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Cass County Master Gardeners to Host Fall Plant Sale on September 14

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The shorter days and more moderate temperatures make this fall a great time for gardening projects. The Cass County Master Gardeners invite you to their annual Fall Plant Sale, set for Saturday morning, September 14, at the Cass County Community Center, 805 W 10th Street on the Fairgrounds in Atlantic. The sale will be open to the public to purchase divided perennials suitable for fall planting.

Plants expected to be on the sale include iris, rudbeckia, clematis, Siberian iris, perennial geranium, grape hyacinth bulbs. peonies, daylilies, hosta, dahlias, salvia, sedum, houseplants and more! There will also be a large collection of gently used garden decor, pots, books, and tools for shoppers to explore.

The sale begins at 8 AM, and will be held in the front parking lot of the Cass County Community Center on the fairgrounds in Atlantic. Interested gardeners are encouraged to arrive early for best plant selection, as high-demand plants occasionally sell out before 10 AM.

The Master Gardeners will bring perennials dug and divided from their own gardens to the fall plant sale. Community residents are also welcome to donate plants, and members may even help you dig! Please call in advance and make arrangements to drop off donated plants before the date of the plant sale. All funds raised from the sale support local Master Gardener projects such as community garden spaces, grants and educational activities across Cass County.

Many perennials work well for fall dividing and transplanting, including daylilies, peonies, garden phlox, bleeding heart, coneflowers, speedwell, and more. Iris and hosta can also be transplanted successfully in early fall. By dividing the plant when it is not flowering, all the energy it produces can be directed to root and foliage growth, so plants overwinter in place and come back strong in the spring. Additionally, the cooler weather is easier on the plants (and the gardener!), and the plants generally do not use as much water as in spring and summer.

Plants should be placed in the ground as early in fall as possible, but most can be successfully planted up until the ground freezes. The plants should also be adequately watered until the ground freezes, and some may benefit from a layer of mulch to help control moisture loss and help with root establishment. If you have questions about dividing and caring for plants, stop by the Extension Office or visit the online Extension Store to pick up a free publication on dividing and caring for perennial plants in the garden!

To donate items, or for more information about these events and other Master Gardener activities in Cass County, please call the Cass County Extension Office at 712-243-1132, stop by the office at 805 West 10th street in Atlantic, email Cass County Extension Director and Master Gardener Coordinator Kate Olson at keolson@iastate.edu or visit www.extension.iastate.edu/cass. You are also invited to follow the Cass County Master Gardeners Facebook page at www.facebook.com/CassCoMG to keep up with local events and tips for gardening!

Process continues on new Council Bluffs beef plant

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The developer of a new beef processing plant near Council Bluffs says they are moving into the third round of selling units to the Co-op which will supply the cattle. Chad Tentinger says he hopes they will be able to start construction next year.

“We are waiting to see that heifers are being retained, so we know that our herd is being built back,” he says. “So right now it looks like we’re starting to see that heifer retention, and as we see more and more that we’ll be able to make a business decision come next spring to break ground or not.” The Co-op will supply the beef for the Cattlemen’s Heritage processing plant using a different model than what is used now by the major processors.

“And we sell them based on the board of trade. The C-M-E (Chicago Mercantile Exchange). The problem with it is, over the last decade, the C-M-E has gotten further and further away from the fundamentals, and today it doesn’t trade on fundamentals. It trades on computer algorithms. It trades with no people in the pits anymore,” Tentinger says. Cattlemen’s Heritage will pay for cattle based on what’s called the Boxed Beef Cutout pricing model, which he says will provide and opportunity for a share of profits to go back to the cattle producer.

Tentinger says he isn’t trying to put the big processing plants out of business, he just wants to provide cattle producers like himself more options. “That’s my belief system. I think we need more options, more regional with producer involvement, so that we can get a better deal and receive more value,” Tentinger says. “But the only way we can receive more value for our product, is take ownership in the plant.” Tentinger says it’s a new way to bring more of the profit to the producers.

