Agriculture, Food And Beverage Manufacturing
Tentinger honored for speaking out for agriculture
(03/17/10)
Even if you haven't met Bill Tentinger, you've probably heard or read his words in the news. The rural Le Mars farmer and pork producer has become a voice for agriculture in northwest Iowa and beyond. That's why he was honored Tuesday with the 2010 Outstanding Service to Agriculture at the Agri-Business Luncheon, sponsored by the Le Mars Area Chamber of Commerce...
Merrill industry is model for Iowa's future, Judge says
(03/09/10)
If Iowa is going to recover from the recession that has plagued the nation, recovery is going to come from the ground up. That's what Lt. Gov. Patty Judge said Monday during a visit to the Plymouth Oil, a food-grade corn oil plant just north of Merrill...
Ice cream parlor and museum plan downtown move
(02/24/10)
A Le Mars landmark is moving downtown. The Blue Bunny Ice Cream Parlor and Museum will take up residence in downtown Le Mars in 2011, according to a statement released today (Wednesday) from Wells' Dairy. "This year is our 10th year at the current Highway 75 location, and while it served us well over the years, we felt it was an opportunity to revitalize the concept, create some new excitement and enhance our already strong downtown by bringing an historical building back to life." said Mike Wells, CEO of Wells' Dairy.. ...
'A Time to Remember' benefits local Alzheimer's programming
(02/23/10)
Jerry and Audrey Scholten, of Le Mars, will serve as honorary chairpersons for the upcoming Wine & Roses event in Le Mars, "A Time to Remember." The event benefits the Alzheimer's Association. The Scholtens encourage everyone to generously donate to help provide optimal care and services to the persons and their families confronting this disease...
From field to table: Plymouth Oil begins production
(02/22/10)
The food-grade corn oil plant just north of Merrill is making liquid gold. After weather and financial delays, the $30 million Plymouth Oil plant is completely constructed and pumping out gallons of crude corn oil, according to Dave Hoffman, chairman of the Plymouth Oil Company board...
Local bright stars catch Food Network's eye
(02/10/10)
It was lights, camera, action at the Le Mars Dairy Queen Tuesday. The Food Network was in town tracing the story of StarKiss Bars, a frozen treat at Dairy Queen. "The Food Network approached us and said they wanted to come to Le Mars to shoot a show on how StarKiss Bars are made," said Dean A. Peters, director of communications for the American Dairy Queen Corporation...
Are we sending bald eagles back to endangered list?
(02/01/10)
Bald eagles are being attacked by an emerging predator. It's in the food they eat. Eagle protection agencies have been seeing eagles that are oddly sick, explained Plymouth County Naturalist Victoria De Vos. "They started testing the blood and they are finding out that they had very high levels of lead -- a neurotoxin," De Vos said. "It was basically paralyzing them in different ways."...
Job training program revision, could limit local businesses
(01/28/10)
One-half million dollars for Plymouth County business could be at stake as the State of Iowa discusses adjustments in funding to the Iowa Industrial New Jobs Training Program. Plymouth County businesses that received job training funding in 2009 were Plymouth Energy - $250,612, Plymouth Oil - $153,000, Wells Dairy - $25,000 and Bodeans Baking Company - $63,403...
From biomedical engineering to watercolors: Artist's journey winds its way to Le Mars
(01/26/10)
A teacher told Jean Weiner she was born to paint. This affirmation came not during the Le Mars woman's high school career or even her college or graduate studies. It came after Weiner was in her early forties, had worked successfully in biomedical engineering, had two children and had battled a rare form of cancer...
City leases Willow Creek Bar and Grill to Fiddelke
(01/13/10)
In a 3-2 vote Tuesday, the Le Mars City Council chose Mike Fiddelke, of Orange City, to lease the bar and grill at Willow Creek Golf Course for 2010. The lease, at a rate of $30,000 per year, is tentatively set to begin March 1. The other candidate seeking the lease was Kathy Schwader, of Le Mars, who had been recommended for the lease by the Le Mars Park Committee at last week's city council meeting...
Late harvest, early winter storms leave crops stranded
(01/07/10)
Corn still stands in fields in northwest Iowa and nearby states -- and without a winter thaw it will likely remain there until spring. "Right now there's not much you can do. You can't physically get in the field," said Joel DeJong, crops field specialist with Plymouth County Iowa State University Extension...
