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  • Lady Outlaws place third at District

    Rongi Yost, Correspondent|Updated May 18, 2022

    The Lady Outlaws took third place at the District Tennis Tournament, which was held on Monday, May 9 in Madras, and then on Thursday and Friday, May 12-13 at the Salem Swim and Tennis Club. Sisters started out well on the first round of Districts on Monday, and advanced 10 players into the second day of play. In singles play, Juhree Kizziar advanced on a bye. Brooke Harper defeated Ava Shibahara of Estacada 6-0, 6-1 in the first round. Harper’s ground strokes were consistent, and her serves and coverage of the court were m... Full story

  • Boys tennis wraps up year at Districts

    Rongi Yost, Correspondent|Updated May 18, 2022

    The young Outlaws tennis squad got a taste of District Tournament play, which began on Wednesday, May 11, at Estacada High School. All four players were eliminated on day one. Jaxon Barry, the lone senior and most experienced player on the team, lost his first-round match to Riley Adair of Madras 3-6, 2-6. He went into consolation and defeated Jesus Leon of Woodburn in an 8-1 pro set. Barry was then eliminated in the next round of consolation in a 2-8 pro set loss to Spencer Dirks from Stayton. The Outlaws’ other three p... Full story

  • LAX team winds up regular season

    Rongi Yost, Correspondent|Updated May 18, 2022

    The Outlaws lost their final two league games this past week: a heartbreaking 4-7 loss to Ridgeview on Tuesday, May 10, and at home three days later a 0-15 loss to Summit, the No. 6 ranked team in the state. The game against the Storm was a makeup game from earlier in the season that had to be postponed due to illness on the Outlaws’ squad. Prior to the game against Ridgeview on Tuesday the Outlaws honored their 13 seniors, including Sean Alvarez, Gavin Christian, Austin Ekern, Gaven Henry, Ricky Huffman, Charlie Irish, E... Full story

  • Sisters motorcyclist rides deep into Mexico

    Cody Rheault|Updated May 18, 2022

    The wind roars across the desert, blowing sand 40 mph across an arid landscape. Billowing into rippled sand dunes, the scene embodies the 102-degree heat. The sand hitting his face feels like a hundred bee stings. Patrick Tougas squints into the distance, dreaming of better days. But he’s only halfway across the Sonoran Desert, aiding a friend ferrying two motorcycles to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.... Full story

  • Cloverdale Fire levy passes

    Updated May 18, 2022

    It appears that voters have heartily approved a stripped down funding levy for the Cloverdale Fire District. The district asked voters for 69-cents-per-$1,000 (assessed valuation) to fund 24/7 staffing by fire officers/EMTs.... Full story

  • Impacts of growth on Sisters

    Sue Stafford|Updated May 17, 2022

    People are concerned that the recent rapid growth occurring in Sisters might change the character of our town. The current population is about 3,286. Portland State University projects that by 2041 there could be 6,700 within the city limits. How do we provide for that kind of increase while maintaining the quality of life and ambiance for which Sisters is known? Those were questions the community wrestled with Thursday night as residents packed the Sisters Fire Hall... Full story

  • Letters to the Editor 5/18/2022

    Updated May 17, 2022

    Abuse of recycling center To the Editor: Every single time I go to the Sisters Recycle Center to drop off recyclables I find that most all of the bins contain junk, trash, and other wayward items. The other day it was one of the most common items: huge pieces of styrofoam. But along with that were two mops and multiple paper bags full of garbage. And that’s just what I could see in the one bin I used. I have found yard waste, metallic wrapping paper, and almost anything you can imagine except legitimate recyclables. It’s not... Full story

  • Jimmy Ralph Willard - Passed May 7, 2022

    Updated May 17, 2022

    Jimmy Ralph Willard, born in Le Flore, Oklahoma, to Ebb and Della Willard, passed away May 7, 2022, at his home in Sisters surrounded by his family. He was 86. He is survived by his wife of 63 years, Ida Mae (Davis); brother Phillip; daughters Rhonda Bellinger (Patrick) and Tina Brown; son Larry (Dana); six grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren. Jim was an avid fisherman. He enjoyed lake fishing on the high lakes of Central Oregon and catfishing on Hugo Lake in... Full story

  • Pamela Jean Kundert - May 16, 1953 — May 4, 2022

    Updated May 17, 2022

    Pam was born to Francis and Alice Harvey on May 16, 1953, in Dallas, Oregon. She was raised and attended Dallas schools, graduating high school in 1971. On August 6, 1971, Pam married Tim Bookey. They had two children, Tamera and Jason. After that marriage ended, Pam married Wallace Kundert on November 24, 1984, gaining two step-children, Barry and Jeffrey. Pam worked in insurance from 1971 to 1987 at Stan Malo/Wall Insurance in Dallas, until moving to Monterrey, Mexico, where... Full story

  • What’s all the buzz about?

