Tuesday, February 3, 2026
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Get Outta’ Jail Free

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Well, the weather changed again today. Today we reached 68 degrees while yesterday it was 65. That’s global warming for you. (Had the temperature gone down that would have been climate change too.)

Based on the ‘butterfly effect’ that means the three degree rise in temperature could cause an earthquake somewhere in Uganda. What, you’ve never heard of the butterfly effect? It’s a term used by members of President Biden’s green advisory team and his Cabinet members. (I’ve seen better cabinets at IKEA.) Bureaucrats who are trying to legislate the weather endorse the ‘butterfly effect’ that theorizes that a single butterfly flapping it’s wings in Phoenix can cause a typhoon in Japan.

Lee’s amendment to the ‘butterfly effect’ states that any scientist who believes in the ‘butterfly effect’ is nuttier than a wood rat.

Everything is being blamed on climate change these days. If too much rain falls that’s climate change. If not enough rain falls that’s climate change. According to the Internet, climate change has caused trees to die, sheep to shrink, birds to lay less eggs, birds to lay more eggs, more fatal shark attacks, snowfall in Baghdad, severe acne, an ammo shortage, more suicides in Australia, altered taste in beer, a faster spinning earth, more kidney stones, larger spiders, more heroin addicts, an increased number of UFO’s, more flatulent cows and at least one fist-fight at a wedding. One study even concluded that global warming is causing global cooling. I kid you not.

Just because arctic seals haven’t shown up on Hollywood sidewalks doesn’t mean that the ‘experts’ past predictions about the dangers of global warming were wrong. And we shouldn’t laugh when their dire forecasts about floodwaters separating California from the continent and sliding down to become part of Mexico, didn’t come to fruition. The Mexican government is probably counting their lucky stars that the lefty loonies stayed right where they are. The error of their ways merely means that some scientists were, in the words of one Mexico City newspaper, “muy lunitica”.

Climate change has caused the scientist’s predictions to change too?

That’s when it dawned on me… climate change is the perfect excuse when scientists and politicians are wrong! They can use climate change like a ‘get out of jail free card’. It’s the perfect defense. Miss an appointment? No problem. You were so distressed about climate change killing the planet that you traded in your gas guzzler for a Smart Car® and when you hit a skunk it totaled the Smart Car® and landed you in intensive care. Now your not-so-Smart car is one smart-and-smelly car.

I was daydreaming about all the things I could blame on climate change when I looked up to see flashing lights in my rearview mirror. Initially I thought the highway patrol lady looked like a pushover so I didn’t want to waste my “go to” excuse so I used the old reliable, “With all due respect mam, how can you expect me to read the speed limit signs when it’s so foggy?”

It turned out that the female officer wasn’t quite the pushover I first thought she was. So I tried an excuse that has rarely failed me: “I’m so sorry but I only went faster after looking at my gas gauge, seeing it was on ‘E’, and so I sped up to get home before I ran out of gas.”

I was shocked when that excuse didn’t work either.

So I thought I’d try out the climate change excuse for the first time. “You got me officer, I’m guilty. I admit I may have been driving a little too fast but you strike me as a highly intelligent person and I’m sure you’re aware that some scientists say that a car emits fewer greenhouse gases per mile when driven at a faster speed. So I was merely trying to be green by doing 65 in a 35.”

It seems the officer was exceedingly offended by my climate change excuse. She turned purple in the face and I’m sure she raised the earth’s temperature by at least three degrees. And the greenhouse gases in the steam she was emitting out the top of her head couldn’t have been good for the environment.

Believe me, I didn’t have nearly as much green after I paid that ticket.

We, the government

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john marshal

In our town, like others, people are the government. It’s the arrangement set out by our founders and it’s worked well here for more than a century and a half.

We know many of those who keep us safe and healthy, who keep the lights on, the water flowing, the streets clean and smooth, the pool open and the parks trim, among other services.

