It seemed easy enough. Iโd guided rafts through the Big Eddy stretch hundreds of times, I thought, as I sat in my little yellow kayak above the rapids. And Iโd kayaked plenty of class IIIs and IVs.
But none of them were so thoroughly lined with lava rocks as sharp as these.
All summer long, Iโd played the โshould I or shouldnโt I?โ game with this stretchโthe rocks in the river here, just above Lava Island, are young, geologically speaking, and razor sharp.
But as the raft of a friend who would run safety for me rounded a bend, I knew my summerโs worth of contemplating was over.
Outside
New Downtown Shop to Peddle Skis/Bikes/Beers/Coffee from former gallery
It’s officialโthe lovely city-owned historic building formerly known as the Mirror Pond Gallery will soon have a new tenant.
Bend’s David Marchi, an experienced mountaineering, heli-ski and cycling guide, is opening Crowโs Feet Commons, a backcountry ski/boutique bike shop that will also serve coffee and beers in The Rademacher House, which was the former home of Arts Central. Marchi signed a lease Sept. 21.
This is great news for three reasons.
Kiss of the Spider Woman
The busy arachnid outside your window is doing good work
This, Oh, Best Beloved, is my favorite time of yearโour back yards are full of Charlottes, aka the orb weaver spider. If truth be known, we could not get along as well as we do on this beautiful Old Earth, without all the Charlottes and her relatives that build their silken orbs on our porches, backyards, barns, chicken houses and shrubs.
If you have ever taken the time to inspect Charlotte’s Web, you will discover one does not have to read E. B. White’s beautiful book to see she eats hundreds and hundreds of harmful insectsโflies, moths and wasps in particular.
Going Long: September in Bend is ultra-marathon season, but โcross races are upon us, too
After leading through the halfway point at the 2012 U.S.A. Cycling Mountain Bike Marathon National Championships, Bendโs Adam Craig thought he had the race sewn up.
Last yearโs marathon champ continued to ride comfortably at the front of the race until mile 52 of the 54-mile event.
โI pretty much won the whole time until about two miles to go,โ joked Craig about last Saturdayโs race. Near mile 32, the Rabobank-Giant rider said he started to run low on fuel and then, with 2012 U.S. Olympian Todd Wells bearing down, Craig dropped his last two gels while racing down Dinah Moe Humm Trail.
Harder, Higher, Longer and Awesomer: MTB marathon national champs, Masters road roundup and big news for Woody!
Climbing up Flagline Trail is kinda tough, but itโs fun and scenic and generally not THAT hard.
Climbing up Flagline 17 miles into a 54-mile mountain bike race, however, is a real kick in the pants.
Once again, Central Oregon will play host to the U.S.A. Cycling Mountain Bike Marathon National Championships, Sept. 15, but rather than hold the start and finish in the Old Mill, a la the 2011 edition, the race will instead be staged out of Wanoga Sno-Park and will include more single track, more miles, more high altitude and more elevation gain than last yearโs race, which featured miles of pavement and minimal uphill pedaling.
Road Warriors: Masters Nationals return to Bend, South Sister stampede and SUP stuff
For the second consecutive year hundreds of “mature” bike racers will flock to Central Oregon for the USA Cycling Masters Road National Championships. This year it’s a five-day affair that will kick off Wednesday, Sept. 5 and run through Sunday, Sept. 9. Unlike last year, however, this year a โmasters racerโ is defined as those aged 35 and older. In 2011 the youngest master’s category was the 30 to 34 age group.
Other notable changes for this year’s edition include new courses for the time trial and for some of the crit races. Rather than race another time trial up and down the broken pavement of Skylinerโs Rd., race organizers elected to hold the race outside Prineville onย the Crooked River Highway that will take racers upstream and into the Wild and Scenic Crooked River canyon.
Keeping It Natural: Sunriver program offers kids a chance to become outdoor ambassadors
If you would like to see your children interested in something other than TV and spacing out on computer games, then involve them in the Natural Worldโnot only will they have a wonderful time, but they’ll learn a great deal and may even have less mass to their posterior.
What? You don’t know how to do that…? And you think huntin’ and fishin’ is enough? Then talk to Jennifer Curtiss, lead naturalist and coordinator for the Junior Naturalist Program at the Sunriver Nature Center and Observatory (SNCO).
Fly Time: Relying on the kindness of a stranger
Hiking up the trail along the east fork of the Lostine River into the Eagle Cap wilderness in the Wallowas is one of the most perfect fly fishing pools imaginable. Enough off the trail that you might miss it, the pool comes at the base of a short rocky drop in the river. After the drop, the water flows quietly in a 20-yard-long by 10-yard-wide pool thatโs no more than four feet deep at most. Since the river bottom here is sandy, wading barefoot is easy. Thereโs also no fear of snagging on a backcast as the trees are well set back from the poolโs edges.
The only reason I made a recent trip into the Wallowas was to fish this pool and to bask in the joy of wading deep in cold water and casting to eager Brook Trout. Note that the poolโs brookies arenโt huge but are ready to take traditional dry fly patterns, like an Adams, Royal Coachman, elk hair caddis and humpy floated on the surface, or pheasant tail and bead head nymphs.
Arriving at the pool after a two-and-a-half-mile uphill hike, I took my boots off and rigged up my four-piece backpacking rod. Reel on, I reached into my pack for my fly box and found it missing. Despair ensued. Iโd forgotten to pack the box.
Local Runners Gone Wild: While Bend runners flooded the results sheets in Colorado, area climbers ponder access to popular crag
Bend already lays claim to the title โBike Town U.S.A.,โ but it may be time to add โUltra Runners โR Usโ to our townโs moniker.
Bendites dominated the recent GORE TEX Trans-Rockies Run, a 120-mile, six-day stage race in Colorado that concluded on August 18. Bend sent eight runners to the race, which started in Buena Vista and finished in Beaver Creek and included approximately 20,000 feet of altitude gain, and each day all eight Bendites made podium appearances.
Zach Violett and Stephanie Howe returned to the race hoping to improve on last yearโs third-place finish in the โopen mixedโ category. The couple, now experienced in the ways of stage racing, blew the other co-ed teams out of the water and won the six-day race in 17 hours, 47 minutesโtwo hours ahead of the second place team.
Trees of God, Folly of Man: A Bend foresterโs mission to rebuild Lebanonโs legendary cedars
Those who know their Bible know the Cedars of Lebanon, also called the Cedars of God. The trees appear everywhere from Numbers, to First Kings, to Job, to Psalms, to Isaiah and Ezekiel, and Amos to Zechariahโyet they have almost vanished from the Earth. Before Man the Destroyerโthat invincible user of all Nature’s vast inventoryโdiscovered what is today Lebanon, primal forests cloaked the highlands and plains, and throughout that magnificent forest were the Cedars of God.
Lebanon cedar became integral to various ancient civilizations that discovered its many uses. Canaanites used it for home construction; Phoenicians employed it for building commercial and military ships, as well as houses, palaces, and temples. Ancient Egyptians used its resin in mummification. Cedar sawdust has been found in the tombs of Egyptian Pharaohs. The Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh designates the cedar groves of Lebanon as the dwelling place of the gods.