    Updated May 17, 2022

    From the first day I set foot in Oregon — literally — rattlesnakes came into my life. I was leaving the old Hampton Station, out east of Bend on Highway 20, having stopped there for a cold Pepsi. It was the last week in September and a huge line of thunderstorms was ahead of me on and above that glorious snowcapped Cascade skyline, and I was wondering what Bend would be like. As my old 1947 Harley 74 OHV carried me past the Millican store, I spotted a snake... Full story

  • Equestrian team competes at State

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated May 17, 2022

    Eight Sisters High School equestrian team members got to face off with riders and horses from all over Oregon in the 2022 Oregon High School Equestrian Team State Championships held May 12-15 at Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center. Oregon High School Equestrian Team is separated into eight regions during the regular season. The best from each region compete at the state meet, featuring competitors from over two dozen schools. The four-day competition features 26 different even... Full story

  • Sisters Farmers Market seeks volunteers, vendors, and more

    T. Lee Brown|Updated May 17, 2022

    Sisters Farmers Market will launch a new season of microlocal food, artisanal goods, and live entertainment on June 5. While many slots are already filled, the market is still seeking volunteers, vendors, nonprofit organizations, and musicians to participate. Volunteering can take many forms. At age 11, Sisters Middle School student Molly Fredland volunteered throughout last season. “It was very fun and it was a great learning experience,” she said. Helping vendors set up boo... Full story

  • BBR Women’s Golf Club invites new members

    Katy Yoder|Updated May 17, 2022

    The Black Butte Ranch Women’s Golf Club (BBRWGC) launched its season on May 17, with a two-person scramble and get-together. There’s still room for more women to join the group. Members encourage anyone interested in joining to contact steering committee member Jane Slingsby at [email protected] Even with the first event taking place, it’s still a great time to join. “I have been a member of the BBRWGC for several years, and I have so enjoyed all the women I have met and played with over the years. The Tuesday game da... Full story

  • Tour historic Camp Polk Cemetery

    Sue Stafford|Updated May 17, 2022

    The Three Sisters Historical Society is celebrating National Historic Preservation Month this May with three tours of Camp Polk Meadow and the Camp Polk Cemetery in collaboration with the Deschutes Land Trust, which manages the Meadow. The three tours are each limited to 10 people, and reservations may be made by calling Historical Society president Jan Hodgers, who will be leading the tours, at 541-788-0274. On the day of the tour, meet at the Deschutes Land Trust kiosk... Full story

  • Detectives arrest man in school threat incident

    Updated May 17, 2022

    The man who allegedly made a threat to a Sisters school on May 5, leading to an early dismissal of students and a couple of days of heightened alert, has been taken into custody by law enforcement. Charles Matthew Schmiel, 41, faces one charge of first-degree disorderly conduct. According to the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office, detectives learned the location of Schmiel on May 16. Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office detectives contacted the Beaverton Police Department and relayed the information regarding Schmiel’s locat... Full story

  • Woodworker is a master of design and craftsmanship

    Katy Yoder|Updated May 17, 2022

    Sisters resident Dale Holub is an esteemed master woodworker. His creations are in homes and buildings around the globe, with collectors from Kuwait to Canada, the Hawaiian Islands, Japan, and throughout the U.S. Holub describes his work as contemporary Craftsman style. Signature appointments include handles and pulls in solid ebony, rosewood, birds-eye maple, and inlay detailing only he makes. Holub’s creative side is fed by design challenges and multifaceted projects that i... Full story