Extension staff settling in at new offices
(01/05/10)
Freezing rain and snow didn't stop the Plymouth County Iowa State University (ISU) Extension Office staff from moving to its new office at the Le Mars Convention Center lower level just before Christmas. "We were ready to go," said Ann Schoenrock, 4-H County Youth Coordinator last Wednesday as she gave a quick tour of the new office space. It is in what was formerly known as the Vanilla and Chocolate Rooms, previously occupied by Wells' Dairy Inc...
Rewind 2009: The good, the bad and the blizzard
(12/30/09)
Editor's note: This is the first of two stories recapping 2009's top stories in the Daily Sentinel. Mother Nature put a wet (or white) blanket on Plymouth County's Christmastime plans, nailing northwest Iowa with more than a foot of snow and winds that lowered visibility and drifted roads shut. ...
Racing the elements: Herbst and crew react to heavy autumn rainfall
(12/11/09)
When the September harvest rolled around this year Darwin Herbst thought it would be business as usual. But that wasn't the case thanks to a very rainy October. Herbst, of Merrill, has been farming his whole life. This year was different for the Herbst farm and most farmers in the area...
When life was simple: Life on the farm was busy with work and fun times
(12/10/09)
Editor's Note: This story is another in a weekly series looking back at life decades ago and remembering a time when people's lifestyle was very different than today. Life on the farm has many memories for Leonard Molzen. "I've lived on the farm all my life in the same township, Johnson Township," Molzen said. He moved to Good Samaritan Society-Le Mars in 2005...
Pioneer Village Christmas readies for weekend activities
(12/10/09)
Pioneer Village Christmas will hold its second and final weekend of activities Saturday and Sunday evening, open from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. New this year are displays in the Round Barn, with the live nativity performed twice each evening at the barn's entrance. Displays of Santas, snowmen, lighted ceramic village pieces and animated Christmas figures are inside...
Pioneer Village Christmas opens Saturday
(12/03/09)
Pioneer Village Christmas will open for two weekends of holiday fun Saturday at the Plymouth County Fairgrounds. Hours are 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 5, 6, 12 and 13. For the first time in many years, the Round Barn will be open to visitors with displays and the live nativity...
There's a glow in the west
(11/23/09)
Now as an adult, Scheitler has decorated on the grounds of his acreage just one mile from that farm for the past 14 years, each year adding a bit more. Make that a lot more. "We call it 'Christmas Acres,'" Scheitler said. He estimates there are 60,000 lights on 55 trees and 60 bushes, with 17 inflatable decorations in the yard. ...
Brunsville grain elevator adds capacity, speed
(11/23/09)
Brunsville's Premium Feed and Grain upped the ante this harvest with a new 204,000 bushel storage bin and a new grain dump that can take in grain at the rate of 8,000 bushels per hour. The company's growth also included adding three new full-time jobs. Now Premium Grain and Feed employs 12 people, 10 of which are full-time...
Where do we grow from here? Moving forward with downtown survey results
(11/20/09)
People have a lot of ideas for downtown Le Mars, according to recent results of a Main Street Iowa-directed survey and analysis. Requests from the about 350 people surveyed range from general, like add more stores downtown, to specific suggestions, like bring in Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant...
Local grocery stores feed the hungry
(11/17/09)
Local grocery stores are working to bring food to the tables of those who can't afford to buy it. At the Le Mars Wal-Mart, twice a week, a truck from the Food Bank of Siouxland pulls up to the back of the store. When it drives away, it's loaded with about 15 boxes of food to distribute to regional agencies helping people in need...
Put some candles in a hot dog, Bob's Drive-In is 60
(11/16/09)
Most people in Le Mars today can't remember a time when Bob's Drive-In didn't exist, selling its famous Bob's Dogs on the corner of Highways 3 and 75. This year, the family-owned nostalgic eatery marks its 60th anniversary. In 1949, Robert C. "Bob" Kass opened the drive-in after finishing his military service...
