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Iowa paddlers need to be patient and wait for consistent warm weather

Ag/Outdoor, News

March 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa’s been on a weather rollercoaster lately, with record high temperatures in the 70s along with subzero wind chills and snow. While the forecast calls for more above-normal temps this week, most Iowans should keep their kayaks and canoes in the shed for now. Todd Robertson, the river programs outreach coordinator for the Iowa D-N-R, says paddlers ought to wait for steady warmth to allow water temperatures to rise, and it could be April — or longer. “The problem is, we haven’t had enough of these warm, consistent days to heat up the water. This is going to take several weeks,” Robertson says. “So between now and then, it’s not that people can’t go paddling, it’s that you have to know your skill level. You have to be fully prepared for immersion. You have to wear the right gear. You have to know how to read a river.”

That also means never paddling alone. He says water temperatures in most areas of Iowa are in the low to mid 40s right now. “When the temperature of the water is 60 degrees or below, you are automatically at risk for hypothermia if you become wet,” Robertson says. “That’s a ways off before that water reaches a safe level. That’s why if I go out and paddle, I’m at least bare minimum wearing my full-body wetsuit, because I need that extra protection to buy me time to get out of the water.”

Air temperatures have been all over the map lately, but large bodies of water take time to warm up, so it may be at least a month before it’s safe for lesser experienced paddlers to load up their boats. “We may have this rollercoaster for a while,” Robertson says. “I would say, especially if you’re not experienced out on the water, just wait a little while. We’ve got plenty of time. It’s great weather to go ride your bike and then you can go paddle later, but we got to let that water heat up.”

Robertson says he recently spotted some paddlers on a central Iowa river. “I’m not sure what they were wearing, but my fingers were crossed that they wouldn’t hit the water,” he says, “because it’s just so ice cold that it is a danger.”

Cold water shock and hypothermia can set in quickly, Robertson says, if you fall into the water at current temperatures. Whatever the weather, he recommends paddlers always wear a life jacket, let a friend or loved one know where you’re going and when you’ll be back, and bring a dry bag with extra clothing to change into should you get wet.

Montgomery County Sheriff’s deputies arrest a Red Oak man Sunday afternoon

News

March 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Department reports the arrest at around 1:17-p.m. Sunday, of 45-year-old Joshua Duane Mohn, of Red Oak, for Driving While Barred. Mohn was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $2,000 bond.

Red Oak man arrested Sunday night on an Assault charge

News

March 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – A man from Red Oak was arrested late Sunday night, on an Assault charge. Authorities say Officers arrested 31-year-old Matthew Allen Boyce at around 11:15-p.m., in the 1100 block of N. 3rd Street. Boyce was charged with Assault causing bodily injury – a Serious Misdemeanor. He was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $1,000 cash bond.

JOYCE ANN KENKEL, 78, of Panama (Mass of Christian Burial 3/6/24)

Obituaries

March 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

JOYCE ANN KENKEL, 78, of Panama (IA), died Saturday, March 2nd, 2024, at home. A Mass of Christian Burial for JOYCE KENKEL will be held 10:30-a.m. Wed., March 6th, at St. Mary’s of the Assumption Church, in Panama. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Visitation at St. Mary’s Parish Center is on Tuesday (March 5th) from 5-until 8-p.m., with a Rosary at 7-p.m.

Burial is in the St. Mary’s Cemetery in Panama.

JOYCE ANN KENKEL is survived by:

Her husband – David Kenkel, of Panama.

Her sons – Allen (Tracey) Kenkel, and Scott Kenkel, all of Panama; Curtis (Natalie) Kenkel, of Olathe, KS; and Richard (Anita) Kenkel, of Joplin, MO.

Her daughter – Tina (Peter) Laskie, of LeMars.

Her sisters – Lyn Schneider, and June Foxhoven, both of Millard, NE

13 grandchildren; 3 great grandchildren; and her sister-in-law Betty Foxhoven, of Earling.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Monday, March 4th, 2024

Weather

March 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Today: Mostly cloudy & breezy w/a 30% chance of rain and thunderstorms. High near 55. NE winds 15-25 mph. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Tonight: Partly cloudy. Low around 30. N/NE winds @ 10-25 mph.
Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 57. Northeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 57.
Thursday: A 50% chance of rain. High near 57.

Sunday’s High in Atlantic was 74. The Low was 33. We received .02″ rain this morning (as of 6-a.m.). Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 51 and the Low was 25. The Record High for March 4th was 78 in 1921. The Record Low was -17 in 1978. Sunrise: 6:50. Sunset: 6:14-p.m.

6.2% pay raise for Iowa judges means they still lag pay in every surrounding state

News

March 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa district court judges are paid less than judges in every state that touches Iowa. While the Iowa Supreme Court’s chief justice has recommended a more than six percent salary hike for Iowa judges, that still won’t bring their pay in line with any surrounding state. In January, Chief Justice Susan Christensen told lawmakers Iowa district court judges have gone without pay raises in 10 of the last 15 years and they now make 16-thousand dollars less per year than South Dakota judges and 38-thousand dollars less than judges in Nebraska.