In Lindsborg, the mayor and city council hire a city administrator who supervises the management of notable municipal agencies. They include the Parks Department, Convention and Visitors Bureau, Community Development and Neighborhood Services, Public Safety (police, fire, ambulance), Public Works (streets, electric, water and wastewater treatment), Recreation (swimming pool, golf course, dozens of activities programs), Communications (keeping people informed) and more.

We select and elect those who serve us; they seek no glory, no riches, no beds of clover. They are at their jobs because they believe in community, that they can help it be a better place. They make a difference.

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In recent years, polls and surveys have revealed a trend of disrespect for public service. This is fueled almost daily by reports of politicians who play fast and loose with public funds, who sell their influence for a cause or barter it for favors or trade it for glory, usually short-lived. When they are not busy promoting themselves they spend time demeaning public servants up and down the line.

In contrast, we see others ‒ especially the young ‒ step out, seeing themselves as world citizens eager to find ways that they can be involved and engaged.

There have been signs:

Fifteen years ago Congress passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, a massive bipartisan economic stimulus bill. This countered an economic crisis brought on by banking and real estate mortgage pirates. Billions in federal aid went to state governments, Medicaid was saved, and local governments were helped to survive revenue shortfalls.

In 2021 the Infrastructure and Jobs Act, known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill, became law, authorizing $1.2 trillion for transportation and infrastructure spending and $550 billion for new investments and programs, a lot it for electric vehicle charging stations.

These and a few others offer at least some marks of shared purpose in a Washington otherwise soiled with grievance, grudge and self-interest.

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But we count on ourselves. Government begins at home. We choose the people who manage things in our cities and counties. In Lindsborg this means friends, neighbors, acquaintances and those we don’t know personally but trust to do well.

This covers a lot of ground. It includes the street department and crews from the water and electric departments in a mission to keep the city clear, clean and safe no matter the routine or the challenge.

The vigilance of police, fire and ambulance services leaves a secure feeling. The Parks Department and Recreation managers, the Convention and Visitors Bureau ensure a brighter and more lively way of living, and are proud to show it. Managers and assistants at City Hall keep the teams moving, collect the funds and pay the bills, manage the budget and plan for the next month, the next year and beyond.

They are from us. Those who get their kicks and think they get their popularity by bashing public service only spin insults at their own kind. They

mock the very citizens who have elected the servants and selected the managers. They deride their own, the very citizens who comprise that government.

Our government starts and ends with us, the People. Those who seek to find fault might first look in a mirror.

Crawdad Calamity

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Thayne Cozart
Milo Yield

As I observe kids today totally absorbed in their electronic devices for self-entertainment, my old mind wanders back to my childhood near Moran in southeast Kansas and the creative ways in which my friends and I found to entertain ourselves.

One of my favorite memories from my youth is what I today call “The Crawdad Calamity.” What prompted that memory is that I recently saw a crawdad hole not far from my garden. At least, it had all the properties of a crawdad hole with a mud mound at the surface. What’s strange about it is that my garden is no where near any surface water — pond or stream. But, I do water my garden often and thoroughly, so I assume that Mr. Crawdad made himself a comfortable dwelling by burrowing down into the moist garden soil.

Regardless of the reason for that hole, it brought back this fond memory. I’ve mentioned before that my closest friend and classmate in high school wuz Brosen Burg. Brosen lived less than two miles from the Yield farm, so it wuz easy for he and me to get together for teenage rural entertainment.

Well, on the day this story happened, I went to Brosen’s place and he and I decided to fish for crawdads. It had been a wet season and in those days, every terrace puddle wuz inhabited by crawdads. We used a hunk of bacon tied to a fishline on a cane pole. We’d dunk the bacon in the water until we saw the line move, then we’d carefully lift the line from the water. More often than not, a hungry, stubborn crawdad would have its pincers hooked into the bacon and we could swing it to shore and drop it into a 5-gallon bucket.

