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“Stand Up Paddleboard” Demonstrations available in Cass County (IA)

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Lewis, Iowa) –  The Cass County Conservation Board is once again holding a “Stand Up Paddleboard” (SUP) Demonstration. The public demonstration will be held 9-a.m. and 10:30-a.m., Saturday, July 22nd, at the Cold Springs Park Beach, near Lewis. There is no charge, but children must be 16 years or older, and paddler’s must weigh LESS than 250-pounds. You MUST CALL to reserve your spot, at 712-769-2372. The program will be cancelled if there is unsafe weather conditions on the Lake.

SUP is the fastest growing sport in the paddling community not only across the country, but especially right here in land-locked areas like Iowa. It’s fun, healthy as a total body work-out and offers a unique perspective when it comes to being on the water. After a quick demonstration try out the boards for yourself! If you do not bring a life jacket one will be provided to you. The CCCB Stand Up Paddleboard programs are held monthly, ending after the Labor Day Weekend on Saturday, September 2nd.

Available slots (as of June 29th):

Saturday July 22nd

9AM- 5 spots

10:30AM- 5 spots

August 26th

9AM- 5 Spots

10:30am- 5 Spots

September 2nd

9am- 5 Spots

10:30am- 5 Spots

Guided Blooming Prairie Hike this Saturday in Cass County (IA)

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Massena, Iowa) – The Cass County Conservation Board is holding a Guided Blooming Prairie Hike this weekend. The program will start at the Outdoor Classroom shelter, located near Massena, at 76977 Tucson Road, beginning at 10-a.m. Saturday, July 8, 2023. The program is FREE, and all ages are welcome.

You’re invited to join Cass County Naturalist Lora Kanning, for a hike in the prairie. Explore blooms throughout the numerous prairies inside the park.

Water level drop underway at Meadow Lake in Adair County

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 1st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

GREENFIELD, Iowa – The water level of Meadow Lake near Greenfield in Adair County is being lowered 3 feet . The Iowa DNR says the process to help improve the size of bluegills in the lake, began this past week. The water will be released slowly over the next two weeks to avoid any downstream impacts. A water level draw-down is a common fisheries management technique used to improve the size of panfish.  Meadow Lake has an abundance of 7-inch bluegills that lack the quality anglers are looking for.

“Crowding the fish into a smaller area makes them more susceptible to predation by largemouth bass and reduces the number of small bluegills,” said Bryan Hayes, fisheries management biologist. The reduced number will improve growth in the coming year. “Draw-downs in 2016 and 2019 had this effect,” Hayes noted.

The draw-down is expected to have minimal effect on public access to Meadow Lake. The boat ramp will be usable and the lake will remain open during the draw-down. Meadow Lake will be allowed to refill starting in September.

Meadow Lake is a 34-acre lake in the middle of the 317 acre Meadow Lake Fish and Wildlife Area located in the north central part of Adair County.  It has a maximum depth of 20 feet and an average depth of 7.3 feet.

 

 

Evolution of the Heartland agri-tourism event set to take place in August

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 1st, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Manning & Audubon, Iowa) – A marketing firm based in Manning is hosting an agri-tourism event next month (August), in Audubon and Manning. Shelly Greving owner of Emerge Marketing Solutions, says the “Evolution of the Heartland” experience August 3rd and 4th, is designed to showcase the heart of America’s rural communities and the evolution of innovative Ag advancements. She explains the reason for showcasing what agriculture has to offer.

Greving said the event was created to bring people back to the Midwest and show them Ag entrepreneurship in action.

Tour options for the first day of the event include, but are not limited to: Mainstreet Entrepreneurs; Innovation & Technology; Niche Farming; Spirits of the Heartland; Templeton Distillery, Beef & Swine Immersion; the Manning Hausbarn Heritage park tour, and more. Participants have the option to stay overnight for a second day of immersive tours.

Participants will get a taste of rural Iowa at a Farm-to-table lunch.

A community tailgate supper will feature food stations with pork, beef, and more. All meals are included in the price of registration. Participants will also be able to browse local produce and goods at the Iowa Vendor Showcase.

