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KU News: Researcher co-edits special issue highlighting how just energy transition can happen globally

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

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Researcher co-edits special issue highlighting how just energy transition can happen globally

LAWRENCE — As the world transitions from fossil fuels to renewable energy, entire communities are being left behind or overlooked. A University of Kansas associate professor of public affairs & administration has co-edited a new special issue of the journal Planning Theory & Practice examining how public planners can help ensure a just energy transition around the globe. “While people may think of these energy problems being in Madrid, Nairobi or other major cities in other countries, they are also right here,” Ward Lyles said. “There are already winners and losers in places like Kansas that are getting funding to address these questions and issues of air quality, justice and place-based solutions, to deal with energy transition as it lands in communities.”

KU to welcome School of Pharmacy dean candidates to Lawrence campus

LAWRENCE — Four candidates will hold public presentations in consideration of becoming the next dean of the School of Pharmacy at the University of Kansas. The name of each candidate will be announced approximately two business days before their respective campus visit, and visits are scheduled Feb. 10, 13, 17 and 20. Presentations will take place in Room 1020 of the School of Pharmacy building and will be livestreamed.

 

Artist’s guide to digital weaving blends old, new technology

LAWRENCE — The new 72-page book “RATIO: Digital Weaving to Change the World” is Poppy DeltaDawn’s first take on a more cross-disciplinary approach to the possibilities and implications of the digital hand-loom. The University of Kansas assistant professor of visual art spends much of “RATIO” explaining and illustrating her methods — practically and step by step — but also recounts the development of weaving technology in China and Europe, integrating a philosophy that, in the words of her publisher, “considers the broader implications of creating cloth and why it matters to our agency, autonomy and freedom.”

 

KU graduate is first Jayhawk named finalist for Fellowship for New Americans

LAWRENCE — University of Kansas alumna Isabel Keleti is the first KU graduate to be named a finalist for a highly competitive national fellowship that provides merit-based funding for new Americans, immigrants and children of immigrants who are poised to make significant contributions to U.S. culture. Selected from a pool of more than 2,600 applicants, Keleti is one of 77 finalists to interview for the Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans. A dedicated pianist and educator, Keleti is a Leawood native and Blue Valley North High School graduate. She earned a bachelor’s degree in piano performance from KU in 2017.

 

Full stories below.

 

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Contact: Mike Krings, KU News Service, 785-864-8860, [email protected], @MikeKrings

Researcher co-edits special issue highlighting how just energy transition can happen globally

 

LAWRENCE — As the world transitions from fossil fuels to renewable energy, entire communities are being left behind or overlooked. A University of Kansas researcher has co-edited a new special issue of a journal examining how public planners can help ensure a just energy transition around the globe.

“From a planetary standpoint, we have to get off of coal, but there are people employed at coal plants. And there are communities that are very dependent on fossil fuels,” said Ward Lyles, associate professor of public affairs & administration at KU. “As you look around the world there are people who are making choices about their energy future and finding it’s not always a just future for everyone.”

Lyles, along with Fayola Jacobs and Elise Harrington of the University of Minnesota, edited the special issue of the journal Planning Theory & Practice. The issue invited scholars from around the world to explore topics in a just energy transition and how planners can play a part in equity and justice, policy and governance, community engagement, and other factors.

“This issue’s pieces offer planning a call to action, an encouragement to redouble our efforts to address justice in both traditional planning areas and increasingly important arenas, such as energy. We are reminded that a transition away from carbon-intensive fossil fuels and shift in energy production technologies does not inherently result in processes and practices that reshape social and economic systems for good, from documenting the prevalence of unjust financial practices in the solar industry to re-centering non-human beings in the energy transition,” the editors write in their introduction.

The journal includes submissions from authors representing five continents exploring topics in just energy transition in both the Global North and South. Paired teams offered pieces addressing a topic as well as a response from peers. Topics covered include energy poverty in the Global North, socially and ecologically just energy transitions, the politics of resistance to planning for just energy transitions, debilitating debt’s role and the dual role of urban artificial intelligence in such transitions.