  • Gravel riders grind it out in Sisters

    Bill Bartlett|Updated May 17, 2022

    Who are these guys? That was the question being asked all weekend as Sisters area campgrounds filled to overflowing and hotels put out No Vacancy signs. Some 443 cyclists entered the Cascade Gravel Grinder, the second stage in a four-stage gravel bike extravaganza that began with The Gorge Gravel Grinder April 24, in Dufor, Oregon. The next leg, and a barn-burner, promoters promise, is the Oregon Trail Gravel Grinder that brings it all back to Sisters June 22-26, with five... Full story

  • Children’s program is back

    Updated May 17, 2022

    As did many organizations, the parent/child program Together For Children (TFC) took an imposed hiatus during the pandemic. They are now returning to Sisters, reconnecting at SPRD with a weekly program for families with young children. No matter how resourceful parents have been during the pandemic, socialization and interaction with others has been limited, making it hard to introduce those important skills to their toddlers. TFC is a proven antidote to that problem. The same is true if parenting a two-year-old seems... Full story

  • Outlaws qualify six athletes for state track meet

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated May 17, 2022

    Most of the Sisters Outlaws track athletes saved their best performances of the season for when it mattered most, at the Oregon West District Championships held May 13-14 at Husky Field in Sweet Home. There are three ways for athletes to qualify for the state meet, which will return to Hayward Field in Eugene for the first time in three years. The top two finishers in each event automatically qualify, along with one “wild card” from each event based on being the best thi... Full story

  • SHS Concert Choir sings at State

    Ceili Cornelius|Updated May 17, 2022

    Every year entering the spring season, Sisters High School Choir Director Rick Johnson asks his group of students if they would like to compete in state choir competition, or if they’d rather visit an Oregon university and work with faculty and tour the music programs at Oregon colleges. This year, students were eager to compete. “We had just come out of the musical and students said they wanted to compete at the district level,” said Johnson. The Sisters High School concert c... Full story

  • Fifty years ago…

    Jim Cornelius, News Editor|Updated May 17, 2022

    Been doing a little work for the upcoming 50th anniversary of the Watergate break-in, one of the most significant events in modern American political history. The aftershocks of the botched political espionage operation that ultimately brought down the Nixon presidency continue to reverberate today, as evidenced by the persistent tendency to attach the suffix “gate” to any political scandal, large or small, that captures our attention (i.e., “Russiagate”). Even for people... Full story

  • Sheriff’s bike patrols train in Sisters

    Sue Stafford|Updated May 17, 2022

    In preparation for the warm weather and tourist and special event season, two of Sisters’ finest took part in a day-long bicycle training held at the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office Sisters substation. Deputies Mike Hudson and Josh Westfall, along with officers from Bend, Sunriver, and Black Butte Ranch, spent the morning weaving around cones in the parking lot, riding through the forest on multi-use dirt trails, and on paved and graveled roads. The afternoon was spent wor... Full story

  • Baby formula shortage hits Sisters

    Bill Bartlett|Updated May 17, 2022

    The nationwide infant formula shortage has reached crisis proportions. Mothers in some locales are driving as much as four hours to find the product. Others are paying online profiteers three to four times its normal price. And, most desperately and dangerously, some moms are diluting the mix to ration what they have. Doctors warn that this is harmful, with any number of potential detriments to a child’s development. Given that Sisters skews toward an older population and i... Full story

  • Prescribed burning continues in Sisters

    Updated May 17, 2022

    The Sisters Ranger District plans to ignite a prescribed fire on up to 177 acres roughly five miles south of Sisters along the FS 1505 road on Tuesday, May 17. Operations will begin as early as 9 a.m. and will continue until ignitions are complete, or conditions become unfavorable. This treatment is part of the Sisters Area Fuels Reduction Project and is intended to reduce hazardous fuels in the wildland-urban interface and return forest stands to historic conditions by reintroducing fire on the landscape. This unit is a... Full story

  • Outlaws battled tough baseball competition

    Jim Cornelius, News Editor|Updated May 12, 2022

    The Outlaws varsity baseball team battled tough competition in the 4A-3 Oregon West Conference. They wrap up league play this week with two games against Caldera. Senior night is Wednesday, May 11. Going into the last week of play, the Outlaws are 8-15 overall; 3-12 in league. It’s not clear whether the Outlaws might get some post-season play. “We’re kind of on the bubble as far as a play-in game,” said Coach Kramer Croisant. The Outlaws’ record reflects a young team with... Full story

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