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  • Letters to the Editor 8/10/2022

    Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Roundabout To the Editor: I hope the planned roundabout on the east end of town will be designed to accommodate the obvious (to me) and long overdue solution to the through-traffic issue that seems to confound Sisters. The simple, most straight-forward, and tried ’n’ true solution is and has been to make Cascade Avenue one-way westbound and Hood Avenue one-way eastbound. True, we’d have to give up the diagonal parking on Hood in favor of parallel parking, as has worked for decades on Cascade. I don’t know what may have be... Full story

  • Sisters to Mississippi: A blues pilgrimage

    Ceili Gatley|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Back in January 2020, the founders of the Sisters Rhythm & Brews Festival, Joe and Jenn Rambo made a road-trip blues pilgrimage to the heart of the blues — the Hill Country of Mississippi. The couple hit the road in their van to Clarksdale, Mississippi, with many stops along the beltline of the heart of the blues along the way. They stopped in Austin, Texas, and Memphis, Tennessee, and scouted artists doing winter shows. They landed in Clarksdale, where they saw many... Full story

  • Thrills and nostalgia hallmarks of air show

    Bill Bartlett|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    If you’ve never been to an air show, you might reconsider. The perception held by many is that they are only for aeronautic buffs and pilots, or that they feature only airplanes. That is not the case with Airshow of the Cascades scheduled for Friday and Saturday, August 26-27 at the Madras airport. “What folks need to think of is not a textbook air show but a festival,” said Joe Krenowicz, who heads the Madras Chamber of Commerce. “If planes don’t interest you, then bring the... Full story

  • Rhythm & Brews Festival returns

    Ceili Gatley|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    After a two-year pandemic-related hiatus, Sisters Rhythm & Brews Festival is back this weekend, Friday and Saturday, August 12 and 13. Joe and Jenn Rambo, the founders and directors of the Festival, are excited to bring a collection of 11 artists for the 2022 Festival. A few of the artists are returning from the 2019 Festival, including Eric Gales and Mr. Sipp. “This is our third year doing the Festival and we really do it as a passion project,” said Jenn Rambo. From the sta... Full story

  • 4-H youth get ready for county fair

    Bill Bartlett|Updated Aug 3, 2022

    Sisters Country is home to the Cloverdale Livestock Club. It’s our version of 4H and it’s been around more than 75 years. The international program began in 1902, boasting more than 6 million current members and 25 million alumnae. Thirty-four youth from 8 to 18 make up the Club here, mostly from Sisters Country but a few from as far as Crooked River Ranch and Bend. The Deschutes County Fair, August 3-7, is the big event, what the young people are all working toward. This is... Full story

  • BBR police officer set to retire

    Jim Cornelius, News Editor|Updated Aug 3, 2022

    Kelvin Lettenmaier is, in the estimation of Black Butte Ranch Police Chief Jason Van Meter, “the epitome of a community police officer.” On August 3, Officer Lettenmaier, 57, was to work his final shift as a Black Butte Ranch Police Officer, after two decades of service that made him a beloved figure at the resort community eight miles west of Sisters. Lettenmaier has had a long and varied connection to the Ranch. His family moved to Central Oregon in the 1970s, where his fat... Full story

  • Monarch Butterflies are endangered

    Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Headlines in conservation magazines, and even on newspapers have been crying: “Monarch butterflies on the verge of extinction!” And they are, all the way from Maine to California. Their populations have dropped over 90 percent in the West and up to 84 percent in the East. According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN, which recently added the Monarch to their Red List and designated it as “endangered,” three threats have caused the Monarch populat... Full story

  • Firefighters stop Fly Creek Fire

    Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Firefighters stopped progression on the Fly Creek Fire on the Metolius Arm of Lake Billy Chinook on Monday. Firefighters held the fire at 280 acres and increased containment to 25 percent. Dozer line has been constructed around 80 percent of the fire perimeter. Control lines held Monday afternoon, despite being tested by 15 mph winds. Air support dropped retardant late Monday to ensure containment efforts on the ground held. The Level 3 evacuation notice for the Perry South and Monty Campgrounds and the Level 2 evacuation... Full story

  • Whose water is it anyway?

