Making wind chimes

Special to the Times Vedette 

Students made wind chimes on Wednesday at Art on State using bottle caps buttons, pony beads and bells for the windchimes. Next week, they will make Tic Tac Toe boards.

Art on State is an art gallery created by the Guthrie County Arts Council as an opportunity to bring together the artists of the county, encouraging them in their talents by providing means to display and sell their work and to bring awareness of artistic endeavors to the community at large by presenting performing and visual arts programs. Art on State is located at 320 State St. in Guthrie Center. Learn more at www.guthriecountyartscouncil.org.

Amelia, Abby and Avery

Merrick and Ainsley

Michael

Alyssia and Shua

So Much More than Books

By Karen Kelly | Special to the Times Vedette

Author Event for tweens and teens

Iowa sportscaster and hit author Scott Reister will be appearing at  the MJB Library on Wednesday, July 31 at 4:30 p.m. This event is open to all ages but especially is geared to upper elementary through early high school patrons.

Scott Reister’s book is entitled “Baseball Spy” and is a top new release on Amazon. An adrenaline-packed adventure, the book features 14-year-old Zane Mitchell who finds his mom missing and a mysterious Federal Agent at his door when he returns home from a tough baseball game with his new team. Zane discovers one of his teammates is a hacker who is trying to expose a government secret. Racing against the clock, Zane plays a deadly game of cat and mouse while trying to save his family and protect national secrets. 

Reister’s interactive program is especially appealing to young sports fans. Attendees are encouraged to bring their ball gloves. Reister will discuss what the book is about and how he came up with the idea. He also shares hoops he had to jump through to get the book published.  Workshop participants will also have an activity related to spies and/or baseball.

This thriller is available for check out at the MJB Library. Following Scott Reister’s program, autographed copies may be purchased from the author for $16. Sports fans and spy enthusiasts will not want to miss this captivating program.

Magic Show

Magic fans of all ages need to mark their calendars for Wednesday, Aug. 7 at 3:30 p.m. Our library will be hosting  an exciting magic show from the same people who presented the Absolute Science Foam Show. 

Between the Covers

Books are ready to be picked up for the August book club meeting. The August book will be “The Villa” by Rachel Hawkins. Childhood friends who drifted apart as adults, Emily and Chess reconnect and decide to take a girls’ trip to Italy. The two stay at an Italian villa with a notorious past. Rented in the summer of 1974 to a rock star and his entourage, the rock star sets in motion a chain of events resulting in one guest writing a platinum album, another writing one of the greatest horror novels of all time, and a third brutally murdered. Emily begins to dig into the villa’s past and the events surrounding the murder. As she gets closer to the truth, Emily senses tension between herself and Chess. Secrets are revealed. Will the summer end in another brutal murder? 

This book is inspired by Fleetwood Mac, the Manson murders and the summer that Percy and Mary Shelly (author of “Frankenstein”) spent at a Lake Geneva Castle with Lord Byron. 

Book club will meet at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 13.

Cookbook Club

Cookbook Club will meet Thursday, Aug. 15 at 6:30 p.m. to share dishes from “The Farm Made Cookbook: Traditional Recipes from America’s Farm.” Stop in and select a recipe that you would like to share at the meeting on Aug. 15.

Adult Programs

Cribbage Club will meet each Monday morning from 9-11 a.m. in the Taylor meeting room.  Bridge Club will meet every Wednesday morning from 9-11 a.m. in the Taylor meeting room.  Card Making Club meets the third Thursday of each month also in the Taylor meeting room from 9-11 a.m. The August Card Making Club will be Aug. 15. A reminder that all materials are provided for a $5 fee.

New Nonfiction

“The Kneeling Man: My Father’s Life as a Black Spy Who Witnessed the Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.” by Leta McCollough Seletzky tells the true story of her father’s life as a spy set deep in the Jim Crow South during the Civil Rights Movement. In the iconic photo of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel, the author’s father is the man kneeling next to King, trying to stop the bleeding. “The Kneeling Man” is the result of the author’s research into her father’s past as a spy who went on to have a career in the CIA. This captivating story is both a spy thriller and a portrait of the author’s family. This book is available for check out at the MJB Library.

Peggy Simmer 

1945-2024

Peggy Kay Simmer, 79, of Rock Island, Illinois, died Friday, July 19, 2024, at Silver Cross Pavilion at Friendship Manor. A funeral service will be 11 a.m. Friday, July 26, 2024, at St. James Lutheran Church, 3145 31st Avenue, Rock Island. Visitation will be from 4-7 p.m. Thursday, July 25, 2024, at Wheelan-Pressly Funeral Home and Crematory, Rock Island. Cremation will take place following the funeral service. Memorials may be made in care of JDRF (Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation).

Peggy was born in Jefferson on May 3, 1945, the daughter of Keith and Dorothy Schoonover Brutsche. She married Larry L. Simmer on Jan. 15, 1963, in Guthrie Center. 

Peggy retired after years of clerical work for Herman’s Hosiery, Montgomery Elevator, John Deere and Company and Simmer Chiropractic. 