“Being appointed by our governor should be the pinnacle of a lawyer’s career, not a deep financial sacrifice,” Christensen said. Bob Gast, the state court administrator, says the number of applicants for district court judgeships has declined 61 percent in the past 20 years. “Fewer of those applicants are coming from the private practice of law,” Gast says. “There has been a 65% decline from 2009 to 2023.” State Representative Brian Lohse, a Republican from Bondurant, is chairman of the House Appropriations subcommittee that drafts a budget for the the state’s court system. He says raising the salaries of district court judges is a goal he hopes to achieve this year, but lawmakers haven’t settled on a number yet.

“Being a judge is a difficult job, but it’s also not the most lucrative when compared to the private sector,” Lohse says. “If we’re going to really move forward in the law and have the kind of decisions we want and good, good justice, we need to be able to put bright legal minds in the benches and, as a lawyer myself, you want a good person sitting in that judicial seat, making the decisions for your case.”

The annual salary for a district court judge today is just over 158-thousand dollars. The average salary for an attorney in Iowa’s capitol city of Des Moines is four-thousand dollars higher.

Saturday High School Girl’s State Basketball Championship Scores

Sports

March 3rd, 2024 by Asa Lucas

Class 4A

#1 Clear Creek Amana 43, #2 Waverly Shell Rock 25

Class 2A

#1 Dike-New Hartford 48, #2 Panorama 46

Class 1A

#1 North Linn 67, #2 Newell-Fonda 51

Hawkeyes Drop Series Finale to Ole Miss

Sports

March 3rd, 2024 by Asa Lucas

OXFORD, Mississippi – The University of Iowa baseball team dropped the rubber match of a three-game series to Ole Miss, 8-3, on Sunday afternoon at Swayze field.

Iowa outhit Ole Miss 7-5 but fell behind 5-0 after five innings, and 8-0 after seven innings. The Hawkeyes scored three runs in the eighth inning but couldn’t mount a comeback.

“The game started off like it was going to a low scoring pitchers dual,” said head coach Rick Heller. “We had some opportunities offensively, had bases loaded early with no outs and ran into some bad luck. Had the chopper and they got the force at the plate, and then Seegers smoked a ball right at the third baseman to double us off. That is how the day went for us offensively.”

Cade Obermueller started on the bump for the Hawkeyes. He threw four innings and allowed four runs on two hits while walking five and striking out four.

Zach Voelker threw two innings and allowed one run, and Gannon Archer threw 2/3 of an inning allowing two runs. Brant Hogue, Jack Young and Drew Deremer closed out the final 1 1/3 innings for the Hawkeyes without allowing a hit.

“Our top four hitters in the lineup didn’t have a hit today,” said Heller. “Then we went back to giving free bases. It wasn’t a day when Ole Miss was tearing the cover off the ball. You look at the scoreboard we lost, 8-3, but outhit them, 7-5, we pretty much gave them all the runs except the solo home run.

Andy Nelson had a three-hit day for Iowa going 3-for-4 and Reese Moore was 2-for-4 with a double and an RBI. Kyle Huckstorf had a two-run blast to chip away at the Rebel lead.

“It is disappointing,” said Heller. “We can’t get out of our own way, and we are our own worst enemy right now. I liked the way we fought back in the eighth and kept playing. Huck hits that home run and it should have been 3-3 or 3-2 us if we go out and limit the free bases. I was happy that we kept playing. We need to clean it up, period. Simple as that.”

Seeds Set For 2024 Phillips 66 Big 12 Women’s Basketball Championship

Sports

March 3rd, 2024 by Asa Lucas

Oklahoma earned the top seed in the 2024 Phillips 66 Big 12 Women’s Basketball Championship, held March 7-12 in Kansas City’s T-Mobile Center. The Sooners won the Big 12 regular season title outright, posting a 15-3 league record to finish one game ahead of No. 2 seed Texas.

No. 3 seed Kansas State (13-5) and No. 4 seed Iowa State (12-6) captured the final two double-byes into the quarterfinals, which take place Saturday, March 9. Iowa State, involved in a three-team tie at 12-6, earned the tiebreaker by virtue of a 2-1 record against Baylor (2-1 against tied teams) and West Virginia (1-3 against tied teams), then winning the head-to-head matchup with Baylor once West Virginia was dropped from the tiebreaking procedure.

The tiebreaking procedure resulted in Baylor receiving the No. 5 seed and West Virginia slotting into the No. 6 spot. Kansas (11-7) is the No. 7 seed and faces No. 10 BYU (6-12) at 5:30 p.m. CT/4:30 p.m. MT in the second round on Friday, March 8. No. 8 seed Oklahoma State (7-11) faces No. 9 TCU (6-12) in the other second round matchup, set to tip at 1:30 p.m. CT. TCU earned the tiebreaker over BYU due to a 2-0 record in the head-to-head matchups.