The contributed pieces give examples of attempts at just transition, such as the European Union’s support of switching to renewable energy, with unintended consequences of communities in Spain, often poor communities, being overlooked and left without dependable access to electricity. Others examine how politics of resistance have cropped up in locations such as Colombia, South Africa and Indonesia, often in response to an urban bias in energy transition. All three nations are major coal producers and have committed to a just energy transition, but they have seen debates and resistance in areas traditionally overlooked in policy discussions.

The pieces point out potential issues, such as poverty and how they stand in the way of a just energy transition, while the responses examine ways urban planning can take the examples to heart and ensure that current and future generations can be just and equitable in their work toward that goal.

“While people may think of these energy problems being in Madrid, Nairobi or other major cities in other countries, they are also right here,” Lyles said. “There are already winners and losers in places like Kansas that are getting funding to address these questions and issues of air quality, justice and place-based solutions, to deal with energy transition as it lands in communities.”

Authors point out how efforts to aid an energy transition are often well intentioned and how technology designed to assist can perpetuate injustices.

“The digital divide — a disparity in access to and literacy in digital technologies — risks benefiting only certain population segments with AI-driven energy initiatives. Those lacking necessary technology or digital skills may be further marginalized in an increasingly digitized energy landscape. Additionally, data privacy and surveillance concerns arise as urban AI systems collect and analyze vast amounts of personal and community data,” writes Mennatullah Hendawy of Ain Shams University in Cairo. “Without robust safeguards and transparent governance, AI in energy management could lead to intrusive monitoring of individuals’ energy consumption patterns, infringing on personal freedoms and privacy. Therefore, to support a just energy transition, AI deployment must adhere to fairness, transparency and inclusivity, ensuring broad accessibility and mitigating potential negative impacts like job displacement in traditional energy sectors.”

While the contributions come from around the globe and from scholars from a variety of disciplines, the editors said they all show how urban planning can and should play a vital role in ensuring a just energy transition. The issue’s format with brief contributions and responses were intended to ensure a conversational look at global topics that can have local appeal.

“We wanted topics that were complementary,” Lyles said. “Rather than curating a book, it’s more like curating a few journal articles or conversations that are very inclusive of diverse voices on what needs to happen for a just energy transition.”

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Contact: Savannah Rattanavong, Office of the Provost, 785-864-6402, [email protected]

KU to welcome School of Pharmacy dean candidates to Lawrence campus

 

LAWRENCE — Four candidates will hold public presentations in consideration of becoming the next dean of the School of Pharmacy at the University of Kansas. The university seeks a visionary, collaborative leader and scholar to advocate for excellence in research and teaching that betters the world.

The name of each candidate will be announced approximately two business days before their respective campus visit. The public presentations will take place in Room 1020 of the School of Pharmacy building and are scheduled for the following dates:

Candidate 1: 4-5 p.m. Feb. 10
Candidate 2: 4-5 p.m. Feb. 13
Candidate 3: 4-5 p.m. Feb. 17
Candidate 4: 4-5 p.m. Feb. 20

The presentations also will be livestreamed through links available on the Provost’s Office website. Members of the KU community are encouraged to attend each candidate’s public presentation and provide feedback to the search committee. Presentation recordings and the online feedback form will remain open throughout the visit process.

The dean will be responsible for all school administration matters, including academic programs, research, personnel, budgets, alumni engagement, fundraising and government and industry relations. The dean will also be expected to be a strong proponent for pharmacological research, professional pharmaceutical education and the school.

The School of Pharmacy trains researchers who help solve the world’s most pressing medical problems and elevates workforce development through educating nearly 400 pharmacists annually who serve the people of Kansas and beyond. The school additionally has been in the top 20 National Institutes of Health-funded pharmacy schools for more than 20 years.

The search committee, co-chaired by Michelle Carney, dean of the School of Social Welfare, and Candan Tamerler, associate vice chancellor for research and professor of mechanical engineering, is aided in the process by WittKieffer, an executive search firm specializing in higher education.

