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Tips on protecting gardens during storm season

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K-State horticulture expert shares how to help gardens through severe weather.

Storm season can be stressful for many reasons, but for Kansas gardeners, protecting their plants is a priority.

With Kansas’ storm season in full swing, Kansas State University horticulture expert Cynthia Domenghini has tips on how to protect and recover gardens from severe weather damage.

“We are entering storm season and various areas of the state will likely have high winds, excessive rainfall and hail,” Domenghini said.

Domenghini’s recommendations include:

Heavy Rain

“The force of rainfall pounding on the soil can result in a thick crust that prevents seed emergence and partially blocks oxygen from reaching roots,” Domenghini said. A shallow cultivation with a rotary hoe or other tool can break up the crusted soil. Domenghini cautions against deep tiling as it could damage young, tender roots.

Standing Water

“Standing water cuts off oxygen to the roots, which can result in plant damage if it doesn’t drain quickly enough,” she said. Plants can sometimes handle 24 hours of standing water, but hot weather following the rainfall can cause the water to become hot enough to ‘cook’ the plants.

“There isn’t much that can be done about this unless a channel can be cut to allow the water to drain,” Domenghini said.

Hail Damage

Hail damaged plants should recover quickly as long as only the leaves were damaged. If stems and fruit were damaged the situation may become more serious. “The plant can recover from a few bruises, but if it looks like the plants were mowed down by a weed whip, replanting is in order,” Domenghini said.

Leaning Plant

“Either wind or water can cause plants to lean,” Domenghini said “They should start to straighten after a few days.” She does not recommend trying to bend them back as the plants often break easily.

Domenghini and her colleagues in K-State’s Department of Horticulture and Natural Resources produce a weekly Horticulture Newsletter with tips for maintaining home landscapes and gardens. The newsletter is available to view online or can be delivered by email each week.

Interested persons can also send their garden and yard-related questions to Domenghini at [email protected], or contact your local K-State Research and Extension office.

Symphony in the Foothills

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June 8th, Red Ranch, Greenwood County. Featuring Guest Artist: Katharine McPhee.

This is more than just an event; it’s a celebration of nature, culture, and community that your mom will remember for years to come.

Here’s what you can look forward to at our Signature Event:

  • An enchanting outdoor concert featuring powerhouse vocalist Katharine McPhee and the talented Kansas City Symphony performing against the stunning backdrop of the Flint Hills.
  • Guided prairie walks and educational presentations that deepen your appreciation for this unique ecosystem.
  • Shopping in the Flint Hills store, where you can find an array of unique gifts and souvenirs.
  • Relaxing and reading the Field Journal as you unwind and delve into the beauty and history of the Flint Hills.

    Don’t wait until the last minute to find the perfect gift for Mom. Secure your tickets to Symphony in the Flint Hills’ Signature Event today and give her a Mother’s Day experience she’ll never forget!

    Ticket Pricing:

    Adults – $110

    Children 12 & Under – $50

    *Taxes and fees apply

    For more information visit SymphonyintheFlintHills.org.

Plant a tree and help the environment, right? In Kansas, it might warm the climate instead.

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It’s Environment 101: Trees help save the planet. But not everywhere.

Yes, they suck carbon dioxide out of the air and store it in forests — just what the doctor ordered for an industrialized atmosphere coughing on too many greenhouse gases.

But new research clarifies that deploying trees against global warming backfires in parts of the U.S. and Canada, including much of the Great Plains.

“Trees are great in the right place,” said Susan Cook-Patton, a senior forest restoration scientist at The Nature Conservancy. “But they’re not uniformly awesome across the globe.”

Trees darken the ground. So a place that otherwise would reflect more sunlight and send some of its heat straight back into outer space instead soaks up that heat. In some regions, this outweighs the trees’ potential carbon storage.

This is the case for many grasslands, meaning that the dense, dark juniper trees spreading west across the center of the country can cost the landscape more of its valuable reflectivity than the trees’ carbon-sucking capabilities are worth.

That adds urgency to grassland conservation efforts. Prairies are vanishing beneath a rapidly spreading blanket of woody plants that threatens rancher livelihoods, makes wildfires worse and eliminates habitat for grassland wildlife.

Scientists in Oklahoma have dubbed the phenomenon that is gobbling rangeland from Texas up into the Dakotas the “Green Glacier.” Humans triggered the Green Glacier through a combination of changes to the environment.

Why won’t adding more trees help cool off the Great Plains?

