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В Мурманске разыскивают свидетелей смертельной аварии
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Известны даты массовой трепки мурманских управляшек
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В Мурманске в «первомайке» проверят работу управляющих компаний
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Pro tips on the best snowshoeing this season Some outdoor winter staples look decidedly different this year, and others were just canceled. Not so for self-guided snowshoeing. It s pretty easy to socially distance on snowshoe trails, and they re often less crowded than skiing trails. To help everyone make the most of the trails this year, we reached out to local snowshoer and Snowshoe Trail Coordinator for the Central Oregon Nordic Club, Bob Timmer, to get tips for newbies and seasoned snowshoe enthusiasts alike. Timmer has seen a lot of what Central Oregon snowshoeing has to offer. Since the CONC has a volunteer service agreement with the Forest Service, he s coordinated snowshoe trail maintenance at trails including Edison Butte Sno-Park and the sno-parks off Century Drive since 2013.
Central Oregon used to be home to several ski areas now considered ‘lost’ By Brian Rathbone, The Bulletin
Published: December 25, 2020, 5:36pm
Share: Steve Stenkamp, a local historian of lost ski areas in Oregon, talks about the former ski jump while walking through the Skyliner Sno-park. (Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin/TNS)
BEND, Ore. Decades ago, there were multiple community-run ski areas in Central Oregon. After Mount Bachelor opened in 1958, those spots were slowly shuttered and began to fade away.
Steve Stenkamp, a retired Bend firefighter and avid skier of more than 50 years turned skiing historian, has been on the hunt to find Oregon’s abandoned slopes.