U.S. wildlife leaders worry about future during Akron summit
(11/16/09)
Leaders from national wildlife groups shared concerns about the future of clean water and conservation in the United States during a summit near Akron this past weekend. "This is a place where agricultural producers, conservationists and water quality advocates come together for a common program," Jim Martin said of the gathering...
Prehistoric people leave footprints in Loess Hills
(11/12/09)
Eight hundred to 900 years ago the first corn farmers dwelled in the northern Loess Hills. Evidence of the prehistoric Mill Creek native people, as archaeologists have deemed them, and their villages and cemetery sites have been found in parts of Plymouth County and northwest Iowa...
Couple plans to build semi trailers at former grain site
(11/10/09)
A Le Mars couple will be transforming a former grain mill site west of Le Mars into a manufacturing business for semi trailers. Clint and Leslie Chapman, now owners of the 3.59-acre property about 2 miles west of Le Mars on Highway 3, received approval Monday from the Plymouth County Board of Adjustment for a conditional use permit to manufacture live-bottom trailers at the site...
Le Mars Truck Stop rolls on with new owners
(11/02/09)
The late Jim Brownmiller's dream of keeping a truck stop in Le Mars will live on even as ownership of the Le Mars Truck Stop changes hands. Kent Hanstein and Beth Dreckman officially became the truck stop's new owners Oct. 16 -- but it's not much of a change for the two...
China to lift ban, pork industry sighs in relief
(11/02/09)
Last week officials from China announced plans to lift a six-month ban on pork imports from the United States -- news that could be a shot in the arm for a suffering pork industry. The ban has yet to be lifted, but National Pork Board president Tim Bierman, of Larrabee, Iowa, has no doubt this will have a widespread positive impact on the pork industry...
Olympic champion returns to roots: Jennie Finch headlines Pink Ribbon Night
(10/30/09)
You won't find too many natives of Southern California who enjoy the smell of a cattle farm. But Jennie Finch is not your typical California girl. "It's funny how you appreciate the smell of cows and cornfields," said Finch, a softball pitcher for Team USA and a two-time Olympian, said in Le Mars Thursday. ...
Faber's hobby wine earns high rank
(10/28/09)
A Le Mars man's wine, made from grapes grown in his backyard and fermented in his basement, was picked champion in its class last weekend. Wayne Faber entered his dry red wine in the Schleswig Wine and Bier Contest last weekend, an annual event for Schleswig, 45 miles south of Cherokee...
Oh deer! It's that time of year
(10/28/09)
With tree leaves turning golden and temperatures cooling, the fall season also brings a greater chance of car-deer accidents on roadways across Plymouth County. "We're starting to see an increase in vehicles hitting deer," said Plymouth County Deputy Paul Betsworth. "Once farmers start getting their crops in, they start chasing the deer out of the fields onto the roadways."...
Locally-made cottage cheese sweeps national competition
(10/22/09)
Cottage cheese manufactured at Dean Foods in Le Mars rose to the top in the 2009 U.S. Championship Cheese Contest. In fact, the three entries from Le Mars, labeled under the Old Home Foods name, took first, second and third in their category, in a field of 11 entries from competitors like Kraft Foods and Westby Co-op Creamery...
Ethanol outlook: Where is the industry headed?
(10/21/09)
Editor's note: This story is part two of a pair of stories looking deeper at the ethanol industry and Plymouth Energy's recent quest to raise $10 million for the ethanol plant. In the past decade, ethanol has been both a golden egg and a rotten one...
Neighbors bring combines to recovering farmer's rescue
(10/20/09)
Jerry Vaske's bleeding kidney kept him from harvesting his 220 acres of soybeans this fall. But the job still got done Monday. The rural Remsen farmer's friends, neighbors and family members climbed aboard nine combines, hooked up tractors and wagons, drove feed trucks and harvested Vaske's three fields in less than a day...
Easy as pie? With Jane Sherman, it is
(10/19/09)
Jane Sherman once baked a pie that sold for $125. She's that good. At least that's what the bidders thought at the church auction where that banana cream pie was sold. Whether at church auctions, bake sales or restaurants, the Le Mars woman is famous for her pies...
Museum to host railroading program, ethnic food fair
(10/19/09)
Railroading in Plymouth County and ethnic foods of the area will be the focus of a program Sunday at the Plymouth County Historical Museum. The Rev. Gary Landsness of St. John's Lutheran Church, ELCA, Le Mars, will present a program on railroading at 1:30 p.m. in the museum's Music Room on the main floor...
