Wednesday, January 14, 2026
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Play safe on the farm

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By John Schlageck, Kansas Farm Bureau

Farms and ranches offer children a unique environment in which to live, play, work and grow up.

With all the excitement and whirlwind of activities, potential hazards lurk around every machine shed, tractor, silo and grain bin.

Like a moth to a flame, belching diesel smoke, the roar of engines and rubber wheels on tractors, combines or silage cutters draw children to them. And like fire, they can be dangerous.

Such equipment can cut, crush, trap or kill children. It can harm the ones we want to protect the most – our children.

Childhood farm injuries and fatalities most often occur while children play where farm activities are going on, or the youngsters are innocent bystanders.

Each year, hundreds of children are killed, and thousands more are injured in farm-related incidents, according to National Safety Council statistics.

Children younger than 10 years old experience one of the highest rates of pediatric farm-related injuries, says Holly Higgins, Kansas Farm Bureau safety director.

“In an ideal world, parents should keep children away from farming activities and environmental hazards associated with farming and ranching,” Higgins says. “Never invite children to ride in the tractor. Stress that your youngsters stay away from machinery. Don’t let them play or hide under or around machinery like tractors.”

Education and awareness are the key ingredients to help make the farm a safer place for children to play, Higgins says. Brushing up on some of the potential hazards can also make it safer for parents.

While barns, grain handling facilities and big buildings can be fun to play in, children can fall or be exposed to harmful substances like chemicals and electricity.

Explain the dangers associated with stored grain. Stress that grain can entrap a person almost immediately. Children should never play around, or in grain that is stored in bins, trucks or wagons. Emphasize that it is difficult, or can be impossible, to pull a child out of grain if he/she becomes trapped.

Discuss with your children the potential dangers involved with farm animals. Remind them that while animals are fun to be around they can also bite, trample and stomp.

Tell your youngsters the signs that show an animal may be dangerous. Some of them include pawing the ground, snorting, raised hair and ears laid back.

“Animals – even friendly ones – can be unpredictable,” Higgins says. “Have children stay away from large ones. Emphasize they stay away from animals with newborn or young. Tell them to remain calm, speak quietly and move slowly when around animals.”

Wide-open spaces can provide children with ideal playgrounds. However, this isolation may also lead to difficulty finding help in the event of an emergency.

Remember, it is important youngsters have a safe place to play. Ask them to identify safe play areas. Talk about areas away from farm machinery, animals, manure pits and silos.

Carefully define safe boundaries. Let children know where they can and cannot play.

Safe play areas remain the best alternative to bringing children into the worksite. This is especially important when off-farm child care is not available.

Keep your youngsters safe while they play on the farm.

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.   

 cover photo – Joel Dinda

– See more at: http://www.kfb.org/news/insight/index.html#sthash.F4yK7Yd0.dpuf

Ghosts & Goblins Flashlight Adventure

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credit: Cheney Recreation Commission 

Grab your little ones and dress up in your Halloween costumes and grab your flashlight for another fun family adventure.  Some goblins dropped a bunch of goodies & fun items at the Fairground ball field for you to find.  Participants will be required to bring their own flashlight (no spotlights are allowed), and may collect a total of 10 spooky special items & other goodies.  Children 8 & under must be accompanied by an adult.  We will not be able to take any new participants the night of the event.  No school Friday, October 24. If weather is bad, event will move to the CRC building, 223 E. South Ave.

Date:                       Thursday, October 23

Time:                      7:15 p.m.

Age:                        11 years old & under

Location:                Meet at the Fairgrounds Front Gates

Fee:                         $3 per seeker

Deadline:                Monday, October 20

cover photo – Stuart Richards

City of Cheney Flu Shot Clinic

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Flu Shot Clinic will be held on Tuesday, 10/21 at City Hall from 2-4 PM.

Insurance and Medicare accepted.

Shots available for all ages.

cover photo – Blake Patterson

Chronicles of The Farm Woman: Henrietta Becker

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Farm woman

A local news item states that neighboring farm girl, Henrietta Becker, called her parents from New York City on New Year’s eve and that her voice came in clear on the party line.

Long distance tele-phone calls are  common place today.  Every day con-nections are made from the east coast to the west coast, to the north and south.  In the course of minutes one may be connected with London or Helsinki.  But it is still rare enough to be news when a call comes through from Manhattan Island on the party line.

The story behind this telephone call may well be observed and read by all who say there is no oppor-tunity for youth today. 

This neighbor girl is an intern in dietetics in Presbyterian Hospital and Medical Center and she got there entirely by her own efforts in the depression thirties.  The way has not been easy but the point is she is there and will complete her training in a few months.

