712 Digital Group - top

Crescent Layer Bars (1-5-2023)

Mom's Tips

January 5th, 2023 by Jim Field

  • 1 can (8 oz.) Pillsbury refrigerated crescent dinner rolls
  • 1 cup white vanilla baking chips
  • 1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
  • 1 cup slivered almonds
  • 1 cup cashews halves and pieces
  • 1 can (14 oz.) sweetened condensed milk (not evaporated)

Heat oven to 375 degrees (350 for dark or non-stick pan).  Grease bottom and sides of 13″ x 9″ pan with shortening or cooking spray.  Unroll dough into 2 long rectangles.  Place in pan; press over bottom and 1/2″ up sides to form crust.  Bake 5 minutes.

Remove partially baked crust from oven.  Sprinkle vanilla baking chips, chocolate chips, almonds and cashews evenly over crust.  Pour sweetened condensed milk evenly over top.

Bake 20-25 minutes longer or until golden brown.  Cool 10 minutes.  Run knife around sides of pan to loosen.  Cool one hour.  Refrigerate 30 minutes or until chocolate is set.  For bars, cut into 6 rows by 6 rows.

YIELD:  36 bars

Water content of snow makes it slow in replenishing drought areas

Ag/Outdoor, News, Weather

January 5th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Despite several rounds of heavy snow in recent weeks, it will take significantly more precipitation to break Iowa’s long-running drought. State climatologist Justin Glisan says much of the state is far behind on moisture levels. “We’re going to need several months, if not more than a year, of above-average precipitation in those drier parts of the central region and western Iowa,” Glisan says. “You look at Sioux City, around there, 47% of normal precipitation for the year, going back three years, 25 inches below-average-plus in certain parts of the state.”

Large portions of Iowa are in moderate to severe drought, and multiple northwest Iowa counties are in the D-3 category of extreme drought, but parts of Woodbury and Monona counties are in the worst category, D-4, for exceptional drought. Glisan says the soil needs to recharge in order to rebound.

“You really have to get a lot of water into the soil profile to replenish those stocks, but also wetter soils will get more runoff into the stream, so you’ll see a rebound in those stream flows as well,” Glisan says. “So we’re going to need, in those D-3 and D-4 regions, a lot of precipitation to put a dent in those longer-term deficits.” Glisan says it takes a lot of snow to melt down to usable precipitation. He says it’s anywhere from eight to 12 inches of snow that equate to one inch of rainfall.

“So you’re not getting a lot of water out of that snowpack, number one,” Glisan says, “but if the drier soils are frozen deeper, it’s going to take a while for those profiles to thaw late winter/early spring, so even if you’re melting that snowpack, a lot of that’s not infiltrating, it’s running off.”

Much of Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota has been in a significant drought for most of the last two years.

Industrial hemp grower numbers drop again

Ag/Outdoor, News

January 5th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The growing of industrial hemp has not taken off as some envisioned when it returned to Iowa fields in 2020. Lane Kozel with the Iowa Department of Agriculture says the number of growers fell again this season. “Believe last year, we dropped to 45. And this year, we had 33, licensed growers. Of those 33, 26 growers actually planted a hemp crop. So we’re down to about 26 growers this year,” he says. “So it’s been cut in half every year since the program was started.” Kozel says one of the factors is the cost of the inputs and the amount of manual labor needed to properly cultivate and grow a crop .

“I don’t think there’s a market for it as well, I don’t think that’s been established is to help out or growers either,” Kozel says. The processing needed to extract the C-D-B or to create seeds, for grain or fiber has not taken off in Iowa. “Once it grows and there’s no place to go with it — that’s kind of leads to people not being interested either,” he says. Many other states also approved industrial hemp programs, and he says that created a lot of product. “You know, there’s been talked as long as it’s programs and going people have been, sitting on previous crops. C-B-D, that seemed to be the big boom, in previous years. And I think the market is saturated with that,” Kozel says. “And so until we can find some uses for some fiber and some grain, I think it’s going to stay where its at.” Kozel says there needs to be development of processing to use the hemp to make it worthwhile for growers to invest in.

“When we first started the program, I mean, everyone’s got, you know, great ideas with hemp concrete and housing, building material and clothing and what have you, but there’s just none of that going on right now, to my knowledge,” according to Kozel. “I’m sure there’s some small businesses in the country that are making him closing blue jeans out of hemp and things like that. But far as an Iowa, there’s nothing.”

The industrial hemp is required to pass a test that shows it has a T-H-C level below three-point-nine percent. The crop has to be destroyed if it can’t meet that standard. Kozel says everyone passed the test this year.

Red Oak man arrested on an Assault charge; 1 arrested on a warrant for FTA

News

January 5th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – Red Oak Police report that at around 12:55-a.m. today (Thursday), 30-year-old Michael David Sinnott, of Red Oak, was arrested in the 600 block of Carter Drive. He was taken into custody for Domestic Abuse Assault by Impeding Air Flow. Sinnott was being held without bond in the Montgomery County Jail. And, at around 6:32-p.m. Wednesday, Red Oak Police arrested 41-year-old Troy S. Williams, of Red Oak, on a warrant for Failure to Appear. Williams was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $1,000 bond.

