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CLICK HERE for the latest market quotes from the Iowa Agribusiness Network!
CLICK HERE for the latest market quotes from the Brownfield Ag News Network!
(Radio Iowa) – A regional recreational trail system spanning more than one-hundred miles in northwestern Iowa will connect several towns, including Sergeant Bluff, Sioux City, Merrill, Hinton and Le Mars. Siouxland Chamber of Commerce president Chris McGowan says linking the communities is a strategy to overcome the area’s labor shortages. McGowan says, “To take a pause on aggressively recruiting more businesses and creating more job vacancies and saying, what can we do to enhance quality of life in the region so that we can attract more people?”
Sioux City is one of the largest towns in the state without a trail connection to another city. It’s estimated it could double the amount of visitors the trails see within five years of the project’s completion. Sioux City Parks and Recreation director Matt Salvatore says the regional trail system will be a real game-changer for the area. “I think that could really transform the community,” Salvatore says. “People will move to Siouxland because of the quality of life amenities, and we can see our communities start to grow, and we can see our employment start to go up.”
The project is made possible by a seven-million dollar grant awarded by the Iowa Economic Development Authority. As part of the grant, the project must be completed by 2026.
(Kendall Crawford, Iowa Public Radio)
(HARLAN, Iowa) — The Rosmann family, of Rosmann Family Farms, and Eric Madsen of Madsen Stock Farm, will host a Practical Farmers of Iowa field day in partnership with Farming for Public Health exploring weed control strategies in organic row crops on Tuesday, Aug. 2nd, from 1-4 p.m., near Harlan (1222 Ironwood Road). The event – “Weed Control Strategies in Organic Corn and Soybeans With Buffalo Cultivators and Planters” – is free to attend and will include lunch. RSVPs are appreciated for the meal by July 27. To sign up, visit the event page at practicalfarmers.org/field-days or call Debra Boekholder at (515) 232-5661.
Rosmann Family Farms includes Ron Rosmann and Maria Vakulskas Rosmann; David Rosmann and Becky Tompkins-Rosmann; Daniel Rosmann and Ellen Walsh-Rosmann; and Mark Rosmann and Virginia Lehner-Rosmann. Rosmann Family Farms is a multi-generational diversified crop and livestock operation on 700 acres of certified organic land. The farm consists of cattle, hogs, egg layers and a range of crops, including popcorn, soybeans, corn, small grains, hay and pasture, annual forages and cover crops. Maria operates the farm store, Farm Sweet Farm. Ellen and Daniel operate FarmTable Delivery and a restaurant, Milk & Honey in Harlan, featuring local foods.
Eric Madsen raises organic crops and livestock near Audubon with his parents, Vic and Cindy, and will join Ron during the field day to provide additional perspective on mechanical weed management. During the field day, Ron and Eric will share their organic weed control experiences and cultivator know-how while showcasing their Buffalo equipment. Guests will learn how to improve cultivator settings and fine-tune a planter. They will also have a chance to a cultivator field demonstration and learn about cultivating oat stubble.
Cultivator specialist Dale Kumpf, of Global Equipment Company, will be on hand to speak and share his knowledge. Other speakers will include Iowa State University extension organic specialist Kathleen Delate, who will talk about weed control and crop rotations in organic systems, and Olga Reding of the Iowa Organic Association. Though Buffalo equipment is featured, concepts and strategies discussed will be relevant to any high-residue cultivator. Full event details are available at practicalfarmers.org/weed-control-strategies-in-organic-corn-and-soybeans-with-buffalo-cultivators-and-planters.
This event is part of PFI’s 2022 field day season, which includes 41 events hosted by farmers located across the state, and beyond, on topics spanning the agricultural spectrum. Attendees can expect a welcoming atmosphere, a spirit of curiosity, a culture of mutual respect and farmers openly sharing their knowledge and experience. The full roster of events – along with additional information about PFI field day policies and logistics – is available at practicalfarmers.org/field-days. For questions, contact the PFI office at info@practicalfarmers.org or (515) 232-5661.
The field day is sponsored by Albert Lea Seed; Farm Power Implements; Iowa Farmers Union; Iowa Organic Association; Iowa State Organic Ag Program; OCIA International, Inc.; Organic Valley – Organic Prairie – CROPP Cooperative; Riverside Feeds, LLC; Sunrise Foods International; and The Scoular Company. Practical Farmers’ 2022 field days are supported by Level A sponsors Albert Lea Seed; BioTill Cover Crops; Grain Millers Inc.; Iowa Agriculture Water Alliance; Iowa State University Department of Agronomy; Iowa State University Extension and Outreach; MOSA Certified Organic; Nori Carbon Removal; P&K Midwest; Sinclair Tractor; Sunderman Farm Management; and Van Wall Equipment.
