The Horizon
All the latest updates on our work defending rural lands, creating livable cities and towns and preserving wild lands and water throughout Central Oregon
Shaping Our City II: A Closer Look at Bend's UGB Proposal
On August 9th and August 17th we will be giving an update on Bend's UGB proposal.
Event: Speak up for the Deschutes River!
Hosted by the Bend Youth Brigade Paddle Team, this event is for people - especially young people - who love to kayak, SUP, raft, or float on the river and want to do their part to help its recovery.
Summer 2016 Hike Series: Lookout Mountain
This will be a beautiful hike with scenic views of Big Summit Prairie and stunning views of the Cascades.
Summer 2016 Hike Series: Big Tree and Dead Slough Hike
Sign up to hike with us Sunday, June 12th, 2016.
Learn more about Peck's milkvetch - Tumalo's rare plant species
The population on the Bull Flat wildlife area is important not only because it is rare but also because it has been extensively studied over several decades.
The Disappearing West
A new report shows the extreme rate at which we are losing natural areas to development in the American West.
Bend's Urban Growth Boundary and Affordable Housing
Listen to a radio interview with Central Oregon LandWatch's Advocacy Programs Manage about housing affordability and Bend's Urban Growth Boundary.
Help Save the Bull Flat Wildlife Area
The Upper Tumalo Reservoir is a beautiful natural area west of the rural community of Tumalo. Here, the sagebrush and juniper spotted high desert landscape gives way to the green foothills of the Cascades.
The Upper Tumalo Reservoir is a beautiful natural area west of the rural community of Tumalo. Here, the sagebrush and juniper spotted high desert landscape gives way to the green foothills of the Cascades.
Letter: A better plan for Deschutes River flows
Making a judge decide what is right and wrong for the river is not fair to her; the different government agencies need to do their mandated jobs.
Letter: Watch out for deer and elk
For generations mule deer have come to Bend and surroundings this time of year to birth their young and to raise them for six months, until they are ready to travel the hundred miles or so to their wintering grounds east of here. Little do they know this is no longer safe for them.
Breaking News: UGB Proposal Approved by Steering Committee
This afternoon the Urban Growth Boundary (UGB) Steering Committee, which consists of the Bend City Council and representatives from the Bend Planning Commission and the Board of County Commissioners, approved a package of recommendations for Bend’s UGB expansion and associated growth management policies.
The future of Bend's west side is coming into focus
In its reporting for the last meeting of the Citizen's Advisory Committee for the Central Westside Plan, which aims to emphasize biking, walking and mixed-use projects in areas that are currently nonresidential, The Bulletin interviewed LandWatch's Moey Newbold, a member of the committee.
Oregon economy benefits from ‘quiet’ recreation
Oregon received about $185 million in direct spending in 2014 from nonmotorized recreation on land owned by the Bureau of Land Management, according to a recent national study.
Growing Pains: Take Me Home
First time homebuyers are not necessarily interested in high density cookie cutter homes in the new developments on the outskirts of town. Living closer to work and access to amenities are modern values often overlooked.
Letter: It’s time to save the Upper Deschutes
Once home to some of North America’s finest trout fishing, the Upper Deschutes is now treated with little more consideration than an irrigation ditch.
The Bulletin Editorial Board: Irrigation Districts Should Share Water
Flows in the Upper Deschutes become a relative trickle in the winter. They get as low as 20 cubic feet per second. People may disagree about what exactly would be a “healthy” flow. Nobody looks at 20 cfs and cheers. Ten times that would be a start
Action Alert: Protect the Ochoco Forest!
The Forest Service has proposed to build more than one hundred miles of motorized trails, covering approximately 165,000 acres in the Ochoco National Forest at a cost of $1.2 million.