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  • Cascade Avenue paving set to roll August 15

    Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Cascade Avenue will get a new coat of paving this month. The Oregon Department of Transportation is repaving the top layer of the state highway that runs through the center of Sisters from Locust Street to Pine Street, from Monday August 15 through Friday, August 20. The work will be conducted at night, from 10 p.m. to 5:30 a.m. ODOT will post signage to guide night traffic around the work zone. Those with businesses on Cascade Avenue are asked to inform night delivery or work personnel of the work and to avoid the paving... Full story

  • Commentary... What is your mission statement?

    Edie Jones|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    In preparing a presentation about the Sisters School District and what the school board on which I serve does, I started off with our mission statement: “An education community that creates belonging prepares and inspires.” A few days later I was reminded of the words from another school. This one is private and located in Oakland, California. Their words describe their school as a place that promotes “scholarship, diversity, and citizenship.” I am also serving on the board of the High Desert Education District. Their s... Full story

  • Astronomy Club welcomes speaker

    Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Dr. Larry Price will be a special guest speaker at the Sisters Astronomy Club’s next meeting on Tuesday, August 16, beginning at 7 p.m. Dr. Price will give an update on the status of CERN’s Large Hadron Collider, the world’s premier collider for discoveries in elementary particle physics. He will discuss improvements made to the collider and to the physics detectors during a multi-year shutdown, and explain the goals of the third major data-taking period (known as Run 3) since the turn-on in 2010. Larry Price is a physi... Full story

  • Combining family therapy and nutrition health

    Katy Yoder|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Justin Little is no stranger to Sisters. He grew up here and has fond memories of a childhood full of outdoor adventures, music, and family. He and his wife and their four young children recently relocated from Southern California to give their children the same excellent education and childhood he received in Sisters Country. Little left Sisters High School in 2002 to attend Azusa Pacific University. After graduation he spent time teaching music lessons that always seemed to... Full story

  • Sisters 4-Hers shine at fairgrounds

    Bill Bartlett|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Outside, it was all fun and games. Inside the animal barns, it was all business. As record numbers of Deschutes County Fairgoers delighted in the myriad thrilling rides, some with lines requiring a 20-minute wait, members of the Cloverdale Livestock Club were at work garnering scores of ribbons. Young Conner Cyrus, for example, scored 17 ribbons over the weekend. 4-H is not complicated to its members, but is complex especially to outsiders. In sheep alone there are... Full story

  • Bull by Bull

    Judy Bull|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    • “There was a time” is my new mantra. It sounds kind of sad, but it’s not at all sad. It means I’m looking back and I’m truly glad that I can say, “There was a time.” There was a time when I could do most anything I set my mind to, including roping, packing, driving, and penning on my horse, Irish. We even drove Santa Claus in a couple of the Sisters Christmas parades. Those were the days. • I looked into lawn mowers a little while back. I even looked into a new push mower, now called a reel mower. I thought a push... Full story

  • New automotive service opens

    Jim Cornelius, News Editor|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Judging from the traffic through 3 Sisters Automotive Service Center last week, there is quite a bit of pent-up demand for the services Jorge Solorzano offers at the new operation. The new automotive business (unrelated to an outfit of similar name that is now closed) opened on August 1, offering a range of services like oil changes, brake work, tune-ups, changes of air and cabin filters, replacement of belts, and battery changes. “Basically in-and-out services, you k... Full story

  • Coles express commitment to ‘special’ place

    Sue Stafford|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    When talking with Glenn and Jen Cole of Pole Creek Ranch, their passion for the land and the view spills out of them both. “This is a great place with a great story,” Glenn Cole began, “and we want to preserve that specialness.” Sisters Country has been special to Glenn since his days as a student and member of the track team at the University of Oregon. He would come over the mountains from Eugene to enjoy all the area has to offer. Jen Cole’s godparents, Jim and Jeanne Ho... Full story

  • The Bunkhouse Chronicle - Dark Matter

    Craig Rullman|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    “Praise ignorance, for what man has not encountered he has not destroyed.” — Wendell Berry Turns out we can add monarch butterflies to the list of species threatened during the sixth mass-extinction event, which we are all living through. Years ago, when I lived in Reno, Nevada, and before it became a grubby extension of California’s East Bay favelas, the monarchs would come through the Washoe Valley in spring — innumerable clouds of them, like a swarm of locus... Full story