Our intentions were to extract enuf crawdads that we could have a “crawdad boil” for a meal. Well, the crawdad fishing wuz superior that day. We were catching eating-size crawdads by the dozen. But, then we hit the bonanza. A real jackpot. Brosen pulled a giant crawdad out of the water. It wuz huge — at least 6–inches from the tip of its menacing pincers to the tip of its tail. The biggest we’d ever seen.

When we took our crawdads back to the Brosen house to prepare them for eating, our mischievous teenage minds conjured up a prank to pull on Brosen’s mom.

At this point I need to describe Mrs. Burg. She grew up on a ranch in New Mexico. She wuz an outgoing, happy-go-lucky soul. And, she wuz a tough lady when it came to ag stuff. She did chores. She wuz at home a horseback. She wuz a good hand at working cattle and sheep. She drove a truck. But, that tough lady veneer wilted in the presence of any rat, mouse, snake, frog, spider or big bug. She would scream like an urban diva or shrinking violet at the sight of any of those critters. It wuz that weakness that prompted our little prank that day.

While we were fishing, Mrs. Burg wuz in Iola, Kan., grocery shopping. So, Brosen and I had her kitchen to ourselves. Here’s what our prank wuz. First, we got a pan of water boiling. Then we dropped Mr. Monster Crawdad into the boil, whole, lobster-like. In fact, the crawdad resembled a Maine mini-lobster.

Then we found a small oval platter. On the platter, we placed Mr. Monster Crawdad in the middle on a nice piece of lettuce. We surrounded the crawdad with cottage cheese. We made sure that the crawdad’s pincers were propped up in a convincingly menacing manner. We even garnished the platter with a couple of green olives. When finished, we carefully placed the platter on the top shelf of the refrigerator — right where it had to be first-seen when the door wuz opened.

With the prank set, we waited for Mrs. Burg to get home from grocery shopping. When she arrived, she happily entered her kitchen with one arm holding up a paper bag of groceries. She smilingly greeted us boys.

But, then, still holding the bag of groceries, Mrs. Burg opened the refrigerator door and spied Monster Crawdad and his huge pincers. Predictably, she let out a blood-curdling scream. And, she dropped the grocery bag and groceries scattered all over the kitchen floor.

As this happened, Brosen and I were doubled-up laughing becuz our prank had worked to perfection. But, our mirth wuz short-lived when Mrs. Burg began to verbally berate the pair of us pranksters with language that couldn’t be misinterpreted.

All we could do is stand there and take the verbal dress-down. But, then, when she ran out of bombast, we burst into laughter again and Mrs. Burg began to see the humor in the situation. She eventually laughed herself and scolded, “Well, you got me. But, it better never happen again!”

I remember we helped clean up the floor and put away the groceries. But, for the life of me, I can’t recall who or when Mr. Monster Crawdad wuz devoured. I can assure you that the meal memory had disappeared, but the prank memory is still quite vivid.

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This past week, Nevah and I decided to put the pall of politics aside for a few hours and do an All-American thing. We needed a county fair fix. We spent one evening at two county fairs — the Clay County Fair in Clay Center and the Riley County Fair in Manhattan.

It wuz good to see only positive happenings for a few hours. Rural folks having a good time. I watched parts of the swine show at the Clay County Fair and parts of the beef show at the Riley County Fair. Together, we toured the 4-H and open class exhibits. She guessed where her quilting would have placed. I guessed how my garden veggies would have stood the competition.

The best part wuz taking a 4-year-old great-grandson through the livestock barns. Everything excited him — the cattle, hogs, sheep goats, chickens, rabbits, turkeys and ducks. It wuz just plain ol’ family fun that I recommend for anyone wanting an uplifting break.

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My words of wisdom for this week: “The original swat team was a herd of cattle in the summer.” Have a good ‘un.

Feral Chickens…Seriously?