Chris Parks and Cass/Adair County Conservation Officer Grant Gelly talk about all things outdoors. This week they discuss water quality, new regulation books, learn to hunt programs and more.
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(Radio Iowa) – The Register’s Annual Great Bike Ride Across Iowa — RAGBRAI — starts Sunday. However, riders and support crews started converging on Sergeant Bluff Wednesday, as the town is the starting point for this year’s route. Sergeant Bluff City Councilwoman Andrea Johnson says 28-thousand people are expected in the community for the opening festivities this weekend — so the city is asking motorists to avoid the entertainment zone.
“We are asking that people do not drive through our town just because we have lots of bikes and we’re just trying to keep everyone safe,” she says. Saturday’s series of concerts and other activities will begin around noon in Sergeant Bluff. The city has established designated parking areas and three shuttle routes. “We encourage everyone to come and eat our food and enjoy our bands,” Johnson says. Emergency officials are preparing for excessive heat and the possibility of severe weather.
Sergeant Bluff Fire Chief Anthony Gaul says his fire station will be the command post to deal with whatever Mother Nature has in store. “We did a final test of our outdoor warning system which is meant to alert people that are outdoors in case of severe weather or any other disasters,” Gaul says. “We have a voice function on that as well as the tone siren alert.” If a tornado or winds of more than 70 mile an hour are forecast, the outdoor warning system in Sergeant Bluff is triggered, but they plan to announce any severe weather that does not meet that threshold.
Fourteen campgrounds have been established around Sergeant Bluff for the RAGBRAI crowd. “We have established tornado and storm shelters for every campground. We have access to all of those public safety wise so we can open them up whenever need be and we have sent that all throughout the campground so they know where they are to go.” Gaul and other Sergeant Bluff officials are walking through the campgrounds, too, welcoming RAGBRAI riders and pointing out the emergency shelters. Gaul says the city has a valuable tool that likely will alter the crowds find shelter before dangerous lightning arrives.
“We have a lightning prediction system called THOR GUARD,” he says. “It is set to alert when we have about a 12-15 minute time frame before lightning impacts the community and over the last years it has been very accurate.” Officials have been handing out yard signs to Sergeant Bluff residents that indicate the home is open as an emergency shelter to bicyclists in case of severe weather. The latest forecast indicates there’s a chance for severe storms in the area on Saturday.
Early Sunday, RAGBRAI riders will leave Sergeant Bluff and pedal through Bronson, Anthon and Battle Creek before reaching the overnight stop in Ida Grove. The week-long ride covers 454 miles and ends in Lansing on July 30th.
This year is bittersweet for riders – it’s the first year without one of its founders. Ninety-one-year-old John Karras died due to complications from a stroke. He co-founded Ragbrai with Donald Kaul in 1973.
Officials with the Iowa Environmental Council (IEC), today (Friday), released their Beach Advisory for the week of July 22nd. There are eight 8 beach advisories this week, seven of which advisories are related to unhealthy E.coli levels:
There is also one beach with a Microcystin-related Advisory: Geode Beach (Danville, Des Moines County, IA)*
*Data from the Iowa DNR State Park Beach Monitoring Program
**Data from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Rock Island District
Lake of Three Fires is temporarily closed for swimming.
A Missouri resident who swam in Lake of Three Fires had a confirmed infection and passed away from Naegleria fowleri, commonly known as the “brain-eating amoeba.” There is no new information to share at this time other than the beach has been sampled and the samples have been sent to the CDC laboratory. The beach will remain closed pending test results. Additionally, the test results for E. coli exceed the advisory threshold this week.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – Cass County businesses and organizations are coming together to address hunger and improve nutrition by growing food. This spring, through a Growing Together grant from Iowa State Extension, Cass County Master Gardeners and Grow Another Row provided free food plants to people visiting food pantries and Grow Another Row stands. When the Atlantic Hy-Vee Lawn and Garden Center closed for the season in July, the store donated additional food plants and herbs to the project. The Atlantic Lions Club also received a grant this spring from the Cass County Community Foundation to expand and enhance the community garden at Mollett Park in Atlantic, adding garden space and installing edible landscape plants.
Cass County Wellness Coordinator Brigham Hoegh says, “Combined, these efforts are creating more access to fresh, local produce in yards, gardens and produce stands across the county.”
Cass County was one of 36 communities awarded Growing Together grant funding. Grow Another Row and the Cass County Master Gardeners applied for this grant last winter. The funding is being used to maintain a community donation garden, coordinate produce donations through Grow Another Row, and provide nutrition education to food pantry clients and others in the county. This spring, seeing additional need for space and resources to grow food, the Atlantic Lions Club applied for and received a Cass County Community Foundation grant to expand and enhance the community garden at Mollett Park in Atlantic. Fruit trees we installed, with plans to install berry bushes and educational signage soon, laying the groundwork for a community edible landscape space. Additional raised garden beds were also added, along with rainwater collection units and educational signage which will enhance the garden space that is used for both private and donation gardening.