  • Ranch to host some events and community activities

    Sue Stafford|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    When Richard and Linda Patterson decided it was time to sell their iconic 350-acre ranch along Highway 242, they “prayed to find the best realtor and the best people to buy it” and carry on their stewardship of the land and the incredible mountain view. “We got both!” Richard Patterson said. “The Coles are first-class, sweetheart people and they love Sisters. I would do business with them with only a handshake.” Glenn and Jennifer Cole of Hermosa Beach, California,... Full story

  • Your Story Matters - Faulty foundations and future directions

    Audry Van Houweling, PMHNP|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    What I enjoy most about my job are the stories. Tales of resilience, trudging through struggle, and persistence that is awe-inspiring. Tales of celebration and transformation, allowing lightness to be just as present as the heaviness. To have the privilege to bear witness to the rawness of life — the vulnerability that may have never been spoken outside the walls of my office, is an opportunity I try not to take for granted. While diplomas hang on my office wall constituting some level of due diligence for my job, my... Full story

  • Prizes await in Sisters Farmers Market raffle

    T. Lee Brown|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Time is running out to buy tickets for the August raffle at Sisters Farmers Market. The winning tickets will be drawn during the market at Fir Street Park this Sunday, August 14. Purchase tickets online through Saturday at 5 p.m. or in person at the market’s Info Booth. “You do not need to be local or present to win,” said Market Manager Michelle Jiunta. The market is prepared to ship the grand prize if necessary; it has garnered much admiration from locals and out-of-town vis... Full story

  • Fire risk map axed

    Alex Baumgartner|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    On August 4, just five weeks after publishing a wildfire risk map, the state Forestry Department axed it. That move follows a chorus of complaints from Republican state lawmakers and residents in southern and eastern Oregon who said the rollout of the map was clumsily handled and led to people losing their property insurance or having premiums doubled. They said the Oregon Department of Forestry was ill-equipped to handle the impacts of the map in the middle of fire season. The latest criticism came Thursday, with a... Full story

  • Tribute bands rock summer in Sisters

    Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Hardtails Bar & Grill will rock out the summer season with the two concluding shows in their annual slate of tribute bands. Lovedrive takes the stage on Saturday, August 13, with their tribute to the German hard rock band the Scorpions. Lovedrive was formed in 2012 based out of Southern California and proudly pays tribute to the sound, look, and energy of a live Scorpions concert. The band performs Scorpions songs of the late 1970s like “In Trance” to “Lovedrive,” all the ’80s... Full story

  • SHS graduate working as nurse at St. Charles

    Ceili Gatley|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Sabrina Allen was raised in Sisters and grew up surrounded by her Sisters community. She has now returned to that community, working as a nurse at St. Charles Hospital in Bend. Allen (formerly Reifschneider) attended Corban University after graduating from Sisters High School (SHS) in 2017. Throughout her high school career, Allen immersed herself in everything she could in the medical field. “I knew I always had a call to the health care field. I just at the time didn’t kno... Full story

  • British firefighters respond to Sisters

    Bill Bartlett|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    During an international conference of firefighting managers in Portland in 2014, Sisters-Camp Sherman Fire District chief Roger Johnson got to talking with his counterpart from Hampshire, England. The professional friendship led to a one-of-a-kind annual exchange of personnel for a fortnight (14 days) every summer. Even during the COVID-19 years, the two departments remained in close consultation and comradery via Zoom. The yearly visits in person have resumed, and Sisters is... Full story

  • New Sisters libraries open doors

    Bill Bartlett|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Two of the five new Little Free Libraries were dedicated last week, including the one shown here with Mayor Michael Preedin, who was present for the ribbon cutting ceremony. Erika Turnquist, age 2, and her brother Damien, 9, were the first borrowers at the one installed at the entry to Clemens Park at North Larch Street and East Black Butte Avenue. The Little Free Library at McKenzie Meadows Village park was also dedicated. Next week will see the installation at ClearPine sub-... Full story

  • Conspiracy theory and psychology

    Michael Paulson|Updated Aug 9, 2022

    Our shared imaginations that establish cultures require trust. Conspiracy theories erode trust. What are the variables that promote conspiracy theories? David Hundsness, a Silicon Valley educator with credentials in psychology, has uploaded several videos on the what, how, and why conspiracy theories grow. He concludes there are four reasons with the fourth being the most important. One reason is the lack of information or the ability to understand the information. The rate of technical change today makes it nearly... Full story

  • 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

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