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I heard years ago, from a family member living in Florida, that feral chickens were actually a problem there. I didn’t want to believe that, till I read a news story about it, and now recently it was reported on the news again.

The story told about free-roaming feral chickens in Key West Florida. It said “With the population getting out of hand, city commissioners are taking action – not by hunting down the fixings for a massive tailgate party, but by going after their human enablers.” The article went on to tell how fat the chickens were from the popcorn, French-fries and bird food they were fed by tourists. One man whose street had been invaded by the chickens, said “The population has literally exploded; they’re being fed, and when you ask anybody to stop feeding them, it’s like you’re asking them for their firstborn.” When I think of feral wildlife, I imagine destructive feral hogs that wreak havoc in the south, pythons devouring native species in the Everglades, or wild dogs in Australia; you know, beasts that cannot be controlled with a pellet gun and an old-fashioned chicken catcher, but not feral chickens.

This is ridiculous! Why would your solution be to fine those feeding the chickens and not just get rid of the chickens? I have a couple suggested ways of doing that. There have to be chicken farms / ranches in Florida that would love to be given more free egg-layers, so send the city councilmen out at night to collect them from their roosts and simply relocate them.

The second is more of a culinary solution. I would build a fleet of those little carts like the hot dog venders use in New York City. Each would be complete with a Coleman camp stove and a big fiberglass sprayer tank for clean water (this will require cleaning all the herbicide from your tank first.) Your only other investments would be a large frying pan, a couple utensils, a supply of seasonings and condiments, a fifty-pound sack of cracked corn once a week and perhaps a bicycle with which to tow the rig around. Oh, and one of those old-fashioned chicken catchers you can fashion from a piece of heavy fencing wire will also serve you well.

Find a neighborhood with feral chicken problems and get your rig set up early in the morning when the chickens first begin to scratch around. Scatter a little cracked corn around your cart, then simply stand and wait with the chicken

catcher behind your back. As yardbirds get within reach, lash out with the catcher and snatch them up by the leg. Spin around in place, clean and pluck them into a trash container hidden under the counter (after all, you don’t want to offend the customers,) now quickly rinse them, cut them up, bread the pieces and chunk them into your skillet full of lard already smoking over the Coleman, and viola; fried feral fowl! A cooler full of ice might also prove handy on busy days so you can catch several birds at once; otherwise simply catch them as needed.

Don’t be afraid to vary your offering either. For example, Kentucky Fried has Original and Extra Crispy; you can offer both Safe and Extra Risky. Use your imagination when naming your business too, as the more exotic the name, the more attention you’ll grab. Names like Freddy’s Fried Feral Fowl or Bob’s Broasted Banties will certainly suck in the patrons.

Folks, the words “feral” and “chicken” should not go together. Notice this has never been a problem here in the Midwest, where we like our fried chicken and have the common sense to solve problems like this logically… Continue to Explore Kansas Outdoors!

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

PESTS

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Description: Mimosa webworm larvae are about one-inch long and light green to gray/brown with five longitudinal stripes on the body. The adult moths are silver-grey and have small black spots on the wings.

Life Cycle: There are two generations of Mimosa webworm each year. The firstgeneration moths emerge in early June and lay eggs on the honeylocust leaves. Caterpillars
can be seen from mid-June through early July. The second generation of moths appear
in mid to late July to lay another round of eggs. The larvae from this generation feed
from early to late August.

Damage: Though Mimosa webworms can defoliate trees, healthy, established trees
tend not to suffer greatly. Damage is primarily aesthetic as the larvae create tight webs
of silk around the leaflets. Foliage in the webs turns brown and is unsightly. Additionally,
the silk hanging from the trees as the larvae lower to the ground is a nuisance.

Control: Chemical control is not typically necessary. Treatment is ineffective if applied this time of year when the webs and brown leaves are already present. For more information about Mimosa webworm visit: KSRE Publication Mimosa Webworm