The BulleTin • Friday, July 30, 2021 B5 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY SATURDAY TONIGHT HIGH 95° LOW 67° Hot with sunshine and patchy clouds Very warm with sun and clouds ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record 97° 86° 100° in 1929 59° 50° 30° in 1917 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace Record 0.23" in 1984 Month to date (normal) 0.16" (0.41") Year to date (normal) 3.09" (5.95") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.05" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Sat. Sun 5:51am/8:32pm 5:52am/8:30pm Moon none/12:59pm 12:03am/2:02pm Mercury 5:37am/8:33pm 5:44am/8:36pm Venus 8:43am/9:59pm 8:45am/9:57pm Mars 7:51am/9:35pm 7:50am/9:32pm Jupiter 9:28pm/7:55am 9:24pm/7:50am Saturn 8:36pm/6:13am 8:32pm/6:09am Uranus 12:13am/2:28pm 12:10am/2:24pm Last New First Full Jul 31 Aug 8 Aug 15 Aug 22 Tonight's sky: 2021 marks the 50th an- niversary of the Apollo 15 lunar landing on July 30, 1971. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 8 8 5 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. POLLEN COUNT Trees Absent Weeds Low Source: Oregon Allergy Associates TUESDAY 85° 61° Rather cloudy and not as hot EAST: Hot Friday with plenty of sunshine. Also areas of smoke and haze. Thunder- storms are likely Saturday. CENTRAL: Hazy sunshine and hot Friday. A mix of clouds and sun Saturday with a shower or thun- derstorm likely. WEST: Sunshine Fri- day with near-record heat. Avoid strenuous outdoor activities if at all possible. 90° 60° Sunshine and patchy clouds Mostly cloudy and warmer Astoria 73/57 Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER As of 7 a.m. yesterday Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie 41364 75% Wickiup 15034 8% Crescent Lake 17356 20% Ochoco Reservoir 5528 12% Prineville 51959 35% River fl ow Station Cu.ft./sec. Deschutes R. below Crane Prairie 274 Deschutes R. below Wickiup 1090 Deschutes R. below Bend 93 Deschutes R. at Benham Falls 1400 Little Deschutes near La Pine 72 Crescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 74 Crooked R. above Prineville Res. 0 Crooked R. below Prineville Res. 202 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 32 Ochoco Ck. below Ochoco Res. 3 -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the T-storms Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: USDA Forest Service Lee Continued from B3 Even though the pain in Lee’s foot eased — funny how it seemed to get better the more she trained — she arrived in Ja- pan figuring her best shot was at a silver medal. Sure, she’d beaten good friend and reign- ing Olympic champion Simone Biles during the final day of the U.S. Olympic Trials last month, but that was an anomaly, right? Then Biles opted out of the all-around competition to fo- cus on her mental health fol- lowing an eight-year run atop the sport. Everything was on the ta- ble. Gold included. Lee took it with a brilliant set on uneven bars, a nervy performance on beam and a floor exercise that made up for in execution what it might have lacked in aggres- sion. Her total of 57.433 points was just enough to top An- drade, who earned the first gymnastics all-around medal by a Latin American athlete but missed out on gold when she stepped out of bounds twice during her floor routine. Russian gymnast Angelina