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Heartbeat Today 10-27-2023

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

October 27th, 2023 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with the J-Team…Jarrit Smith, Josh Smith, Jaci Igou, Jacob Smith and Joseph Smith, about the 10th Annual Haunted House at 1500 Mulberry in Atlantic.    Hours are Friday, October 27 through Monday, October 30 from 7:00 pm to 11:00 pm and Tuesday, October 31 from 5:00 pm to 11:00 pm.  They ask for a free will donation with profits donated to the Grace Pauley family in the Avoca area to aid in her recovery.

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Local 24-Hour Rainfall Totals Reported at 7:00 am on Friday, October 27, 2023

Ag/Outdoor, Weather

October 27th, 2023 by Jim Field

  • KJAN, Atlantic  .14″
  • 7 miles NNE of Atlantic  .09″
  • Anita  .62″
  • Audubon  .24″
  • Oakland  .24″
  • Manning  .36″
  • Corning  .49″
  • Bridgewater  .65″
  • Guthrie Center  .6″
  • Carroll  .29″
  • Clarinda  .15″

Critics say Summit carbon pipeline would be a drain on Iowa’s water supply

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 27th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Opponents of proposed carbon pipelines in Iowa say the projects will be too much of a drain on Iowa’s water resources. Jan Norris of Red Oak is one of several people who read a joint statement during a public hearing this week. “As it turns out, Summit Carbon Solutions not only wants to take our land, they want our water,” Norris said.

The Iowa Department of Natural Resources has already granted Summit a permit to withdraw up to 55 million gallons of water each year from a new well near an ethanol plant in Chickasaw County. The agency is considering another application from Summit for the use of nearly 28 million gallons of water each year from a new well in Wright County, near an ethanol plant in Goldfield. Julie Glade’s farm is about 17 miles from Goldfield.

“We know these waters are life. They belong to all of us in Iowa,” Glade said. “…Please deny Summit’s Goldfield withdrawal request.” Representative Mark Thompson, a Republican, represents Wright, Humboldt and Hancock Counties in the Iowa House. “The water shortage is about as obvious as the nose on your face. We live near Belmond, near a lake. The lake has receded about 150 feet from the natural shoreline,” Thompson said. “…I also would encourage this permit to be denied.”

Proposed Summit Pipeline

The carbon capture process generates heat. Water is used to cool the carbon so it can be compressed, liquefied and shipped through a pipeline. Marjory Swan, a Wright County farmer, says Iowa’s water resources are not unlimited and shouldn’t be used for the project. “We are very well aware of the drought conditions Iowa and her neighbor states have been suffering through recently — 2.9 million residents of our state are currently living in areas of drought,” Swam says.

Others who testified at this week’s hearing asked state officials to consider how much water Summit would need for its entire project, not just for each of the ethanol plants that would connect to the pipeline.

Kathleen Hunt of Eldora owns land in Hardin County that’s along the proposed Summit route and she says Summit’s water use would be unprecedented. “It is incumbent upon the DNR to go about their work carefully and with scientified precision,” she said, “because the public wealth of Iowa is at stake.”

Summit has said it’s project is crucial to the survival of the ethanol industry as consumer demand for carbon-free fuel will grow. Three years ago the Iowa Department of Natural Resources rejected a different company’s plan to withdraw two BILLION gallons of water from a northeast Iowa aquifer every year and sell it to communities in the west that are running out of water.

World Food Prize winner to restore Ukrainian farmland, vineyards

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 26th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The winner of this year’s World Food Prize is launching a program to reestablish vineyards and farmland in parts of Ukraine that were damaged in the war with Russia. Heidi Kühn is the founder of Roots of Peace. The U.S-based nonprofit works in war-torn nations to clear landmines and unexploded bombs, and to restore land to agriculture. Kühn says the risk of injury from unexploded ordinances can harm local economies and restrict food production for decades.

Kühn says, “As land mines are in there, it’s holding the land hostage from business opportunity.” The impacted area of Ukraine is estimated to cover 22 million acres, which is about the same amount of land devoted to corn and soybeans in Iowa. The area is considered critical to the global wheat supply. In Vietnam, the group is still clearing mines placed in the demilitarized zone 50-plus years ago. Kühn says in restored areas, farmers have planted more than one-million black pepper trees.

Heidi Kuhn. (Roots of Peace photo)

“This is fertile ground that feeds us,” she says, “so I think this is not a political call to action, this is a moral call to action.” Kühn will receive the award at a ceremony in the Iowa State Capitol tonight (Thursday). The World Food Prize is awarded each year in honor of Iowa native and Nobel Prize winner Norman Borlaug and his work reducing world hunger.

(by Grant Gerlock, Iowa Public Radio)

Heartbeat Today 10-26-2023

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

October 26th, 2023 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Patti Amos who is helping to organize a fundraising benefit for the Segebart family.  Cari and teenage son Cody were injured in a head-on collision with an uninsured drunk driver.  The benefit will be held on November 4, 2023 from 5:00 pm to :00 pm with a free will donation meal and an auction at the St. Joseph Parish Hall in Earling.

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Local 24-Hour Rainfall Totals Reported at 7:00 am on Thursday, October 26, 2023

Ag/Outdoor, Weather

October 26th, 2023 by Jim Field

  • KJAN, Atlantic  .24″
  • 7 miles NNE of Atlantic  .09″
  • Atlantic Airport  .19″
  • Massena  .37″
  • Elk Horn  .1″
  • Anita  .25″
  • Audubon  .08″
  • Oakland  .06″
  • Villisca  .38″
  • Corning  .28″
  • Underwood  .17″
  • Guthrie Center  .2″
  • Red Oak  .18″
  • Clarinda  .5″
  • Shenandoah  .2″
  • Carroll  .23″

Heartbeat Today 10-25-2023

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

October 25th, 2023 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Dylan Zmed, who with his brother, Zach, will present The Everly Brothers Experience” Sunday afternoon at the Wilson Performing Arts Center in Red Oak.

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Cass County Extension Report 10-25-2023

Ag/Outdoor, Podcasts

October 25th, 2023 by Jim Field

w/Kate Olson.

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Harvest continues to run ahead of last year

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Dry conditions led to another busy week in the fields for farmers. The U-S-D-A crop report says the corn harvest increased by 20 percent in the last week, bringing the total to 62 percent of the corn now out of the fields. That is two days ahead of last year and one week ahead of the five-year average. Combines have now harvested 87 percent of the soybeans statewide, up from 74 percent the week before. That is one day ahead of the harvest rate from last year and ten days ahead of the five-year average.

Heartbeat Today 10-24-2023

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

October 24th, 2023 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Sonya Clausen about the Atlantic BPO D.O.E.S. Quilt Show and Bake Sale this Saturday, October 28 from 10:00 am to 3:00 pm at The Venue in Atlantic.

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