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Cribbage results from April 16

Special to the Times Vedette 

A total of 12 players participated on April 16. Sandy Rumelhart got a 16, Gary Evans got an 18, Dan Webb got a 16 and a 20, and Richard Ellis also got a 16 and a 20.

The Guthrie Center cribbage players generally meet at Guthrie Center Library on Mondays at 8 a.m., at the New Homestead independent living rec room at 8 a.m. on Wednesdays, and at the Guthrie Center Activity Center at 1 p.m. on Fridays. Organizers say there is always room for more, and they will be glad to teach you how to play. They play for quarters on Wednesday and Friday.

Collecting tractors is Steensen’s hobby

Cletus Steensen and his favorite tractor.

Purchase of a John Deere 730 Diesel in 1970 led to a lifelong pursuit.

By Rich Wicks | Guthrie Center Times, April 2025

Most anyone who likes classic tractors would be thrilled to walk into the shed of Cletus and Cindy Steensen of rural Adair.

“I’ve been a tractor nut from the day I was born. I grew up on the Fords and the John Deeres. My uncle lived next door, and he was a tractor nut, too, and he liked the mechanic work,” Steensen said. “My dad was more of a woodworker.”

From tractors to vintage sewing machines, Cletus Steensen likes making things run.

Steensen recalled his father assigning him the job of maintaining the family’s tractors, which included tuning them up, changing oil and making numerous repairs. Steensen quickly learned much of what it takes to keep a tractor running smoothly. That experience later paid off both professionally and as a hobby.

“In 1998, hog prices had really dropped, so I got out of the hog business, and, just by word of mouth, people started asking if I’d help them with some tractors. I had a little mechanic shop and welding stuff,” Steensen said. “I ended up doing a lot of tractor repairs and restorations as a business, and then I retired from that in 2018.”

While working on other people’s tractors, Steensen also worked on a few of his own. He now has a small collection of his favorites.

“The collection I have here, the six of them, are the 30 series. It’s the last series of two-cylinder tractors that John Deere made,” Steensen said. “The one I bought first was the 730 Diesel. I bought that in 1970, and I didn’t know it was a 1960; I just wanted a tractor.”

That purchase in 1970 led to a lifelong pursuit and hobby.

“I started wanting to collect the 1960 series. That was the thrill of the hunt,” Steensen said. “One came from 50 miles west of Fort Smith, Arkansas, in Oklahoma. Another one came from South Dakota. One I bought at a Carroll machinery auction.”

Besides that series of six classic John Deere tractors, Steensen also has a few Ford tractors in his shed.  But even that isn’t his entire collection. 

“I’ve got a few more tractors down at my son’s place,” he said. “It’s been fun, and I still do it. I’ve got one in the shop I’m waiting on parts for.”

Some of the tractors Steensen has restored sat unused for as many as 20 years. This can make his task more challenging, but he doesn’t back down. In particular, carburetors, injection pumps and fuel tanks do not age well when neglected for many years. But, for Steensen, the end justifies the means.

“I tear them clear down and rebuild them. And when you first hit the switch to start them up, it’s kind of a neat thing to hear them running,” he said.

Steensen displays great attention to detail in his hobby.

“I like to keep everything as original as I can,” he said. “But I’ve had some parts that I couldn’t find, so I had to have a friend machine one for me.”

As if finding, fixing and restoring classic tractors to near mint condition was not enough to keep him busy, Steensen has also found himself doing similar work on vintage sewing machines. In his shed, along with the tractors, he has several Singer sewing machines manufactured more than a century ago. 

“Usually, in the winter, I work on them,” Steensen said. “That first one I did, we took it to the county fair, and my granddaughter sewed with it.”

Steensen recalled a favorite memory with his John Deere tractors.