“The Co-op will own 20 percent give or take, but 20 percent of Cattlemen’s Heritage true ownership. So when somebody buys, for example, somebody buys a thousand shares, they have to deliver a thousand cattle every year,” he explains. He expects to have three rounds where they sell units, and the cost rises for each round.

The processing plant will source cattle from Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska and South Dakota and is designed to process two-thousand cattle daily for an annual total of 525-thousand. Tentinger says it not only supports family cattle producers, but will also stimulate the local economy by creating 800 direct jobs and 34-hundred indirect jobs.

Cass County (IA) Mobile Food Pantry Distribution Set for September 11

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) –  Cass County’s next mobile food pantry distribution will be held on September 11, 2024. Atlantic’s Mobile Food Pantry distribution will be at the Cass County Fairgrounds. Massena’s Mobile Food Pantry will be on the East Side of Massena’s City Park. The mobile pantries are hosted by community partners across Cass County.

A mobile pantry is a traveling food pantry that delivers food directly to families in need for a one-day distribution. People from surrounding towns and communities are welcome. Mobile food pantries are available free of charge. Anyone in need is welcome, and no documentation is required. Each car can take food for up to two households at a time. For any additional information or questions please contact Grace McAfee, Community Wellness Coordinator, at (712) 250-8170 or by email at mcage@casshealth.org.

Additional mobile food pantries have been scheduled for Atlantic, Anita, Griswold, and Massena. (See below for details)

Atlantic 2024 Mobile Food Pantries

Where: Cass County Fairgrounds (1000 Fair Ave. Atlantic, IA 50022)

2024 Dates: September 11, October 9

Time: 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Anita 2024 Mobile Food Pantries

Where: Anita Food Pantry (208 Chestnut St. Anita, IA 50020)

2024 Dates: October 16

Time: 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

Griswold 2024 Mobile Food Pantries

Where: Central Church of Christ (51 Harrison St. Griswold, IA 51535)

2024 Dates: November 2

Time:  10:00 am – 11:30 am

Massena 2024 Mobile Food Pantries

Where: East Side of Massena’s City Park (500 5th St, Massena, IA 50853)

Dates: September 11, October 9

Time: 4:30 pm – 5:00 pm

Mobile pantry dates, times, and locations are subject to change. For the latest information on mobile pantries in the county, visit https://foodbankheartland.org/food-resources/find-food/. For information on local food, farmers markets, and food access, follow the Cass County Local Food Policy Council’s Facebook page @CassCountyLocalFood.

Family farmers call for a level playing field

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Iowa News Service) –  The U.S. Department of Agriculture is considering new rules, seeking to level the playing field for independent farmers in Iowa and across the country. Food price gouging has become a campaign issue in the Midwest, where the election could be won or lost. Berleen Wobeter and her husband Pete raise cattle on about 300 in central Iowa. She said family farmers want Congress to strengthen the century-old Packers and Stockyards Act, address alleged food price gouging and fix the lack of competition in the beef industry, where four companies control 85% of the market.

“That’s not going to happen the more consolidated it is,” Wobeter pointed out. “Then if there isn’t a market for all of our beef, then I guess some of us need to get out. But it needs to be fair.”
The Biden administration has proposed a new rule designed to update the Packers and Stockyards Act, which was signed in 1921. The U.S. Department of Agriculture is taking public comment through Sept. 11.

Congress is considering restoring mandatory country-of-origin labeling for beef in the next Farm Bill, which would allow domestic producers to charge higher prices for beef grown in the U.S. Wobeter said despite being in a highly consolidated industry among large corporate ag producers, she and Pete have continued to succeed on their 300 acres near Toledo. “I think that has been my husband’s approach to things,” Wobeter explained. “In the ’80s, when it was ‘go big or get out’ he said no, that’s not the way he was raised. You just kind of stay steady, stay within your budget, don’t overspend, and it’s worked for us.”

