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All in a Day’s Work: Extreme skiing hero blows through Bend on Ring of Fire quest

Chris Davenport plans to take on 17 different slopes during the Ring of Fire Volcano Tour.

If you were looking for a free hotdog and beer last week, you could have done far worse than swing by the Great Outdoors parking lot off Century Drive, where professional skier Chris Davenport had splayed his 44-foot-long RV across six parking spots and fired up the grill. Inside the jet-black beastโ€”a Ford emblazoned with Audi stickersโ€”Bendโ€™s mustachioed mountain guide David Marchi and Jonas Tarlen, who runs Three Sisters Backcountry, Inc., sat on couches and talked about big days in the mountains.
โ€œItโ€™s supposed to be really nice out there tomorrow,โ€ Davenport offered, having consulted a customized weather sheet a Boulder-based snow guru has been sending him daily. โ€œHis reports are amazingly accurate.โ€

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Hot Spot: Despite advances in safety, power lines remain a threat to raptors

A spot on a power line might not be the best place for a bird to take a break what with the high possibilities of electrocution.

Birds have no inkling as to the hazards of getting too close to high-powered electricity. As a result, if a bird touches two or more wires, the meeting is fatal. Electricity in wires is similar to controlled lightning; the current is always searching for a way back to the earth. A bird standing in that path is a conductor and will be fried. Periodโ€”exclamation point!
When wires were first attached to poles to carry electrical energy to far-flung places, not many people gave much thought to what happened to raptors when the wires crossed. Blam! Curtains for said bird. It wasn’t until it began to cost money to put those circuits back together that power companies began to do something about transmission wires that killed birds.

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Welcome to Summer! (Almost): The approaching summer season brings with it a change in teams for one local athlete as well as heaps of events for your sporting pleasure

There’s plenty of competitions happening in the area to help kick the summer into gear.

Bend's Ryan Trebon is not only one of the fastest cyclocross racers in the world, he's a darn nice guy. The 6-foot-5-inch 31-year-old finished last year ranked 15th on the world 'cross standings and his tireless work ethic, large smile, and ability to generate otherworldly power on the bike has earned him the respect of both his fellow racers and his fans. But in his final years with longtime sponsor, Kona, Trebon says racing and training had become stale. And he will be the first to admit that his flagging enthusiasm showed in both his attitude and his results. His regular frustration on the race course earned him the nickname, Tre-Boo-Hoo. Needing a change, the lanky bike racer and his longtime mechanic, Dusty Labarr, struck out on their own seeking new sponsorship and improved results.

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Rides of Spring: The High Desert's new, revamped and little explored mtb trails

Mrazek Trail offers ideal terrain for a perfect mountain biking session and excellent views along the way.

Because it was so mild during of the heart of winter, tireless local mountain bike trail builder Phil Meglasson was able to make substantial progress (along with help from his son Eric Meglasson and local pro riders Adam Craig and Carl Decker among others) on an additional quarter mile of whoops on the Mrazek Trail. This new section of whoops joins the existing whoops just past the of the start current section and runs up along the same old streambed.
To get to the start of the new whoops section, ride up Mrazek and about 25 yards past the corkscrew downhill, look off to the right. There you'll see the trail a few yards away to your right. It's marked with a new “double black diamond” sign.

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A History of Cruelty: Problems surrounding Oregon's fur trapping are nothing new

The high desert’s history of trapping and killing wild animals is a concern to the people of Central Oregon.

By now everyone is familiar with the push to change the rules on recreational trapping in Oregon – a movement that got started thanks mostly to the trapper who left a deadly trap so close to a hiking trail on the banks of the Metolius River that a hiker’s dog stumbled into it and was almost crushed to death. Since then, newspaper and TV stations have published more than two dozen stories focusing on the current regulatory system.
That 1,200 or so people can kill – for fun and profit and largely without regulation – the wildlife treasures known as “furbearers” has always been a mystery to me.

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Time Capsule: Aging film canister reveals a glimpse of Smith Rock climbing history

A film canister discovered on Smith Rock reveals a list of dates and climbing entries.

For the Belden family – Chip, Julie and their three children – outdoor adventure outings are an integral part of family life. Over the past several years some of their outings have started with a canoe ride across the Crooked River to the Deschutes Land Trust property adjacent to The Ranch at The Canyons and Smith Rock State Park. Safely across, the family hikes up into the pinnacles area to, as Chip Belden puts it, “explore, see cool geological formations and keep an eye out for rare plant species.”
While combing the area this spring, Julie Belden stumbled onto something unusual – an aged, yellow film canister. After discovering it and gathering the family around, Chip, a photographer, shook the canister to see if there was any film in it.

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Getting Started Loving Nature: Chickadees lead the way

Learning the importance of nature sometimes starts from a small experience.

That’s the way the love of birds – and ultimately all of nature – usually begins; the surprise of discovering that a gray jay will come to you for a hand-out. At that moment, two things happen: there’s a link in the heart between child and bird, and at the same time, the person must ensure that he or she does no harm. That means providing the animal with food that will be in balance with a normal diet, something to which some people do not adhere.
I would like to say this is how my love for all of nature began, but it wasn’t. I shot and killed a beautiful owl that flew over my head just to prove I was a good shot. How things changed when I proudly brought it back to show to my uncles – especially when I met my grandfather instead – who asked why I shot the owl.

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Ski Crater Lake: An out and back in Oregon's national park

A little bit of what to expect when skiing around the wonders of Crater Lake.

On June 12, 1853, three members of a mining expedition searching for the legendary “Lost Cabin” gold mine stumbled upon a “deep blue lake” in southern Oregon. Roughly 50 years later President Theodore Roosevelt created Crater Lake National Park on May 22, 1902. And, last Thursday, I turned 40. I couldn't think of a better way to beat back the middle-aged blues than tackling Oregon's crown jewel of a national park.
Ski hopes and dreams
There are many numbers that illustrate the magnificence of Crater Lake. It's 594 meters deep with 4.6 trillion gallons of water. But, the only number in my head was the 31 miles around the lake.

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Human-Powered Fun in the High Desert: Running (and winning) the Horse Butte 10 Miler, again. This time, faster.

Runner and Bend’s fastest cowboy, Max King wins the Horse Butte 10 Miller yet again.

Once again locals reigned supreme at the 200-person Horse Butte 10-Miler, an early season trail race staged on Bend’s eastside on April 7.
Bend’s fastest cowboy, Max King, who toed the line sporting a thin white pearl-snap western shirt and cut off jean shorts, blazed to the finish line in record time this year, winning the 10-mile race in 54 minutes, 7 seconds. Katie Caba, also of Bend and wearing a more traditional running kit, was the fastest woman of the day, clocking in at 1 hour, 5 minutes, 28 seconds.

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Trail Blazing: Early spring conditions abound on area trails

Conditions of the trails surrounding Central Oregon are continuously changing in the spring weather.

They go from town. Pedaling down the shoulder, they ride side-by-side because traffic is minimal and the cars that do pass have bikes on top. The woman is local, but the two men are from out of town. She takes a left toward the trailhead and they follow, passing a parking lot half filled with dirty Subarus and Toyota pickups. A 1984 VW Westfalia the color of burnt toast sits off in one corner with the sliding door open, giving the riders a quick glimpse of goose-bumped skin as someone shimmies out of their shorts.

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