hold a grand reopening of its art shop this weekend, starting Fri day, Sept. 2 and continuing through Sunday, Sept. 4. Up for sale will be a number of works of art from local artists, including painting, photography, jewelry and beadwork.“Visitors to the reservation want to take home a piece of Warm Springs,” said Deb Stacona, executive director of the Tananawit nonprofit. “Warm Springs is rich in cultivating artists. We have numerous mas ter artists, and we want to support beginning artists, too.” Stacona, who managed the gift shop at The Muse um at Warm Springs for 20 years starting in 1999, and who became Tananawit’s executive director this sum mer, said she’s excited for this new opportunity to help local artists grow. “We’ll have outdoor displays, and our suite of about 500 square feet is packed with local art,” StaconaTananawit’ssaid. art shop is locat ed at 3240 Walsey Lane, Suite #5 in Warm Springs. The shop was opened for a short time in ear ly 2022 but quickly closed, according to a press release. With Stacona now at the helm of the nonprofit, along with the help of artist Sara Dowty— who’s also the new business and outreach coordinator—the two hope to further Tananawit’s mission of providing economic and educational opportunities for local people, and building knowledge of the traditional and contemporary Native arts of the Columbia Riv er plateau.Tananawit was formed in 2013, according to its website, when a group of about a dozen Warm Springs artists met to explore the idea of forming a cooperative. In 2015, the group began working with the Warm Springs Community Action Team and Oregon Native American Business Entre preneurial Network to develop the idea, and in 2017 Tananawit became a nonprofit. Artists interested in selling items at the Tananaw it shop can contact deb@warmspringsartists.org or sara@warmspringsartists.org to set up a consignment account. The grand reopening of the shop takes place from 10am to 6pm Friday, Saturday and Sunday, and regular hours for the shop will be every day from 10am to 6pm. Learn more about Tananawit at warmspring sartists.org.

Top, Tananawit Executive Director Deb Stacona invites the public to the nonprofit's new art shop. Pictured below is a beaded bag by Calley Begay. courtesy Tananawit

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FILM SHORTS

Your

THREE THOUSAND YEARS OF LONGING: The new film by George Miller, the genius behind “Mad Max: Fury Road” and “Babe: Pig in the City,” stars Tilda Swinton and Idris Elba and is focused on a lonely woman who discovers a Djinn in a lamp who offers her three wishes for his freedom. The trailers make this look like an insane work of unfiltered imagina tion, so here’s hoping it lives up to the hype. See full review on p 47. Regal Old Mill TOP GUN: MAVERICK: There’s a reason why Tom Cruise is the last true movie star and it’s mostly because he’s that perfect blend of creepy, weird and desperate to entertain us—and boy does he.

WHERE THE CRAWDADS

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

This feels like a true Hollywood crowd-pleaser in a way we haven’t seen in years. Talk about a highway to the danger zone. Regal Old Mill, Odem Theater Pub, McMenamins

BEAST: Idris Elba vs. a lion. If there’s more that you need than that then we are just fundamentally different people. Regal Old Mill. BODIES BODIES BODIES: A meta horror comedy that tries to reframe the high concept hilarity of “Scream” for post-Millennials and the Zoom gen eration. Pete Davidson is in it, so I guess this movie will be our news cycle for the next few weeks, although it does look entertaining and fun. Regal Old Mill, Tin Pan Theater, Odem Theater Pub BREAKING: John Boyega turns in an intense per formance as a desperate Marine Corps veteran that holds a bank full of people hostage with a bomb. Based on a true story, “Breaking” also has one of the last performances of the late, great Michael K. Williams. Regal Old Mill BULLET TRAIN: Why yes, I would like to see Brad Pitt fight a train full of assassins as it speeds across Japan. When you’ve got one of the co-creators of the “John Wick” franchise behind the camera, that means there will be just as many jokes as punches and “Bullet Train” is just as goofy as it is exciting. Regal Old Mill, Odeem Theater Pub DC LEAGUE OF SUPER-PETS: This animated ad venture sees The Rock and Kevin Hart as the voice of Superman and Batman’s respective dogs that must team up to save their respective Super Part ners. The trailers for this aren’t great, but I’ve been a fan of the Super-Pets since I was a kid, so don’t be surprised if you see me at the theater. Regal Old Mill, Odem Theater Pub ELVIS: I would have zero interest in this one if it wasn’t from the same filmmaker that did “Moulin Rouge,” so I know it will at least be visually interest ing. Sorry, I just don’t care about Elvis. I like the musicians he ripped off quite a bit more. Regal Old Mill, Odem Theater Pub

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 46

Together, Together, Hand Hand & &Paw Paw Transforming TLives ransforming Lives Together, we help 3,000 animals every year at the Humane Society of Central Oregon with safe sheltering, medical care & adoption. hsco.org 541 382-3537 ADOPT SHOP DONATE HSCO Thrift Store HSCO Shelter 61170 SE 27th St Bend OR 97702 Tu Fri 1p 5:30p Sat 10a 5p hsco org 61220 S Highway 97 Bend OR 97702 Every Day 10a 6p Donations M Sat 10a 5p

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

MARCEL THE SHELL WITH SHOES ON: Did you fall in love with the hilarious and touching YouTube vid eos of Marcel (voiced by the luminous Jenny Slate) when they came out a few years ago? Of course you did. Well, this feature-length story about the little shell searching for his people is one of the sweetest and kindest movies of the last few years. A joy. Tin Pan Theater