Melnikova added bronze to the gold she won in the team final. American and future Or- egon State gymnast Jade Carey, who joined the competition after Biles pulled out, finished eighth. Biles’ decision to sit out led to the jarring sight of the gym- nast considered the greatest of all time cheering on Lee and the rest of the 24-woman field from the stands with the gold that’s been hers for so long now in play for everyone else. Still, Lee did her best to not think about the stakes. She FaceTimed with her father John — who was paralyzed from the chest down during a freak accident in Minnesota just days before the 2019 na- tional championships — before the meet, just like always. He told her to relax. So she did. Or at least, she tried. Lee admitted she was getting “in her head” a little bit while Today Hi/Lo/W 95/76/s 73/53/pc 71/50/pc 89/68/pc 61/54/c 96/77/pc 83/63/pc 95/75/pc 87/60/s 94/69/c 98/76/s 88/63/pc 96/75/pc 81/60/pc 83/59/pc 69/54/pc 67/55/pc 64/51/t 96/78/pc 95/71/t 95/72/pc 86/59/t 76/61/pc 81/62/s 71/54/s 91/64/pc 86/70/t 99/75/pc 99/77/s 77/57/pc 75/51/pc 93/77/t 98/79/s 78/59/pc 95/63/s 84/66/pc 74/57/pc 81/62/s 92/72/s 74/54/c 86/65/s 73/52/t 75/55/pc 75/59/s 93/68/t 83/58/s 79/53/pc 97/65/s 88/78/pc 94/77/t 97/73/pc 79/62/pc 98/77/s 95/76/s Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 69/59/sh 101/83/s 64/52/pc 113/87/pc 92/80/sh 79/69/t 89/79/s 77/64/pc 66/50/t 92/66/s 57/44/s 90/81/t 101/78/s 81/58/pc 90/78/t 66/54/r 66/56/c 80/61/t 69/46/pc 90/83/t 94/78/s 84/71/s 65/41/s 65/62/pc 79/61/s 66/56/r 96/61/s 85/80/t Saturday Hi/Lo/W 97/78/pc 77/60/s 71/54/s 89/67/t 63/57/c 95/75/t 77/68/s 95/75/s 82/61/s 93/66/t 95/75/t 90/55/s 87/71/t 77/61/pc 78/63/s 71/62/pc 74/58/s 69/49/c 94/77/t 91/71/pc 94/72/pc 77/57/t 81/65/pc 76/60/pc 76/61/s 78/59/t 78/65/t 95/76/t 98/76/t 78/59/pc 73/52/pc 94/77/t 98/80/s 77/61/pc 78/61/t 79/64/t 79/63/t 78/54/t 93/73/c 79/55/c 83/55/pc 75/54/t 78/61/t 79/59/t 86/67/pc 79/59/s 77/56/s 97/66/t 88/77/pc 95/77/t 93/73/pc 74/60/pc 97/75/t 95/77/t City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfi eld, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 71/50/0.00 98/76/0.00 87/75/0.01 106/87/0.00 87/66/0.00 97/74/0.00 96/74/0.00 82/65/0.00 92/75/0.15 89/70/0.50 94/77/0.00 92/79/0.74 85/72/0.11 85/74/0.00 95/73/0.00 94/81/Tr 77/71/0.19 81/70/0.53 91/73/0.04 96/73/0.00 95/79/0.04 94/75/0.31 114/84/0.00 86/77/0.81 81/69/0.49 104/88/0.00 80/65/0.69 73/52/0.73 79/63/0.11 93/68/0.00 87/62/0.00 96/63/0.15 90/70/0.15 75/57/0.32 101/64/0.00 97/80/0.00 91/70/0.02 94/76/0.51 78/68/0.00 72/57/0.00 82/61/0.00 86/61/0.00 91/73/0.00 90/59/0.00 88/71/0.00 96/64/0.00 94/72/0.00 87/80/0.48 96/79/0.06 99/78/0.00 87/73/0.64 97/75/0.00 100/62/0.00 112/86/0.15 Today Saturday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 74/58/pc 75/56/pc 92/73/t 83/67/t 73/54/pc 78/61/t 93/79/t 95/79/t 84/61/t 76/61/c 91/71/t 82/63/pc 100/77/s 99/78/s 84/64/pc 84/63/pc 87/66/pc 78/65/sh 76/59/pc 81/60/t 98/78/pc 96/76/pc 90/79/sh 91/79/t 74/61/s 82/66/t 82/63/pc 84/63/t 93/68/t 90/70/pc 96/81/pc 95/80/t 82/59/pc 76/64/s 86/60/pc 81/64/s 90/75/t 82/71/pc 96/74/pc 97/74/s 86/70/t 83/64/t 92/76/t 93/76/pc 102/85/t 105/84/pc 80/64/pc 75/64/c 84/61/pc 79/63/s 101/82/t 101/85/t 75/52/s 76/56/s 77/55/pc 76/56/pc 83/58/pc 77/59/pc 94/71/t 87/72/pc 79/58/t 87/56/s 92/69/pc 