More information about the search can be found online.

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Don’t miss new episodes of “When Experts Attack!,”

a KU News Service podcast hosted by Kansas Public Radio.

 

https://kansaspublicradio.org/podcast/when-experts-attack

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Contact: Rick Hellman, KU News Service, 785-864-8852, [email protected], @RickHellman

Artist’s guide to digital weaving blends old, new technology

 

LAWRENCE — As Poppy DeltaDawn, assistant professor in the University of Kansas Department of Visual Art, sees it, the 72-page “RATIO: Digital Weaving to Change the World” (For the Birds Trapped in Airports/LMRM, 2024) is her first take on a more cross-disciplinary approach to the possibilities and implications of the Thread-Controller 2 digital hand-loom.

“It’s a hand-loom outfitted with computerized Jacquard technology that was invented in the 1990s by an Oslo weaving professor, Vibeke Vestby,” DeltaDawn said. “It’s made by the Norwegian company Tronrud.”

The maker says it “enables the weaver to expedite the process of converting ideas into actual form or woven fabrics.”

DeltaDawn is building upon that framework.

“I relocated to KU from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago to develop the Textile and Fiber area’s digital weaving program,” said DeltaDawn, who arrived on the Lawrence campus in fall 2023. “In the last decade, institutions across the world have been integrating handweaving and innovative design into their curriculum, yet there are still relatively few opportunities to learn the loom and consider its social and historical contexts.”

DeltaDawn spends much of “RATIO” explaining and illustrating her methods — practically and step by step — programming the TC2 loom using original designs created in the Adobe Photoshop computer program. But she also recounts the development of weaving technology in China and Europe, integrating a philosophy that, in the words of her publisher, “considers the broader implications of creating cloth and why it matters to our agency, autonomy and freedom.”

The book also contains a preface by the co-directors of Chicago’s LMRM (“Loom Room”), a community weaving center with one of the largest digital looms in the country. The book debuted during LMRM’s 2024 Weaving Workshop Weekend, a digital weaving conference in which DeltaDawn also presented a lecture and new work in a group exhibition with the event’s other presenters.

DeltaDawn said her hiring at KU is an encouraging sign of the times.

“There’s an interest in traditional textile production that was experiencing a divestment in the past 20 years or so,” she said.

In “RATIO,” DeltaDawn writes of connecting the renewed interest in hand-making cloth and other traditional crafts to the so-called “tradwife” movement, suggesting that “traditional” and “conservative” values are conflated. But there are plenty of other factors at play, she said.

In her classes and research, DeltaDawn lectures on why weaving matters and why it is essential to continue innovating this human technology. Among other exemplars, she points to Mahatma Gandhi’s Swadeshi movement that espoused a self-reliant community rooted in traditional cultural and economic subsistence.

“Because the bulk of our manufacturing takes place overseas, the average American just doesn’t know how textiles are made anymore,” DeltaDawn said. “Textiles used to be … a recognizable characteristic of our humanity and of our aptitude to manipulate the world around us into objects of cultural value and use value. The textiles that we use could tell a story about our communities and the land that we occupy.”

With more artists, designers and researchers interested in the creative possibilities of the digital loom, DeltaDawn said, a field manual that acknowledges the realities of our current material culture is needed.

“After being a part of digital weaving and textiles programs around the country,” the KU researcher said, “I realized that there was no playbook, no rules, no pedagogy for thinking through the ramifications of this novel technology. I realized that we have an opportunity to effect change and to consider what it means to make art today with ancient cultural practices.

“That is this book. This is the first step — asking, ‘What is the future of the field; the future of weaving?’ ‘RATIO: Digital Weaving to Change the World’ reveals and reminds its readers that weaving is a human-powered activity that was systematically taken from weavers.”

“This is only an edition of 200. This is chapter one. This spring I will be an artist-in-residence at the ATLAS Institute at the University of Colorado-Boulder, and during those three months I will work with researchers at the Unstable Design Lab to develop the next segment of my digital weaving guide.”