EMILY THE CRIMINAL: Aubrey Plaza breaks bad in this deliriously intense crime drama that feels like one part “Uncut Gems” mixed with two parts of just being poor in America. Sisters Movie House FALL: Look, a movie made about my worst nightmare: being trapped at the top of a mile-high antenna tower. This looks terrifying and also kind of fun, I guess, if you like full blown panic attacks with your motion picture experience. Regal Old Mill, Sisters Movie House FIRE OF LOVE: This documentary is an astounding look at Katia and Maurice Krafft, two French vol canologists whose love was as fiery as the magma they encountered. Or something equally cheesy. Seriously, you’ve never seen a documentary like this, I promise. It’s beautiful and a strong reminder of the art that lives in all humans. Tin Pan Theater

MINIONS: THE RISE OF GRU: I definitely wish this looked more like a sequel to the surprisingly great “Minions” and less like a prequel to “Despicable Me,” but who am I kidding, I’ll see this either way. I love me some twinkie-shaped, gibberish-speaking weirdos. Regal Old Mill, Odem Theater Pub NOPE: One of my most anticipated movies of 2022 is finally here: Jordan Peele’s third feature as a director, “Nope.” Instead of doing another deep dive into the fractured psyche of humanity, this is an alien invasion story unlike any we’ve ever seen. This managed to exceed every single expectation I had for it. Regal Old Mill THE RACE TO ALASKA: Do you want to be pinned to your theater seat for a couple hours while watching a documentary about one of the most dangerous races in the world? Good, because that’s absolutely going to happen here. Have fun with that. Tin Pan Theater THOR: LOVE AND THUNDER: Writer/director Taika Waititi is one our most innovative filmmakers and “Love and Thunder” is packed with mind-blowing visuals and some of his most irreverent humor yet. Don’t believe the negativity, this is an absolute blast. I hope we get Thor movies forever. Regal Old Mill

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

By Jared Rasic  friendly local film reviewer’s takes on what’s out there in the world of movies. Courtesy IMdb Beast.

“Three Thousand Years of Longing” isn’t a perfect movie by any stretch of the imagination, but I kinda love it any way. The film’s flaws are sometimes just as gorgeous as the moments that work because director/auteur George Mill er is nothing if not an audacious and abundantly ambitious filmmaker. The 77-year-old filmmaker is responsible for the most visually stunning action mov ie of the century so far, with “Mad Max: Fury Road,” and he takes that relent lessly inventive drive to innovate and applies it to a story that doesn’t have the same emotional heft as his earlier work.

SCREEN

20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 47 SC

Three Thousand Years of Longing Dir. George Miller Grade: BRegal Old Mill

sequences jaw-droppingly cool. Ulti mately, the film is incredibly varied in its tones, textures and styles while being very fun to look at, but the emotional weight just isn’t there. “Three Thousand Years of Long ing” sinks or swims on the chemis try between Swinton and Elba. Both actors obviously have charisma to burn, but we never really feel the connection between them, which means we don’t connect with their relationship. This movie should have sent me out of the theater with tears streaming down my face feeling drunk on the possibilities of love and desperate to find my person, but instead my reaction was basically just, “Well, that was cute.” And that’s OK! Even though it didn’t connect with me emotionally, it still filled my brain parts with beautiful images and reminded me of the inher ent power of stories. “Longing” checks all my intellectual boxes while leaving my heart a bit cold, which is fine. Not everything can be “Marcel the Shell With Shoes On.”

By Jared Rasic

Here’s the thing about movies: they don’t have to be perfect. Very few of them are. And just because a mov ie has a bad performance, an uneven script or some aspect that isn’t as good as the next doesn’t mean the film is a failure—especially when that film has the ambition and the talent behind it to be something really special or, more importantly, original. Sometimes when you aim for the stars you only graze the clouds, but that’s still pretty high up there.Itmight seem like I’m pretty easy on most movies, which on some level I am, but I also watch a ton of absolute trash that I don’t have the time or col umn inches to write about. It’s almost a miracle when a film actually gets made, because so many things have to come together and so many different people have to combine their differing artistic styles into one coherent vision. I’m still uncynical about most movies, so there’s no reason to be overly brutal when dis cussing bad or even just flawed ones.

Another gorgeously composed shot from director George Miller Photo courtesy of Film Nation B

Across his 50+ years of filmmaking (and almost singlehandedly creating a film industry in Australia), he has made four “Mad Max” movies, two “Babe” movies, two “Happy Feet” movies, “The Witches of Eastwick,” “Lorenzo’s Oil” and a seg ment of the 1983 “Twilight Zone” movie. The man follows his muse and offers no apologies or explanations.

FREEEVENTOREGONCENTRALYOURPROMOTEFORGOTO:CALENDAR.BENDSOURCE.COM

“Three Thousand Years of Longing” tells a deceptively simple story about Alithea Binnie (performed by the always amazing Tilda Swinton, downplaying her usual otherworldliness) a solitary scholar whose expertise is “Narrativeol ogy,” basically the study of stories. While at a bazaar in Istanbul, she purchases an antique bottle and then eventually unleashes an ancient djinn (played by an excellent Idris Elba) once back in her hotel room, who offers her three wish es of her heart’s desire. The rest of the film is a discussion between Alithea and the djinn about the nature of stories and whether anyone can trust the concept of three wishes when throughout all of history it never seems to go well for the person making the wishes. Structurally, it’s a fascinating gambit because we’ve got a huge chunk of the movie that plays as a debate between a scholar and a djinn inside a fairly non descript hotel room. A feature-length conversation isn’t the most stimulat ing thing visually, but their chat is con stantly countered with flashbacks to the story of how the djinn became trapped in the bottle, and Miller uses every cin ematic trick in the book to make those

An Existential Fairy Tale Magic remains in "Three Thousand Years of Longing"

hought van life was taking over Central Oregon? Well, it hasn’t even gotten start ed. Van lifers will infiltrate the grounds at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center this weekend for a festival celebrating all of the van dwellers out there.