86/65/t 90/67/pc 82/68/s 69/52/pc 72/58/pc 99/60/pc 91/61/pc 86/68/t 75/67/t 90/70/t 89/70/t 93/77/pc 94/77/s 77/69/pc 78/66/pc 72/57/pc 70/56/pc 83/60/pc 80/59/pc 86/60/pc 84/58/t 97/79/s 96/77/t 90/66/s 89/63/c 73/61/t 83/57/pc 100/72/s 102/75/pc 94/73/pc 94/69/t 91/81/t 92/81/t 95/74/t 95/76/t 99/78/s 100/73/s 88/65/s 81/67/s 99/76/s 98/70/s 105/75/s 103/77/c 101/82/t 104/83/t prepping for her bar routine, the one that’s currently the hardest in the world. She didn’t exactly look nervous. The 15.300 the judges rewarded her for a series of intricate connections and releases tied Andrade’s near-perfect Cheng vault for the highest score of the night. Yet it wasn’t Lee’s brilliance Thibault Camus/AP Fans watch as Teniel Campbell of Trinidad And Tobago (66), right, Amanda Spratt of Australia (18), and Jiajun Sun of China (61), compete during the women’s cycling road race at the Olympics Sunday in Oyama, Japan. her hero, Yuto Horigome, and the rest of the men arriving for competition. When the secu- rity guards inevitably showed up to shoo away Nakamura and her friend, 8-year-old Sora Yamagishi, the sprightly youngster in the blue Nike skateboarding cap kept slip- ping away. “Some people scold me sev- eral times,” Nakamura said, “so I have to hide when I see these people.” 70/55/0.38 106/82/0.00 59/50/0.00 111/86/0.00 93/81/0.12 77/74/1.10 90/81/0.00 77/63/0.00 67/50/0.10 88/68/0.00 55/39/0.00 91/82/0.04 100/79/0.00 82/61/0.00 90/77/0.19 63/50/0.04 70/55/0.00 82/59/0.06 69/43/0.00 91/84/1.05 95/77/0.00 86/69/0.00 64/42/0.00 65/61/0.00 79/63/0.00 72/55/0.00 99/70/0.00 83/77/0.12 67/57/pc 100/82/s 63/48/pc 115/89/pc 91/79/t 89/68/s 89/79/s 75/59/pc 67/50/t 87/65/pc 57/44/s 91/82/s 102/79/s 89/61/pc 90/78/t 66/52/sh 63/52/sh 76/59/c 70/48/pc 88/82/t 95/76/s 86/73/s 66/43/s 65/62/pc 73/60/s 70/57/sh 82/55/pc 85/80/t Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw 105/87/0.00 76/56/0.05 68/61/0.18 77/62/0.02 68/57/0.00 91/79/0.00 90/79/0.00 94/79/0.00 63/55/0.57 66/57/0.11 72/57/0.00 64/61/0.14 87/70/0.00 73/32/0.00 54/42/0.00 86/77/0.05 93/79/0.00 94/79/0.39 90/81/0.00 70/59/0.15 65/47/0.00 97/81/0.35 90/79/0.00 87/77/0.05 81/66/0.13 77/61/0.00 83/64/0.00 79/64/0.01 107/84/pc 70/55/t 67/52/pc 73/60/t 69/53/c 91/80/s 89/80/t 94/79/pc 74/60/r 67/48/pc 75/58/pc 65/59/pc 88/70/s 71/33/s 53/43/pc 86/70/pc 95/79/pc 94/80/t 91/79/t 67/54/sh 67/51/s 98/82/t 88/80/s 86/76/pc 67/53/s 81/63/s 89/66/t 79/58/pc 100/85/pc 75/57/t 72/58/pc 75/62/pc 74/53/c 91/80/t 89/80/t 94/78/pc 62/52/sh 73/56/pc 73/58/pc 68/61/pc 88/74/s 73/37/s 61/47/pc 92/72/pc 91/77/t 89/80/t 88/79/t 69/55/sh 75/60/pc 93/82/t 91/81/s 89/77/pc 69/61/sh 79/64/pc 80/64/sh 83/58/pc that made the difference but her guts. She nearly came off the balance beam while exe- cuting a wolf turn — basically a seated spin — needed to suc- tion cup her toes to the 4-inch slab of wood to stay on. Her score of 13.833 moved her in front of Andrade heading into the floor exercise. Going first, Lee opted for a Brazil,” she said. The gold, however, remains in possession of the Ameri- cans. Lee’s victory marked the fifth straight by a U.S. woman, with the past three Olympic champions all being women of color. Biles and 2012 gold medal- ist Gabby Douglas are Black. Lee’s parents are Hmong, an ethnic group who have histor- ically lived in the mountains of Southeast