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Much of Kansas is at ‘high risk’ of West Nile virus. Here’s why and how to stay safe

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Keep your distance from mosquitoes if you’re in Kansas in the near future.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has issued high-risk and moderate warnings for West Nile virus across the state. Johnson and Wyandotte counties, located in the northeast region, are in moderate-risk areas, while Wichita, found in the south-central region, is in a high-risk area.

About half of Kansas is considered high-risk areas because there are a high number of mosquitoes in those regions, and that increases the chances of residents being bitten by a mosquito carrying the virus, according to the state health department. A moderate risk area means there is a moderate possibility of being bitten by a mosquito carrying the virus.

There have only been two reported cases of West Nile virus in Kansas in 2024 so far. There were 66 total cases and four deaths reported in 2023.

No matter what region you live in, here’s what to know about West Nile virus and mosquitoes.

What is West Nile virus?

The West Nile virus causes an illness with flu-like symptoms. Those can include fever, headache, muscle and joint aches, nausea and fatigue.

It’s the most common mosquito-borne disease in the United States. The virus does not spread from person to person, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , just from mosquito to humans and other mammals.

Around 1 in 5 people who are infected develop a fever and other fever-related symptoms, and about 1 out of 150 infected people develop swelling of the brain or brain tissue. In extreme cases, the virus can be fatal.

There is no vaccine or specific medication to treat the virus, but if you’ve had it before, you’re immune to it.

When are mosquitoes the most active?

You are more likely to see a mosquito in the day time through July and September, according to KDHE. They’re most active from dusk to dawn.

Mosquitoes are attracted to water, so remember to empty any standing water that may be sitting there from any rainfall. Clear out water from buckets, old tires, tarps, garden beds, kiddie pools or other spots with rainwater. The KDHE recommends to use larvicide in low-lying areas where water cannot be removed.

How does Kansas determine the risk of West Nile virus?

The Kansas health department determines the risk level based on:

  • The temperature, because mosquitoes breed more in hot weather
  • The number of mosquitoes in the area
  • The number of people infected with West Nile virus historically.

How do I stay safe from mosquitoes and West Nile virus?

The Kansas health department recommends the following prevention measures:

  • If you go outside, use insect repellent. Officials recommend using a repellent with an EPA-registered active ingredient on skin and clothing, which includes DEET, picaridin or lemon or eucalyptus oil.
  • Mosquitoes are most active at dusk and dawn hours, so keep the insect repellent on you during these hours. People with weakened immune systems should consider limiting how long they’re outside during these times.
  • Make sure you have good screens on your windows and doors to keep mosquitoes out.
  • Get rid of mosquito breeding sites by emptying standing water from flower pots, buckets, barrels and pet dishes that are left outside. You should also replace the water in your bird baths once a week if you have one.
  • Keep the water out of swinging tire holes by drilling holes in them.
  • If they’re not in use, keep kiddie pools empty and on their sides.

    Check the Kansas Department of Health and Environment’s West Nile virus tracker to learn about your community’s current risk level.

Lovina Enjoys Summer Days with Family

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Today daughter Loretta and sons Denzel and Byron came here after my husband Joe and sons left for work. Daughter Verena left last night; she went to daughter Susan and Ervin’s house. She will stay with their five oldest children today while Susan will go help prepare for Ervin’s brother Steven’s wedding, which is Thursday. 

I’m still trying to get used to not having daughter Lovina home in the mornings. We miss her here, but I am happy for her and Daniel. It seems different seeing her sit with the women in church instead of with the young girls. 

Denzel is snuggled up with Loretta on the loveseat. He looks tired but is looking over here watching me pen this column. Byron is in the pack and play crib, talking to himself. He will probably talk himself to sleep. Denzel will be two years old tomorrow (July 10). He is a busybody, and he’s started his terrible twos early. Ha ha! He’s a sweetie, though, and can act so innocent when he does something wrong.

Yesterday son Benjamin came home from work and buttered some bread to make himself a grilled cheese sandwich. He walked away to go do something else, and when he came back, his one piece of bread was gone. Denzel had spotted the buttered bread and figured it would be a good snack. He loves bread with butter (and sometimes jelly). We had to laugh about Benjamin’s disappearing bread. 