Central Oregon Adventure Van Expo

The Adventure Van Expo is a family-friendly gathering of folks and their over land adventure rigs. The Expo will be at six locations across the country, with con ventions as far out as New Hampshire. The rigs can range anywhere from trucks decked out with roof tents and trailers to the idealistic sprinter van converted into a plush living space. It’s an opportunity to meet like-minded overland adventurers and get creative ideas for that next build-out!

If you want to camp at the expo, act quick; event organizers are expecting camp ing spots to fill up fast. Each car is allowed four campers, with an extra ticket required for purchase if there is an additional camper over 18. The party starts as the sun goes down and there will be live music and adventure folk getting down! Alcohol consumption is limited to one’s camping spot.  By Chris Williams

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/202221,JULY/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 48

GO HERE

Central Oregon Adventure Van Expo Sat., Sep. 3-Sun., Sep. 4, 10am-5pm Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond Free/adv $10/door Unsplash One Dog at a Time, LLC Gale Blanchard Personal Pet Sitting in my Home One or Two Dogs (If Both Live Together) Overnight or Daycare Dog Walking and Cat Care in Redmond541-316-1775 galebamair@aol.com GIVEAWAY!$200valueGiveawayrunsfrom8/26–9/7Windinnerfor4toPacificPizzaandBrew! 340 SW Century Dr • 541-550-7887 • Pacificpizzabrew.com Scan to Enter!

T

Van lifers take over Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center

If your ride is already primed for adventure then look into competing in the DIY competition. The competition will judge trucks and vans based on three categories: fit and finish, best layout and most creative/unique. Show off the hard work that goes into a build-out, or poach new ideas and get inspired to start one! Winners of each category will receive $250 gift cards from RB Components and Goal Zero.  Each stop on the tour averages about 50-60 vendors. These include anything from solar/battery providers to rack companies and rooftop tent providers. If you imagine a piece essential for adventuring it will probably be there!

By Jim Anderson, FAA Certified Glider Instructor, retired a’ just never know how the mind of a 94-year-old naturalist/writer is going to work at 11 o’clock Sunday morning in church. There I was sitting in the pew, listen ing to a beautiful newly married young woman talking about her conversion, when suddenly I saw a 1936 GB R-1 air racer waving in the air up ahead of me, clutched in a little boy’s hand. What a magic moment that was! In a split second I could hear the roar of the big 800 hp radial engine again as that magnificent airplane went blasting over me, and I was back at the Reno Champi onship Air races, lying flat on my stom ach in the sagebrush. I had met the pilot of the GB, Delmar Benjamin, about 10 minutes earlier and asked him for a low pass in the raceway so I could get a snappy photo of his air racer to use in a story I was writing for the newspaper back home. Little did I know he’d be that helpful, or get himself into so much hot water doing it. It just so happened that Old Man Murphy, of “Murphy’s Law,” was stand ing between me and two guys from the Federal Aviation Administration when we heard the GB coming. I got the pho to I was looking for, but when we all got up and out of the sagebrush and back on our feet, Murphy’s Law was activat ed, which states, “If something can go wrong, it will.” Those two FAA guys didn’t feel good about getting a face-full of Nevada des ert sand and gave poor Delmar a big pen alty for doing what he did…even though I thought his low pass was quite normal and wonderful; after all, we were stand ing on the race course. Anyway, I got into aviation and start ed flying in 1940 when air racing was the talk of the town. Charles Lindbergh’s great adventure was still hot in the news, and within the air racing world were the Granville Brothers who designed and built the GB R-1 Racer, then flown by Jimmy Doolittle and Eddie Rickenback er of WWI fame. A racing champion pilot by the name of Col. Roscoe Turner entered my life at that time when he got himself hooked up with a growing oil company. Turner was quite a showman and placed a baby lion in the cockpit of his Turner Rac er, made sure the press knew about it, and went from one airport to the oth er with his lion cub, Gilmore, on his lap. Which put him in my personal hero sta tus, where he still is today. Because of my rich interest in air rac ing, it was no surprise to anyone then that I could be found at the Reno Air Races on Friday, Saturday and Sunday in early September—not long after I rolled into Bend on my beautiful Harley-Da vidson in 1952. When that replica GB went by I was in seventh heaven! The original GB Racer, was built by the Granville Brothers—Zantford, Thomas, Robert, Mark and Edward—in 1932 in Springfield, Massachusetts. They kept fiddling with the original design until it morphed into the R-1, which won many races and awards. Prior to the racer they had designed and built three biplanes they named the Sportsters. The GB R-1, however, was designed by Zantford, who had the nick name of Granny and was no stranger to aircraft as he ran an airplane repair busi ness in the old Springfield Airport.

The Springfield Union newspaper of Sept. 6, 1932, quoted Dolittle saying, “She is the sweetest ship I have ever flown. She is perfect in every respect, and the motor is just as good as it was a week ago. It never missed a beat and has lots of stuff in it yet. I think this proves that the Granville Brothers up Three year old Cal Walker flying his GB at full speed! (Photo compliments of his mom, Laura.)

The GB R-1 racer won the 1932 Thompson Trophy race, piloted by the famous WWI ace, Jimmy Doolittle, (who was also the leader of the Doolit tle Raiders that bombed Tokyo, Japan, in WWII.)Doolittle also set a new landplane speed record of 296 mph in the Shell Speed Dash of 1932. (The distinction of a landplane speed record was notewor thy because, at that time, racing sea planes often outran landplanes, such as the then-current speed record holder, a Supermarine S.6B, built in Great Britain which had averaged 407.5 mph in Sep tember 1931).