Cincinnati (5-13) holds the tiebreaker in the three-way tie for 11th, taking the 11-seed with a 2-1 record against No. 12 seed Texas Tech (2-2 against tied teams) and No. 13 seed Houston (1-2 against tied teams). Cincinnati faces No. 14 seed UCF (3-15) at 8 p.m. CT/9 p.m. ET on March 7, following the opening game of the Championship with Texas Tech facing Houston at 5:30 p.m. CT.

2024 Phillips 66 Big 12 Women’s Basketball Championship
Thursday, March 7 – First Round
Game 1: No. 12 Texas Tech vs. No. 13 Houston, 5:30 p.m. CT
Game 2: No. 11 Cincinnati vs. No. 14 UCF, 8 p.m. CT/9 p.m. ET

Friday, March 8 – Second Round
Game 3: No. 5 Baylor vs. Game 1 Winner, 11 a.m. CT
Game 4: No. 8 Oklahoma State vs. No. 9 TCU, 1:30 p.m. CT
Game 5: No. 7 Kansas vs. No. 10 BYU, 5:30 p.m. CT/4:30 p.m. MT
Game 6: No. 6 West Virginia vs. Winner Game 2, 8 p.m. CT/9 p.m. ET

Saturday, March 9 – Quarterfinals
Game 7: No. 4 Iowa State vs. Winner Game 3, 11 a.m. CT
Game 8: No. 1 Oklahoma vs. Winner Game 4, 1:30 p.m. CT
Game 9: No. 2 Texas vs. Winner Game 5, 5:30 p.m. CT/4:30 p.m. MT
Game 10: No. 3 Kansas State vs. Winner Game 6, 8 p.m. CT/9 p.m. ET

Monday, March 11 – Semifinals
Game 11: Winner Game 7 vs. Winner Game 8, 1:30 p.m. CT
Game 12: Winner Game 9 vs. Winner Game 10, 4 p.m. CT/3 p.m. MT/5 p.m. ET

Tuesday, March 12 – Championship
Game 13: Winner Game 11 vs. Winner Game 12, 8 p.m. CT/7 p.m. MT/9 p.m. ET

Bulldogs win 10th Regular Season Championship in Program History

Sports

March 3rd, 2024 by Asa Lucas

DES MOINES, Iowa – The Drake women’s basketball team led wire-to-wire in an 82-62 victory over Valparaiso at the Knapp Center to clinch at least a share of the 2023-24 Missouri Valley Conference regular season title on Saturday afternoon. Seniors Grace Berg, Anna Brown and Taylor McAulay were recognized in a postgame Senior Day ceremony before the Bulldogs cut down the nets to celebrate their 10th all-time MVC regular season championship.

All five Bulldog starters scored in double figures highlighted by a double-double (12 points, 10 rebounds) from Anna Miller. Berg and Courtney Becker each added a team-high 14 points while McAulay contributed 10 points knocking down a pair of triples. Katie Dinnebier dished out seven assists and put up 11 points.

Valparaiso (5-22, 4-14) stayed within an arm’s length early on. The Beacons trailed by a bucket at 13-11 before Shannon Fornshell drilled a trifecta in the final minute of the opening quarter. Drake (24-5, 17-1) led 17-11 after one frame.

The Bulldogs failed to extend their lead to double digits in the second quarter as the Beacons hung around thanks to Leah Earnest inside and Olivia Brown from the perimeter. Dinnebier scored Drake’s last five points of the first half, first off a driving layup followed by a three-pointer in the waning seconds before halftime. The two teams entered the locker room with the host Bulldogs controlling a 36-28 lead at the break.

Drake began to pull away in the third quarter. About halfway through the third stanza, Berg’s putback fell as she drew a foul for a 48-36 edge. Berg muscled down low near the end of the period to push the margin to 62-47 in favor of the Bulldogs.

The Beacons’ deficit ballooned to 20 points at the 4:37 mark of the fourth quarter when Courtney Becker took advantage of a Valpo turnover for a layup on the other end, ahead 76-56.

A balanced effort keyed an 82-62 victory for Drake and the celebration was on. Drake was able to empty their bench and applaud all three seniors in a well-earned home finale victory.

“It’s a really, really special thing to pay tribute to our fans and to be conference champions,” Suzie Glazer Burt Head Coach Allison Pohlman said. “This team is special. What’s unique about this group is that they’re really committed to staying in the moment. We’re excited about our journey and will celebrate today, but we’ve got two more regular season games and an important trip to Hoops in the Heartland, so we’ve got to refocus and take care of business.”

Drake women’s basketball will enter the final week of the regular season with a visit to Evansville on Thursday, March 6 at 6 p.m.