She was an active member at St. James Lutheran Church, Rock Island. She enjoyed reading, hunting with family, attending as many of her grandchildren’s events as possible and gatherings with family and friends.

Those left to cherish her memory include her husband, Larry Simmer, Rock Island; sons, Rodney (Jill) Simmer and their children, Austin, Lauren, Rachel and Hannah, L. Scott (Jeanine) Simmer and their children, Jared (Kelcy), Kelan, Drew, Malerie, Sam and Seth and Todd (Angela) Simmer and their children, Seth and Cole; great-grandchildren, Ila, Kayden and Remi; and sister, Carol (Gerald) Schlieman, Granger.

She was preceded in death by her parents.

Online condolences, memories and expressions of sympathy may be left for the family at wheelanpressly.com

Learn more about buying sweet corn, keeping it fresh and growing your own

From Iowa State University Extension and Outreach

The middle of summer is officially here, and so is sweet corn season. With the unusual weather events this year, Iowans can still expect to see an abundance of their favorite sweet corn variety.

Iowans in the southeast witnessed their first round of sweet corn on June 24. Four days later, producers were back in the fields harvesting larger amounts. In central Iowa, growers saw their share start trickling out of fields as of July 4.

In this article, Dan Fillius, field specialist for horticulture and commercial vegetables with Iowa State University Extension and Outreach, shares his insight on some basic sweet corn questions.

When is sweet corn the best?

In most years, Iowans can buy local sweet corn from roadside stands before it is available in stores. Sweetcorn being sold from the back of a truck bed has most likely been picked that same morning – making it exceptionally fresh and the best for supper that night!

When choosing your corn from the grocery store, the question of when it was picked is more complex. The kind of sweet corn available at grocery stores is either picked fresh daily with a new delivery every day from a local Iowa farm, or it is a supersweet variety that is going to hold its value for a week to 10 days.

“The corn that is in the grocery stores nowadays typically does not lose its quality for at least a week,” said Fillius. “It could be shipped from Florida during the off-season and many would be surprised to learn that it will still hold its flavor throughout transport. Supersweet corn can be picked and kept cool and still last a week to 10 days.”

The overall best option is to eat your sweet corn on the day of purchase. However, the sweeter the sweet corn variety, the longer it will keep without degrading.

When should I harvest sweet corn?

Sweet corn should be harvested at the milk stage. At this stage, the silks are brown and dry at the ear tip. When punctured with a thumbnail, the soft kernels produce a milky juice 

Overmature sweet corn is tough and doughy. An immature ear is not filled to the tip, and the kernels produce a clear, watery liquid when punctured. The harvest date can be estimated by noting the date of silk emergence. The number of days from silk emergence to harvest is approximately 18 to 23 days.

Prime maturity, however, may be reached in 15 days or less if day or night temperatures are exceptionally warm. Most hybrid sweet corn varieties produce two ears per plant. The upper ear usually matures one or two days before the lower ear. Lower ears are just as tasty as upper ears, however they are almost always smaller, making them less marketable for commercial producers.

How to keep your sweet corn fresh?

To prolong the life of your sweet corn, make sure to keep your ears cold and stored in the refrigerator. If your sweet corn is warm, the sugar is going to degrade faster, and the taste will not be as fresh. Also, be on the lookout for corn earworm. While you may be tempted to discard ears that have obvious worm damage, early season sweet corn this year is likely to have more worms than usual. Fillius said that Iowa farmers struggled with ear worm and other pests this year because of the unusual amount of rain and heat.

Remember Peaches and Cream?

Peaches and Cream is a common marketing term for bicolor sweet corn describing the yellow and white kernels. There used to be a popular variety named “Peaches and Cream” that was grown and very popular, but it is not grown as much anymore.

Most of Iowa’s sweet corn today is not truly “Peaches and Cream,” but rather this evocative term has turned into a local understanding of the sweetness one finds in delicious, bicolor Iowa sweet corn.

Grow your own sweet corn

Learn more about growing sweet corn in a recent Yard and Garden article called Growing Sweet Corn in the Home Garden. Additional information is available in a recent edition of Talk of Iowa, a show produced by Iowa Public Radio.

Weekly Crop Progress and Condition Report — July 23, 2024

From the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship

Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig commented on the Iowa Crop Progress and Condition Report released by the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service. The report is released weekly April through November. Additionally, the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship provides a weather summary each week during this time.

“Severe thunderstorms early last week gave way to a cooler and quieter string of days as corn pollination is underway across the state,” Secretary Naig said. “Temperatures look to warm up through the week for county fairgoers. 

The weekly report is also available on the USDA’s website at nass.usda.gov.

Crop report

Most of the State received little rainfall and experienced below average temperatures. These conditions allowed Iowa farmers 5.9 days suitable for fieldwork during the week ending July 21, 2024, according to the USDA, National Agricultural Statistics Service. Field activities included harvesting oats for grain, cutting and baling hay, and applying fungicides.