202221,JULY/29ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 49

Memories of a life in aviation from our resident naturalist

Laura Walker Jim Anderson

O OUTSIDE Y

Reno Air Races… in Church!

McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 NW Bond St., Bend Monkless Belgian Ales 803 SW Industrial Way #202, Bend Oblivion Brewing Co. Tasting Room 63027 Plateau Dr. Unit 4, Bend Silver Moon Brewing 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend Spider City Brewing 1177 SE 9th St., Bend Sunriver Brewing Co. Galveston Pub 1005 NW Galveston Ave., Bend Sunriver Brewing Co. Eastside Pub 1500 NE Cushing Dr., Bend Tranquilo MSA Tranquilo doesn’t have its own taproom, but find it around town and at Hola! restaurants.

10 Barrel West Bend 1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend 10 Barrel East Bend 62950 NE 18th St., Bend Ale Apothecary Tasting Room 30 SW Century Dr. Suite 140, Bend Bend Brewing Company 1019 NW Brooks St., Bend Bevel Craft Brewing 911 SE Armour Rd., Bend Boneyard Beer 1955 NE Division St., Bend Boss Rambler Beer Club 1009 NW Galveston Ave., Bend Bridge 99 Brewery 63063 Layton Ave., Bend Cascade Lakes Brewing 1441 SW Chandler Ave. Suite 100, Bend New location coming soon at 27th street and Reed Market Road

This is the Beer Issue. This sec tion is called Craft. So in honor of those two things, we’re laying out the breweries that call Central Oregon home. There’s lots on the list since we last made one, so even if you’re a local, there’s a high likelihood you’ll find one that you haven’t yet visited.

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 50 CRAFT Central Bywhat’sitInBreweriesOregon’saplacelikeBeerTown,canbetoughtokeepupwithopen.Here’salist.NicoleVulcan

7th Street Brew House 855 SW 7th St., Redmond Initiative Brewing 424 NW 5th St., Redmond Porter Brewing Company 611 NE Jackpine Ct. #2, Redmond The Vault Taphouse/Kobold Brewing 245 SW 6th St., Redmond Wild Ride Brewing 332 SW 5th St., Redmond SISTERS Funky Fauna Artisan Ales 211 Sun Ranch Dr., Sisters Three Creeks Brewing Co. 721 Desperado Ct., Sisters SUNRIVER Sunriver Brewing Company 57100 Beaver Dr., Sunriver

The Cellar – A Porter Brewing Company 206 NW Oregon Ave. Suite 2, Bend Craft Kitchen & Brewery 62988 Layton Ave. #103, Bend Crux Fermentation Project 50 SW Division St., Bend Deschutes Brewery Public House 1044 NW Bond St., Bend Deschutes Brewery Beer Garden & Tasting Room 901 SW Simpson Ave., Bend GoodLife Brewing 70 SW Century Dr., Bend Immersion Brewing 550 SW Industrial Way Suite 185, Bend Kobold Brewing – The Lair 1043 NW Bond St., Bend

Cheers! BEND

Crooked Roots Brewing 420 N Main St., Prineville Wild Ride Brewing 1500 NE 3rd St., Prineville REDMOND

Van Henion Brewing 63067 Plateau Dr., Bend Waypoint from Bend Brewing Co. 921 NW Mt. Washington Dr., Bend Worthy Brewing 495 NE Bellevue Dr., Bend Worthy Burgers & Brews 806 NW Brooks St. #110, Bend MADRAS Madras Brewing Co. 212 SW 4th St., Madras Mecca Grade Estate Malt and Brewing 9619 NW Columbia Dr., Madras PRINEVILLE

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to bottom will complete the quote: “The old summer’s-end melancholy nips at my heels. There’s no school to go back to; no detail of my life will change come the onset of September; yet still, I feel the old ________.” - Sara Baume, A Line Made by Walking We’re Local! Questions, comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark pearl@bendsource.comat © Pearl mathpuzzlesgames.com/quodokuStark ★ (www.brendanemmettquigley.com)QuigleyEmmettBrendan©2021 ACROSS1Detroit-based union: Abbr. 4 Fill with employees 9 Best Play or Best Upset, e.g. 13 All for it 14 Enterprise weapon 15 It’s just over a foot 16 Beach bum’s trademark 17 Deadpan look 19 “Assuming that’s what’s happening ...” 21 ___ cheese 22 Prepared entirely with base ingredients 25 Filmmaker Perry 28 School where actors Eddie Redmayne and Tom Hiddleston studied 29 Typical behavior 31 It’s in the mail: Abbr. 32 Bone: Pref. 35 Large force 38 Plastic criminal restraints 41 Sound heard repeatedly in “snug as a bug in a rug” 42 Meditated (on) 43 Vietnam’s national dish 44 Graceful bird 46 River through York 50 “TMI!” 53 “Sorry if I offended” 56 Citgo rival 58 Shoots toward a tree house, say 59 Couldn’t care in the slightest 63 “Respect for Acting” writer Hagen 64 Global financing subj. 65 Lena’s

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Pearl’s Puzzle row, column, each top “Game of Thrones” character subject Like answer “___ no me gusta” (“I don’t like that” in a network is working figure Is unacceptable Like some pantyhose like some shopping-incentiv injection administer in application part lily of shit Haircut that sticks up Space Force NCO and box with each of R E exactly once. highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom old summer's melancholy nips at my heels. There's no detail of my life will change come the onset of September; Baume, Line Made by Walking for the week of Aug 22, the good music’s already been written by people with Zappa to

12 Desire 14

20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 51 THE REC ROOM ROUNDINGCrosswordDOWN

