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Make it a safe Harvest

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Make it a safe harvest

By John Schlageck, Kansas Farm Bureau

Long hours, a flurry of activity, less-than-ideal weather conditions and work involving large machinery combine to make wheat harvest a potentially dangerous period.

To say farmers are busy during this time would be an understatement. Try to call one after 7 a.m. or before 10 p.m. and you’ll be wasting your time – they’re not home. They’re in the field or shop preparing for harvest.

Wheat harvest marks the pinnacle of nearly a year’s effort to produce this crop. During harvest, farmers and custom cutters work long, hard hours. Fifteen-minute meal breaks are about the only real time off in days that often stretch 14 hours. If weather conditions cooperate, cutting usually begins about 9 a.m. and continues until midnight, or when the grain becomes too moist or too tough to cut. People and machines are pushed to their limits.

While every machine – combine, truck, grain cart, tractor or auger – provides its own unique hazards, operator stress or error account for the majority of harvest accidents. Years of safety features built into these machines are useless without operator safety. Exceed human limitations and accidents are bound to follow.

Operator knowledge and attitude remain the key to a smooth, well-oiled wheat harvest. A safe operator knows his skills, limitations and condition, both physical and emotional.

The safety-conscious operator knows his equipment, its condition, capacities, limitations, hazards and safety equipment. Such an operator is constantly monitoring field and weather conditions.

In Kansas, thousands of acres of wheat add to the pressure of slicing through those acres before hail or windstorm destroys the bountiful crop. With this added pressure comes the desire to take chances, short cuts and extend working hours. Such behavior only adds to fatigue and high levels of stress and tension.

Remember, harvest will take its toll if you don’t take breaks. Eating balanced meals, even if you only take 15 minutes is important.

Stop the machine. Crawl off and relax a few minutes while you’re eating.

Drink plenty of water, tea or other cold liquids during the hot, dry days of wheat harvest. Jump out of your machine for such breaks at least every hour.

Walk around the machine to limber up. This will also allow you to check for possible trouble spots on your combine.

Before harvest ever begins, check your equipment and perform the proper maintenance. Consult your operator’s manual or dealer if you have any questions. Well-maintained machinery reduces the chance for breakdowns and related aggravation in the wheat field.

Delays due to breakdown only force harvest crews to work longer and harder to catch up. Such delays also increase the chance of accidents during this catch-up period.

As is sometimes the case with some farmers, they may have kept some combines longer than they should have. Treat these “old-timers” with care. They’ll need additional preventative and routine maintenance.

Pulling pre-harvest maintenance is easier and less frustrating than fixing such problems in the heat, dirt and sweat of the harvest field. Reduce your chances of aggravation now – it will be worth it.

John Schlageck is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas. Born and raised on a diversified farm in northwestern Kansas, his writing reflects a lifetime of experience, knowledge and passion.

Kansas Man Pleads Guilty In Armed Robbery

A Topeka man has pleaded guilty to taking part in an armed robbery at a Little Caesars Pizza restaurant, U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said today.Court-gavel

David Pierre Wigfall, 28, Topeka, Kan., pleaded guilty to aiding and abetting a robbery in which the robber brandished a firearm. In his plea, Wigfall admitted that on March 1, 2013, he drove a white Cadillac occupied by co-defendants Alonzo Nathan Lax, Johnnie Lee McCall and Jordan Lucas. At McCall’s direction, Lax agreed to rob Little Caesar’s Pizza at 2620 SW 6th Street, Suite B, in Topeka. Wearing a blue hooded sweatshirt, gloves and a black ski mask, Lax entered the restaurant, brandished a firearm and demanded money. A clerk saw him leave the restaurant and get into the passenger side of the Cadillac.

A few minutes later, officers of the Topeka Police Department found the Cadillac parked at a residence in the 1000 block of SW Plass and determined that it was registered to Wigfall. They saw articles that appeared to be from the robbery in the car. They kept watch on the car until Wigfall got in and drove away. When they stopped Wigfall they recovered a mask and coins from the robbery that Wigfall had discarded before they pulled him over.

Sentencing is set for Sept. 23. He faces a penalty of not less than seven years and not more than life and a fine up to $250,000.

Co-defendants include:
Johnnie Lee McCall, 28, Topeka, Kan., who pleaded guilty to one count of aiding and abetting commercial robbery and one count of aiding and abetting brandishing a firearm. He is set for sentencing Aug. 19.
Jordan Christopher Lucas, 26, Topeka, who pleaded guilty to one count of commercial robbery and one count of brandishing a firearm in connection with a Feb. 27, 2013 robbery at Baskin Robbins, 4400 S.W. 21st in Topeka. He is set for sentencing Sept. 3.
Alonzo Lax, 26, Topeka, who pleaded guilty to robbery and brandishing a firearm. He is set for sentencing Aug. 13.

Grissom commended the Topeka Police Department, the FBI and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jared Maag for their work on the case.

Man Abandoned in 1972 in Kansas Seeks Answers

ancestry

(AP) — A man who was abandoned in a phone booth in Kansas City, Kan., in 1972 is on a quest to identify his birth parents and why they left him.

Bill Atkinson, who now lives in suburban St. Louis, was found covered in nothing but a blanket in the phone booth on June 7, 1972. Doctors thought he was about 12 hours old when he was found.

