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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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Better Than Your Town: This week Bend’s best are on the hunt hardware

Bend’s elite cyclists are poised to capture some of the most prized titles in cycling over the course of the next week.

Bend’s elite cyclists are poised to capture some of the most prized titles in cycling over the course of the next weekโ€”or coming weeks if weโ€™re talking about Chris Horner. From multi-day endurance slogs, to short and sweet gravity events, to the Tour de France, we have mountain bikers and road racers fighting for glory at the biggest bike races of the year. Here’s a look at who’s doing what, and where they’re doing it. Keep in mind that these guys aren’t just pack fodder; they all have a legitimate shot at the podium or first place in their respective races.

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Going Walkabout: The Chewaucan River is a gem in Oregonโ€™s Outback country

Venturing in the Outback of Central Oregon to the Chewaucan River, the ideal spot for fly fishing.

Itโ€™s easy to miss the Fisher Kingโ€™s fly shop in the postage stamp-sized town of Paisley just beyond Summer Lake.
The small shop is tucked into the corner of a self-storage business on the side of Highway 31 in the heart of the Oregon Outback. In fact, I blew right past it on my way to Lakeview, turning around only after I thought better of trying to navigate the back roads of the Winema-Freemont forest without the benefit of local knowledge. So I whipped a U-turn just outside of Paisley and backtracked.
Iโ€™m glad I did.

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The Wonderous Vole: The amazing world of the modest rodent

Voles play an important role in the Northwest but are a extremely dependable food-source to its predators.

Look at him. He doesn’t look like much, does he? Just a tiny short-tailed mammal about the size of your thumb, of no significance; a mere tidbit to a coyote, and only a tasty snack for a badger.
Great Horned Owls gobble ’em up by the bushel-basket, and a Red-tailed Hawk will wait until almost dark to catch a few for dessertโ€”nothing better than a few voles in your tummy to help with a good night’s sleep.

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Plastic Fantastics: Recreational kayaks rule the waters

Increasing demand for kayaks help locate the perfect spots to begin your kayaking journey.

Ten years ago during an interview at an outdoor industry trade show, a kayak manufacturing company president somewhat sheepishly admitted that, while a high percentage of his companyโ€™s ad budget went to promoting whitewater kayaking, for every one whitewater boat the company sold his company moved another 40 recreational kayaks. Today, that ratio is probably more like 200 to 1. Recreational โ€œrecโ€ kayaks and their longer and faster brethren (day touring and ocean/touring kayaks) seem to be everywhere from lakes, to lazy rivers, to bays, marshes and estuaries.

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Bike Racing Made Better: How Erik Eastland elevated bike races from boring to badass

Erik Eastland’s Blitz to the Barrel shows to be a dramatic twist on traditional bike races.

Innovations are often born out of frustration. You think Henry Ford was psyched about riding around in a horse and buggy? Hell no.
And so it was with Erik Eastland and his now famous beer-drenched bike party, Blitz to the Barrel, an invite only point-to-point bike race that this year carried a $20,000 prize purse.
Eastland, frustrated by the boringness of traditional bike races, sought to bring the party to Bend’s favorite past time.

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