-end

2 Oslo Accords

The

© Pearl WSOUGPNRwww.mathpuzzlesgames.com/quodokuStarkREADPTPNTEODRANITDIDOERNDADPEIRFWSONITUSTWIGFNOINTFUSWGGIOWTUFNNOFUSGITTUFGNIOSWNTGUSFWOIIOSNGWTUFFWUITONGSPuzzle for the week of Aug 29, 2022 Difficulty Level: ●○○○ Fill in every row, column, and 3x3 box with each of the letters P I N T O D A R E exactly once. The highlighted letters read left to right and top

52

foundational. This is always true, but will be extra true for you in the coming weeks. Your words of power are kernel, core, gist, marrow, and keystone.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In the coming weeks, logic may be of only partial use to you. Information acquired through your senses might prove less than fully adequate, as well. On the other hand, your talents for feeling deeply and tapping into your intuition can provide you with highly accurate intel ligence. Here’s a further tip to help you maximize your ability to understand reality: Visit a river or creek or lake. Converse with the fish and frogs and turtles and beavers. Study the ways of the crabs and crayfish and eels. Sing songs to the dragonflies and whirligig beetles and lacewings.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): As a Taurus, you are always wise to be reverent toward your five senses. They are your glorious treasures, your marvelous superpowers, your sublime assets. In the coming weeks, they will serve you even better than usual. As you deploy them with all your amazement and appreciation unfurled, they will boost your intel ligence. They will heighten your intuition in ways that guide you to good decisions. You will tune into interesting truths that had previously been hidden from you. I suspect your sensory apparatus will be so sharp and clear that it will work almost as extra sensory powers.

By Rob Brezsny

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “To love oneself is hard work,” declares Virgo author Hanif Abdurraqib. He adds, “But I think it becomes harder when you re alize that you’re actually required to love multiple versions of yourself that show up without warning throughout a day, throughout a week, throughout a month, throughout a life.” Let’s make that your inspirational strategy, Virgo. The coming weeks will be a favorable time to refine, deepen, and invigorate your love for all your selves. It may be hard work, but I bet it will also be fun and exhilarating.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): The coming weeks will be a favorable time to dream up creative solu tions to problems that haven’t fully materialized yet. Then you can apply your discoveries as you address problems that already exist. In other words, dear Aquarius, I’m telling you that your uncanny facility for glimpsing the future can be useful in enhancing your life in the present. Your almost psychic capaci ty to foretell the coming trends will be instrumental as you fix glitches in the here and now.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “What good is it if you read Plato but never clean your toilet?” writes author Alice Munro. To which I add, “What good is it if you have brilliant breakthroughs and intriguing insights but never translate them into practical changes in your daily rhythm?” I’m not saying you are guilty of these sins, Leo. But I want to ensure that you won’t be guilty of these sins in the coming weeks. It’s cru cial to your long-term future that you devote quality time to being earthy and grounded and pragmatic. Be as effective as you are smart.

Routine

you

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Ar ies-born Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was one of the greatest basket ball players ever. He excelled at most aspects of the game. Some experts say his rebounding was only average for a player his size—seven feet, two inches. But he is still the third-best rebound er in National Basketball Asso ciation history. And he played for 20 years, until age 40. What tips might Abdul-Jabbar have for you now? Here’s a suggestion from him that aligns with your current astrological omens: “Work on those parts of your game that are fundamentally weak.” The implica tion is that you have a lot of strengths, and now it’s time to raise up the rest of your skill set.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): When you Geminis are at your best, you don’t merely tolerate dualities. You enjoy and embrace them. You work with them eagerly. While many non-Geminis regard opposi tions and paradoxes as at best inconvenient and at worst obstructive, you often find how the apparent polarities are woven together and complementary. That’s why so many of you are connoisseurs of love that’s both tough and tender. You can be effective in seemingly contradictory situations that confuse and immobilize others. All these skills of yours should come in handy during the coming weeks. Use them to the hilt.

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM

Homework: Which of your past mistakes provided you with the most valuable lessons? Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com A Quantum Healing Center It is an egg shaped, patented chamber that utilizes sound, light, and sacred geometry to realign your energies so your body can do what it does best, heal itself. Head to our website to learn more. What is a Harmonic Egg? Ongoing events at Spark Wellness: CA N YOU BEAT BEETHOVEN? SI< Fun Run/Walk Symphony! h h h 5konsors t ueatueet11oven .com BEAT BEETHOVEN? Beethoven the Central online h h h 5kenerous sponsors at ueatueet11oven .com CA N YOU BEAT BEETHOVEN? Beat Beethoven SI< Fun Run/Walk to support the Central Oregon Symphony! BEAT Beethoven's SBS. M� l..:� Octo�er 9, 2022at10:00 am Register online h h h 5kandviewall of ourgenerous sponsors at ueatueet11oven .com

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Author Jean Frémon says Cancerian naturalist Henry David Thoreau “always had two notebooks—one for facts, and the other for poetry. But Thoreau had a hard time keeping them apart, as he often found facts more poetic than his poems.” Judging from your current astrological omens, Cancerian, I suspect you are entering a time when facts will be even more poetic than usual. If you open yourself to the magic of reality, the mundane details of everyday life will delight you and appeal to your sense of wonder. events will veer toward the marvelous. Can bear to experience so much lyrical grace? I think so.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): How to be the best Libra you can be in the next three weeks: 1. Make sure your cool attention to detail never gets chilly. Warm it up now and then. Invite your heart to add its counsel to your head’s observations. Tenderize your objectivity. 2.

