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Enduring the Next Trend: European-style enduro races might be the MTB wave of the future

Super Ds, which feature both cross-country and downhill segments, are relatively short and staged on mellow enough terrain that they attract a broad spectrum of ridersโ€”cross-country and downhill racers dig them, as do the casual all-mountai

For the last few years Super D races have been the darlings of the mountain bike world. Super Ds, which feature both cross-country and downhill segments, are relatively short and staged on mellow enough terrain that they attract a broad spectrum of ridersโ€”cross-country and downhill racers dig them, as do the casual all-mountain riders. The popular races often attract riders whoโ€™ve previously never considered entering a bike race.
So how is it that European-inspired enduro racing is threatening to dethrone the beloved Super D?
Lots of reasons, as it turns out.

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Trigger Happy: Sign shooters are anything but sporting

Shooting signs comes under the heading of Criminal Mischief, which, according to the good people at the Deschutes County Sheriff’s office, is covered by the Oregon Revised Statutes.

OK, all you crazies with guns. Enough is enough! I cannot even imagine what goes through your heads when you raise your rifle, handgun, or shotgun and blaze away at the assorted signs in the forest and desert. Sure, Bi-Mart and sporting goods stores love you for purchasing boxes and boxes of ammunition so you can kill signs, but is this what you think is fun?
My gut feeling is that you nutsos that shoot signs probably couldn’t hit an elephant in the tail end if it were walking in front of you.
Grow up will you! The cost for replacing those signs that you just have to shoot up is no small number. Land-managers place them in the locations you find them for a good reason, and not for you screwballs to use as targets. Even safety signs, such as stop signs and curve warnings, are shot to smithereens.

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Too Hot to Handle?: Early season steelhead, schooled at Pronghorn and a Good ride.

Itโ€™s no secret that the annual steelhead pilgrimage has begun on the Columbia River, which has fish junkies trekking north in hopes of intercepting some of the early arrivals.

Come early August dedicated steelheaders know that what happens on the lower Deschutes stays on the lower Deschutes. And I wonโ€™t break that confidence.
However, itโ€™s no secret that the annual steelhead pilgrimage has begun on the Columbia River, which has fish junkies like myself trekking north in hopes of intercepting some of the early arrivals, including the strong push of wild fish that make up a good chunk of the early โ€œrunโ€ on the Columbia and tributaries including the lower Deschutes.

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Calling Bull(snake): Sometimes imitation is the worst form of flattery

Gopher snakes, sometimes called bull snakes (Pituophis catenifer), are as common as garter snakes in some parts of Oregon.

In nature, faking it is a complicated game of survival. Birds that nest on the ground often look like dust and duff. The nighthawksโ€™ eggs and babies resemble small stones while a newly hatched Townsend’s solitaire resembles tiny pieces of charcoal. So effective are bitterns that they seem to vanish amidst stalks of marsh vegetation. Mule deer fawns disappear in dappled sunlight. The gopher snake may carry this form of imitation a little too far.
First,ย  some personal history. Years ago I heard a rumor that a professor (of literature) was teaching a fly-fishing course at a Portland college. The prof reportedly told his students to kill all the gopher snakes they encountered because gopher snakes had crossbred with rattlesnakes and could kill.

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From Flat Water to Fast Water: Take the stand-up paddleboarding basics to the coast

Given that stand-up paddling traces its origins to the Pacific Ocean, itโ€™s worth noting that thereโ€™s much more to the sport than what we see from the banks of the Deschutes River.

Stand-up paddleboarding on flat water is the equivalent of going for a lunch-hour jogโ€”itโ€™s good for you, it probably makes you feel better, but it doesnโ€™t exactly get you into the red zone. As a result, it can be hard to get motivated. You could say the activity is short on โ€˜psyche.โ€™
Wait, before anyone gets their board shorts in a wad, let me say this: getting exercise, no matter the format, is always preferable to getting none at all. Also, thereโ€™s nothing wrong with flat-water stand-up paddle board (SUP) sessions, or flat water anything else for that matter. But given that stand-up paddling traces its origins to the Pacific Ocean, itโ€™s worth noting that thereโ€™s much more to the sport than what we see from the banks of the Deschutes River.

