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  • Welcome to my Kitchen

    LAURA ESTES|Updated May 7, 2014

    Garden planting season has arrived and as I was digging out the winter accumulation of freshly sprouted weeds, I noticed that my chive plants are producing a bumper crop of tender young leaves, perfect for flavoring breads and casseroles. A favorite, Yogurt and Chive Biscuits, is an easy to prepare, savory accompaniment to any main dish. Yogurt and Chive Biscuits 2 cups biscuit baking mix 1/2 cup cold water 1/3 cup plain yogurt 1 Tbsp snipped fresh chives or 1 tsp dried...

  • Market Perspective

    PEARSON BURKE|Updated May 7, 2014

    The rally in the wheat market marches on as the two main reasons for this contra seasonal rally continue to support prices. First, the drought and now record high temperatures in the Southern Plains continue to stress the winter wheat crop there and second, the conflict in the Ukraine continues to intensify. Both stories now have the full attention of the market. Speculative funds, who not too long ago held a record short position in Chicago wheat, are now net long about 100 million bu., heading into this Friday's USDA Crop...

  • Rock Doc

    DR E KIRSTEN PETERS|Updated May 7, 2014

    I once experienced a small earthquake when I was visiting the San Francisco Bay area in California. The natives thought little of the temblor but I was impressed that the ground beneath my feet could suddenly and without warning start to shake. Later, when I majored in geology in college, I learned that my native Northwest is also at risk for earthquakes, as is much of Alaska. Another part of the country with a history of large quakes is called the New Madrid Seismic Zone....

  • Guest Editorial

    TRACI BRUCKNER|Updated May 7, 2014

    In April, small grass-fed beef producers received some great news. USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service announced the creation of a new certification option for smaller, grass-fed beef producers. The Grass-Fed Program for Small and Very Small Producers arose out of the Grass-Fed Marketing Claim Standard within USDA’s Process Verified Program. Under the new certification process, small farm and ranch operations marketing fewer than 50 head of cattle each year will have the opportunity to label their product as consistent wit...

  • Guest Editorial

    KIMBERLY NELSON|Updated Apr 30, 2014

    If there were an infinite number of lines on an infinitely expanding plane, positioned in every direction, each line would intersect with an infinite number of other lines, yet it would still never meet every line that exists on the plane. Imagine each of these lines as a human. We are met with infinite possibilities in our life, yet there are some things which we are moving parallel to. There are some people we will never meet, some things we will never do, some places we will never go. Yet, should that stop us from continui...

  • Rock Doc

    DR E KIRSTEN PETERS|Updated Apr 30, 2014

    My household accumulates quite a number of plastic shopping bags. Most come home with me from the grocery store. I use them to line the little garbage pail that sits under the kitchen sink and the wastebasket that's in the bathroom. I also have the joy of using them to pick up poop deposited by Buster Brown, my faithful mutt from the pound. But if you don't have uses for the plastic shopping bags you bring home, what do you do with them? Researchers hope that one day -- perhap...

  • Welcome to my Kitchen

    LAURA ESTES|Updated Apr 23, 2014

    Spring just may be here. Odessa saw pretty nice weather for the annual Easter Egg Hunt put on by the Odessa Lions Club. Families who enjoy dying hard-boiled eggs and hiding for the young folks to find, were able to put out eggs without rain washing off the color. By the time you read this article most of those eggs will be eaten, but if you still have a supply on hand, Curried Deviled Eggs are a savory way to serve hard boiled eggs. Curried Deviled Eggs 12 hard cooked eggs 3...

  • Guest Editorial

    KIMBERLY NELSON|Updated Apr 23, 2014

    By KIMBERLY NELSON “Either you run the day, or the day runs you.” –Jim Rohn Most of us have been in front of the podium of a cheesy motivational speaker at some point. Some of them have the uncanny ability to lift our spirits, make us laugh, and push us to think about something a little bit differently. But mostly, the reaction gained is closer to that of a stern lecture than a pick-me-up. Unless you have incredible command of an audience and amazing public speaking skills, the best way to motivate is not through the masse...