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Contact: Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, KU News Service, 785-864-8858, [email protected]

KU graduate is first Jayhawk named finalist for Fellowship for New Americans

 

LAWRENCE — University of Kansas alumna Isabel Keleti is the first-ever KU graduate to be named a finalist for a highly competitive national fellowship that provides merit-based funding for new Americans, immigrants and children of immigrants who are poised to make significant contributions to U.S. culture.

Selected from a nationwide pool of more than 2,600 applicants, Keleti is one of 77 finalists to interview for the Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans, after which 30 recipients will be selected this spring.

Fellows are granted up to $90,000 in funding for one to two years of graduate study in any field and in any advanced degree-granting program in the United States. They join a lifelong network of distinguished fellows across various fields.

A Leawood native and Blue Valley North High School graduate, Keleti earned a bachelor’s degree in piano performance from KU in 2017, having studied with Jack Winerock, professor emeritus of music. Following KU, Keleti earned a master’s degree in piano performance from the Mannes School of Music–The New School, studying with Vladimir Valjarević in New York City.

A dedicated pianist and educator, Keleti has won numerous international piano competitions and has performed at prestigious venues around the world, including Carnegie Hall, Bohemian National Hall, Xi’an Concert Hall and the Lied Center of Kansas.

Beyond her performance career, Keleti is passionate about Czech music and culture, earning recognition with the 2024 Gold Crystal Heart Award for significant contributions to Czech culture in New York City. She was also a Fulbright Scholar in the Czech Republic, where she studied with Professor Jan Jiraský at the Janáček Academy of Performing Arts in Brno.

The daughter of parents from Slovakia and Belgium, Keleti grew up surrounded by the European music and traditions shared by her parents, which inspired her dedication to classical music and its role in preserving cultural identity.

“The support and kindness of my mentors in Kansas, particularly my piano teacher, Dr. Winerock, has always given me a sense of possibility and hope that I hope to pay forward in my musical and educational pursuits,” Keleti said.

In addition to lecturing on piano pedagogy and earning recognition for teaching, Keleti maintains a private studio of piano students, many of whom have achieved competition success.

As a musician-owner of Groupmuse, she fosters community through salon-style house concerts, connecting musicians, hosts and audiences. Her love of house concerts was born in Kansas.

“I’ve carried this sense of connection through music with me everywhere I’ve lived,” she said. “I’m passionate about making classical music more accessible and welcoming, and I’m deeply grateful for the communities I’ve found that are centered around music.”

Erin Wolfram, associate director for the Center for Undergraduate Research & Fellowships at KU, said it had been a joy getting to know Keleti as she prepares for her finalist interviews.

“The fact that Isabel is the first Jayhawk — and first Kansan — to be named a Soros Scholarship finalist is a testament to how competitive this award is,” Wolfram said. “Her résumé and accomplishments are quite impressive, and this honor is extremely well deserved.”

Since 1998, the Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowship for New Americans has awarded 805 fellows from 103 countries more than $80 million to pursue the graduate degrees of their choosing, which have ranged from screenwriting to medicine to law.

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Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

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Wheat Scoop: Beyond the Value of the Grain: K-State research details wheat’s value in a cropping rotation

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Kansas Wheat

For the audio version, visit kswheat.com.

Tracking the price of grain — whether on an app or tuning into the right radio station for the market reports — is an important and routine part of farming. Still, Kansas Wheat and K-State wheat researchers encourage producers to look beyond the value of the bushels in the bin when deciding on their crop rotations to the economic, operational and environmental benefits of planting wheat.

 

“Wheat’s value extends far beyond the grain’s market price,” said Aaron Harries, Kansas Wheat vice president of research and operations. “The advantages of including wheat in your cropping system are wide-ranging, from providing flexibility in planting and nitrogen fertilizer timing, opportunities for dual-purpose production or double-cropping and the value of wheat residue.”

 

The compiled K-State research findings were published in a WheatRx publication this winter that describes the versatility wheat brings to farming operations. The article is part of “Wheat: Beyond the Value of the Grain,” an educational campaign organized by Kansas Wheat and K-State Research and Extension. The campaign — aimed at farmers, landowners, financial institutions and policymakers — emphasizes the wide-ranging advantages of including wheat in a cropping rotation.