Now a 41-year-old husband and father of three, Atkinson says the couple who adopted him gave him a great life. But he says having his own children has made him interested in finding out about his origins.

The investigation has proven difficult. Many of those involved in his discovery are dead and there are few clues from records.

Rural Church Uncovers Unusual Bibles

ashland biblesA small rural church in southwest Kansas is celebrating what some might consider a gift from God.

A minister of the Presbyterian Church in Ashland says she was sorting through some boxes at the church when she found one filled with some unusual Bibles.

The 15 Bibles found by Minister Marsha Granberry were printed in several languages including Eskimo, Slavic, Cherokee, Russian, Chinese and Yiddish.

Most of the Bibles were printed in the 1920s and 1930s, except the Cherokee version, which apparently was printed in 1860.

Granberry says the Bibles are in pristine condition, with no watermarks, tears or underlining.

The Wichita Eagle reports the monetary value of the Bibles hasn’t been determined but the small congregation is considering putting them up for auction to pay for a badly-needed church bathroom.

G-E Wheat “Isolated” Case, Says Local Weed Scientist (VIDEO)

green wheatThe genetically modified wheat  found in Oregon last month is an  “isolated event,” according to the USDA.

“USDA has neither found nor been informed of anything that would indicate that this incident amounts to more than a single isolated incident in a single field on a single farm,” the agency said in a statement issued Friday.

“All information collected so far shows no indication of the presence of GE (genetically engineered) wheat in commerce.”

Phil Stahlman, weed scientist at KSU Ag Research Center in Hays, says major markets, such as Japan, Korea and Taiwan, have postponed imports of U.S. white wheat as they continue to study information from U.S. officials:


USDA’s investigators have interviewed the person who harvested the wheat as well as the seed supplier; and reviewed samples of the wheat seed sold to the producer, and samples of the producer’s wheat harvests.  All samples collected so far, including those  from 200 area growers near the genetically engineered wheat field, have tested negative.

KHAZ Country Music News: Trisha Yearwood, Little Big Town Win Daytime Emmy Awards

khaz trisha yearwood 20120301Congratulations to Trisha Yearwood and Little Big Town on their Daytime Emmy wins Sunday night. Trisha’s Food Network show, Trisha’s Southern Kitchen, tied for the Outstanding Culinary Program trophy with another show on that network, The Best Thing I Ever Made.  

Little Big Town took the Outstanding Original Song category for their song, “Good Afternoon,” the theme from ABC’s Good Afternoon America.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

 

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Hunting Concerns Conservationists

quivirawildlife

(AP) – Conservationists are raising concerns that a proposal to expand hunting at the Quivira National Wildlife Refuge could endanger whooping cranes that migrate through the south-central Kansas refuge.

Currently, the refuge is closed when the whooping cranes, which are an endangered species, stop on their annual migration.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is considering allowing hunting when the cranes are at Quivira but put areas the birds are known to frequent off limits. There’s also interest in allowing deer and turkey hunting at the refuge, which currently is banned.

Conservationists say the changes but the whooping cranes at risk, and would change the purpose of the refuge to accommodate hunting.

There are only about 600 whooping cranes remaining in the world.

KHAZ Country Music News: The Band Perry Proudly Continues Country Music’s Big Hair Tradition

khaz the band perry 20130617The Band Perry‘s Kimberly, Reid and Neil Perry are all blessed with very full heads of hair, and it takes some effort to put every strand in place before hitting the stage.

While Kimberly admits she travels with more hair products than her brothers, she still gets her hair fixed in a timely manner.  As for who’s the slowest, Kimberly tells The Boston Globe, “Neil does take the longest to get ready.”

When it comes to who has the best hair in the band, Kimberly gives that honor to her brother Reid.  “Everybody tells us that,” she says. “I’ve come to terms with it.”

The Band Perry will be rocking their big hair at a show in Cullman, AL this Friday.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

 

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Rain slows Kansas wheat harvest

(AP) — Overnight rains have slowed the start of the Kansas winter wheat harvest in south-central Kansas.wheat-e1294107269122-150x150

Steve Inslee, the manager of the OK Co-op grain elevator in Kiowa, said Monday a few local farmers began hauling in wheat last Thursday.

He says wheat harvest is by not close to being in full swing in the area because much of the wheat is still green and not ready to cut.

The elevator in Kiowa has taken in just 140,000 bushels of wheat during the last four days.

Test weights have been averaging around 59 pounds per bushel. Inslee says wheat quality has been all over the board.

Kiowa got less than a half inch of rain early Monday, far less than the pouring rain that fell across south-central Kansas.

 

Winners: Chicken Soup for the Soul book with 99 KZ Country

khaz css inspiration for writers 20130604Winners:  Dick Breese, Mira Bell, Mary Jane Davidson, Pat Nichols and Joyce Sack!

101 Motivational Stories for Writers — Budding or Bestselling — from Books to Blogs

No matter the genre, no matter the medium, the writing process is hard! But you will find inspiration, encouragement, and advice in these 101 stories from others who have stuck with it, through the setbacks and struggles, and successfully went from dreaming about writing to being a writer. Whether you’re an aspiring author, a blogger, or a bestselling writer, this book will motivate and energize you.

 

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