Sheriff hopes company can save jail money
(10/12/09)
Plymouth County Sheriff Mike Van Otterloo hopes a company that provides jail health care programs can help curb rising inmate medical and prescription costs. Otterloo told county supervisors Tuesday he plans to contract with Advanced Correctional Healthcare, of Illinois, at $2,417 a month for its "cost saving" services...
Former teacher turned author returns to Hinton
(09/21/09)
Jane Kauzlarich wrote her book "Quack," then she published it and began selling it and now she's written a song about it. Kauzlarich, a retired Hinton Community School teacher, will be reading "Quack" and singing with pre-kindergarten through fifth graders Wednesday at the school...
Pheasants' habitat dwindles by millions of acres each year
(09/18/09)
Hunters may face a challenge this season -- the pheasant population is on a downward spiral in Plymouth County and throughout Iowa.
Last year Iowa had 100,000 hunters and 383,000 birds, which is four birds per person in the field. Other years there have been 1.5 million pheasants, said John Linquist, Pheasants Forever regional representative.
"From the early 2000s to now there has been a steady decline because of weather and habitat," Linquist said.
The cold, damp spring this year affected pheasants' nesting habits, said Mike Slota, Pheasants Forever chairman for Plymouth County youth programs.
"The weather has to be somewhat warm to produce the insects for the chicks when they're hatched," Slota said. "The hens can't keep the chicks adequately warm and they just die from exposure."
The loss of habitat also affects pheasants' nesting because hens have less area to hide from predators, Slota said.
Pheasant habitats, which usually require 5 to 10 acres, are areas with a mixture of tall and short grasses and flowering plants that attract insects, Slota said.
A major reason that habitat is dwindling is that millions of Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) acres are going away each year, Linquist said.
Last year alone 1.1 million CRP acres expired, according to www.pheasantsforever.org.
With the price of grain, farmers are finding they can make more money planting their land than putting it into CRP acres, Slota said.
"With this economy you can't blame any farmer for squeezing every dollar out of the ground they can," Slota said. "Their job is to produce grain and make money off the ground. We understand that."
Farmers began enrolling their qualified land into CRPs to be planted into habitats 10 to 15 years ago and receiving federal compensation, Linquist said.
"A lot of people's acres are expiring and there are no new signups," he said.
Another 3.8 million CRP acres will expire this fall and 4.4 million acres next September for a total of 21 million acres gone from the program by the end of 2012 without a new signup. The USDA does not have a signup scheduled, according to the Pheasants Forever website.
"It's hard to maintain a bird population when we're constantly taking conservation acres out of play," Linquist said.
Pheasants Forever hopes to turn that around with its program, Reload Iowa.
The intent of Reload Iowa is to establish 1 million acres of new habitat on Iowa landscape.
That means $11.5 million will need to be raised and 50 employees hired to go door-to-door to work with landowners to create the habitat, Linquist said.
"That program is going to have to pay enough money out to entice the farmer to want to do this," Slota said. "The farmer has to look at the bottom line."
There are also national programs like Conservation Practice 38 or State Acres For wildlife Enhancement (SAFE) working to help conserve and create new habitat.
SAFE started last year with 200,000 CRP acres that were divided among states.
"We had 27,700 acres," Linquist said. "All of those acres have been used up and all within a year."
The loss of habitat and dwindling pheasant population in Plymouth County and throughout the state has a trickle-down effect on economy and recreation, Linquist said.
"When the population of the birds down so does the population of the hunters," he said.
That means less dollars spent shopping, eating and staying locally by nonresident hunters.
Fewer hunters also leads to a loss of revenue on licenses, which means less money to help support county and state parks, Linquist said.
"That's what buys the land and sees to the upkeep," he said. "We're hurting ourselves by people not going out and hunting."
A declining pheasant and hunter population is also detrimental for the next generation of would-be hunters, but Slota's optimistic Reload Iowa and similar programs will turn the numbers around.
"I hope we start seeing an increase in the next couple of years," Slota said. "I would love to see it start going back the other way and hopefully we are doing the right things to make it start going the other way."