It’s like standing in the sun on a hot summer day in a white T-shirt instead of a black one, Cook-Patton said. The darker your clothes, the more you’ll feel the heat.

The portion of sunlight that bounces back into space is called albedo.

Trees warm the planet in places where they reduce the ground’s reflectivity a lot, and don’t capture enough carbon to offset that problem.

Trees cool the planet in places where they pack away a lot of carbon and don’t change albedo very much, such as regions that aren’t very reflective anyway.

“Our work in general suggests that adding trees to Kansas grasslands provides limited to no climate mitigation,” Cook-Patton said.

Adding trees to some parts of eastern Kansas can have a cooling effect, but the trees change the color of the surface so much that this will “undercut the benefit of the carbon storage quite substantially.”

In the drier western half of the state, adding trees has a warming impact on the climate.

Ultimately, many factors play into the net effect of trees. That includes, for example, the color of the soil, the rain and snowfall patterns, the kind of trees that thrive there and the transparency of the atmosphere. (Atmospheric transparency varies globally.)

As it turns out, rebuilding forests is often a great idea where they existed historically in recent centuries, such as in the Pacific Northwest and many eastern states. Adding forest is generally a bad idea in places that were historically prairie.

The authors found that adding trees is negative for the climate in most temperate grasslands, savannas and shrublands globally.

They created a tool to help decision-makers anywhere in the world understand both sides of the equation — the carbon impact and the albedo impact.

This makes it easy to see where restoring forests pays off.

The authors hope that will help agencies working across big geographic scales — such as a country or state government — to hone their reforestation efforts.

It could also allow planners of carbon storage projects to calculate more accurate estimates of how much climate benefit any given tree-planting project would offer.

Are there other benefits to trees, including in cities?

Urban areas offer one illustration of the complexity of deciding where to plant trees.

Cities want trees for a whole host of benefits to their residents that the authors of the albedo study agree are important and worthy. Those benefits range from improving air quality to shading streets from brutal summer heat.

But the authors of the study, published in the journal Nature Communications last month, note that actions to combat climate change and actions to help us live in a warming world aren’t always the same.

“Trees can make it cooler locally,” said geography professor Chris Williams, director of environmental sciences at Clark University in Massachusetts, “but still warmer on a planetary scale.”

Cities aim to beef up their urban tree canopies to mitigate heat from pavement and to absorb air pollution, both of which improve local human health and quality of life.

Trees can also benefit water quality, prevent erosion and feed wildlife.

That means decision makers in parts of the country where trees are climate-negative have to consider many factors when deciding whether to plant them.

Kansas News Service.

ADM donates $1 million to agricultural innovation at Kansas State University

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Kansas State University today announced that ADM, a global leader in human and animal nutrition, has pledged $1 million to the university’s Global Center for Grain and Food Innovation, one of four new or renovated facilities included in the university’s visionary Agriculture Innovation Initiative led by the College of Agriculture.

The ADM investment will support advances in food product development, food safety and food security, sparking industry innovation and elevating the academic experience for K-State students.

“I want to thank ADM for its investment in our Global Center for Grain and Food Innovation,” said Ernie Minton, Eldon Gideon dean of the College of Agriculture and director of K-State Research and Extension. “The College of Agriculture is consistently ranked as one of the top 10 higher education ag programs in the nation, and this donation will help ensure we remain at the top in educating students, leading in research and helping our partners feed a hungry world.”

With a focus on interdisciplinary research and development, 30% of the new center’s space will be allocated for on-site collaboration between public resources and private enterprises. It will also include state-of-the-art laboratories, classrooms and interdisciplinary partner spaces.

“ADM is excited to support the development of the Global Center for Grain and Food Innovation at Kansas State University. The facility will not only foster new collaborations across the university, but it will enhance the student experience by way of research, creativity and innovation,” said Tedd Kruse, president of ADM Milling. “ADM’s purpose is to unlock the power of nature to enrich the quality of life, and as a milling and baking solutions leader, we are proud to support K-State’s Agricultural Innovation Initiative to help deliver a pathway for highly trained students to lead the advancement of new technologies and change within the industry.”

The other facilities included in the Agriculture Innovation Initiative are the Agronomy Research and Innovation Center, the Bilbrey Family Event Center, and Call and Weber halls. Combined with the Global Center for Grain and Food Innovation, these upgrades and expansions will support grain, food, animal and agronomy research at K-State, as well as resilience in the colleges of Agriculture, Arts and Sciences, Business Administration, Engineering, Health and Human Sciences, and Veterinary Medicine.