Topsoil moisture condition rated 1 percent very short, 10 percent short, 81 percent adequate and 8 percent surplus. Subsoil moisture condition rated 1 percent very short, 10 percent short, 80 percent adequate and 9 percent surplus.

Corn silking reached 68 percent, 1 day behind last year but 2 days ahead of the five-year average. Corn crop at the dough stage reached 18 percent, 2 days ahead of last year and 5 days ahead of the five-year average. Corn condition was rated at 75 percent good to excellent. Soybean crop blooming reached 69 percent, 5 days behind last year but equal to the five-year average. Soybeans setting pods reached 25 percent, 2 days behind last year and 1 day behind the five-year average. Soybean condition was 74 percent good to excellent. Oats turning color reached 89 percent, 2 days behind last year but 3 days ahead of the five-year average. The oat harvest for grain reached 44 percent complete, 5 days ahead of last year and the five-year average. Oat condition was 76 percent good to excellent.

The state’s second cutting of alfalfa hay reached 75 percent complete, 5 days behind last year but 2 days ahead of the five-year average. The third cutting of alfalfa hay began at 6 percent, 4 days behind last year but 1 day ahead of the five-year average. Hay condition rated 78 percent good to excellent. Pasture condition rated 71 percent good to excellent.

Weather summary

Provided by Justin Glisan, Ph.D., State Climatologist, Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship

The main weather headline of the reporting period was an early week derecho that formed in central Iowa and covered over 500 miles through Illinois, Indiana and Michigan. While pockets of agricultural damage were found, particularly in eastern Iowa, most of Iowa remains free of widespread impacts. Unseasonably cool conditions were also observed statewide with negative departures in the two to four degree range; the statewide average temperature was 71.1 degrees, 2.5 degrees below normal.

Sunday (14th) afternoon was unseasonably warm statewide with daytime temperatures in the upper 80s and low 90s under mostly sunny skies. Scattered thunderstorms formed in north-central and eastern Iowa into the evening hours with some storms producing strong wind gusts. The storms dissipated just before midnight as skies cleared with a southeasterly wind into Monday (15th) morning. Lows remained warmer than normal, ranging from the upper 60s north to mid 70s south with patchy fog in northeastern Iowa. Underneath the existing heat dome over the Midwest, afternoon temperatures rose into the upper 80s to mid 90s as a boundary draped west to east became a focusing mechanism for afternoon discrete supercells. The initial storms fired in central Iowa with a fast moving EF-1 rated tornado carving a seven-mile path through the near-western suburbs of Des Moines (Polk County). The storms quickly coalesced into a squall line and sped across eastern Iowa, leaving behind nearly 50 reports of severe straight line winds and hail along with three weak tornadoes; a wind gust of 86 mph was observed near Aurora (Buchanan County). Much of the state’s eastern half reported measurable rainfall with many stations collecting at least 0.50 inch. Stations in east-central Iowa observed heavier amounts with 30 stations at or above 1.50 inches; five stations in Linn County measured more than 2.00 inches from 2.25 inches in Central City to 2.80 inches in Cedar Rapids. The line exited Iowa later in the night as skies cleared with a northwest shifting wind. Tuesday (16th) was a much quieter day with spotty showers passing across Iowa as afternoon temperatures held in the mid to upper 70s. Overnight lows into Wednesday (17th) varied from the upper 50s in northwest Iowa to mid 60s in the southeast corner. Partly cloudy skies developed through the afternoon with highs in the 70s.

Variable and light winds developed into the nighttime hours with pockets of fog reported in northern Iowa on Thursday (18th) morning. Clouds became more prevalent from west to east through the day as afternoon highs varying from the low 70s northeast to low 80s southwest. Skies cleared out across eastern Iowa into Friday (19th) with overcast conditions lingering in western Iowa where temperatures remained in the low to mid 60s; temperatures were five to 10 degrees cooler where clouds weren’t present. Cloudy conditions persisted over the daytime hours with highs holding in the 70s over much of Iowa. Showers pushed into western Iowa toward the evening and spread into central Iowa over the next several hours. Light showers increased in coverage by daybreak on Saturday (20th) with unseasonably cool conditions under stratus clouds and rain. Rainfall eventually ended around sunset with general totals in the 0.10-0.30-inch range. Higher totals were found in pockets of northern and southwest Iowa; Hampton (Franklin County) collected 0.65 inch with a 1.58 inches reading in Underwood (Pottawattamie County). Calm to light winds allowed widespread fog formation through Sunday (21st) morning with temperatures in the low to mid 60s.

Weekly precipitation totals ranged from no accumulation in several pockets to 3.66 inches in Cedar Rapids (Linn County). The statewide weekly average precipitation was 0.66 inch while the normal is 1.01 inches. Little Sioux (Harrison County) reported the week’s high temperature of 96 degrees on the 15th, 10 degrees above normal. Forest City (Winnebago County) and Mapleton (Monona County) reported the week’s low temperature of 48 degrees on the 18th, on average 14 degrees below normal.