ASTROLOGY

“We can choose to live in joy.” -Joseph Campbell Another word for joy is con nection. Deep connection. The Hebrew word for joy is simha, and it has a nuance that is untranslatable into English. Joy, in English can be experi enced alone. Not so with simha, which means happiness shared. True joy rever berates. From this perspective, joy is a connector. There is always a WE. Grati tude, by definition, connects.

A column to help locals live a kinder and more courageous life

Again,Breathe.we are beyond words. Thank you! Bless you!

Joy is what we need for our souls to flourish, and also for our families, com munities, nation and world to flourish! No one is excluded from true joy. Not the rich. Not the poor. Not the strang ers, orphans, widowed nor our handi capped.Iwill leave you with two ancient practices that strengthen our joy mus cles. They need to be exercised, or else they weaken and we fall into taking for granted how fortunate we are. Express your gratitude, as best you can, as much of every day as you are able. Give to charity at least once a week. What we “have” is not “ours.” It was shared with us along the way. Sharing with others who need it reminds us we are all in this game together.

Joy must transcend our day-to-day lives. It is a choice. Maybe the most important choice we ever make. The son of a friend of ours was recently killed. Shot down in public. Life cannot get much worse for a parent. Pause for a moment, please. These words are infinitely more than words. They are lifetimes of excruciating pain. Potentially lifetimes of paralyzing misery. At a gathering recently, Mary (name changed for pri vacy) shared that she has chosen to live a joyful life despite her loss. These words can barely touch what they attempt to describe. Do your best to soak in what you know you probably won’t be able to fully ingest.Our friend has cho sen to live a joyful life. Every moment, there are lessons to inspire us to live life more joyfully. Some les sons are revealed. A mother holding her smiling infant. A father pitching a softball to his three-year-old daughter. An older couple warmly smiling at each other after all these years. So many. Many of our lessons, and proba bly most of them, are not apparent but rather are deeply concealed. They ini tially appear damaging, even irrevers ibly destructive to our joyful existence. A disabling disease. A miserable job. An abusive childhood. A painful divorce. A murdered son. So many. Lessons never stop arriving. Can both joy and suffering coexist inside one soul, one family, one com munity, one country… our one world? Absolutely! And it is our responsibili ty to ensure they do. Let us take a clos er look at what we often think of as the same concept: joy and happiness. The following wisdom is derived from the book, “Covenant & Conversation” by Rabbi Jonathan Sacks. Happiness is dependent on things going well for us. Am I free of pain? Are my children living how I would like them to be living? Is my political candidate winning? Are friends returning my phone calls? Are my morning eggs cooked the way I like them? Happiness is more directly related to our comfort level. Joyfulness takes us into another realm. A realm beyond how I am feeling. Some would say joy is a spiritual realm. Day-to-day, we live in a world of ups, downs and inside outs. Most of which we cannot control. We are observers in the stadium of life. Cheering, booing, winning and losing—the game has no time-outs and lasts forever.

Joy is what we need for our souls to flourish, and also for our andcommunities,families,nationworldtoflourish!

Joy revels in the larger and smaller pictures. The infinite cooperation that allows every day to unfold. Our blessed food suppliers. Transportation of every kind. A butterfly fluttering by. Our car ing healers. A grasshopper’s ability to jump. Music that awakens our souls and moves our happy feet. Distant gal axies. Letting go of time. Joy asks us to relinquish our attach ment to our “me-centered” world. Our lives will always include pain of every kind. That’s what we signed up for. But we also signed up for a universe filled with magical won ders, as long as we are willing to soak in the miracles we see daily, and the untold billions more we will never, ever see.

By Burt Gershater

20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 53 AWAKENING OUR INNER HERO eastsidegardensinc.com541-383-3722 61780 SE 27th Bend SUMMER SPECIALS!! StyleFallArts ISSUE & Advertise in the most stylish issue of the year! On Stands September 15 Ad Deadline September 9 advertise@bendsource.com | 541.383.0800 Featuring TOP SHOPS A special advertising supplement to all the hot retail shops in town! E Newsletter Feature just $100! Reach over 9.5k digital subscribers in the special edition e-newsletter! Choose Joy, Regardless

PRICEJUSTREDUCEDLISTED

VOICEINDEPENDENTBEND’S/20221,SEPTEMBER/WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM 54 www SkjersaaGroup com 5 41.3 83 14 26 1 033 NW Newpor t Ave. Bend, OR 97703 Skjersaa Group | Duke Warner Realty Terry Skjersaa Principal Broker, CRS Jason Boone Principal Broker, CRS Mollie Hogan Principal Broker, CRS GregBrokerMillikan CUSTOM HOME ON GOLDEN BUTTE 1829 SW Turnberry Place Stunning views of the Cascade Mountains & city of Bend. 2 bed, 2.5 baths, flex space, indoor & outdoor dining areas, water features, hot tub & custom quality finishes throughout. OFFERED AT $1,495,000 STUNNING DISCOVERY WEST HOME 3095 NW Tharp Avenue 3 bed, 3 bath, flex space, and a 2 car garage. Built by award winning collaboration of Mike Wilkins Construction & Jason Todd Designs. OFFERED AT $1,500,000 FIND YOUR PLACE IN BEND & 541.771.4824 ) otis@otiscraig.com Otis Craig Broker, CRS www.otiscraig.com Real Estate Sold By Real Experts TAKING REAL ESTATE SERVICE TO A HIGHER LEVEL THE KOHLMOOS TEAM Each office is independently owned and operated. All brokers listed are licensed in the state of Oregon. Equal Housing Opportunity. SANDY: 541.408.4309 · JOHN: 541.480.8131 SANDY KOHLMOOS, LICENSED BROKER IN OR JOHN KOHLMOOS, LICENSED BROKER IN OR WWW.KOHLMOOSREALTORSBEND.COM TL 1200 Immonen Road, Lincoln City, OR 97367 | Ready to Build $849,000 | 42-acre Ocean/Bay view parcel. Ready to build. Water and power on property. Adjacent to Salishan Resort. Geoff Groener Licensed geoff.groener@cascadesir.com541.390.4488Broker Yourcascadehassonsir.comCoastalConnection MLS# 22-1844 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED. 20436 CLAY PIGEON, BEND 97702 • $775,000 64170 PIONEER LOOP, BEND 97701 • $877,995