Asia. Lee’s parents emigrated from Laos to Min- nesota, which has the largest concentration of Hmong in the U.S. A large group of friends and family gathered in Min- neapolis to watch her make history. She hopes the image of a Hmong standing in front of the world and on top of her sport resonates in a commu- nity she sometimes feels can be too restrictive. “I want people to know that you can reach your dreams and you can just do what you want to do,” she said. “Because you never know what’s going to happen in the end.” Others managed to find vantage points to watch skate- boarding, too, and they were richly rewarded. Not only did Horigome win the men’s street event, Momiji Nishiya took gold and Funa Nakayama bronze in the women’s event. “I love skateboarding and follow all Japanese top skat- ers,” said Tamura, who works for a Tokyo staffing agency and managed to catch some of the kickflips and railstands through binoculars. Were fans bummed they couldn’t get in the venue? Maybe get a little closer to the athletes? “To be honest,” Tamura said, “I couldn’t get a ticket, so I am not that shocked. But in these circumstances, the deci- sion makes sense, although it is sad.” Shogo Miyamoto, a free- lancer from Kyoto, also thought the decision to ban spectators was correct. But that hasn’t stopped him from try- ing to breathe in the Olympic atmosphere. He arrived in To- kyo on the second full day of competition and tried to get a glimpse of a few of the venues, then planned to head down the coast to catch some sailing. “I wasn’t really interested in sports,” Miyamoto said. “But the Olympics is something that you wouldn’t have in your home country twice in your life. Maybe not even once. That’s why I wanted to come and explore the venues.” There are still plenty of op- portunities, too, for the most intrepid of fans. With the right equipment and and a little bit of gump- tion, golf fans might be able to catch a glimpse of Masters champion Hideki through the trees lining the East Course at Kasumigaseki Country Club. At Odaiba Marine Park, where a few souls braved the rain to watch the triathlon this week, long-distance swimmers will compete in the marathon. Speaking of marathons, the track and field marathon will take place next week in Odori Park in Sapporo, about 700 miles northeast of Tokyo, where temperatures should be slightly cooler. That could mean sightings of reigning Olympic champion Eliud Kip- choge, Kenya’s marathon world record-holder Brigid Kosgei or American four-time Olympian Galen Rupp. Technically speaking, fans are prohibited from lining the route. But good luck policing 26.2 miles (42.2 kilometers) of road. Those unwilling to run afoul of the law can catch the final week of cycling, which will shift to the velodrome in Izu for track cycling. Its location in the Shizuoka prefecture, like the mountain bike course and the road race finish at Fuji In- ternational Speedway, falls out- side the spectator ban, mean- ing up 1,800 people will be able to squeeze inside. Good for the fans. Good for the athletes missing their sup- port, too. “Initially I was quite gut- ted. Without fans completely would have been different,” said Britain’s Laura Kenny, a four-time Olympic champion in cycling. “Would they have played crowd noise? Could they have chosen the London crowd? It wouldn’t have felt