Corning woman arrested on drug charges

News

January 5th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Adams County, Iowa) – A woman from Corning was arrested on drug charges December 30th, following a traffic stop on Highway 148 at Joshua Tree Road. Upon a probable cause search being conducted on the vehicle, 18-year-old Molly Bagby was arrested for Possession of a Controlled Substance/Marijuana – 1st offense, and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. She posted a $1,300 cash bond, and was released from the Adams County Jail.

SUSAN “SUE” JANE IRLBECK, 74, of Avoca (Funeral Mass 1/9/23)

Obituaries

January 5th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

SUSAN “SUE” JANE IRLBECK, 74, of Avoca, died Tuesday, Jan. 3rd, 2023, at the Nebraska Medical Center. A Funeral Mass for SUE IRLBECK will be held 11-a.m. Monday, Jan. 9, 2023, at St. Mary’s Catholic Church, in Avoca. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Avoca has the arrangements.

A Rosary at the funeral home will take place on Sunday, Jan. 8, 2023, from 5-until 5:20-p.m., followed by the family greeting friends from 5:20-p.m. until 7-p.m.

SUSAN “SUE” JANE IRLBECK is survived by:

Her husband – Allen Irlbeck, of Avoca.

Her son – James Irlbeck, of Avoca.

Her sisters – Barb (Rennie) Weinbrandt, of Davenport; Betty (Tim) Habnab, of Cedar Rapids, Renee (Bruce) Bierstadt, of Des Moines and Gail Linde of Fort Dodge, Ia.

Her brothers – Dennis (Sharon) Linde, and Bruce (Molly) Linde, all of Ft. Dodge.

4 grandchildren & 2 great-grandchildren.

No. 16 Iowa women need more balance

Sports

January 5th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Iowa women’s basketball coach Lisa Bluder says the Hawkeyes need more scoring balance. Junior guard Caitlin Clark and senior center Monica Czinano combined for 56 points in the 16th ranked Hawkeyes’ Sunday loss at Illinois. They also took 44 of Iowa’s 64 shots.

Bluder says other players need to step up.

The Hawkeyes need Gabby Marshall to get involved. The senior guard is averaging only four and-a-half points per game and shooting just 20 percent from three point range.

The Hawkeyes visit 14th ranked Michigan on Saturday.

Iowa’s Fran McCaffery talks Patrick McCaffery and Indiana

Sports

January 5th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Iowa will be shorthanded tonight (Thursday night), when hosting 15th ranked Indiana. Junior forward Patrick McCaffery has stepped away from the team to deal with anxiety. He was averaging nearly 13 points per game.

That’s Iowa coach Fran McCaffery who says Patrick is still with the team.

McCaffery says there is no timetable for Patrick’s return.

Iowa is 0-3 in the Big Ten and will host a Hoosier team that is expected to contend for the league crown.

With Patrick out, sophomore Payton Sandfort will get more playing time. The Waukee native is shooting only 21 percent from three point range.

House leader a thumbs down on move to fill Natural Resources & Outdoor Rec fund

Ag/Outdoor, News, Sports

January 5th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The top Republican in the Iowa House says the 2023 legislature is unlikely to fill a state fund created to finance water quality and outdoor recreation projects. In 2010, Iowa voters passed a constitutional amendment creating the Natural Resources and Outdoor Recreation Trust Fund where money from a FUTURE sales tax increase would be deposited. Last year, Senate Republicans proposed a maneuver to fill that fund, by converting all local option sales taxes to a statewide one percent sales tax.

House Speaker Pat Grassley says about 50 cities and counties, though, do not have a local option sales tax, so it would be an increase in those areas.  “Now I know there are people that want to offset it and different conversations,” Grassley says, “but at the end of the day, it could cost somebody something.” In early 2020, Governor Kim Reynolds proposed a one cent sales tax increase as part of a plan that put money in the Natural Resources and Outdoor Recreation Fund AND reduce state taxes overall, however the proposal drew some G-O-P opposition and was tabled once the pandemic hit.

The 2023 legislative session begins Monday.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Thursday, 12/5/2023

Weather

January 5th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Today: Mostly cloudy this morning; P/Cloudy this afternoon. High 31. NW @ 10-20 mph.
Tonight: Fair to P/Cldy. Low 15.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy. High 38. SE @ 10 mph.
Satur
day: Mo. Cldy w/light snow or flurries. High 32.
Sunday: P/Cldy. High 35.

Wednesday’s High in Atlantic was 29. Our Low this morning was 25. We received .3” of snow from 7am Wed. thru 5:30-a.m. today. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 14 and the Low was -3. The Record High on this date was 62 in 2012. The Record Low was -26 in 2010.