Time to go? Canada Geese movement hints at season change
(09/15/09)
On an average day at the Le Mars Municipal Park around 100 Canada Geese are mingling with other waterfowl. But lately they've been leaving the water and taking to the air in their famous V-formation. The geese are preparing for a change -- fall. Canada Geese (Canadian Geese is actually the informal term) migrate generally in September and October, but they'll probably be around for a while, according to Jeremy Kettmann, a park technician at Hillview Park in Hinton who studies birds' migratory patterns.. ...
Wells' Dairy helps region rank high in food processing
(09/14/09)
Plymouth County's largest employer helped push the Sioux City metro region to the top of the list for food processing industry growth in a New Jersey magazine. Sioux City, along with the surrounding area, was picked as the Top Metro for Food Processing Industry Growth in the August issue of "Business Facilities." It is, the magazine said, the leading growth center for food processing, food products and agribusiness...
Maass honored with Farm Bureau Ag Award
(09/10/09)
A retired Remsen farmer is the 2009 recipient of the Plymouth County Farm Bureau's Service to Agriculture Award. The award was presented to Kenneth Maass and his wife, Bethene, at the 91st annual meeting of Plymouth County Farm Bureau Tuesday evening at the Le Mars Community Middle School Auditorium...
Sweet amigas: Two friends open Mexican restaurant together
(08/07/09)
They make each other laugh. They finish each other's sentences. And now two women who've been friends for 12 years are running a new Mexican restaurant, Los Rosales, in downtown Le Mars. Lidia Esquivel and Josefina Silva opened the restaurant just off Central Avenue on First Street Northeast complete with signs featuring roses -- the restaurant's namesake...
Sweet corn stand goes back 20 years
(08/04/09)
Under an ash tree, the worn black pickup truck owned by Lynn Buss sits in the shade, the bed piled high with ears of sweet corn. Buss, with the help of his children and grandchildren, bring their sweet corn to this hot spot by Bob's Drive-In, owned by the Kass family, each day during the hot months of summer...
Judge emphasizes design, gain in swine winners
(08/03/09)
The term "design" came into play frequently Saturday as exhibitors in the Fair's Swine Show maneuvered their entries before Show Judge Dr. Tom Baas, Ph.D. Baas, a professor in the Department of Animal Science, Iowa State University, explained that while the design of a pig "has always been very important" the design of the pig -- its structure and "how it's put together" -- is receiving added emphasis today in light of modern-day options for pork production...
Small portions, big tastes at fair's cooking school
(07/29/09)
Ready to try something new in your kitchen and maybe win a prize? Then come out to the cooking school at the Plymouth County Fair at 7 p.m. Friday presented by Wells' Dairy, Inc. culinologist John Kennedy II. What is a culinologist? "It's part chef, part food science," explained Kennedy, admitting he has "one of the coolest jobs in the world."...
Open shows move from Round Barn
(07/28/09)
Visitors to the 2009 Plymouth County Fair will find the Round Barn Open Class displays in a new location -- the former 4-H Building. With the 4-H displays moving to the Hall of '84, open class Art Show, Creative Hobbies Show, Antiques and Collectibles, and Horticulture, Food and Preservation Show will move to the former 4-H Building...
2009 fair truck recognizes fair board and swine show
(07/27/09)
The 10th annual edition of the Plymouth County Fair collectible truck recognizes the swine show judging and members of the Plymouth County Fair board. The series of trucks is designed to recognize activities and scenes that make up the Plymouth County Fair...
Delivering more than fuel
(07/24/09)
From the ground, all you might hear is the rumble of a jet engine. But 29,000 feet above you, a work of aerial art is taking place. Locked in a delicate ballet, a KC-135 tanker airplane is pumping thousands of gallons of fuel into a B-2 stealth bomber...
Filmmaker turns Westfield into the Bible's ancient lands
(07/22/09)
Last week, Noah was cutting down trees near Westfield to build his ark. And David, not yet a king, was tending his sheep in a nearby pasture. It's not time travel, it's the makings of a movie. Rural Westfield native Josh Martyn was back in his neighborhood 5 miles south of Westfield to film scenes for "The Greatest Gift Ever," a 20-minute Christian film to be released before Christmas...
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