Thursday, January 29, 2026
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Scientific Observations of 2024

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If this year has proven anything it’s that things can change fairly rapidly. That is to say, that you can never really know what to expect when it comes to the human race. We are very good at making life a little bit more complicated then it needs to be. Not to mention the fact that we always strive for progress in every field. I am of course talking about the scientific developments of our time, there are many of them out there and more being found each day. So with 2024 coming to a close, let’s take a look at what scientific highlights the year had to offer.

First of all, let’s look at some crazy infrastructure around the world. In China, the Three Gorges Dam is a colossal undertaking which provides an incredible amount of electricity to the people of the nation. Interestingly enough, because of its sheer size and the volume of water that it holds back, scientists have observed changes in the Earth’s rotation because of it. That’s right, apparently you can build a structure of large enough to change the rotation of our planet itself. Now of course, the impact of human-made structures on our planet is no foreign concept. But scientists say that the Three Gorges Dam’s water is enough to shift the Earth’s pole position by 2 cm, slow down the plants rotation, and increase the length of the day by 0.06 microseconds. While those things aren’t necessarily perceivable to us, the fact that a man-made creation altered the way that our planet spins in space is quite preposterous.

Another part of the infrastructure that has developed immensely is travel. Renewable fuels have been showing up everywhere in our travel industry. But it hasn’t quite made breakthrough in the aircraft travel department. That may change, as this past year European designers have been working to design a supersonic hydrogen jet which has potential to fly 300 passengers at 1,141 mph (Mach 1.5). It’s a breakthrough in aerodynamics as the the jet features a sleek design. Regardless, it’s quite amazing to see such developments in our world.

Continuing on with our observations of celestial bodies, astronomers are observing more about different parts of space constantly. One of those topics of observation is astroids. Asteroids tend to do one of three things when they interact with the Earth, either they fly past it, they hit the atmosphere which causes bright streak that we know as comets, or they could possibly get caught in orbit. For a couple of months between September and November this year astronomers observed one such asteroid get caught in Earth’s orbit giving us a “mini-moon” for a couple of months. The asteroid was only 33ft in length which makes you wonder, how did we even catch something so small, that arrived for such a short amount of time?

Of course, there are more scientific developments than just in the realm of astronomy, planet science, and new renewable technologies. But the importance of all of these cannot be understated. It’s essential for us to understand how our planet functions, and all of the ins and outs of its many ecosystems. After all, with this past year being the hottest on record (like every year before it), we really need to begin to ask the big questions. Hopefully with the understandings that science provides us, and a little bit of faith, we can find our way through all our troubled times.

The Tinkerer

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lee pitts

I’m a tinkerer. Please note I said tinkerer, not thinker. BIG difference. Before I tell you about some things I’ve built from scrap I should state that I’m not an inventor. BIG difference. One of my best friends is an inventor and he spends most of his time in high level talks with lawyers, model makers, professors and his income tax team. A tinkerer consults with no one and makes no money so he doesn’t require the services of H & R Block, let alone an entire team.

A tinkerer never knows what he’s making until it’s finished. That was certainly the case with my first creation at the age of ten. I thought I’d just built the world’s first automatic dog feeder but there was only one problem: my dog wouldn’t eat out of it. Turns out I’d just invented the world’s best automatic squirrel feeder instead.

My next creation was the chicken lasso. I hate to admit this but 60 years ago we raised a lot of layers and when they got old we’d catch them, dress them out and gag them down in soup. The accepted method to catch chickens back then was to take a wire coat hanger, double up the end to make it stronger and then bend it in the shape of a hook. Then you tried to snare the chicken’s foot with it. I suppose it worked okay but it could hardly be considered fun or moral building. So one day I was messing around and cut one of the cotton ropes off my mom’s clothesline, (For you Gen Zer’s and millennials this is how we dried our clothes back in the dark ages). For lack of any calves to rope, I started roping chickens. Talk about fun! I was thinking about selling a few chicken lariats until my mom discovered I’d already reduced the capacity of her clothesline by 25%.

I’m pretty sure I’m the first person to come up with truck reins which allowed me to steer the truck from the pickup bed while feeding cows and standing on hay stacked three bales high while in granny gear. I wrapped some rope around the steering wheel in the two o’clock position and ran it out the driver’s side window leaving enough slack so I could hold the reins on top of the haystack from the rear of the vehicle, before putting the lariat through the passenger side window and attaching it to the steering wheel in the ten o’clock position. That way before I was about to enter one of the many rock piles on the ranch I tugged on my reins which turned the truck thus avoiding the rocks pile. Believe it or not this worked with some adjustments. (The eleven o’clock and one o’clock position worked much better).

Everything was fine and dandy until I was too late one time and I got tangled up in the rocks, the reins were jerked from my hands and I sailed off the truck like a rodeo cowboy off the back of a bull. Needless to say, “I didn’t stick the landing.” Laying there on the rocks I realized I sprained my ankle real bad so I had to hop as fast as I could to stop the truck before it entered the slow lane of the highway that bordered the ranch.

The contraption I’m most proud of is my Water Pik®-like device. My teeth are slowly rotting out because of all the nasty drugs the docs gave me and I’ve had thirteen teeth pulled so far. OUCH! My dentist suggested that maybe we could slow down the rot if I used a Water Pik®. When I found out how much they cost I figured I could make my own using my airbrush and my shop compressor. I set my compressor at 125 psi, put some toothpaste in the paint cup and pulled the trigger on my airbrush. I think I may have set the pressure too high because it knocked me on my butt and dislodged two teeth, roots and all.