    Sue Stafford|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Raise the Deschutes is a series of free monthly seminars being presented over the coming year by the Deschutes River Conservancy, to help educate the public about water management in Central Oregon. The next seminar, scheduled for Wednesday, August 17, is titled “Whose Water is it Anyway? Water Rights 101,” and will focus on water rights in the Deschutes Basin. The subject of water, its scarcity in certain areas of the basin, and how to equitably share it, gives rise to con... Full story

  • Families should prepare for fall sports season

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Gary Thorson, athletic director for Sisters High School (SHS), is looking forward to the start of the fall sports season. “We are super excited to get fall sports rolling again for both SHS and SMS (Sisters Middle School),” he said. “As we started to come out of the pandemic last year we had a good bump in participation numbers and we are hoping to see that again this year,” he said. And the best part for families is that once again there are no pay to play fees for being involved in sports and activities at either school.... Full story

  • USFS personnel moonlight as Smoke Drifters

    Bill Bartlett|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Steve Orange plays bass guitar. He’s also Timber Sales Administrator for the Deschutes National Forest, Sisters District. Co-worker Mike Boero, an archeologist for USFS, plays drums. Together with Macon Lohning and John Van Heel, guitarists and lead guitar and singer, Jonas Tarlen, they make up the Smoke Drifters band. They took the stage last Friday night from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Eurosports Food Cart Garden who sponsor live music every Friday night in June, July and August. T... Full story

  • Road closed in Whychus Creek area

    Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Forest Road 1514, in the Whychus Creek area of the Sisters Ranger District is closed to allow the replacement of a road culvert. The culvert replacement is an important step in providing improved fish and aquatic organism passage in the creek, the Forest Service reports. The road is a popular route because it provides a loop connecting Forest Road 15 and Forest Road 16 in the area of Whychus Creek. The loop offers access to wilderness trails and dispersed camping sites as well as a scenic gravel riding opportunity. With the... Full story

  • The play’s the thing in Sisters

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    The Guerilla Shakespeare group is no ordinary troupe of actors and actresses. The “guerilla” concept of sweeping into town with few encumbrances and then heading to the next venue sets the acting company apart. The group staged “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” on Saturday evening, July 30, at the Fir Street Park under perfect midsummer conditions. It’s the fifth time the group has played in Sisters over the years under producer and artistic director Clinton K. Clark, a Bend native... Full story

  • Property owners must do clean-up

    Sue Stafford|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Following a public hearing on July 27, City Council approved the adoption of Ordinance No. 525, which amends the Sisters Municipal Code. The ordinance allocates the responsibility for right-of-way maintenance of a property within the City to the adjacent property owner. The ordinance is a change from how rights-of-way have been maintained in the past, with the City Public Works department previously performing the maintenance. Accumulation of debris and junk, overgrown... Full story

  • Work set to start on riprarian restoration

    Sue Stafford|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Large equipment belonging to M&M Services LLC of Medford rolled into Sisters last Wednesday in preparation for the three-week restoration project of Whychus Creek between the Locust Street bridge and Highway 20. Dump trucks, front loaders, excavators, and utility trailers were neatly assembled in the north end of Creekside Park behind orange hazard fencing. The fencing on both sides of the creek is intended to keep the public away from the construction zone while work occurs.... Full story

  • ¡Chiringa! brings Latin dance music to Sisters

    Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Bend-based Latin dance rock band !Chiringa!, will make its first appearance at Angeline’s Bakery in over a decade on Friday, August 5, at 7 p.m., throwing down tropical covers and original funk rock fusion Latin music. The show features special guest Samuel Thompson from Los Angeles on trumpet. !Chiringa! is a four-piece Latin dance rock band that aims to unite people of all backgrounds and spread the love of Latin music. With a smokin’ rhythm section and strong female lea... Full story

  • Running commentary

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    The first time I saw Sydney McLaughlin compete, she was about to start her senior year of high school as a 16 year old. I was covering the 2016 Olympic Trials at historic Hayward Field and wondered if this teenage phenom was for real. She had established herself as an up-and-coming track star in the 400-meter hurdles. The question on everyone’s mind was: Can this whippersnapper possibly make the Olympics by placing in the top three at the Trials? The answer turned out to be y... Full story