She says she hopes the tours open everyone’s eyes, to see what is happening in rural Iowa.

The cost for the entire event is $150, but some parts of the event are free. The deadline to register for the tour(s) is July 15th or until all the spots have been filled. Register online at https://www.evolutionoftheheartland.com.

Local 24-Hour Rainfall Totals at 7:00 am on Friday, June 30, 2023

Ag/Outdoor, Weather

June 30th, 2023 by Jim Field

  • KJAN, Atlantic  .75″
  • Atlantic Airport  .67″
  • 7 miles NNE of Atlantic  .54″
  • Massena  .85″
  • Elk Horn  .26″
  • Audubon  .54″
  • Oakland  .57″
  • Corning  1.19″
  • Guthrie Center  .44″
  • Logan  .51″
  • Red Oak  1.3″
  • Creston  1.26″
  • Clarinda  1.15″
  • Shenandoah  1.1″

Vilsack says he’s confident congress will ‘get to yes’ on the Farm Bill

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 30th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – U-S Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack says as the U-S-D-A extends grants and loans for everything from broadband expansion to production of alternative crops, not all that spending has to be tucked into the Farm Bill.  “Some of it’s going to be met through the Inflation Reduction Act. Some of it can be met through the normal budget process and some of it can be met by creative use of the Commodity Credit Corporation,” Vilsack says. “…If you use all the tools and all the tools are available, then we can get to a point where we have a Farm Bill that benefits the many and the most and not just the few.”

Congress appears on track to release a first draft of the 2023 Farm Bill this fall, close to the September 30th expiration of the last Farm Bill. Vilsack says it’s always tough to put a Farm Bill together. “Not so much because of the partisan challenges, but because of the geographic and commodity challenges and I think there’s also obviously a challenge relative to the financing of the Farm Bill,” Vilsack says. “but I think there is a genuine commitment on the part of both the House and Senate leadership on the Ag Committees to get to yes.”

The current Farm Bill, approved in late 2018, has provided subsidies for crop insurance, but 75 percent of the spending in the Farm Bill has gone to federal food assistance programs. Some House Republicans want to tighten eligibility for food stamps, also known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP. Vilsack says the Biden Administration considers the issue to be resolved after new food stamp work requirements were included in last month’s budget deal that raised the federal government’s borrowing limit.

“I think that there are probably some things that could be done to strengthen the states’ administration of SNAP that would help and I wouldn’t be surprised if you don’t see that being discussed in the context of the Farm Bill, but I don’t think you’re going to see additional work requirements or things of that nature,” Vilsack says. “I think that issue’s been, as I like to say, snapped shut.”

Vilsack says congress will have to find a way to permanently raise the pay for firefighters in the Forest Service, which is part of the U-S-D-A. The 2021 infrastructure bill provided a temporary fix, but Vilsack says in order to keep enough people on the payroll to fight wildfires, congress has to put more money into the Farm Bill for their pay.

Vilsack, in Iowa, says income concentration an issue in US agriculture

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 29th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – U-S Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack says small and mid-sized farms are part of the country’s muscular core and specialized farming is how they’re likely to flourish.  “The notion of getting big or getting out runs counter, I think, to the heritage of this state and to the heritage of American agriculture,” Vilsack says. Vilsack spoke to a crowd in Des Moines this (Thursday) morning. He pointed to 2022, which was a record year for farm income, with just seven-and-a-half percent of U-S farms got 89 percent of that income.

“Are we comfortable with a situation where income continues to be concentrated, with the understanding that folks who are large scale production agriculture have enormous risk financially and do an enormous service to the country and the world,” Vilsack asked, “or are we big enough and smart enough and innovative enough to basically create another alternative option so that folks can have a choice?”

Vilsack argues production of local foods or the use of farming practices that businesses and consumers are willing to pay a premium for as the way for small operators to find success.