At $595 apiece, the going rate in my neck of the woods to have a tooth pulled, I figure my Pitts Pik already saved me $1,200 and I think I may have just accidentally invented the world’s fastest and least painful way to pull teeth!

Kansas Farmers Union Calls for Immediate Removal of Postmaster General DeJoy

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MCPHERSON, KS – Kansas Farmers Union (KFU) has a long history of support for the United States Postal Service (USPS). Rural residents depend heavily on the USPS for daily business transactions, communications, and as a vehicle for growth of the rural economy.

Recent operational restructuring has curtailed service across the nation, particularly in rural areas. Further consolidation of rural post offices, the potential elimination of Saturday and door-to-door delivery, coupled with the loss of good paying postal jobs over the entire nation, will negatively affect the economy.

Rural America will be dealt a first class blow under this misguided policy. Local and regional newspaper delivery to outlying areas will be delayed for days. This not only damages the circulation numbers of the newspapers but also devalues local information and advertising.

“We rely on the mail for many things,” says KFU member Tom Giessel of Larned, KS. “I rely on it in my billing from my farm cooperative. They allow discounts if you pay within five days from receipt of the bill. And, you know, if they keep slowing the mail down then I don’t get it in time to get a discount,” Giessel says.

Postmaster General since 2020, Louis DeJoy is responsible for inconsistent handling of first-class mail, decommissioning high-speed sorting machines, forming bigger regional processing hubs that slowed delivery to rural customers, and six postage rate hikes since 2021.

During its state convention held in November, Kansas Farmers Union members passed a Special Order of Business calling for the immediate removal of current Postmaster General DeJoy by the United States Postal Service Board of Governors.

The Special Order of Business reads, “The replacement should be an advocate for a Postal Service that meets the needs of the American people, and Kansas Farmers Union members stand firm in our conviction to protect this great freedom and commonwealth from attacks and privatization.”

About Kansas Farmers Union – Since 1907, Kansas Farmers Union (KFU) has worked to protect and enhance the economic interests and quality of life for family farmers and ranchers and their communities. Kansas Farmers Union represents its members, who are engaged in diverse farming and ranching pursuits, through education, legislation, and cooperation.

Infected Geese Migrated to Kansas

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Kansas Game Wardens are alerting the public that some geese have migrated into Kansas carrying Avian Influenza.

Kansas Wildlife and Parks Officials say  that if you come across a migratory bird or raptor acting abnormal, please report it to any agency biologist.  Officials may not collect or investigate each report due to staff availability. Many times, nature is allowed to take its course without intervention.

Please do not handle any birds that appear sick or injured or take any sick birds to any zoo facility.

Also, northeastern Kansas wildlife rehabilitator, Operation Wildlife, is not accepting any sick or injured birds at this time due to Avian Influenza.

If you have any questions, please contact KDWP Wildlife Disease Biologist Shane Hestings at phone number (620) 342-0658.

You Don’t Say!

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With deer rifle season in full swing right now, my mind wonders (more than usual) as I sit in our deer blind. Something Joyce and I used to do as we sat together in the blind, was make up animal conversations for various situations. On a fall turkey hunt years ago, we had our hunting blind set up near an old feedlot. The owner had round bales stored there and a tractor path wound around through the bales. The turkeys followed the tractor path through the bales and into the pasture surrounding the old feedlot. We put a couple hen turkey decoys just across the fence into the pasture and settled in to our blind. The resident cattle soon came to see what was up, and became enamored with the decoys. You could almost sense their thoughts, so we named the cows Clara, Elsie, Audrey and Bessie, and imagined their conversation something like this; “They look like turkeys, but they sure don’t move much,” Clara thought starring at the decoys. Elsie added “Turkeys stink but these things smell like tractor tires or something. Let’s all run at them and see if they scatter and make those funny noises turkeys make when we almost step on them.” Audrey weighed in “No I’m pretty sure they aren’t real turkeys – if they were they’d be eatin’ corn out of our poo right now.” Bessie said “Girls I’ve got an idea – let’s all back up and try to pee on them and see if they run like they usually do.”

Perhaps the funniest animal conversation we ever conjured up came about at an old farmstead where we used to hunt deer. The abandoned farmyard sits back a long lane and we would park our pickup there and walk to the nearby deer blind. We knew deer routinely wondered through the farmyard and around the old buildings, so we tried to imagine how they would react to our truck sitting there if they wandered through as we sat in the blind. Here’s the scene: One morning as we sit there in our deer blind, two deer, Bucky and Chloe wonder through and come upon our pickup in the drive. “See Bucky,” Chloe states “I told you I smelled them again.” Bucky rests his chin on the hood of the pickup and replies “Yup, sure enough; hoods still warm, they’re here somewhere.” “What doofuses,” Chloe retorts with disgust as she turns and begins to walk away. Meanwhile Bucky jumps up and sprawls out across the hood of the pickup with his front legs sticking out in front of him and his back legs out behind him, rolls his eyes back into his head and hangs his tongue out the side of his mouth. “Chloe hears the commotion, and just as she turns around Bucky calls out “Ohhhhh Chloe, they got me!” “You get off there this instant,” Chloe scolds. “That’s not funny at all anymore, especially after you got shot in the butt last season!”

The nursing/retirement home where I used to work has two dementia units and I often marveled at the strange things the residents there with dementia would say and think. Making up animal conversations may see pretty weird and even goofy, but I can only hope that filling my mind with silliness like that now will help me ramble on about silly stuff like that when I get dementia rather than being mean & nasty and cussin’ all the time…Continue to Explore Kansas Outdoors.

Steve can be contacted by email at [email protected]