1849 SW TURNBERRY PLACE, BEND 97702 • $1,900,000

Modern ranch style home on oversized fully fenced/ landscaped corner lot with mature trees. Featuring open floor plan with many windows, allowing for plenty of natural light. The luxurious kitchen includes high-end stainless-steel appliances, quartz counter tops throughout, including waterfall island, soft close drawers, tile back splash. The oversized primary suite boasts dual walk-in closets, dual vanities, giant tile to ceiling shower with soaking tub, dual shower head with body sprayers. This home is great for entertaining with a large covered paver patio that included a gas and wood fireplace that is fully vented. The home includes a full surround sound system both inside and outside. Secluded and private, this small acreage property has a park like setting with plenty of mature trees, conveniently located close to Bend and Redmond. This single level 3 bedroom 2 bath, 1622 sqft ranch style home, features open floor plan with vaulted ceilings. A large primary suite featuring numerous windows and vaulted ceilings. The primary bathroom includes dual vanities. An oversized deck looks outs over the property and a detached garage/shop features an insulated 12 ft garage door, with an additional 400 sqft art studio located on the second floor. The property includes 3.72 acres of COID irrigation irrigated by an underground system, a 20,000 gallon cistern, tool shed, chicken coup, and 400 amp service to the property.

This is the family dream home! 4 bedrooms 3.5 bath with a huge open living concept on the main level with the kitchen, family and dining room all flowing together perfectly. Master suite is just off of the family room with access to the large deck with amazing views of the Three Sisters and Mt. Bachelor. Go upstairs for 3 bedrooms and a large loft which is perfect for entertaining. Go downstairs for even more space. Potential for an office or bonus room. Then there is another garage downstairs that has been converted into more of a bonus room, could be used as a garage as well to make it 5 garage spaces. This is a rare find in a perfect location. 695 SW MILL VIEW WAY SUITE 100 • BEND, OR WWW.ALEVISON.WITHWRE.COM | Levisongroupinfo@gmail.com541.915.5977 REDUCED 3151 NE WELLS ACRES, BEND 97701 • $514,000 Cozy 3 bedroom 2 bath Palmer home located in a quiet NE Bend neighborhood. This charming light and bright home features refinished hardwood floors throughout, newer carpet, and high-end laminate floors in bathrooms were replaced within the last year. Fully fenced with larger access to back yard on left side of home and mature trees. This home is a great opportunity for investors or a first-time home buyer. PRICE REDUCED

PRICE

What’s the Deal with ADUs?

“With the recent code changes, under standing how to build an accessory dwell ing unit may not be apparent,” said Jesse Thomas, City of Bend. “Anyone interest ed in building an ADU but wants guidance should visit the Permit Center on the first floor of City Hall, where a city employee can help answer their questions.”

now. Live the Highlife with Your Own Wines in the High Desert CALL MARY GEMBA BROKER/OWNER 541-771-8947/ 541-799-2500 (DIRECT) DESCHUTES REALTY BENDPROPERTIES.LIVE541-330-1700•MARYGEMBA.COM 541.383.0800 | advertise@bendsource.com This special edition brought to you by On Stands: Oct 6 Ad Deadline: Sept 29 Breakfast&Lunch GUIDE—— —— Whether you prefer sweet or savory, veggie or deli, light and crunchy, or rich and heavy, we’ve got the lowdown on the best breakfast and lunch options in town. Readers will sink their teeth into this easy to explore format. Advertise in the Source Weekly’s Breakfast and Lunch Guide and bring home the bacon!

<< LOW 20196 Merriewood Lane, Bend $499,900 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms 1,745 square feet; .21 acre lot Built in 2006 Listed by Angie Mombert & Brent Landels, RE/ MAX Key Properties MID >> 20315 Fairway Drive, Bend $825,000 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms 2,440 square feet; .35 acre lot Built in 1971 Listed by A’Leah Knight, RE/MAX Key Properties

20221,SEPTEMBER/35ISSUE26VOLUME/THESOURCEWEEKLY 55 TAKE ME HOME

Photos and listing info from Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service

