w/ Kate Olson
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Jim Field speaks with Freese-Notis Meteorologist Dan Hicks about the past and upcoming weather patterns.
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The 7:06-a.m. report w/KJAN News Director Ric Hanson
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The Freese-Notis (podcast) forecast for Atlantic & the KJAN listening area, and weather info. for Atlantic.
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Iowa communities with a population of 5,000 or more, have the opportunity to learn more about tree care, identification and inventory through a grant from the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. The two-year grant program currently provides training and assistance to Atlantic, Fairfield, Grinnell, Marion, Marshalltown, Mason City, Muscatine, Oskaloosa and Pleasant Hill, and is now accepting applications for 10 additional communities in 2016.
Grant communities receive intensive training by a team from the DNR and members of the Iowa Arborists Association. Training covers tree identification, health, inventory, planting, corrective pruning and maintenance, benefits of urban trees, ordinances and community outreach.
Through the cooperative effort between the Iowa DNR and the U.S. Forest Service, each selected community will have a complete street tree inventory, canopy cover analysis, and an urban tree management plan with goals and methods to increase its tree canopy.
Grant applications and instructions are available online at http://www.iowadnr.gov/Environment/Forestry/UrbanForestry.aspx. The deadline to apply is September 1st.
Prairie Rose State Park, near Harlan, is welcoming some special visitors this week, and they are taking some of the parks’ land management issues into their own… mouths. This week, about 20 goats will arrive to chow down on non-native honeysuckle and other nuisance vegetation threatening to crowd-out native plants in the park’s woodlands. Park manager Michelle Reinig took the innovative step of hiring goats because “it just made so much sense.”
Reinig says “Our resource is looking rather ‘sick,’ being overtaken by the woodland fugitive honeysuckle not to mention a few other invasives. The goats will help us get a handle on this overwhelming problem while loving the work that they do. This is a more ‘green’ approach than other methods of invasive control, and we like the idea of conservation and agricultural working together.”
Goats On The Go, a targeted grazing company based in Ames, will provide the herd that will call Prairie Rose home for about 10 weeks. Aaron Steele, co-owner of the company, says goats “Like to eat weeds and brush more than grass, and many of our biggest nuisance plants are at the top of the goats’ (dining) list.”
Goats can be put to work controlling noxious honeysuckle, poison ivy, buckthorn and multiflora rose without the use of chemical herbicides or gas-powered machinery. They also happily work in areas that would be uncomfortable and even dangerous for human workers – like steep slopes and dense woods.
The DNR has successfully used goats in land management projects in other parts of the state, most notably on the steep slopes in northeast Iowa.
MARY ELIZABETH CHALMERS, 89, of Villisca, died Tue., July 21st, at the Villisca Good Samaritan Society. Graveside Memorial Services for MARY CHALMERS will be held 2-p.m. Sat., July 25th, at the Grant (IA) Cemetery. Nelson-Boylan-LeRette Funeral Chapel in Red Oak, has the arrangements.
Memorials are suggested to the Grant Volunteer Fire Dept., or Grant United Methodist Women.
MARY CHALMERS is survived by:
Her son – Philip (Dawn) Chalmers, of Villisca.
2 grandsons, 5 great-grandchildren, other relatives and friends.
Police in Red Oak arrested a man Tuesday evening for Driving While Suspended, and OWI/2nd offense. 37-year old Jeffrey Dale Joiner, of Red Oak, was arrested at around 9-p.m. and taken to the Montgomery County Jail, where he was being held on $2,000 bond.
Early This Morning: Partly cloudy. Northeast wind near 5 mph.
Today: Mostly sunny. High in the lower 80s. Southeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight: Partly cloudy until early morning then becoming mostly cloudy. Low in the lower 60s. Southeast wind near 10 mph.
Thursday: Mostly sunny. High in the lower 80s. Southeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy. Low around 70. Southeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
Friday: Mostly sunny. High in the upper 80s. South wind 5 to 10 mph. Highest heat index readings 100 to 102 in the afternoon. Friday Night: Mostly cloudy. A slight chance of thunderstorms through midnight…then a chance of thunderstorms after midnight. Low in the lower 70s. Chance of thunderstorms 40 percent.
Saturday: Partly sunny with a 40 percent chance of thunderstorms. High in the upper 80s.