Why Bend, Oregon?

Written by Gorbaw Sagewind

April 22, 2025

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Bend, Oregon is the kind of place where a kombucha tap is more common than a Coke machine, where dogs have more wardrobe options than humans, and where the word “crunchy” describes not food, but political ideologies, child-rearing philosophies, and even hiking styles. It is, in every topographical sense, a town that leans — metaphorically into awkward urban planning and literally because someone probably built a tiny house on a slanted slope “for the vibes.” Welcome, friend. You’ve arrived in the sacred heart of Pacific Northwest wonkiness.

Let’s start with the obvious: the urban sprawl that thinks it’s a village. Bend used to be a sleepy mill town. Then people discovered that it was kind of like Boulder but with fewer trust funds and more Subaru Outbacks that still have mud on them from last weekend’s “casual 40-mile trail loop.” Now, it’s a small town cosplaying as a city, and the result is a place with roundabouts that lead to other roundabouts, all guarded by strange metal statues of elk and interpretive spirals meant to evoke “community” or possibly “confusion.” Want to get across town? Bring a podcast and a willingness to meditate on red light sequences.

And speaking of planning: nothing here makes linear sense. Brewpubs double as bike shops. Coffee shops also sell CBD dog treats. A storefront could be a taxidermy parlor, a vintage record depot, or both, and no one would bat an eye. Want a haircut? There’s a woman named Maple who runs a salon out of a yurt and only cuts your hair during full moons. She also reads your aura with a rescued falcon. It’s appointment-only.

Socially, it’s a town divided: half are tech expats from the Bay Area seeking spiritual redemption through artisanal bread-making, the other half are deeply local and visibly suspicious of anyone who calls it “Central Oregon” instead of “just Bend.” Everyone bikes — but some in spandex kits worth more than your rent, others in cutoff jeans with a handlebar bag full of crystals, squirrel jerky, and bear spray “just in case.”

And then there’s the housing market, which is wonkier than a goat on a tightrope. Median home prices have moon-launched into “are you serious” territory, yet the people moving in insist on building Scandinavian cabins that look like architectural renderings for Elon Musk’s Mars colony. Somehow, there’s both a housing crisis and a surplus of Airbnb yurts with descriptions like “eclectic minimalist sanctuary near lava tube.”

Nature here is sacred, and everyone’s into it — but also oddly competitive about it. You don’t just hike a trail, you “crush” it. You don’t just ski, you “earn your turns.” Paddleboarding is a spiritual journey, not a recreational activity, and if you didn’t take a selfie with a ponderosa pine named “Old Barry,” did you even visit Tumalo Falls?

Politically, the town exists in a kind of earnest, eco-conscious tug-of-war. You might hear someone denouncing capitalism while holding a $9 turmeric latte and scrolling Zillow for riverfront property. Local government meetings involve debates on whether to fund public transit or give more money to local art involving driftwood and moss. The strong opinions, loosely held energy here is palpable.

In conclusion, Bend is wonky because it was built on paradoxes: sleepy but booming, wild but curated, casual but intense. It’s the kind of town where people talk about leaving society while wearing $300 Patagonia fleeces. But make no mistake — the weirdness is the charm. It’s what makes Bend not just livable, but lovable, in that slightly disoriented, are-we-still-in-Oregon way.

So if you ever feel out of sync with the world, come to Bend — where nothing quite fits, and somehow, everything feels like home.


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