  • Sisters Country birds

    Douglas Beall|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Walking through central Oregon’s ponderosa forests, the twittering and chirping one is most likely to hear is the Pygmy Nuthatch, feeding on insects while climbing all over the ponderosa and lodgepole pines. The Pygmy Nuthatch (Sitta pygmaea), chatters its high-pitch staccato call year-round, gleaning insects and seeds as it forages the entire tree from trunk to needles. This tiny bird, 3.75 to 4.5 inches, is monogamous, bonding year-round with its mate. Both male and f... Full story

  • Country songwriter Austin Jenckes to play Sisters Saloon

    Ceili Gatley|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Austin Jenckes always knew that music was going to be a part of his life. Growing up in the Pacific Northwest, in a small town in Washington state called Duval, Jenckes played music throughout his life. He started playing guitar as a boy because his dad also played, and he picked it up one day and knew that he wanted to pursue it further. Jenckes grew up playing music at church on the worship music team, and in his young adult days, he played in rock n’ roll bands in high s... Full story

  • ‘Green Drinks’ event honors sustainability

    Updated Aug 2, 2022

    About 60 hearty folks spent a hot evening last Thursday on the Seed to Table (S2T) farm, with thunderheads rumbling overhead. Participants from little ones to senior citizens listened to representatives from The Environmental Center (TEC) and S2T share their organizations’ focus on sustainability. TEC coordinates networking events called “Green Drinks” that focus on their three pillars of sustainability: a healthy environment, economic vitality, and social equity. TEC began... Full story

  • Coming together with the blues in Sisters

    Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Sisters Folk Festival (SFF) and Sisters Rhythm & Brews Festival have partnered to present “An Evening with the Blues” concert on Thursday, August 11 at 7 p.m. at Sisters Art Works, 204 W. Adams Ave., Sisters. Grammy-nominated blues, country and gospel artists Jimmy “Duck” Holmes, Jontavious Willis, and Southern Avenue will perform for a special evening celebrating the conclusion of the Summer Concerts at Sisters Art Works and kicking off the 2022 Sisters Rhythm & Brews Festival. The event will mark the first collabo... Full story

  • Serving as a Forest Service intern

    Bill Bartlett|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Have you ever wondered who are and what are inside the six cottages on the perimeter of the Forest Service’s Sisters District station? Three are bunkhouses, one is storage space, and the other two are for fire-related management. In the three unairconditioned bunkhouses with full kitchens, are nine seasonal workers and two interns. The seasonal hires perform a myriad of forest management work assignments that are not accessible when the snows are deep. They work for periods of... Full story

  • Where’s the evidence? Convince me

    Scott Bowler|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    My parents could not have been more different (one a short, funny, emotional, liberal, feminist, elementary educator, and the other a tall, stern, thoughtful, conservative, paternalistic, civil engineer), and they didn’t agree on a lot of things. However, one thing that they both ardently agreed upon, despite many long-running discussions and arguments about things as disparate as parenting style and politics, was that evidence for your position is absolutely vital, and, when strong enough, evidence provides an excellent r... Full story

  • Letters to the Editor 8/03/2022

    Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Vaccine Safety To the Editor: A new vaccine is promised for the fall that targets recent, highly transmissible Omnicron variants, warranting a frank discussion of vaccine safety. But recent submissions to The Nugget by Dr. Wayne B. Schmotzer and Charles Stephens, meant to convince readers that COVID-19 vaccines are not only unsafe, but will make them sicker, perhaps even kill them, have added little of value to the discussion. Dr. Wayne Schmotzer, DVM in his letter to the editor (July 22) cited a study whose results, he... Full story

  • Irrigation district success honored

    Bill Bartlett|Updated Aug 2, 2022

    Three Sisters Irrigation District serves 129 farms on 7,572 irrigated acres. The 130-year-old district delivers water from Whychus Creek to farmers and ranchers through over 62 miles of canals, laterals and pipelines. Ninety-three percent of those conveyances have been converted to pressurized pipe. The results, 25 years in the making, are measurable. Losses to seepage or evaporation are now negligible. Water delivery has been improved in times of drought by 25 percent. The Di... Full story

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