Mills County beef processor set to receive $25-million to buy equipment for a 500k sq.foot facility

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 29th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Des Moines, Iowa, June 29, 2023 – U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Tom Vilsack today (Thursday) highlighted USDA’s investments to increase independent meat and poultry processing capacity and expand market opportunities for fertilizer producers, farmers and rural business owners in Iowa. Vilsack said “While American farmers and ranchers have been responding to the demand to produce more, their communities have struggled to see their share of the benefits. Under the leadership of the Biden-Harris Administration, USDA is committed to championing meat and poultry processors, increasing competition and lowering costs for working families. The announcement I’m making today highlights these producers and reflects the goals of President Biden’s Investing in America agenda, which advances a sustainable vision of agriculture, prioritizes the needs of our producers and small businesses, promotes competition, strengthens our domestic agricultural supply chains and brings prosperity to people and places in rural parts of our country.”

During a roundtable with producers and businesses at Landus Cooperative, Secretary Vilsack highlighted several new and recent investments in three key programs that support a wide range of agricultural interests in Iowa. For example:

  • USDA is providing a $25 million Meat and Poultry Processing Expansion Program (MPPEP) grant to Cattlemen’s Heritage Beef Company, LLC Pending final NEPA review. The MPPEP program helps independent processors expand their capacity and encourages competition and sustainable growth in the U.S. meat processing sector. Cattlemen’s Heritage plans to use the MPPEP grant to buy equipment for its new, 500,000-square-foot facility in Mills County. When the facility reaches capacity, it is projected to process 1,500 head of cattle per day, increasing consumer access to U.S. meat products at the grocery store.
  • USDA is providing nearly $10 million through the Fertilizer Production Expansion Program (FPEP) to Landus Cooperative and Progressive Ag Cooperative to increase local fertilizer options for farmers and producers. The FPEP program increases innovative domestic fertilizer production by spurring domestic competition and combating rising fertilizer costs. Landus Cooperative will use a $4.9 million grant to build a greenfield fertilizer manufacturing and repackaging facility. The facility will manufacture a slow-release, leaf-based nitrogen fertilizer, which will decrease nitrogen application rates and increase overall nitrogen efficiency in growing corn. Landus is the largest agricultural cooperative in Iowa. It provides products and services to 7,000 farmers. Progressive Ag Cooperative will use a $4.9 million grant to construct a dry fertilizer facility to help farmers and producers in northern Iowa and southern Minnesota.
  • On June 28, Vilsack announced the award of $2.5 million in USDA Higher Blends Infrastructure Incentive Program (HBIIP) grants to nine companies to expand the use and availability of higher-blend biofuels in Iowa. For example, Kimmes Enterprises LLC received a $510,500 grant to replace four E15 dispensers and four ethanol storage tanks at three fueling stations located in Carroll, Rockwell City and Baxter. This project is expected to increase annual sales of ethanol by approximately 635,000 gallons.

USDA Rural Development Iowa State Director Theresa Greenfield said the “USDA is helping build up rural communities by investing in ag producers and hometown businesses that support the security of our food supply chain. The Biden-Harris Administration is leading the way in supporting our rural neighborhoods. When we partner with innovators in the business community, job opportunities for Iowans increase.”

Heartbeat Today 6-29-2023

Ag/Outdoor, Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

June 29th, 2023 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Shelly Greving of Emerge Marketing about the local agritourism event “Evolution of the Heartland” in Manning and Audubon on August 3 and 4.  Registration ends July 15 at:  https://www.evolutionoftheheartland.com.

Play

Ag Sec. Vilsack to announce major Investment to increase & expand meat & poultry processing capacity

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 28th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(WASHINGTON, D-C June 28, 2023) – U-S Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack will travel to Des Moines, Thursday (June 29), where he is expected to announce a major investment by USDA to expand meat and poultry processing capacity in Iowa and across the country. The investment is intended to increase competition, support producer income, strengthen the food supply chain, and create jobs and economic opportunities in rural areas.

Secretary Vilsack will also highlight other efforts under the Biden-Harris Administration to build more, new and better markets and strengthen farm and food businesses. The announcement reflects the goals of the President Biden’s Investing in America agenda to rebuild our economy from the middle-out and the bottom-up and create transformative new economic opportunities for families and businesses.