 

One key advantage of planting wheat is a wide optimum sowing window. According to Romulo Lollato, K-State wheat specialist, winter wheat has a broader planting window compared to summer crops, especially in warmer regions like south central Kansas and into Oklahoma. This wide window means farmers can wait to plant for any number of reasons — the next good rain, after other crops are harvested or following completion of other important farm operations.

 

Producers also have flexibility in what class of wheat to plant, meaning they can choose to plant winter or spring wheat or between different classes (hard red winter, hard red spring, hard white winter, soft red winter) depending on the local market advantages. In northwest Kansas, Lollato explained farmers could choose to plant spring wheat if they experience an extremely dry fall but a wet spring. In southeast Kansas, farmers can plant either hard or soft red winter wheat to meet local market demand.

 

Nitrogen fertilization timing is another area where wheat has advantages. Research indicates that the crop can recover from early-season nitrogen deficiencies, as long as nitrogen is available near jointing. This resilience allows farmers to strategically time fertilization based on weather and optimize nitrogen uptake. Remote sensing technologies further enhance nitrogen management.

 

The dual-purpose capability of winter wheat for grazing and grain is another asset. Wheat’s resilience to early-growth stress makes it ideal for grazing, providing high-quality forage during fall and winter when other options are scarce. This dual-purpose function offers market flexibility, allowing farmers to choose between grazing and grain production based on prevailing conditions.

 

Even after harvest, wheat continues to provide additional benefits to a farming operation. Environmentally, wheat residue protects against erosion, reduces evaporative water loss and suppresses weed growth. Standing stubble also captures snowfall, increasing soil water content for subsequent crops. In wetter regions, farmers can even bale residue for hay, generating additional revenue.

 

Finally, producers can take advantage of double-cropping by including wheat in a rotation in areas where there is enough moisture. Winter wheat can be planted soon after the harvest of a summer crop or vice versa. Doing so allows for more cash crops to be grown within the same period.

 

Overall, wheat is an ideal crop to plant in Kansas for reasons far beyond the value of the kernels cut each summer. This field crop is not just iconic, but a versatile, integral component of the Kansas agricultural landscape.

 

Read the full publication on wheat’s value in a cropping system and keep watch for additional resources as they are released at https://kswheat.com/wheatrx.

Biscotti

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One of my favorite cookies of all times is a fruit filled biscotti. In my early years this was not a style of cookie that you found many people making in Northeast Missouri! It just wasn’t a bar cookie that people had much exposure to. It was reserved more for the merging coffee hubs starting back in the early 90’s. It was at this time I spent just about every summer in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. Still single and devoted to 20 mile bike rides every day, the coffee houses were my afternoon indulge most weekday afternoons.

When I had my afternoon ‘treat’ I would allow myself ‘one’ biscotti to go with my afternoon Joe. They were low on sugar, and a bit healthier than many cookies. Most of them, however; were not not freshly made, they were individually packaged. A few years past and I decided to try my hand at making what is often called the ‘twice-baked’ cookie. You make the dough for this delight, bake & slightly cool before cutting it into slices. Then you re-bake the bars on both sides before completion. Some people sprinkle them with powdered sugar, others will ‘half’ dip them in a thin glaze. I usually leave mine plain for the most part.

Thus began my love for fruit filled biscotti bars. I found one basic recipe could be adapted to quite a few different flavors and twists. At Christmas I always did a cranberry orange, almond blueberry was another strong favorite. They need to be padded well if shipped, and they are supposed to be a dry cookie, so they make a good cookie to transport. (Tip: Large pieces of fruit make it hard to cut biscotti.)