This girl taught in country schools for eight years.  She hesitated to go to the university because she thought she didn’t have money enough.  She decided to try.  She found employ-ment, did without many things but earned her bachelor’s degree.  With even less money she set out for Iowa State to work toward a master’s degree.  While there the dormitory in which she lived, burned.  It burned on a rainy Saturday night and the only things she saved were an old dress and shoes and a raincoat.  From this experience she learned that it takes grace to receive as well as to give.  No one had ever given her anything before, or rather she had never before been placed in a position of needing to depend on someone else for a dry pair of hose and a toothbrush.  It was a struggle, she was tempted to come home.  It would have been so much easier.  Instead she acquired this added grace and finished the term.

The offer of internship in Presbyterian came.  She had little money and few clothes, but she accepted the offer.  After she had been there a few months a vacancy occurred on the staff and she was asked to supply.  For five months she was on the payroll and that was a godsend.  She is on the last lap now.

The experiences along the way have been as valuable to this country girl as her academic training.  She has pioneered as did her ancestors when they came to this new land from the old country.  She has worked hard and has learned to trust in the morrow.

Of course we are proud of Henrietta.  She is our neighbor.  But what she has done, others with health and determination and a vast capacity for work, can do.  Don’t tell us there is no opportunity for youth today.                   

Dog Food

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lee pitts

Tico writes a column for the Citizen’s Gazette of Burnett, Texas, which is amazing because judging by his picture in the paper, Tico is a dog. Tico says there are 100,000 cases of pet poisoning per year and these aren’t homicides… the pets are offing themselves by eating dangerous foods. Tico found a list on the Internet from a web site called Embrace that listed the top 20 foods that dogs, like Tico, shouldn’t eat. They included such things as sugar, macadamia nuts, coffee and corn cobs.

Of all my dogs I’ve ever owned not one had a Starbucks habit or had any use for corn cobs. I only had one dog killed by food and that’s the one who got creamed by a bull while he was gnawing on an old cow chip. But that’s hardly a poisoning. I did know a Lab who was owned by the looniest lady on earth who overdosed on a bag of chocolate eclairs once but it was an attempted suicide. If I had to live with that crazy woman I’d have killed myself too.

I am a firm believer that animals know what’s best for them. The only species that doesn’t apply to is the dog. They are picky eaters… anything they can pick up they will eat. They’ll eat anything with great gusto and enthusiasm!  Now that we aren’t killing horses anymore for dog food, the dogs have had to find alternative foodstuffs; like lizards, spiders, rats, mice, bobcats and mountain lions. Although eating cats is VERY dangerous. My Grandma’s Chihuahua named Chiquita tried to eat one of Grandma’s beloved cats and let me tell you, Grandma squashed Chiquita like a banana.

I don’t want to make light of a serious subject so as a public service I’d like to name the rest of the foods dogs shouldn’t eat. First on the list is chocolate. I feel bad about this because we used to feed Tootsie Rolls to a Beagle as a kid and it was actually pretty hilarious. But it didn’t die from eating chocolate. It was a Buick. A 1964 model I believe.

The number two food poison for dogs is raisins and they can cause kidney failure in dogs, although I’m sure they wouldn’t kill the wolves who’ve been eating your lambs and calves. (Wink, wink.)

Mushrooms are next on the list which explains the times you called your dog and it didn’t come. He or she was probably having a psychedelic experience and didn’t want to interrupt. For some dogs that’s the only trip they’ll ever get to take. A sweetener called xylitol is fourth on the list followed by chewing gum, vitamins, and, get this, bones. I don’t agree with the last item because when my wife worked at the grocery store she would frequently bring home big bones for our dog Aussie, and her coat never looked shinier. Although I should warn owners of little dogs, if your dog does choke on a ham hock you may have to perform the ham-lick maneuver.

I’ve already mentioned macadamias, sugar, bread, coffee and corn cobs but we can also add cookie dough and cake, especially birthday cake for any dog past its 20th birthday. A 20 year old dog is living on borrowed time and isn’t going to last much longer anyway, cake or no cake.

I believe the person who came up with this list was a vegetarian because #17 is meat and #18 is rawhide. Are you kidding me? Perhaps they were referring to the lesser meats such as sushi, cod, halibut and salmon (#19 on the list.) They did say that lean meat is okay if it is properly cooked. Heck, I can’t even get that in my house so what chance does a dog have? Dogs are drinking out of the toilet and eating fresh cow pies and the veg heads are worried about a little gristle. What do they think dogs ate before humans started feeding them pureed peas?

Last on the list is avocados. Our dogs Misty and Cindy wouldn’t come within 100 yards of an avocado tree because the overripe ones would splat on the ground and no dog wants it to say on its obituary that it was killed by an avocado.

I think that comes to 19 dangerous foods and I bet you’re wondering, what did I leave off? It was #9: chicken.  We had a dog once that ate the neighbors hens and the chicken didn’t kill it. The neighbor did. Take it from my dead dog, eating too much chicken can be deadly. Eat beef.
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