“It’s been a few years ago that we had all six of them in the Guthrie County Fair parade,” he said. “My youngest boy drove the 830. My next youngest drove the 730. My youngest daughter drove the 630, and my oldest daughter drove the 530. My wife, Cindy, drove the 430, and then I came up behind with a hayrack with the grandkids on it.”

Steensen plans to continue his hobby. 

“I’ll keep working on these things until I can’t do it anymore,” he said. “I’ve had a good time doing it.” 

The Steensen family drove tractors in the Guthrie County Fair parade.

Know someone in Guthrie County whose vehicle, collection or hobby would make an interesting story? Email ideas to rich@gctimesnews.com.

Yester Years

10 years ago

From the archives of The Guthrie County Vedette, April 23, 2015

LEADING THE PACK. Panorama’s Gavin Richey leads a group of three into the final stretch of the 800-meter run at the Saydel Eagles Boys Invitational in Des Moines on April 16.

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20 years ago

From the archives of The Guthrie Center Times, April 20, 2005

SPRING! IT’S A BLOOMIN’ GOOD TIME. One-year-old Alaina Bunde (Chris and Suzanne), Guthrie Center, has her first encounter with flowers grown in her front yard.

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30 years ago

From the archives of The Guthrie Center Times, April 19, 1995

MATH BEE PARTICIPANTS. Four Guthrie Center elementary students participated in the Math Bee at Ankeny on April 4. The team placed seventh overall in the 26-team competition. Nathan Beck earned a ribbon for a ninth-place finish, and Ryne Rumelhart also received a ribbon for placing 17th. Guthrie Center’s participants were, from left, Beck, Rumelhart, sponsor Dolores Beck, Jane Vandevanter and Ashley Glade.

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40 years ago

From the archives of The Guthrie County Vedette, April 18, 1985

ALL SMILES. Bill Haslup was featured in this week’s Vedette Snapshot.

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50 years ago

From the archives of The Guthrie Center Times, April 23, 1975

SPRINGTIME FUN. Spring brings longer daylight hours and a chance for fun in the outdoors. After watching a lonesome tire swing all winter, Brandon Thompson (Gary), renews his friendship with the dangling playmate.

Moves like Jagger

Start me up.” Those three words were the title of a hit song and an awkward video for the Rolling Stones from their 1981 album “Tattoo You,” one of 25 studio albums from the band. The band currently consists of original members Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, along with late-joiner Ronnie Wood. Charlie Watts was a founding member and the drummer of the band through August 2021 when he passed away at age 80. The Rolling Stones were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989 and continue to write, tour and produce today. Needless to say, they are kind of popular.

Admittedly, I am not a huge Rolling Stones fan, but I certainly know of the band and their songs. The 20-somethings of today? Apparently, not so much.

First, a little background. Mick Jagger turned 79 on July 26. This was noted in the celebrity birthdays section of The Daily Umbrella. During our staff meeting, I asked one of our younger employees if she knows who Mick Jagger is. Silence. I then asked another of our younger employees the same question. Crickets. I tried one last time with yet another younger employee.  Her answer? “I think there is a song about moves like Jagger.” Yes, there is, by Maroon 5 from 2011, but Mick Jagger is famous for some other stuff, too.  

How soon we forget. Don Henley, Glenn Frey and J.D. Souther penned this well in 1976 with the song “New Kid In Town” from the Eagles’ “Hotel California” album. “They will never forget you till somebody new comes around.” How true. But to not know who Mick Jagger is? Come on. 

My mother was born in 1935 and grew up with the music of the 1950s. Sometime in the 1980s, I came across a series of cassettes with music from that era. I listened to them in our home while Mom sang along and smiled. Bill Haley and the Comets. The Big Bopper. Little Richard. The Platters. Fats Domino. Buddy Holly. Jerry Lee Lewis. Chuck Berry. The Everly Brothers. The list goes on and on. I may not have known all the words, but I did know the song titles, the melodies and, yes, the artists. In fact, those cassettes might still be collecting dust in a box somewhere. If I had a cassette player, I could listen to them again.  

