Posted inNews

Ray Lamontagne, Ben Harper, Garrison Keillor added to Summer Lineup

We’ve had an embargoed announcement in the can for a bit now, but given that it’s up on the Les Schwab Amphitheater’s website, we figure we can let the cat out of the bag: Ray LaMontagne is coming to Bend on September 6.
LaMontagne most recently released the excellent God Willing and the Creek Don’t Rise, another installment in the songwriter’s smooth indie-Americana.

Posted inNews

The Columbia River Gorge: Reveling in greenery

One sure way to beat the Central Oregon weather blahs and the typical bland high-desert spring landscape is to head to the Columbia River Gorge where spring, although over a month late this year, is arriving. And with its arrival comes brilliant, almost iridescent green foliage, wildflowers and waterfalls crashing with runoff.
A recent ride and hike four-day trip revealed the Gorge at its best. The Oregon side of the Gorge is densely forested and verdant, in contrast to the Washington side, which is browner, sparsely timbered with wild oaks yet spotted with wildflowers and greenery in the gullies cut by small streams and springs.
Nowhere is the Washington side displayed better than at Coyote Wall and the Syncline Trail near Bingen. Here, the hills are alive with wildflowers.
Mountain biking the Syncline is interesting. Like just about every mountain bike ride in The Gorge, you’re riding either uphill or downhill. In our case, we rode well over an hour climbing more than 1,000 feet on the seemingly endless switchback trail to Catherine Creek.
From there we doubled back taking a side trail down what’s known as “Little Maui”. This trail parallels a mountain stream that slices through between two ridges and tumbles over dozens of waterfalls. And all this with spectacular views out over The Gorge toward Hood River and environs on the Columbia River’s southern banks.
A steady diet of riding the Syncline and Little Maui (it’s rock strewn and dicey in parts) would make some give up mountain biking for life. But making the ride once a year works when spring is in the air.

Posted inNews

Bend’s own Allie Brosh of Hyperbole and a Half Lands a Book Deal

One of the funniest people in all of the Internet, Allie Brosh — who I profiled this fall — announced yesterday that she has landed a book deal. Why should you care? Because she lives in Bend, Oregon, that’s why!
Brosh, whose comic blog, Hyperbole and a Half, has quickly gained millions of views since she launched it less than two years ago, says the book will be released sometime in the fall of 2012.

Posted inNews

Cinco de Mayo Video from Last Night: Ozomatli, Rubblebucket, Haaby

How’s everyone feeling today? Judging from the explosion of revelry downtown last night for the Amalia’s street party featuring Ozomatli, Rubblebucket and Todd Haaby, I’m guessing there’s a few people moving a little slow.
But it was worth it, right? The party, which culminated with an insanely packed crowd freaking out to Ozomatli, was one of the craziest (and coolest) things I’ve seen during my time in Bend.

Sign up for newsletters

Get the best of The Source - Bend, Oregon directly in your email inbox.

Sending to:

Gift this article