The 2023 Farm Bill, which has already been extended until the end of this month, remains on hold in Washington.

Grassley says congress will extend current Farm Bill rather than approve new one

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 3rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley is predicting an extension of the 2018 Farm Bill will be in the temporary spending bill congress is likely to pass in the next few weeks to keep the government operating.  “I think we’d be better off having a five-year Farm Bill,” Grassley says, “but that isn’t going to happen.” Congress voted last November to extend the policies of the 2018 Farm Bill, which had expired on September 30th. So far this year, the House Agriculture Committee has voted for a new version of the Farm Bill, but the measure hasn’t been brought up for a vote in the full House and negotiations in the Senate haven’t produced a bill yet either.

Grassley, a Republican who serves on the Senate Ag Committee, says the new Farm Bill needs to include higher price supports for commodities like corn and soybeans. “We say it this way in the United States Senate: ‘We need more farm in the Farm Bill,'” Grassley says. “Presently it’s 85% food stamps and 15% agriculture and we think the reflection of the inflation to put more farm in the Farm Bill.” Congress has a September 30th deadline to pass budget bills, but 1997 was the last time that happened.

Lawmakers instead pass a measure that funds all government agencies. Grassley says that move should happen well before September 30th. “When you get close to shutting down the government, like let’s say the week before, there’s a lot of taxpayers’ money spent just getting ready to shut down the government,” Grassley says, “so we ought to bring some consistency to it and it should not be a controversial thing.”

After the House and Senate passed a short term spending plan last September, a handful of Republicans successfully removed Kevin McCarthy from his role as House Speaker.

Incentives for farmers work to restore Iowa habitat, protect soil

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 3rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Iowa News Service) – Practical Farmers of Iowa is looking for landowners who want to help restore natural habitat on their property, and get help doing it. It’s part of a larger effort to help farmers become more environmentally friendly.
PFI’s Habitat Incentive program offers farmers a financial incentive to plant prairie strips on their land, for example.

PFI’s Senior Habitat Viability Coordinator Grace Yi said those strips restore habitat for native species while at the same time reducing soil erosion. “All of these practices are going to have multiple benefits,” said Yi. “So they are going to be good for soil health, good for water-quality improvement, and also provide habitat for wildlife. ”

In addition to the prairie strip portion of the Habitat Incentive Program, PFI is also making incentives available to do precision conservation analysis on their land – which helps farmers make use of unproductive acres. Yi said the end goal of the program is different for most of the farmers who apply.

Rolling Farm Fields, North of Dubuque, Iowa

For some it might be reducing soil erosion and runoff into nearby waterways. For others it night be finding a productive way to use other acres. “For some farmers it might be that corner of the farm is low yielding,” said Yi, “it’s difficult to farm with because it’s steep in slope or it has weird turnarounds, so they can’t easily round out the field. ”

In order to be eligible for the program, at least 50% of the area the farmer plans to change has to be unprofitable. The incentive, funded by federal and state sources, is capped at $10,000.

Largest ever group of barns to be featured in statewide tour

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 2nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Ninety-two restored barns will be featured on this month’s statewide tour organized by the Iowa Barn Foundation. The group raises money to preserve the state’s dwindling number of barns. Wayne Frost, a spokesman for the foundation, says all 92 barns on the tour have received Iowa Barn Foundation grants.  “A sprinkling of the barns we have helped across the state,” Frost says. Twenty of the barns have never been featured before on one of the group’s tours.

“I would tell anybody who’s gone out on a barn tour before, come back again because we’ve got a lot of new barns,” Frost says, “and every barn has its own story to tell.” The tour is unique because people can go inside the barns rather than just drive by. Frost says some are working barns. “There’s hay in the hayloft (and) straw; there’s cattle, hogs, sheep, horses — so it’s a mix,” Frost says. “Some of them have spiffied them up.”

