Inside: OSAA floats possible return of multiple state wrestling tournaments » Wednesday, March 30, 2022 Redmond, Oregon • $1 redmondspokesman.com A special good morning to subscriber Glen Duncan @redmondspox Sellout crowd packs High Desert Stampede Spokesmen staff report The High Desert Stampede ro- deo drew top professional rodeo riders from around the country and standing-room-only crowds to the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Cen- ter’s First Interstate Bank Center in Redmond. “It was a real success,” said Denis Fast on Sunday, March 26, empha- sizing the word “real” with a wide grin. Fast is the chairman of the young Redmond organization that put on the rodeo for the fifth year. “It was an action-packed show that was sold out both Friday and Saturday nights ... some 6,500 at- Team roping is a test of speed and precision. Bareback bronc rid- ers hang on for a wild ride during the High Desert Stampede in Red- mond last week. rodeo in the Northwest this season. Last year, attendance was lim- ited due to the safety precau- tions of the COVID-19 tending each night,” he said. It was the first, large professional Bill Bartlett/ photos for The Spokesman pandemic. See Rodeo / P4 REDMOND Central Oregon Ag Show focuses on WATER, DROUGHT Another COVID-19 variant is confirmed State officials expect minor upswing BY GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau organization, Perfect Balance USA, in response to litigation over the Oregon spotted frog, which was listed as threatened under the En- dangered Species Act. A comparatively minor up- swing in COVID-19 cases in Oregon is expected to hit this week, driven by infections of the hyper-contagious BA.2 version of the omicron vari- ant, according to a new state report. The forecast from the Ore- gon Health & Science Univer- sity shows a much lower peak for the new wave of cases, top- ping out at under 300 hospi- talizations per day in the first week of May, then resuming a downward trend until reach- ing current levels again by late June. “The primary forecast shows a slight increase in hospitalized patients as the impacts of BA2 and reduced COVID restric- tions are experienced,” said the report written by Dr. Peter Graven, the chief COVID-19 forecaster at OHSU. The variant was found in two wastewater samples from Redmond on Feb. 7 and 14, said Tim Heider, a public in- formation officer at the Ore- gon Health Authority. “This was likely an introduc- tion with limited transmission and at the time (the sub-vari- ant) did not overtake the (main variant),” Heider said. “The wastewater detection allows experts to estimate the propor- tion of each variant circulating in a community.” See Ag Show / P4 See COVID-19 / P3 Submitted photo Clint Johnson demonstrates what a working dog can do during the Central Oregon Ag Show. A BY GEORGE PLAVEN • For the Spokesman n estimated 2,100 people from across the Northwest attended the inaugural edition of the Central Oregon Agricul- tural Show last weekend at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond. The event came as farmers and ranchers in the region face another year of paralyzing drought, with water short- ages projected to bring an abbreviated growing season and major economic damage due to crop losses. Water was a central theme among the show’s speakers and guests, who discussed how to get the most out of every drop and what can be done going forward to strike a balance between the needs of irrigators, fish and wild- life. “I think there needs to be a lot of attention paid to Central Oregon right now,” said JoHanna Symons, a rancher from nearby Madras. “We’re in a pretty catastrophic sit- uation.” Symons raises cattle and runs a commercial feedlot with her husband, Jeremy. In 2016, the couple co-founded a nonprofit The Spokesman uses recycled newsprint Wednesday 3/30 Events in and around Redmond Ochoco Preserve Tour: Join the Deschutes Land Trust and Jason Grant for a tour of Ochoco Preserve; 10 a.m.-Noon; Whychus Canyon Preserve, Off Goodrich Road, Sisters; de- schuteslandtrust.org or 541-330-0017. Thursday 3/31 The Redmond Spokesman welcomes event information for its community calendar. Submissions are limited to nonprofit, free and live entertainment events. Deadline is 5 p.m. Thursday for the following Wednesday’s paper. Items are published on a space-available basis and may be edited. Contact us at news@redmondspokesman.com or fax 541-548-3203. Alicia Viani Band — Range Music Series: The local duo will tell lyrical and instrumental stories; 5:30-8:30 p.m.; free; Brasada Ranch, 16986 SW Brasada Ranch Road, Powell Butte; brasada. com or 855-318-4960. The New Climate War — The Fight to Take Back Our Planet: Join renowned climate scientist, Michael E. Mann as he explores how to collectively address the climate crisis; 6:30- 8:30 p.m.; $25 — $75, students free; The Riverhouse on the Deschutes, 3075 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; skeptoid.org or 541- 389-3111. Friday 4/1 Coffee Clatter: Join Friday morning for business network- ing and check out the new location for Bethlehem Inn Red- mond and hear about other great things they are up to; 8:30- 9:30 a.m.; free; Bethlehem Inn, 517 NW Birch Ave,, Redmond; visitredmondoregon.com or 541-322-8768. See Calendar / P3 INDEX Puzzles ............. 2 Obituaries ....4-5 Flashback ........ 6 Classifieds ....... 6 Volume 112, No. 31 USPS 778-040 U|xaIICGHy02326kzU