Styles come and go. Trends come and go. Music comes and goes. I may not like it, but I get it. Meanwhile, some artists transcend generations. Mick Jagger, apparently, is no longer one of them. 

Have a fantastic Friday, and thanks for reading.

Shane Goodman
Editor and Publisher
Times Vedette digital editions
shane@gctimesnews.com
641-332-2707

Livestock producers concerned about livestock diseases, uncertain about level of threat and capacity to manage

From Iowa State University Extension and Outreach

Livestock diseases have received substantial attention and global media coverage in recent years. Highly pathogenic avian influenza, or HPAI, has dominated the news as it has led to loss of millions of poultry, increased egg prices and viral spillovers to other livestock such as dairy cattle, and has recently been found to infect humans. However, there are many other diseases that impact Iowa’s livestock sector, the top U.S. producer of red meat and eggs, including porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome, or PRRS, and bovine respiratory syncytial virus, or bovine RSV, that cause billions of dollars in annual losses to farmers and increased consumer prices.

“Farmers are on the front lines of managing livestock disease threats, and their capacity to identify and treat diseases before they become major outbreaks is critical,” Hanna Bates, a research administrator at Iowa State University’s Nanovaccine Institute and lead author of the study, said. “This research from the Iowa Farm and Rural Life Poll is helping us to better understand farmers’ degree of concern about different diseases and their capacity to manage them.”

New to the ISU Extension store, the Livestock Producer Perspectives on Livestock Disease report draws on data from the 2024 Iowa Farm and Rural Life Poll survey, which surveyed 432 livestock producers in February and March of 2024. The survey included two sets of questions aimed at understanding livestock producers’ perspectives and attitudes relating to livestock disease management. The first part of the survey provided a list of eight major diseases and asked farmers to rate their levels of concern about each. A second set of questions examined attitudes regarding multiple dimensions of disease management.

The research found high levels of concern about many of the diseases, with bovine respiratory disease, hoof-and-mouth disease, and bovine RSV among the top concerns, with 77%, 74% and 73% of respondents expressing worry, respectively, and more than half of producers indicated concern about the eight major diseases listed.

Because livestock diseases have differential impacts depending on species, the report also examines livestock producers’ concerns by type of livestock raised to measure concern among producers whose animals were most likely to be impacted. For example, nearly all swine producers were concerned about PRRS and swine influenza, and 81% of poultry producers were at least somewhat concerned with avian influenza.

While results again showed significant levels of concern, many farmers were not concerned. For example, 22% of cow-calf producers and 16% of fed cattle producers selected either “not concerned” or “don’t know” for bovine RSV, a major cattle disease prevalent in Iowa. Similarly, one-third of cow-calf producers and 29% of fed cattle producers selected either “not concerned” or “don’t know” for Johne’s disease.

The survey also posed questions about monitoring and management challenges. About 58% agreed that current monitoring and management strategies are effective at limiting disease outbreaks, and 53% agreed that they have sufficient access to monitoring and mitigation resources. That said, 33% and 39% selected the uncertain category for those two items, respectively, and 9% disagreed with both. This suggests that close to half of livestock producers lack confidence and capacity to effectively manage disease.

“On the whole, the results show that many producers feel that the systems in place are working and they have the resources they need to manage disease and limit the spread of outbreaks,” said J. Arbuckle, extension sociologist and report co-author. “However, the lack of concern about some major diseases and level of uncertainty about management capacity point to a need for ongoing education and support to help farmers effectively manage livestock disease.”

About the Iowa Farm and Rural Life Poll

The Iowa Farm and Rural Life Poll is an annual survey conducted by Iowa State University Extension Sociology. Initiated in 1982, the poll is the longest-running survey of its kind and works to inform local, state and national decision-making and improve extension and outreach programs. All reports are available on the Iowa Farm and Rural Life Poll web page.