“Our Agriculture Innovation Initiative marks a significant milestone for land-grant universities, especially in K-State’s commitment to interdisciplinary research and development,” said K-State President Richard Linton. “By fostering greater collaboration across departments and colleges, we’ll broaden the university’s research opportunities and outcomes while working alongside other organizations and private industry partners. This represents an exciting new chapter for K-State, solidifying its position as the next-generation university in education, research and industry.”

As Kansas State University’s strategic partner for philanthropy, the KSU Foundation inspires and guides philanthropy toward university priorities to boldly advance K-State. Visit www.ksufoundation.org/impact/category/release for more information.
As the nation’s first operational land-grant institution, Kansas State University has served the people of Kansas, the nation and the world since its founding in 1863 — and it continues to set the standard as a next-generation land-grant university. K-State offers an exceptional student experience across three physical campuses and online offerings, meeting students where they are and preparing them to achieve their personal and professional goals. The university is committed to its mission of teaching, research and service through industry-connected programs, impactful research-driven solutions, and a sharp focus on community engagement and economic prosperity.

For many Kansas students, financial aid delays are making it hard to plan for college

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Some high school seniors said they just started receiving financial aid offers this week. And some colleges, including the University of Kansas and Newman University, have pushed back their tuition deposit deadlines because of FAFSA delays.

Some Kansas students are scrambling to decide on a college and pay tuition deposits after errors with the application process for federal student aid kept them waiting months longer than usual.

U.S. Department of Education officials said Tuesday that they’ve fixed glitches with the new Free Application for Federal Student Aid, commonly known as the FAFSA, and online applications are being processed quickly.

But some high school seniors said they just started receiving financial aid offers this week — after the traditional May 1 college decision day.

“It has just been a struggle since December,” said Sophia Uriarte, a senior at Wichita East High School. “The website would be crashing, or it would not allow my parents to enter their emails. … It was a mess, honestly.”

Some colleges, including the University of Kansas and Newman University, have pushed back their deposit deadlines because of the FAFSA delays.

On Tuesday, a bipartisan group of lawmakers in the U.S. House and Senate raised concerns about ongoing issues and delays. They said the rocky implementation of the new FAFSA caused a financial aid traffic jam with weighty implications for students, and they worry that the U.S. Department of Education is months behind in its process for next year.

In a telephone call with reporters, Under Secretary of Education James Kvaal said the department has received about 9 million FAFSA submissions since January.

Kvaal said students who complete a FAFSA now can expect their records to be sent to colleges in one to three days. The deadline to apply is June 30.

“We know that many colleges, including the vast majority with impending deadlines, are now sending student aid offers,” Kvaal said.

“We all know how important this is. We will continue to do whatever we can to get students all of the financial aid for which they are entitled, and to help colleges make financial aid offers as quickly as possible.”

Cammie Kennedy, a college and career counselor at Wichita East High, said she has spent a frantic few weeks meeting with seniors and their parents to help them compare aid offers and navigate the application process.

She said the FAFSA application itself is much easier than in past years — which was the reason for the overhaul — but the process started late and remained glitchy.

“They just weren’t ready. And because of that, and because of some of their errors, it has delayed students to just now discovering what they really got in aid,” Kennedy said. “A little late. We’ll never say too late because we can always get them in. It’s just getting them to hang in there.”

She said some students have switched colleges after learning their first choice isn’t offering as much financial aid as they had hoped. Others are so frustrated by the process, they’re thinking of delaying college altogether.

“That is the biggest conversation I keep having with these seniors, which is, ‘Just hang in there. Let’s figure it out,’” Kennedy said. “But I have had a couple come in here and they’re like, ‘I’m just gonna wait and I’m gonna go get a job.’ Because this is just a lot.”

East High senior Karen Ochoa applied to several colleges and filed her financial aid form on time. But because of delays at the federal level, she received her first aid offer this week.

Now she’s crunching numbers to figure out what she can afford.

“The scary part about that is that for seniors, our last day is Monday,” Ochoa said. “So it’s kind of like everything’s coming at you at once.”

Kennedy, the East High counselor, said students and their families can continue working with college counselors after graduation to finalize forms or compare aid offers.

“They need to come because we know what to do, and we can assist them through this process,” she said. “If they just utilize this office, we can help them at least find an alternative pathway or the right pathway for them.”

Kansas News Service