This is the Iowa Barn Foundation’s 24th fall tour, scheduled for the weekend of September 14th and 15th.  “The value of the tour is raising the awareness of the impact our barns have,” Frost says. “One of our board members, Dwight Hughes, likes to use the phrase that, ‘Our barns are really the castles on the prairie,’ and if you think of the landscape as you drive across the state of Iowa, all the barns that you see — it’s just amazing, but they’re disappearing.”

About 200-thousand barns were built in Iowa. Experts estimate only 60-thousand are still standing. Frost restored a barn near Waterloo that was built in the 1870s and it was included in the Barn Foundation’s spring tour.

Expectations are high as fall harvest nears

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 2nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Labor Day marks the end of summer when kids are back in school and farmers are making plans to harvest. State Ag Secretary Mike Naig says the end of the drought has expectations high. “All indications are, is that we’re looking at a sizable corn and soybean crop this year,” he says. Naig says there’s never 100 percent perfect conditions across the state, and that’s evident again this year. “There are places that that certainly because of severe weather flooding, northwest Iowa in particular, some parts of southern Iowa that actually, believe it or not, got dry again and and so you’re going to have some variability in in some places across the state,” Naig says. He says those areas seeing weather impact don’t bring down the lofty harvest projections.

“By and large, we’re hearing about a really good crop. In fact, we may be looking at some record yields in places, and possibly even near or record corn and soybean crops in the state of Iowa,” he says. Naig says there’s some hope that the growing season will extend later into the fall.

“You know, it was a bit delayed at spring planting. So I think there’s plenty of folks that are saying, we sure could use a long fall. But then again, there’s gonna be some folks that go right on schedule,” Naig says. “So I would say the word that you’ve got to use for the crop this year’s is variability.” Naig says there’s moisture in the ground and the conditions are good right now for the corn and soybeans to mature.

DNR official says boating accident numbers down in 2024, likely due to high water

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 2nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Labor Day weekend was expected to be a busy one on the state rivers and lakes. D-N-R boating law coordinator, Susan Stocker, says it has been a safe summer for boating, in part because high water kept some of the boats at the dock. “It was Fourth of July, before or after, before the Mississippi River or areas were able to support boating. So it’s been from a safety aspect, it’s it’s been a safer season,” she says.

Stocker hopes everyone makes sure the end of the season is safe as well by not drinking and driving a boat and following all the rules. “Make sure you’re always have a wearable life jacket for each person. And of course, it’s a fabulous idea if you’re going to wear it,” she says, “because similar to seat belts, you know, we never know when you’re going to get into a boating accident on the water or and so wearing a life jacket is very, very important. And reminder for all of the young people that are under the age of 13, they have to actually wear the life jacket.”

DNR Water Patrol boat

Those who take a canoe or kayak out one last time will also want to scout their route. “We have an interactive paddlers map on our D-N-R web page, under things to do, canoeing, kayaking, where to paddle,” Stocker says. “And so we’ve got updated interactive map that’ll tell you where you’ve got some construction, where you’ve got some conditions that are dangerous.”

Stocker says high water has left debris in some areas and there’s also erosion on shores. So be sure to check things out whether you are boating or on the water in a kayak or canoe.

Layoffs at Wilson Trailer Company in Sioux City

Ag/Outdoor, News

August 30th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A northwest Iowa business that makes trailers for hauling livestock and grain will be laying off dozens of employees this fall. Sioux City’s Wilson Trailer Company has notified the State of Iowa it will be laying off 58 workers on September 30th. By law, businesses that have more than 100 employees are required to provide 60 days advance notice of layoffs. Employees were notified Thursday.

The company, in a written statement, cited slowing trailer sales in the agricultural market as the reason for the layoffs. Wilson Trailer Company, founded in 1890, is a family-owned business with headquarters in Sioux City. It operates five production plants, including two in Sioux City. The rest are in Moberly, Missouri, Yankton, South Dakota, and Lennox, South Dakota.

In addition to trailers to haul grain and livestock, the company makes flatbed and gooseneck trailers.