as exciting as it could have been. I’m glad to have some people coming in.” Elizabeth Flores/Star Tribune Continued from B3 jetties near the surf zone that blocked much of the compe- tition. Over at Ariake Urban Sports Park, a dazzling stadium setup that would have seated 7,000 spectators for the Olympic de- but of skateboarding, 8-year- old Ayane Nakamura was doing ollies on her “Peanuts” skateboard outside the venue. She had come with her mother, Rie, and camped out- side at 7 a.m. in hopes of seeing Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 97/73/0.00 Akron 84/70/0.01 Albany 70/53/0.32 Albuquerque 92/70/0.02 Anchorage 62/55/0.00 Atlanta 94/77/0.03 Atlantic City 79/72/0.30 Austin 94/71/0.00 Baltimore 90/72/1.38 Billings 90/68/0.00 Birmingham 94/72/0.00 Bismarck 81/60/0.00 Boise 99/70/0.00 Boston 81/66/Tr Bridgeport, CT 79/70/0.33 Buffalo 79/64/0.35 Burlington, VT 75/54/0.01 Caribou, ME 76/46/0.00 Charleston, SC 93/73/0.00 Charlotte 94/69/0.00 Chattanooga 95/71/0.00 Cheyenne 87/63/0.00 Chicago 88/70/0.17 Cincinnati 89/71/0.36 Cleveland 85/70/0.04 Colorado Springs 92/63/0.00 Columbia, MO 95/75/0.00 Columbia, SC 96/73/Tr Columbus, GA 98/73/0.00 Columbus, OH 88/70/0.56 Concord, NH 77/52/0.94 Corpus Christi 94/74/0.00 Dallas 98/77/0.00 Dayton 89/73/0.01 Denver 95/68/0.00 Des Moines 93/78/0.01 Detroit 87/74/0.21 Duluth 77/63/0.00 El Paso 92/71/0.00 Fairbanks 71/56/0.00 Fargo 84/55/0.00 Flagstaff 79/57/Tr Grand Rapids 85/73/0.08 Green Bay 81/70/0.09 Greensboro 95/71/Tr Harrisburg 83/71/0.01 Hartford, CT 78/66/0.13 Helena 96/70/Tr Honolulu 88/77/0.05 Houston 97/79/Tr Huntsville 95/70/0.00 Indianapolis 89/73/Tr Jackson, MS 96/73/0.00 Jacksonville 91/75/Tr routine with three tumbling passes instead of four, hoping better execution would over- ride any potential tenths she surrendered by not doing a fourth pass. Her 13.700 was steady, but it left an opening for Andrade. The 21-year-old Brazilian, two years removed from a third surgery to repair a torn ACL in her knee, had the best floor score of the contenders during qualifying. Yet she bounded out of bounds with both feet at the end of her first tumbling pass. And her right foot stepped off the white mat and onto the sur- rounding blue carpet. Needing a 13.802 to win, Andrade received a 13.666 in- stead. Not that she particularly cared. She wasn’t even sure she would make it to Tokyo un- til she won the all-around at the Pan American Champi- onships two months ago. She was in tears as she watched her country’s flag raised during an Olympic gymnastics ceremony for the first time. “This medal represents all Shyenne Lee, left, the older sister of Olympian Sunisa Lee, reacts along- side family and friends as they watch the American clinch gold in the women’s gymnastics all-around Thursday in Oakdale, Minnesota. Spectators On the way to the opening ceremony, thousands lined the street to cheer for the buses, even though they had no idea who was riding inside. They held up signs that read “Wel- come to Tokyo,” despite pub- lic sentiment that has run strongly against the staging of the Games. When drones rose above the stadium, they were oohing and ahhing and tak- ing pictures, just as they would have been watching their be- loved Shohei Ono competing in their national pastime, Judo. Sixty miles to the east, where surfing made its Olympic