Sunday church services were held at our neighbors’ house. Our family, along with sister Emma and son Jacob, nephew Benjamin and Crystal and son, came here after lunch. They all ended up staying for supper. The men grilled chicken, and along with that we had mashed potatoes, noodles, corn, cheese, homemade bread, butter and strawberry jam, ice cream, and cookies. It was an enjoyable afternoon and evening spent together. Everyone ate outside on our big L-shaped porch. Many meals have been eaten on this porch. I love my porch!

Our zucchini is really doing well out in the garden. Last night I fried sliced zucchini, green beans, onions, and peppers together in olive oil. It was delicious!

Our banana peppers are doing well, too, and we had our first meal of them stuffed with cream cheese and shredded cheese, then wrapped with bacon. We put them on the grill to cook. Our sweet corn should be ready to eat soon. Green beans, peas, and all those garden goodies make meal planning much easier. 

Last week, on July 3, Ervin and Susan invited our family and Mose’s family to gather at the graveyard when they put a gravestone on Mose’s grave. Our whole family, Mose’s parents, and three of his brothers and families attended. It brought back many memories of that sad day in December 2020 when Mose lost his life due to injuries from a traffic accident on his way to work. Rest in peace, Mose! You will always have great memories in our hearts.  

I invited everyone here for hot dog sandwiches and snacks afterwards, but Mose’s family couldn’t come. Our family all came, and once again that big porch was used to eat on. I have been leaving the extra tables and chairs on there, so when they all come home everyone has enough room to sit and eat. On warm summer days it’s also nice to feel the breeze on the porch. 

On the evening of July 4, Joe and I went out on the lake with Dustin, Loretta, and sons. They took their pontoon. It was so enjoyable, and the little boys loved it, too. Joe helped Denzel fish, but he seemed too scared to hold the fish. We grilled ribs and bacon-wrapped peppers, along with other picnic food. It was so relaxing, and before we knew it, it was 11:30 p.m. already. We could sleep in the next morning, though. Joe had off three days last week for the holiday. I have not been doing much extra work beside gardening and the daily chores since the wedding. It felt good to get extra rest after a busy few months.

God’s blessings to all!

Here is a recipe for the pudding we served at Lovina’s wedding.

Caramel Pudding

6 ounces Nestlé La Lechera milk-based caramel

2 (16-ounce) containers whipped topping

Caramel baking chips

Caramel sundae syrup

Whip together the milk-based caramel and whipped topping. Garnish with caramel baking chips and caramel sundae syrup. Leftover pudding will freeze well. The amount of milk-based caramel can be adjusted to your preference. 

 

Lovina’s Amish Kitchen is written by Lovina Eicher, Old Order Amish writer, cook, wife, and mother of eight. Her three cookbooks, The Cherished Table, The Essential Amish Cookbook, and Amish Family Recipes, are available wherever books are sold. Readers can write to Eicher at Lovina’s Amish Kitchen, PO Box 234, Sturgis, MI 49091 (please include a self-addressed stamped envelope for a reply); or email [email protected] and your message will be passed on to her to read. She does not personally respond to emails.

Eight-Time World Champion Cowboy Ready For Comeback

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Frank J Buchman
Frank Buchman