Being the coffee ‘snob’ that I tend to be, I thought I would share a good decaf coffee tip with you this week. When we were having our Valentine Dinner a couple of weeks ago, I just happened to serve Starbucks decaffeinated coffee. One of our guests made the comment that it was one of the best decafs she had ever had. Once I made myself stop and think about it, I realized she was totally correct. Frequently you will notice decaf coffee doesn’t seem to have a good quality of body or general ‘umph’ as I call it. I’ve even heard people say it tastes like colored water! You usually will not find Starbucks coffee in our home, it’s not a brand I overly desire. I ended up with it because it was in a local freight store on clearance! Otherwise, I would have never picked it up. I will in the future, it might even make you more of a decaf drinker after you’ve tried it.

I hope you enjoy your batch of biscotti, it takes a small amount of extra time, but I promise it will be a hit. Brew a fresh batch of decaf tonight and dip away with your biscotti bars. Take 3-4 slices to a friend!

For all you monopoly players, April 12th is the date of the upcoming 14th Ozark Mountain Monopoly Tournament being held here in Branson West, Missouri. If you’d like in on all the fun email me at: [email protected], I’ll get an application and flier out to you! Simply Yours, The Covered Dish.

Tropical Biscotti

2/3 cup granulated sugar

½ cup vegetable oil

1 ½ teaspoons pineapple flavoring

2 slightly beaten eggs

2 ½ cups flour

¼ teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon baking powder

¼ teaspoon baking soda

½ cup dried pineapple, small pieces

½ cup chopped macadamia nuts

½ cup sweetened coconut flakes

Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees

Blend together the first four ingredients with a mixer. Bring all dry ingredients together and slowly add to the wet mixture. Lastly; bring in the pineapple, nuts and coconut. Place the dough on parchment paper that is lightly floured. Knead until the dough is smooth. Divide the dough in half, into logs that are about 12-13 inches long and 2 inches wide. Move the logs to a cookie sheet covered with fresh parchment paper. Bake for 25-30 minutes until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Allow to set and cool for about 15 minutes.

Cut the bars with a straight edge knife with slices about ½ inch wide. This cut is a quick diagonal cut, do not drag the knife through as it destroys the bars. Place bars back on the cookie sheet and bake for about 15 more minutes, then flip the cookies over baking for a remaining 15 minutes. Sometimes I have been known to lower my temperature to 300 degrees, to make sure the biscotti dries, but doesn’t turn brown in the process.

Allow to cool totally before applying any icing.

Adaptions: Could add ½ cup dried cherries for additional color, if need be you could use pecans instead of macadamia nuts.

For almond blueberry I used toasted almonds, ¾ cup, dried blueberries, chopped, and almond flavoring 1 ½ teaspoons

For Cranberry orange I use pecans toasted, ¾ cup dried cranberries, vanilla or orange extract 1 ½ teaspoons, and 1 teaspoon of orange zest. (Can be more!)

Snow; Love it or hate it

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Show me a Midwesterner who doesn’t have some sort of love-hate relationship with snow, and I’ll show you the rock they have lived under. It seems as though a person either love it or hates it, and for some of us it depends upon the day. It’s hard to explain how something that makes the landscape suddenly seem so sparkling clean and pure can turn on you in an instant and ruin your day. I was reminded last week how much I love to watch snow fall and how beautiful it makes everything it touches, but also how much I hate removing it from my driveway. I’m kind of a purist, in that I believe God put it there and I don’t want to shovel it and take away any satisfaction He might get from taking it away himself! Yes, to the traveler, home owner, maintenance man and commuter, snow is often an unwelcome inconvenience. To the outdoorsman, however, snow opens up a whole new world of opportunities.

For the outdoors photographer or painter there is no other canvas that compares to an outdoor scene sporting a fresh snowfall. Suddenly, as if by magic, the mundane becomes majestic, the drab becomes dynamic and the everyday becomes extraordinary. Outdoor spots we pass daily with no recognition suddenly become scenes from a calendar. Like the lava lamps of days gone by, the look of the landscape slowly changes from hour to hour with the wind.