<< HIGH 1027 NW Albany Avenue, #1, #2 $1,600,000 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms 1,500 square feet; .13 acre lot Built in 1920 Listed by Karen Malanga, RE/MAX Key Properties ADUs, or accessory dwelling units, are a hot topic in Bend real estate. And for good reason. As of January of this year 702 ADU permits have been approved in the City of Bend since 2001. Some 516 of those permits have been approved in just the past five years. With increased interest in ADUs as a viable income generator and added value, we hear from more and more homeowners curious about the process. “Does my property qualify?” “How difficult is it to get a permit?” “What do I need to do first?” “What are the legal liabilities for an ADU?” “Is the payoff worth the effort and investment?”First,let’s define an ADU. Sometimes called an accessory dwelling unit or addi tional dwelling unit, an ADU is defined by the City of Bend as a permitted “ancillary or secondary living unit that has a sepa rate kitchen, bathroom, and sleeping area existing within the same structure, or on the same lot, as the primary dwelling unit. The accessory dwelling unit may be a sepa rate and detached unit, an attached unit to the principal structure, a repurposed exist ing space within the principal structure, a dwelling unit over a garage, or a similar structural form.” In simpler terms, an ADU is an addition to the main residence on the property but not all additions qualify. While anything over 200; square-feet is considered an additional outbuilding and requires a per mit, not every additional building would be considered an ADU. For example, a "she shed"or a "man cave" is simply another building being used for personal purposes. What sets an ADU apart is that the intent is to have someone live there and qualify under specific parameters as a dwelling. One of the most common misconcep tions I come across is that since ADUs are small, people think they will be inexpensive to build. That’s not the case. City per mits are approximately $6,000, sometimes more. And licensed builders estimate that an 800-square-foot ADU can cost anywhere between $125,000 and $250,000 to build. It’s important to keep all of this in mind as you begin your research and potential proj ect.The upside to the investment is that it will pay off in the long run. Not only does it add significant value to your property, an ADU can be a lucrative income generator. If you decide to move forward with an ADU build, you’ll want to be sure to plan ahead, and permitting is your first step. Per mits from the City are currently taking up to 70 days to acquire. As there are different rules for the City and the County, be sure to check in with both to determine your prop erty’s eligibility and ADU requirements. It is important to know ADUs are legal in the City of Bend, but are not currently legal in Deschutes County.

When thinking about your property’s potential for an ADU, it’s most important to connect with experts who will help you nav igate the permit process, as well as connect you with quality builders to help keep your investment on schedule. And check with your real estate broker to make sure the property you’re interested in allows ADUs. Some neighborhoods don’t allow them, some HOAs have restrictions around them. Want to make your ADU a short-term rental or an AirBnB? There are restrictions around there, to so ask all the questions before moving forward. This single level fully updated and refurbished home has 300 red & white grapevines for your enjoyment and are easily cared for with timed drip irrigation & easily cultivated by a vineyard of your choosing (currently Lava Cellars). OR you and your friends and family can easily work it your selves. Car buff’s delight with heated garages w hoist, gantry, sink plus a 504 sf ADU. 2 road entries, 2 new wells, 2 septics, new heating, A/C, new membrane roofs, new windows, new doors, so much is new. Paved RV pad for guests and beautifully landscaped grounds. Located just outside city limits (no HOAs) + 30 min to RDM. Enjoy sipping your own wines from your back patio over a firepit, bbq and quietly watch pristine sunsets and stars at night. bargain at $989,000! is moving out of state so call to see it

HOME PRICE ROUNDUP

A

By A’Leah Knight RE/MAX Key Properties Broker

Owner

Each office is independently owned and operated. All brokers listed are licensed in the state of Oregon. Equal Housing Opportunity. 541.383.7600 | CascadeHassonSIR.com BEND | 18868 RIDGELINE DRIVE $3,100,000 | 3 BD | 4 BA | 3,066 SF | 2 AC MLS# 220152578 SISTERS | 69019 HOLMES ROAD $3,400,000 | 3 BD | 3 BA | 4,797 SF | 63.34 AC MLS# 22093975 Explore over 33,000 properties in Oregon & SW Washington SISTERS | 69920 SANTA FE TRAIL $2,150,000 | 3 BD | 4 BA | 4,518 SF | 2.50 AC MLS# 220152728 BEND | 2275 NW LAKESIDE PLACE $3,500,000 | 3 BD | 4 BA | 3,441 SF | 1.14 AC MLS# 220144243 BEND | 325 NW DELAWARE AVENUE $2,000,000 | 6 BD | 2 BA | 2,586 SF | 0.13 AC MLS# 220152350 BEND | 2320 NW FRAZER LANE $1,650,000 | 4 BD | 3 BA | 2,825 SF | 0.20 AC MLS# 220152483 BEND | 19432 BLUE LAKE LOOP $915,000 | 3 BD | 3 BA | 1,756 SF | 0.14 AC MLS# 220150909 SISTERS | 206 W HEISING DRIVE $950,000 | 3 BD | 3 BA | 2,130 SF | 0.15 AC MLS# 220152522 KLAMATH FALLS | 28888 US-97 $1,600,000 | 4 BD | 3 BA | 3,010 SF | 175 AC MLS# 220127658 SUNRIVER | 57742 WALLOWA LANE $999,900 | 4 BD | 3 BA | 2,082 SF | 0.26 AC MLS# 220152600 BEND | 20480 MAZAMA PLACE $789,000 | 3 BD | 3 BA | 2,296 SF | 0.16 AC MLS# 220152281 BEND | 20562 PROSPECTOR LOOP $540,000 | 3 BD | 2 BA | 1,452 SF | 0.12 AC MLS# 220152267 BEND | 734 NE MAJESTY LANE $668,900 | 3 BD | 2 BA | 1,508 SF | 0.24 AC MLS# 220152399 REDMOND | 3690 SW PUMICE PLACE $485,000 | 3 BD | 2 BA | 1,408 SF | 0.12 AC MLS# 220152519 PRINEVILLE | 673 NE GARNER STREET $319,000 | 2 BD | 1 BA | 792 SF | 0.10 AC MLS# 220152621 BEND | 3492 NW MCCREADY DRIVE $1,100,000 | 4 BD | 3 BA | 2,239 SF | 0.50 AC MLS# 220152638 SISTERS | 69848 CAMP POLK ROAD $895,000 | 4 BD | 2 BA | 2,511 SF | 0.76 AC MLS# 220152324 BEND | 61148 AMBASSADOR DRIVE $729,500 | 3 BD | 3 BA | 2,088 SF | 0.12 AC MLS# 220152553 CascadeHassonSIR.com The Central Oregon Luxury Market Leader

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