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Spoke-en Word: A look at recent bike races and an update on an old friend

Reflecting on some of the recent bike races and catching up with an old friend.

Anchored by the strong legs and local knowledge of Ian Boswell, the young Bontrager LIVESTRONG team once again showed their depth as they wrapped up the team classification title on Sunday at the conclusion of the Cascade Cycling Classic. Boswell finished thirteenth overall, 1 minute 27 seconds behind overall winner Francisco Mancebo, and was just one of six (!) Bontrager LIVESTRONG riders to finish inside the top 20 in the general classification.
Boswell rode to an impressive second place during the 76-mile McKenzie Pass Road Race, narrowly losing a sprint to Mancebo. Two days later the young riders on Bontrager LIVESTRONG dominated the 92-mile Cascade Lakes Road Race and captured the top three finishing spots. The team, founded by Lance Armstrong and directed by Axel Merckx, truly is a squad โ€œfor the next generation of professional cyclists,โ€ as their Facebook page states.

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No To Be de-Feat-ed: Remembrance rides, radical runs and paddling purgatory

Popular cancer-benefit bike ride, the Tour des Chutes had to go without its biggest proponent, Gary Bonacker this year.

The day when the Tour des Chutes occurs is always Gary Bonacker’s favorite day of the year. This year, however, the popular cancer-benefit bike ride was without its biggest proponent.
Bonacker, the founder of the event and co-owner of Sunnyside Sports, remains in the Intensive Care Unit, suffering from seizures caused by a brain tumor that Bonakcer has lived with for the last nine years. Though Bonacker remains in critical condition after being admitted to the hospital on July 12, the July 14th benefit event went on and, according to event director Leslie Cogswell, it was a smashing success with approximately 1,400 riders participatingโ€”400 more than last year.

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Banding Together: When raptors roam, airports call on specialists before a fatal encounter

Carole is a wildlife biologist with over 25 years of experience working with just about every species of Western bird you can name, but raptors (hawks, falcons, eagles and owls) are her specialty.

Bird strikes that damage, or cause serious problems to aircraft, are nothing new, or particularly rare. A flock of Canada geese struck the engines of a commercial airliner, turning it into a glider. Fortunately, the man upfront was a trained glider pilot and instructor who knew what to do to make a safe landing in the Hudson River without causing injury to his passengers. That incident brought bird strikes into sharp focus at all major airports around the world, including our own Portland International Airport (PDX).
Last Spring, while banding golden eagle nestlings with a team from Oregon Eagle Foundation (OEF), I had the great pleasure of meeting wildlife biologist, Carole Hallett, one of the people who is personally involved in helping to prevent bird strikes at PDX.

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The Paleo Diet: Local crusher Ryan Palo recently became the first Central Oregonian to climb 5.14c at Smith

Palo became just the twelfth person to send the nearly 150-foot-long line, considered by most climbers to be the hardest route in the park and one of the toughest sport climbs in the U.S.

On May 19, Bend rock climber Ryan Palo had a breakthrough.
After competing in the bike leg of the Pole Peddle Paddle, Palo trekked over Misery Ridge to the backside of Smith Rock State Park to once again attempt a long, incredibly hard line on the Monkey Faceโ€”one which had haunted him for over a year. With his completion of Just Do It, a route rated at 5.14c, Palo became just the twelfth person to send the nearly 150-foot-long line, considered by most climbers to be the hardest route in the park and one of the toughest sport climbs in the U.S.

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Time for a Cat Management Plan: Plague case underscores the need to cull outdoor cat population

The recent plague scare means It’s time for cats to not only be managed, but pay their own way as dog-owners do.

The case of what doctors are calling bubonic plague that hit the headlines recently in Bend opens some nasty doors.
From the time it was first identified as the scourge it is, in 1347, it has killed millions of people throughout the world.
In the beginning everyone said it was spread by people coughing on each other, so everyone scattered to get away from the agony of death.ย  That didn’t work because no one had figured out that the horrifying disease wasn’t spread by people coughing on or touching one another, but by a tiny flea that lives on rats. And rats are still trying to live with us.

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