  • Market Perspective

    PEARSON BURKE|Updated Apr 23, 2014

    The weather market has begun in earnest. Over the last month the futures have had quite a few twenty cent trading sessions. Some has been due to the continuing confrontation between Russia and the Ukraine, but most of it has been due to weather forecasts and the USDA Crop Progress Reports which have started to come out every Monday afternoon. The latest Crop Progress Report showed the overall U.S. winter wheat crop rated at 34% good to excellent and 33% poor to very poor, about the same as last week and about the same as a ye...

  • Rock Doc

    DR E KIRSTEN PETERS|Updated Apr 23, 2014

    By DR. E. KIRSTEN PETERS While I have been dinking around for months, trying to lose five pounds, two of my friends have gotten serious about weight loss. Each of them is down 50 pounds. I'm pleased for them, of course, and truly impressed by their accomplishments. Successfully combatting overweight and obesity is one of the best things people can do for their health. It can help everything from joint pain to heart function, from Type 2 diabetes to certain aspects of mental...

  • Avg. family pays $6K/ year in subsidies to Big Business

    PAUL BUCHHEIT|Updated Apr 23, 2014

    $6,000. That’s over and above payments to big companies for energy and food and housing and health care and all our tech devices. It’s $6,000 no family would have to pay if we truly lived in a competitive but well-regulated, free-market economy. The $6,000 figure is an average, which means that low-income families are paying less. But it also means that families (households) making over $72,000 are paying more than $6,000 to the corporations. 1. $870 for direct subsidies and grants to companies The Cato Institute est...

  • Guest Editorial

    KIMBERLY NELSON|Updated Apr 17, 2014

    It seems at times that every human and every animal in the world is trying simultaneously to be better than all the others. One more mile, one more page, one more year; all for a bit more bragging rights than someone else. Darwinism may suggest that this is a survival instinct, but must we humans embrace the principals of survival of the fittest? Personally, I don't believe it's necessary. Not that friendly competition isn't fun, but why strive for perfection when chances are that, for pretty much every kind of talent, there...

  • Rock Doc

    DR E KIRSTEN PETERS|Updated Apr 17, 2014

    I’ve gained 5 pounds since last summer. My body mass index (BMI) is still fine, but I need to stop gaining to keep it that way. Grizzly bears put my weight gain to shame. In the late summer, they eat some 50,000 calories per day and gain more than 100 pounds. Then, when they hibernate, they fast and live on their body fat. While sleeping the winter away, they don’t pee or poop. They conserve their energy by having heart rates around 15 beats per minute. When they emerge fro...

  • Letter to the Editor; The U.S. Should control the internet for security reasons

    Updated Apr 16, 2014

    Why does Obama want to give away control of the internet? It was financed with American dollars and it was created with our ingenuity! It has been well run under the control of the Commerce Department and Americans enjoy First Amendment protection. Other countries have been allowed our generosity. We could wind up with globalists having their way and they would decide what acceptable speech is and what is not acceptable. Would they impose internet taxes on American companies, while at the same time censoring what they...

  • Love- The Odessa Record; "By Your Relative"

    Updated Apr 9, 2014

    Odessa Record subscriber Larry Fisher of Spokane continues his series of articles on the history of the Batum/Lauer area (where his wife, the former Joyce Kiesz, grew up). Hi, here I am again. Farming was not the only activity occurring in the L-B-D during the 60s. A few of the other activities/events reported in The Odessa Record were: 04-02-1964 - The Lincoln Electric Cooperative is planning the installation of a new substation for the rural area southwest of Odessa. It is expected that the work will be done early in 1965....

  • Welcome to my Kitchen

    LAURA ESTES|Updated Apr 9, 2014

    A new batch of culinary magazine offers arrived in my mail box recently. Some are just an envelope of tantalizing advertisements, while others include sample recipes, or a sample copy of the publication. Cook’s Country magazine sent a sample issue that happens to have some handy tips to solve several cooking dilemmas recently sent my way. Several questions about cakes have come up. Why do the cake layers bake with a hump in the middle? Usually, this is caused by a batter t...

  • Six warning signs of phone/computer scams

    LANCE KISSLER|Updated Apr 9, 2014

    Have you ever cashed a check for a lottery that you didn’t enter? Perhaps you’ve been unexpectedly contacted by a fast-talker and pressured into releasing personal information? Maybe you’ve had a distant or unknown relative ask you for money in an emergency situation. Chances are, if any of these have happened to you, you’ve been scammed. Don’t worry, many honest, good people are scammed. To prevent yourself from falling victim—whether for the first time or again—keep an eye out for these six warning signs that will help you...

