Sisters actors film comedy sketches page 10 Your Store marks 30 years in Sisters page 11 Sisters celebrates the fiber arts page 33 The Nugget Vol. XL No. 27 P OSTAL CUSTOMER News and Opinion from Sisters, Oregon www.NuggetNews.com Wednesday, July 5, 2017 Volunteers make quilt show come alive By Jim Cornelius News Editor It seems like magic — more than a thousand quilts suddenly appearing on the buildings of downtown Sisters in an explosion of creativity and color on the second Saturday of July. And it is a kind of magic — but it involves a whole lot more than the waving of a wand. It’s the coming together of hundreds of vol- unteers, hundreds of quilters and a whole lot of organiza- tion and effort. Last week the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show (SOQS) event office — located this year at Earthwood Homes in the Sisters Industrial Park — was stacked high with a portion of what will be a record 1,497 quilts, which a cadre of volunteers will hang early on the morning of July 8. Volunteers must sort, cata- logue and assign a space for PHOTO BY JIM CORNELIUS Virginia Bradley has hung her quilts in every Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show since 1976. each quilt. That process used to be conducted entirely with paper and pencil, but now is made considerably less Blaze damages home east of Sisters Cloverdale Rural Fire Protection District crews, joined by Sisters-Camp Sherman Fire District, were dispatched to a structure fire on Cascade Estates Drive off Highway 20, on Tuesday, June 27, just before 5 p.m. Cloverdale crews arrived to find a fire burning on the second-floor exterior of the 2,200-square-foot house and extending into the attic, fanned by strong winds. A neighbor who reported hearing an explosion noticed the fire, called 911 and tried to put out the fire with a garden hose, but it was too far involved by that time to extinguish it. The rental home was occupied by several people, who had just left a short time Inside... earlier. Mutual-aid support was sought from the Crooked River Ranch and Bend fire departments to relieve fatigued crews, as the fire- fighting and mop-up had fire- fighters on scene for close to four hours. Five engines, three water tenders and two brush trucks were called out while the Oregon Department of Forestry checked the area for any embers that could have sparked a wildfire. Crews were successful in preventing the spread into the adjacent brush. Fire Chief Thad Olsen estimated damage to the home at more than $80.000, See BLAZE on page 18 arduous by use of a comput- erized bar code system devel- oped by former executive director Ann Richardson and PRE-SORTED STANDARD ECRWSS U.S. POSTAGE PAID Sisters, OR Permit No. 15 computer expert Gary Miller. “It’s so elegant,” SOQS See SHOW on page 30 Firefighters mop-up season’s first fire Firefighters finished burn- out operations and began mop-up, extinguishing hot spots and fire along the perim- eter of the Sheep Springs Fire in the Metolius Basin north- west of Sisters, last Friday. The lightning-sparked fire started on June 27. Crews were able to suc- cessfully complete burnout operations using existing roads to create a containment perimeter. Interior areas will continue to burn, producing smoke in the area. Fire officials managed the Sheep Springs Fire for full suppression using existing roads to create containment See FIRE on page 35 USFS may limit wilderness access Outdoor enthusiasts are loving portions of Sisters Country to death. The U.S. Forest Service is proposing a program to limit access to wilderness areas in order to preserve the wilderness expe- rience in the face of tremen- dous growth in use. Under the proposal, visi- tors to the Mount Jefferson, Mount Washington, Three Sisters, Waldo Lake and Diamond Peak wilderness areas would need to get a permit in advance. Such programs are common in California to limit crowds and the environmental dam- age that comes with them. Backpackers spending the night would need a permit. Day-hikers would need a permit on a number of popu- lar trails in Sisters Country, including Pole Creek, Chush Falls, Park Meadow, PHOTO BY JIM CORNELIUS Tam McArthur Rim would be one of the trails requiring a permit under a Forest Service proposal to control use. T h r e e C r e e k M e a d o w, Tam McArthur Rim, Tam McArthur Rim Horse Trail, Broken Top and Black Crater. In examining use trends, the Forest Service concluded that “overall visitor-use trends across the project area has increased tremendously See USFS on page 29 Letters/Weather ................ 2 Sisters Naturalist ............... 8 Movies & Entertainment ....13 Classifieds .................. 27-29 Real Estate .................32-40 Meetings ........................... 3 Announcements ................12 Crossword ....................... 26 Bunkhouse Chronicle ....... 32 Paw Prints ....................... 36