Obviously, skiers and snowboarders live for fresh snow. After an overnight snowfall, hills too steep to climb become mere carnival rides beneath their feet. Cross country skiers can, in one day, see country it would take them several days to see on foot without the snow. And let’s not forget the farmers; around one foot of snow equals one inch of rain and snow supposedly brings with it good nutrients too, so after a couple dry years like we’ve had, all this snow is more than welcome for our Kansas wheat and alfalfa.

Hunters and trappers can benefit greatly from a fresh snowfall. Tracks of deer, coyotes, bobcats and other game animals are tough to spot in our often-dry Kansas soil, so trying to learn their movement patterns can rely on being fortunate enough to see the animals themselves. Remember going to dances back-in-the-day when your hand was stamped with a mark that only showed up under a special “black light?” That mark was there the whole time but only became visible when put under the light. Just like the black light, snow suddenly shows tracks of wildlife that have been traveling those same paths for months, but leaving no visible signs.

After a significant snowfall a few years ago, I spent time scouting an area I still had yet to trap. It was a soybean stubble field along the river where my wife harvested her first deer several years before. Besides hordes of deer tracks, I followed 2 sets of bobcat tracks as they meandered back and forth across the field and between several freshly made brush piles. I tracked a coyote for several hundred yards and was able to observe exactly how it related to certain land features. I followed coyote tracks on a frozen drainage ditch and could see where it had stopped to nose around under logs and other attractions. Its tracks showed me cattle trails it had traveled along the steep banks and where it had entered and left the ditch. Closing my eyes, I could almost see these animals as they left the footprints that held my attention.

So, the next time it snows, or before this current snow all melts, after you’ve shoveled the driveway, cleaned the walks, swept the deck and cursed the weatherman, grab your camera or walking stick and head for the woods. It will definitely influence your relationship with the “white stuff” as you continue to Explore Kansas Outdoors

Steve can be contacted by email at [email protected].

Wheat Scoop: Rescheduled for March! Join Wheat Rx seminars on March 11 or 12 for your prescription for high-yielding, high quality wheat

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Kansas Wheat

For the audio version, visit kswheat.com.

As blustery winter weather hopefully transitions to a milder spring, Kansas Wheat rescheduled its Wheat Rx seminars for March 11 in Salina and March 12 in Colby. Attend one of the seminars to get a prescription for producing high-yielding and high-quality wheat via the latest recommendations for the best management practices for winter wheat production.

 

The seminars are part of Wheat Rx, a partnership between Kansas Wheat and K-State Research and Extension, to disseminate the latest research recommendations for high-yielding and high-quality wheat to Kansas wheat farmers. This effort includes a series of extension publications at kswheat.com/wheatrx and educational outreach.

 

“Wheat Rx isn’t just about one single practice; it’s about integrating all the pieces of the puzzle,” said Aaron Harries, vice president of research and operations for Kansas Wheat. “From selecting the right variety for your area to implementing effective disease and pest management strategies, every decision plays a role in final yields. We want to give producers tools to make informed decisions every step of the way.”

 

Speakers at both seminars will discuss variety selection, weed control, disease management, soil fertility and more. The March 11 seminar will take place at Great Plains Ag in Salina (1525 E. North Street). In addition to the Wheat Rx topics, attendees will also learn more about Great Plains Ag and tour its Salina facility. The March 12 seminar will take place at Frahm Farmland in Colby (1453 County Road O).

 

This event is free for members of the Kansas Association of Wheat Growers (KAWG). It costs $110 for non-members; however, non-member attendees can choose to sign up and pay for a KAWG membership when they register and attend for free. Learn more about KAWG membership benefits at https://kswheat.com/join.

 

In addition to educational programs like the event, Wheat Rx also includes a series of Extension publications and other educational outreach materials designed to address key management areas of hard winter wheat. These publications contain recent data based on novel research funded in part by wheat farmers through the Kansas Wheat Commission’s two-cent wheat assessment. Find out more or register for the Wheat Rx events at https://kswheat.com/wheatrx.

 

“We know Kansas wheat farmers are innovative and dedicated,” Harries said. “By combining their experience with the latest research and best practices, we can ensure Kansas continues to lead the world in producing high-quality wheat for generations to come.”