  • Letter to the Editor; Scammers trying to separate area folks from their money

    Updated Apr 9, 2014

    To the Editor: During the last few months, a scam to steal money by telephone has been spreading through many counties in the state of Washington. It is called the “Jury Duty Warrant Scam.” The usual approach is that the scammer will call the victim, identify him/herself as a law enforcement officer or a court clerk and advise that a court has issued a warrant for his/her arrest because the person failed to appear for jury duty. The caller then goes on to explain that in order to have the warrant lifted, the caller would nee...

  • Letter to the Editor; Immigrants following different rules now

    Updated Apr 9, 2014

    When Mr. Obama granted amnesty to about 900,000 Latino immigrants (whose parents were illegals) I immediately thought of people I knew who followed the rules to become citizens. They were from Europe and they had gone through Ellis Island where they had to pass a physical and answer a lot of questions. I know of some who were rejected and sent back. The people who were approved found transportation to the homes of their sponsors where they stayed until they found work and places to live. Their sponsors were responsible for...

  • Rock Doc

    DR E KIRSTEN PETERS|Updated Apr 9, 2014

    As a child, I learned about the “valley of the shadow of death” from the twenty-third Psalm. A similar image is conjured up by economists who talk about the “valley of death.” They mean that potentially deadly stage in the life of a business when production needs to be massively scaled up but investors aren’t willing to make that leap based only on pilot-scale results or because the economics of full-scale production are still iffy. One segment of the young biofuels industry...

  • Love- The Odessa Record; "By Your Relative"

    Updated Apr 2, 2014

    Odessa Record subscriber Larry Fisher of Spokane continues his series of articles on the history of the Batum/Lauer area (where his wife, the former Joyce Kiesz, grew up). Hi, here I am again. Last week we were told about a couple of items that Alvin Fink told me about during our discussion. The rest of them are presented hereafter. (d.) In Conrad Fink's time before Mr. Mayer at Batum had grain storage capacities, Fink grain was hauled to Irby and the Finks shopped in Irby also. When Mayer at Batum started accepting grain,...

  • Social neurology; our brains and our friends

    KIMBERLY NELSON|Updated Apr 2, 2014

    The human brain gathers millions of pieces of information every minute, analyzes each one, comes to a conclusion within seconds, and formulates an appropriate reaction. Every one of us processes and reacts to information differently; the reaction created is dependent upon the past experiences, mood, and disposition of the individual. Sometimes, the way we react to a situation may be misconstrued as inappropriate, rash, or uncaring; even when we mean well. The unconscious part of our brain is typically responsible for...

  • Rock Doc

    DR E KIRSTEN PETERS|Updated Apr 2, 2014

    By DR. E. KIRSTEN PETERS I was living in eastern Washington State in May of 1980 when Mount St. Helens erupted after a massive landslide triggered by a magnitude 5.1 quake. Vast amounts of molten rock were violently released to the surface of the earth, erupting not only as sizeable rocks but as fine-grained volcanic ash that floated on the breeze. Us "down-winders" were enveloped in conditions that were dark as night until the ash finally fell to the ground. Volcanic ash isn'...

  • Multi-tasking

    KIMBERLY NELSON|Updated Mar 26, 2014

    “God will never give you anything you can’t handle.” -Kelly Clarkson It’s pretty easy to do one thing at a time. Two things? No problem. Three or four, even? Sure! It’s not hard to multi-task; you do one or two things here and there and, a little at a time, everything gets done. But, sometimes, we try to do everything all at once; that’s when we experience problems. Sometimes, when faced with a series of tasks, it seems like a really good idea, at first, to do everything all at once. That way you won’t have anything to do lat...

  • Market Perspective

    PEARSON BURKE|Updated Mar 26, 2014

    The wheat market has continued to rally over the last three weeks, resulting in marketing year highs for both old and new crop prices. New crop prices are now at higher levels than what most people sold this year's crop. When wheat markets were at their low at the end of January, the speculative funds were holding a short position in the Chicago futures of over 550 million bu. The size of last year's Soft Red Winter Wheat crop was 560 million bu. At that time China, Egypt and Iraq, along with other buyers, stepped into the...

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