Where did these ideas come from? Food pantries across the county have seen increased patronage over the past three years. For example, the number of households served by the Atlantic Food Pantry has grown four times over the past four years. Each week the pantry currently provides supplemental food to an average of 68 households (150 people) or about 10 percent
of the people living in poverty in Cass County. Food insecurity is a reality. Additionally, fruits and vegetables are important sources of nutrition, and many people prefer to eat fresh produce and enjoy growing their own food. Last year, the Cass County COVID-19 Mobile Food For All program surveyed participants and found a majority were either interested in growing their own food or already doing so. Common barriers to food growing for some individuals and families includes a lack of lawn space for gardening or physical limitations. Using that information, Grow Another Row partnered with area food pantries to distribute free food plants last summer, including many “patio” tomatoes and other plants that grow well in containers. The plants were well-received.
Working together, Grow Another Row, Cass County Master Gardeners, the Atlantic Lions Club, and Cass County Extension are also partnering to provide educational programming on produce gardening, including garden tours, planting demonstrations, and opportunities to assist with garden maintenance and harvesting, to food pantry clients and others in the county. Grow Another Row is a program of the Healthy Cass County coalition that provides free, fresh local produce across the county through a network of produce sharing sites managed by volunteers. Produce donated to the program is also shared through all four Cass County food pantries. Grow Another Row is always looking for volunteers to grow, harvest, bag, and transport produce across the county. Individuals and groups—such as service organizations, churches, or workplaces—are welcome to join the effort! All residents of Cass County are invited to participate in the Grow Another Row program and “take what you need; share what you can”!
For more information on Grow Another Row, and to sign up for the program’s email newsletter or volunteer, visit https://www.extension.iastate.edu/cass/content/grow-another-row-cass-county or contact Cass County Extension Director Kate Olson or Cass County Wellness Coordinator Brigham Hoegh at 712-243-1132. For information on food available at Grow Another Row stands, as well as information on Cass County food pantries, farmers markets, and other local food initiatives, follow the Cass County Local Food Policy Council on Facebook
@CassCountyLocalFood.
(Ottumwa, Iowa) – Officials with John Deere say they are moving more of their manufacturing operations out of Iowa. The company says over the next 18 months, it will shift its current production at its Ottumwa facility to Monterrey, Mexico, and revitalize the location for the future. The company announced a similar move at its Waterloo plant last month. Company officials could not specify how many employees at the Ottumwa plant will be affected by the move.
(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Agriculture Secretary Mike Naig says the last quarantine associated with a bird flu outbreak at a commercial flock has been lifted. “This is good news,” Naig says. “It’s a milestone day.” Quarantines were issued to bar poultry and eggs from being shipped from 15 commercial sites where avian influenza had been confirmed. The last restriction — on a turkey operation in Bremer County — has been lifted after it met all cleaning, disinfection and testing testing requirements. Naig says it doesn’t mean the risk is gone.
“But what is does do is allow all of those affected sites to get back into normal production,” Naig says, “and it also allows us, with the response, to start to now look back and say: ‘What went well and what are some lessons we need to apply to a future response?'” Iowa’s first case of bird flu was confirmed in February in a backyard flock of chickens and ducks in Council Bluffs. That site and three others where Iowans were raising birds in their backyards that were sickened with bird flu are to remain empty for the rest of the summer.
“You really can’t clean those kind of sites,” Naig says, “but you can go in and disinfection and test commercial sites and that’s why this is an important day and we make a distinction between a commercial site and a backyard flock.” Two commercial facilities each had five million birds that were killed to prevent the virus from spreading. A total of 13-point-three million birds were euthanized in Iowa due to this year’s outbreak.
“And that represented 40% or so of the total number of birds that were impacted nationwide,” Naig says. The 2015 bird flu outbreak impacted 77 commercial poultry and egg laying sites in Iowa — compared to 15 this year. Naig says it does not appear there was farm-to-farm movement of the virus due to better biosecurity measures. “Our producers have learned a lot about how to keep the virus out their buildings and off of their farms and really track the movement of people and equipment,” Naig says. “…I think the second component of that was just a more effective, faster response on the part of the Iowa Department of Agriculture and the USDA. Those two things together made this a different outbreak.”
The executive director of the North Central Poultry Association says the lifting of the final quarantine is cause to celebrate the collective efforts from all involved. Avian influenza is highly contagious and while wild birds carry the virus without appearing to be ill, it is nearly always fatal to domesticated birds.
Here are some of the results from shows at the 2022 Adams County Fair!
The 2022 Adams County Tall Corn Contest was sponsored by POET, Corning and judged by Tim Christensen, ISU Extension and Outreach Farm Management Specialist. The results were: