Sunday, January 25, 2026
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Spring trees

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Photo credit: Drew Avery

By: Scott Eckert, County Extension Agent, Horticulture

Spring is ALMOST here!  Time to think about planting trees.

The Kansas Forest Service offers low-cost tree and shrub seedlings for use in conservation plantings. Plants are one to two years old and sizes vary from 5 to 18 inches, depending on species. Orders are accepted from now through the first full week in May each year, but order early to insure receiving the items you want.

Orders are shipped from the second week of March through May 5.Approved uses for these plants include windbreaks, wood lots, riparian plantings, wildlife habitat and Christmas trees. They may not be used for landscape (ornamental) plantings or grown for resale.

All items are sold in units. Each single species unit consists of 25 plants. For example, a unit of Eastern red cedar has 25 trees per unit. Though a single species unit is most commonly purchased, four special bundles are also available including a songbird bundle, quail bundle, pheasant bundle and wildlife mast bundle.

Tree planting accessories are also available including marking flags, root protective slurry, rabbit protective tubes, weed barrier fabric and tree tubes.  If there have been problems with deer browsing on young trees, the tree tubes are a must.
For details and an order form, go to:
https://www.kansasforests.org/public_saps/Welcome.aspx

Order forms are also available from the K-State Research and Extension, Harvey County, here in Newton.

Barton men hang historic number on No. 12 Hutchinson

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barton cc

Playing without three key players including two starters, the Barton Community College men’s basketball team put forth its best team effort in knocking off No. 12 Hutchinson Community College 105-93 Wednesday night at the Barton Gym.  In the 105th meeting between the two rivals, Barton led all but fifty-six seconds of the contest going on to score its highest output ever in the series.   The victory improves unranked Barton to 4-1 in the Jayhawk West and 16-3 overall while sending Hutchinson to its third straight loss to drop the Blue Dragons to 1-3 in conference play and 14-4 overall.   Concluding a tough five-game nine-day stretch including two games against nationally ranked teams, Barton will get a much needed rest until a January 21 trip to Colby, Kansas, for a 8:00 p.m. conference matchup at the Community Building against Colby Community College.  

Fourteen seconds into the contest Hutchinson momentarily silenced the juiced up Barton crowd executing a perfect Moataz Aly to Bashier Ahmed back door alley-oop dunk.  Twenty seven seconds later Tyrone Acuff buried his first of two three-pointers on the night regaining the Cougar lead.  Barton continued to lead until a DeShawn Freeman put Hutchinson up 20-19 with 10:54 to play.  It would be the ranked Blue Dragons’ last lead as Acuff put the Cougars up fifteen seconds later.   A 9-0 run late in the first half built the lead out to sixteen and Christian Smith‘s buzzer beating baseline trey sent the Cougars to the locker room with a fifteen point advantage.

Both teams came out hot in the second half but four three pointers by the Cougars increased the lead to twenty just four minutes into the second half.  Smith knocked down two of his four treys on the night while Jalin Barnes and Kenny Enoch dropped bombs as well as the Cougars would draining 8-of-11 from behind the arc in the second half. 

Another Enoch trey increased the lead out to twenty-two with twelve minutes to play but a 15-3 answer by the Blue Dragons over the next three minutes cut the deficit to ten.  Barton widened the lead out to fifteen but three missed free throws and Hutchinson scoring ten of the next fourteen points cut the Cougars’ lead to nine with 2:38 to play.  With uneasiness filling the Barton Gym, the Blue Dragons kept attacking slimming the deficit to six with fifty-two seconds to play.  A pair of Acuff free throws followed by a Hoffman missed three-pointer with forty-two seconds all but sealed the fate as Smith and Khalil Gracey each made a pair of free throws for the final twelve point victory.

Acuff’s career high twenty-eight points led the Cougars in scoring as all five starters eclipsed the ten point mark.  Scoring seventeen first half points, Acuff connected on 9-of-11 from the field and 8-of-11 from the charity stripe while also grabbing a team high eight rebounds.  Saddled with foul trouble throughout the contest, point guard Barnes led with three steals and finished with twenty-two points in twenty-five minutes of court time.  Smith also posted career high production knocking down 4-of-5 from behind the arc scoring twenty points, none bigger than a first half dagger from the baseline corner as time expired giving Barton a fifteen point advantage.  Rock steady Enoch added seventeen while  added eleven as each connected on 3-of-7 from three-point land.  

As a team the Cougars shot 55.4% on the top rated defensive team marking the second straight game Barton eclipsed 50% from the field on a top conference defensive squad.   Having drained ten or more treys six times this season, Barton made it seven games burying 14-of-24 from behind the arc for 58.3% while holding Hutchinson to 8-of-27 (38.9%).   The top rated rebounding team Hutchinson won the battle on the boards 41-31 but the top rated Cougars turned ten steals into a 16-12 points off turnover margin.   From the charity stripe, despite missing eight free throws in the last six minutes, Barton was perfect in its last six to finish 29-of-43 (67.4%) while Hutchinson went 17-of-28 for 60.7%. 

Hutchinson also placed five players in double-digit scoring led by Bashier Ahmed’s twenty-two points.  The Jayhawk West’s leading scorer DeShawn Freeman scored nineteen while Akbar Hoffman came off the bench to score eighteen.  Austin Budke finished with fourteen while Zach Winter added ten.   Keanu Pinder led the rebounding grabbing half of his team leading ten rebounds from the offensive glass as the Blue Dragons hauled down fourteen offensive boards.  Winter and Che Bob led Hutchinson’s 15-13 assist advantage with three each.

Barton played the contest missing three players stemming from an on-court altercation on Monday versus Seward County Community College.  With time winding down in Barton’s 97-73 win over the Saints, Cougar reserve player Tyron Hamby and the Saints’ Kevin Sims became involved in a physical exchange.   Leaving the bench in support of Hamby, starters Ahmad Walker, who leads the Cougars in most statistical categories including top ten rankings in the Jayhawk West, and Eddie Hunt joined Hamby in being assessed a two-game suspension.  All three players will miss the trip to Colby but should be available for Barton’s next home game on January 24 against Pratt Community College.

Vegetable taste test results available to help growers choose varieties

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Mark Seal
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack visits Blue Ridge Produce in Elkwood, VA on Thursday, May 30, 2013. Blue Ridge Produce is a local food hub aggregating Virginia-grown fruits and vegetables for sale to wholesale customers in the Capitol region. (L to R Blue Ridge Produce Jim Epstein, Blue Ridge Produce Mark Seale, and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack). USDA Photo by Bob Nichols.

The University of Missouri’s Bradford Research Center is making available the results of vegetable variety taste tests conducted during 2014. Participants scored samples of different varieties of tomatoes, tomatillos, and peppers, and the results of this scoring are now available online. Tests results for sweet corn and melon varieties are also available. Click here for more information.

Source: Weekly Harvest

Keeping kids connected during long winter days

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(NAPS)—There’s good news for parents looking for a positive way to keep their kids entertained when there is no school. There is an affordable way to keep kids connected to the Internet.

From snow days to holiday breaks, kids will be off from school often over the next few months. And with the inclement weather, this means they are inside, itching for something to do. Instead of watching TV or fighting with siblings, using the Internet can be a more interactive, productive choice for kids of all ages.

Unfortunately, about 30 percent of Americans, many of whom live below the poverty line, don’t have Internet access in their homes. To help, Comcast is offering a low-cost broadband adoption program called Internet Essentials.

Internet Essentials offers families with at least one child eligible for the National School Lunch Program Internet for $9.95 a month; the option to buy a laptop or desktop computer for less than $150; and access to digital literacy training online, in person or in print.

With a service such as this, kids can connect to fun online educational activities for free while they are off from school, and they can keep up with their assignments and stay connected to teachers and classmates. This way, they are not only keeping busy, but they are learning.

Here are a few cool sites:

  • Khan Academy (khanacademy.org): Get a personalized experience in math, biology, economics, computer science, art history and more.
  • PBS Kids (pbskids.org): Find learning games associated with your favorite PBS Kids characters such as Clifford, Curious George and The Cat in the Hat.
  • FunBrain (funbrain.com): Access a ton of activities; read books and comics; and play Mad Libs, math baseball and tic-tac-toe.

Plus, the whole family can use the Internet at home this winter to stay in touch with loved ones, search for new healthy recipes to start the year off right, fill out tax returns and apply for financial aid.

So far, more than 350,000 families, or about 1.4 million Americans, have been connected to the power of the Internet through Internet Essentials. There is also a new amnesty program for families that would qualify for the program but have a past due balance. If they meet all other eligibility criteria, Comcast will offer amnesty for a bill that is more than one year old in order for that family to be eligible.

To learn more or apply, visit www.InternetEssentials.com or call 1-855-846-8376. For Spanish, visit www.InternetBasico.com or call 1-855-765-6995.

Educators and third parties can visit www.InternetEssentials.com/Partner.

 

 

There is a program designed to help children in low-income families get connected to the Internet at home.

 

 

New app helps strawberry and peach growers deal with diseases

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A Clemson fruit specialist and a computer software designer have teamed up to develop a smartphone tool to help strawberry and peach growers. “MyIPM” is the first smartphone app that provides critical disease information for growers to use in making management decisions. “Growers will be able to pick effective and safe fungicides for conventional and organic production of strawberry,” said fruit specialist Guido Schnabel.
Related ATTRA Publication: Peaches: Organic and Low-Spray Production

Source: Weekly Harvest