de- but, fans found their way to Tsurigasaki Beach. Starting on the first day of the three-day tournament, dozens crowded around the plastic orange fence marking the security perimeter, their revelry building throughout the day. Far off in the distance, locals could see the beach and athletes moving into the water, along with coaches, journalists and volunteers at work. Nobody seemed to mind the Mostly sunny INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 117° at Death Valley, CA National low: 38° at Bodie State Park, CA Precipitation: 2.94" at Jefferson, OH FIRE INDEX Very high Very high High Very high Very high Mostly sunny and nice NATIONAL Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 76/54/0.00 73/57/pc 68/57/pc La Grande 99/69/0.04 103/69/pc 91/68/c Portland 97/67/0.00 98/70/s 91/65/pc Baker City 97/54/0.00 99/62/pc 83/63/c La Pine 93/47/0.00 93/59/pc 89/61/pc Prineville 97/55/0.00 100/65/s 89/66/pc Brookings 72/55/0.00 62/52/s 61/52/pc Medford 104/68/Tr 100/72/s 101/71/t Redmond 98/57/0.04 98/65/s 94/66/pc Burns 99/49/0.00 97/63/pc 84/61/c Newport 63/46/Tr 63/52/c 63/52/pc Roseburg 96/65/0.00 99/67/s 95/64/pc North Bend 67/53/0.00 65/54/pc 65/55/pc Eugene 99/59/Tr 99/64/s 96/61/pc Salem 98/64/0.00 101/68/s 97/64/pc Klamath Falls 95/51/0.00 90/59/s 88/58/pc Ontario 102/63/0.00 102/73/pc 90/68/t Sisters 91/54/0.00 95/67/pc 90/66/pc Lakeview 98/52/0.00 89/60/pc 83/56/pc Pendleton 101/63/0.00 106/71/s 98/73/c The Dalles 105/67/0.00 105/76/s 102/75/pc Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday -10s 87° 55° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 109/71 Rufus Hermiston 101/76 108/72 106/78 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 109/79 99/66 98/70 101/63 Wasco 100/65 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles Tillamook 97/64 103/75 106/71 Sandy 105/76 McMinnville 77/57 Joseph Heppner La Grande 95/70 Maupin Government 102/66 103/69 97/68 Camp 102/74 Condon 101/74 Union Lincoln City 99/72 92/67 103/67 Salem 67/54 Spray Granite Warm Springs 101/68 Madras 105/70 Albany 90/61 Newport Baker City 100/68 100/69 Mitchell 63/52 101/66 99/62 Camp Sherman 100/69 Redmond Corvallis John Yachats Unity 95/67 98/65 98/63 Day Prineville 62/52 94/61 Ontario Sisters 100/65 Paulina 101/69 102/73 Florence Eugene 95/67 Bend Brothers 98/65 Vale 65/55 99/64 95/67 95/61 Sunriver 103/75 Nyssa 92/63 Hampton Cottage La Pine 102/74 Juntura Oakridge Grove 93/59 96/61 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 102/68 95/66 98/63 Fort Rock 66/53 97/63 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 94/61 95/63 High: 105° 91/59 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at The Dalles Beaver Frenchglen Silver 63/53 99/67 95/61 91/65 Low: 46° Marsh Lake 97/67 Port Orford 90/58 93/60 at Newport Grants Burns Junction Paisley 67/55 Pass 98/69 Chiloquin 91/61 102/68 Medford Rome 87/60 Gold Beach 100/72 99/69 65/54 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 98/67 98/75 90/59 93/64 62/52 89/60 Seaside 70/55 Cannon Beach 69/55 THURSDAY 89° 55° Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 541-683-1577 WATER REPORT Bend Redmond/Madras Sisters Prineville La Pine/Gilchrist WEDNESDAY OREGON WEATHER TEMPERATURE Grasses Low MONDAY 87° 64° 89° 66° Warm with plenty of clouds Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low SUNDAY