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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Letters,
letters, letters To the Editor:
My brother-in-law and I were
paddling his canoe around Sparks Lake the day before yesterday. Much to
our surprise and sadness it appears, in our opinion, that we all are about
to suddenly lose another magnificent part of our beautiful Oregon scenery.
Sparks Lake has been losing
water every day, since approximately mid-May. The level of the lake is
now down five feet from its former glory. (You can "read" the past four-month
history quite easily by looking at the exposed rocks.) The vast majority
of the lake is now less than one foot deep.
At its current rate of loss
it will be approximately 24 to 30 days before the lake disappears completely.
All that will be left, come December, will be a few puddles, the old dried-up
marsh and a small narrow, what I now will call "Sparks Creek."
Mother Nature has pulled the
plug on that huge, astoundingly gorgeous lake. By canoe, we found two
drains; one small one and one larger one. We could only hear the water
draining through these two large fissures in the volcanic rock.
It "sounds" like the lake
is draining into what seems like an enormous underground cavern.
Please check it out, but hurry.
At the current rate, you have less that a week or so before canoes will
become useless. However, you could now walk the entire lake with a good
pair of boots.
Although it is virtually impossible
to calculate, due to the highly irregular shape of the lake, I would estimate
that possibly up to a million gallons of water drains out of the lake
every day.
The truly sad part is that
all of any future rain and snow melt will never fill the lake back up
so long as it has the capability of draining faster than it can fill.
Our only hope is that Mother Nature puts a plug back in the drain.
Randy Cooper
* *
*
To the Editor:
I don't know who you are,
but I hope you read this message.
You came to Tract O (in Camp
Sherman) in two red-and-white fire engines.
You rearranged our 10-year
supply of cut wood, watered it down and restacked it to save our garage
from fire.
You attached our sprinklers
to our chimneys to save our shake roof.
You put our porch furniture
in the yard and watered down the yard and cottage.
You surrounded our lease line
with a heavy hose and connected it to a pump in the river. The hose had
elevated sprinkler heads that watered the area.
You raked the pine bark into
piles and watered them down.
You did this for all the Tract
O homes and other tracts as well.
Just "Thanks" can never express
our gratitude for saving our cabin and 75 years of memories.
The Tifft, Gribskov, Watson
Family
To the Editor: Not very long ago, I used to be a kindergarten teacher. We taught our students to respect others, to play nice, to keep your hands to yourself. As an adult, I think it's a good idea to live by these rules as well. But sadly, not everyone else does. On August 16, when Andrew "Drake" Gilbert was out with friends in Bend and at the end of the evening, he was assaulted on the dance floor for dancing with a male friend. His jaw was broken in two places and was wired shut for several weeks. The attacker left the bar and the police have yet to find him. As often-time happens in small communities like ours, people are coming together to support Andrew and are working to make sure this does not happen again. Human Dignity Coalition has opened an account in Andrew's name to help raise money to pay his growing medical bills. If you believe in honoring all individuals and celebrating diversity, if you believe that hate crimes should not happen in our town, or in any town, please consider going into your local US Bank and making a contribution to the Andrew Gilbert Donation Account. Or you can send your check made out to Andrew Gilbert to: HDC, P.O. Box 6084, Bend, OR 97708. Please feel free to pass this message along to others in our community. In peace and solidarity, * * * To the Editor: Having lived in Oregon over 60 years -- 13 in Sisters -- we always enjoy on trips up north from Mesa, Arizona, to stop a couple days and see friends (and) have lunch. This year, because of time restraints, we came through town September 22 and I mean through; one five-minute stop at The Nugget to pick up the last issue. Also picked up a copy of "Sisters Oregon Guide 2003-04." While checking the mileage chart in the back, it listed Sisters to Albany as 85 miles; 100 is more accurate. To Corvallis as 96 -- 108 is closer. Sisters is still a place of marvel, but checking home and land prices, we wonder if this area is paradise about to be lost California-style. A big "Hi!" to the Summerfields, Cheathams, Grimsteads and of course to Sylvia and Maggie and glad to see Chester Armstrong is still cuttin' up. Also nice to know that God is still answering prayers for firefighters and everyone's efforts these past weeks. Clayton Garrett |
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