The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current, June 13, 2018, Page 15, Image 15

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Wednesday, June 13, 2018 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon        15
Last (plastic) straw
for local restaurant
PHOTO PROVIDED
Diane Natt-Kelly, Linda Goebel, Carol Dye, Joan Meyer and Rosemary
Norton (not pictured) have been busy preparing for the BBR Art Guild
Garage Sale, which helps fund scholarships for Sisters students.
BBR Art Guild gives to
community in sale
Treasure  hunters  are  on 
the alert for the big garage
sale coming up on June 16 at 
Black Butte Ranch.
Ranch residents are clean-
ing  out  their  garages,  base-
ments, attics and other nooks 
and  crannies  and  donating 
the  results.  Household  fur-
nishings, antiques, art works, 
tools, sports equipment, fur-
niture and much more will be 
available.
Ranch personnel are also 
combing  through  inventory 
and will be selling furniture 
and  other  items  that  are  no 
longer in use.
The sale does much more 
than  provide  an  opportu-
nity for spring cleaning and 
deals on nice stuff. The pro-
ceeds go out into the Sisters 
community.
The  Black  Butte  Ranch 
sale  is  sponsored  by  the 
BBR Art Guild, with the pro-
ceeds  from  donated  items 
providing  scholarships  for 
Sisters  students.  This  year 
the Art  Guild  gave  $10,000 
in  scholarships  as  well  as 
contributing  to  the  art  pro-
grams  at  all  Sisters  public 
schools.
Hours  are  from  8  a.m. 
to  1  p.m.,  at  the  Ranch 
Maintenance  Facility  on 
Geo. McAllister Road.
To   g e t   t h e r e ,   t a k e 
Highway  20  to  the  Camp 
Sherman  intersection,  turn 
left  onto  Geo.  McAllister 
Road  and  follow  the  signs 
three-quarters of a mile to the 
facility.
Habitat for Humanity will 
take any unsold items.
GARAGE SALE
Saturday, June 16, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Local  Hola  restaurants 
will  be  switching  to  biode-
gradable compostable straws 
in each of its Central Oregon 
locations.  The  Mexican-
Peruvian  cuisine  restaurant 
group recently opened a new 
location in Camp Sherman.
Hola  is  championing  the 
fight against the use of plas-
tic straws, as environmental 
activists  estimate  some  500 
million  such  items  being 
used  every  day  in  the  U.S. 
contribute  to  an  increasing 
ecological  toll,  particularly 
on marine life ingesting the 
man-made material.
Hola  founder  Peter 
Lowes  said  the  business 
wanted  to  take  a  lead  as 
an ally for the anti-plastic 
movement. He said: “It is 
something  we  feel  pas-
sionately  about  and  feel 
we  can  no  longer  avoid 
addressing. It’s become a 
global issue, and straws 
are on the leading edge.”
Although straws rep-
resent a small portion of 
the 8 million metric tons 
of  plastic  that  ends  up 
in the ocean every year, 
Lowes  believes  plastic 
straws are an easy way 
to get people started on 
reducing  their  plastic 
use.
He  added:  “Just 
getting  people  to  turn 
down a straw is a gate-
way to a more sustain-
able lifestyle. It’s a sim-
ple  step  that  anybody 
can take to address the global 
plastic  problem.  You  use  a 
straw for 10 minutes, and it 
never goes away.”
Of the 6.9 billion tons of 
plastic  waste  ever  created, 
almost  80  percent  of  it  has 
ended  up  in  landfills  or  the 
environment.
Lowes  added:  “With  the 
increasing problem of plastic 
pollution, and the consequent 
detrimental effect particularly 
on  marine  life,  we  feel  like 
we can play a part in taking 
a relatively small action that 
can make a big difference.”
For more information on 
Hola  visit  www.holabend.
com.
BLUES: Festival 
is partnering with 
local groups
Continued from page 3
$20  of  every  purchase  goes 
to Habitat for Humanity. The 
offer  is  good  through  June 
17.
The  event  features  blues 
legends  John  Mayall  and 
Walter  Trout  along  with 
an  award-winning  lineup 
including:  2017  Soul  Blues 
Male Artist of the Year Curtis 
Salgado; 2016 Contemporary 
Blues  Female  Artist  of  the 
Year  Shemekia  Copeland; 
2016  Album  of  the  Year 
award-winner  The  Cedric 
Burnside  Project;  the  2014 
International Blues Challenge 
winner Mr. Sipp; as well as 
former  Blues  Entertainer  of 
the Year Tommy Castro and 
the Painkillers.
T h e   f e s t i v a l 
will  take  place 
at  Village  Green 
Park  and  Sisters 
Art  Works  (204  W. 
Adams  Ave.)  Friday, 
August  3,  5  p.m.  to 
midnight; and Saturday, 
August  4,  noon  to 
midnight.
Schedule online!
Sarah Conroy,
Chiropractor
ENJOY SUMMERTIME!
Call 541-588-2213
392 E. Main Ave.
SistersChiropractor.com
Located within Bigfoot Wellness
Shena Fields LMT#7439
Harmony Tracy LMT# 21211
ELEVATING Effi STRENGTH
ciency DESIGN
Kolbe’s
K
o l b e ’ s h
high-performance
i g h p e r f o r m a n c e
Forgent™ Series windows and
doors are a must-have for our
Central Oregon weather.
• Proprietary material and thoughtful design
make them simple to install.
• Short lead times make them a perfect
choice for new construction or replacement.
• LakeView MillWorks is the exclusive Central
Oregon distributor.
Visit our showroom: 141 E. Cascade Ave.
The whole second fl oor of the Town Square building | CCB #210187
541-549-0968 | www.lakeviewmillworks.com
541-
541-54