Eight-time world champion Stetson Wright entered last year’s Wrangler National Finals Rodeo with a six-figure lead in the all-around world standings but set his sights on capturing a triple crown.
Wright burst onto the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) rodeo scene in 2019 becoming the first rookie to win an all-around world championship.
Since then, he’s won five straight all-around titles (2019-23), two bull-riding championships (2020, 2022) and a saddle bronc title (2021).
From Beaver, Utah, the 24-year-old cowboy’s run of dominance garnered him the nickname “Superman.”
But in the second round of last year’s Finals, Wright bowed out of the competition with a hamstring injury. Three days later, he underwent surgery, and for the last six months, he’s been rehabbing to get back in rodeo shape.
“I got the nickname Superman, and everybody knows that you’re not invincible. But after five years of running away with everything, I’m not going to lie, I started to believe I might have a little bit of Superman in me,” Wright said.
“That was a tough pill to swallow. I’m just like everybody else, and I can get hurt.”
After his surgery, doctors ordered Wright to stay in bed for six weeks before moving him to crutches for 12 weeks.
Then he started to rehab and train to begin gearing up for his return to rodeo.
“Now I’m at the point of breaking scar tissue, getting my full range of motion back and getting back in the saddle,” Wright said. “I’ve been on a bull and a horse. Everything is looking up at this point, and we’re set to return soon.
“On paper, everything is looking good, and hopefully, well not hopefully, we will be back in Las Vegas next December.”
Wright said missing his shot at a triple-crown stung but that there was too much to be grateful for to dwell on disappointment.
“Yeah, I had my days where I was like, ‘Why would this happen to me?’,” he recalled. “But it was all pretty short-lived. As soon as I went into surgery and came out, all I could think about was a triple crown in 2024.”
Until this past season, Wright remained relatively healthy in his rodeo career.
His run of success and perceived invincibility translated into confidence in the arena but let him down this past December.
“It’s good to have the mindset that you can’t because it does make you pretty tough to beat when you have the upper hand,” he said. “That was a tough pill to swallow when I realized that the triple crown wasn’t in the cards that year. I just watched everything slip away round by round after that.”
Between bull riding and saddle bronc riding, Wright got used to hopping on multiple stock per day, but the hamstring injury hampered him in Las Vegas.
“You guys have seen it, I can get on four, five or six in a day and be fine,” Wright said. “When I got off that bull I was fatigued. I had lost all of my rodeo muscles.”
The months of sitting around and rehab are now in Wright’s rear-view mirror. He said as of right now he’s eyeing July to climb back on at PRCA rodeos.
“There are many things you can change, but the great part of life is that you never know what tomorrow brings,” Wright said. “I’m just having fun, and we’re about back to me being able to do what I love, and I’m pretty excited about it.”
+++30+++

School Praying Could Return

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Frank J Buchman
Frank Buchman

The first thing every morning in early elementary school days was the class standing to recite the American flag Pledge of Allegiance followed by the Lord’s Prayer.
It was a solemnizing pacifying time expressing appreciation for the diverse blessings often taken for granted. Not that the teacher and classmates were forced to do the recitations, it was seemingly an automatic, perhaps even enjoyable action, which should be done.
Then in 1963, the Supreme Court repeatedly ruled that school-mandated prayers in public schools were unconstitutional. Reflections of that action are not recalled precisely, but students no longer prayed in public schools.
At about the same time, many classes stopped saying the Pledge of Allegiance too. Rulings decades earlier had made it illegal to force students to salute the flag, although local classes were saying the pledge because they wanted to.
Uncertain but the flag salute is evidently not recited by today’s elementary students. However, states can still require it while offering exemptions allowing students to opt out on their own.
Thankfully, the Pledge of Allegiance is still said along with a prayer to open certain public sessions.
Return of prayer in school is vaguely possible in the foreseeable future.
Louisiana has become the first state to require that the Ten Commandments be displayed in every public-school classroom under a bill signed into law by Republican Governor Jeff Landry
The legislation mandates that a poster-sized display of the Ten Commandments in “large, easily readable font” is required in all public classrooms, from kindergarten to state-funded universities.
Proponents say the purpose of the measure is not solely religious, but that it has historical significance. In the law’s language, the Ten Commandments are described as “foundational documents of our state and national government.”
Not long after the bill was signed into law, civil rights groups and organizations that want to keep religion out of government promised to file a lawsuit challenging it.
While legal battles over displaying the Ten Commandments in classrooms are not new, this recent action gives optimism of prayers returning to schools.
Reminded of Psalm 34:7: “The angel of the Lord encamps around those who fear him, and he delivers them” Prayer: “Lord, stay the hand of violence against the children, their families, and staff of this school. Dismantle any plan to bring harm to them.”
+++ALLELUIA+++
XVIII–28–7-8-2024