Chad Frey

Chad Frey

A new Kansas tool helps you understand wildfire risk at your address – and how to lessen it

In March of 2016, the Anderson Creek fire set a grim state record by burning about 280,000 acres in south-central Kansas.Just one year later, this Kansas record changed again when more than 460,000 acres burned in the Starbuck fire farther west.Large wildfires have become much more common on the Great Plains in recent decades.In Kansas, risks are particularly high on the outskirts of some cities, as well as in rural areas of the state with aggressively spreading tree and shrub species that intensify grassland blazes.But Kansans can take steps to protect themselves and their property.And now they can type their addresses into a new online tool from the Kansas Forest Service — kansaswildfirerisk.org — to better understand the danger that a wildfire could break out near their home, ranch, farm or business.The risk of that varies greatly across the state.Take the proliferation of homes with several acres of land each at the fringes of suburbia.

Neighbors helping neighbors

Fall harvest is in full swing on our central Kansas farm.Our dryland and irrigated field corn has all been picked and all that’s left in those fields are corn stalks and a lot of dry organic material that was kicked out the back end of a combine.The only corn remaining in the middle of one of these recently harvested fields is our popcorn crop.We baby our popcorn like no other crop on our farm.

In Brief

Tootsie Roll drive this weekendThe Newton Knights of Columbus will host the annual Tootsie Roll Drive Oct.

Amish Cook: What would you do with your time left?

What would you do if the doctor told you that you have only a couple days left to live?I don’t know because I’m not there, yet with Daniel having gone home to heaven it becomes quite real that I too, could go home any time.I have an uncle, who has become quite dear to me, especially after our visit to Haiti to see their family, where they shared the good news of Jesus for years to the natives there.

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Kansas, U.S. dread a Trump-Biden rematch

Everyday folks don’t want to think about it because it makes them uncomfortable and sad.National news media types don’t want to think about it because they have stories to write throughout the next year.The truth is, however, barring a bolt from the blue, next year’s U.S.