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Country Lifestyles

Look Out! Here comes the next generation -Part 3

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By Judy Wade

This is the third part of a series about up and coming young cowboys and cowgirls.

Cowboys and cowgirls come in all sizes.  This month we visited with a pint-sized first grader, a third grader, a sixth grader and a high school senior.

Pate Cody is a seven-year-old first grader at Henrietta Elementary.  He likes music and P.E., and is active in RA’s at First Baptist Church in Henrietta, but his main interests are in rodeo. “I like to see my friends at the rodeos,” he said.]

He enters mutton bustin’, poles, barrels, flags, and goat roping, but the mutton bustin’ is his favorite.  “At one rodeo I had to put underwear on a goat.  That was really hard,” he laughed.

Pate is the son of Coye and Lacy Cody of Henrietta, and like many other young cowboys, has a rodeo heritage.  Coye ropes steers, enters ranch rodeos, and rides broncs.  His grandfather, Kent Cody, is a team roper.

Lacy ran barrels, and her parents, Ronnie and Donna Wells, were also involved in rodeo.  He rode bulls, saddle broncs and barebacks and she ran barrels. To read more puck up the January 2016 issue of NTFR.

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Country Lifestyles

Lacey’s Pantry: Strawberry Sorbet

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By Lacey Vilhauer

Ingredients:
1 whole lemon, seeded and roughly chopped
2 cups sugar
2 pounds strawberries, hulled
Juice of 1 to 2 lemons
¼ cup water

Directions:

Place the chopped lemon and sugar in a food processor and pulse until combined. Transfer to a large bowl. Puree the strawberries in a food processor and add to the lemon mixture along with juice of one lemon and water. Taste and add more juice as desired.

To read more, pick up a copy of the April issue of NTFR magazine. To subscribe by mail, call 940-872-5922.

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Country Lifestyles

A Mountain Out of a Molehill

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By Nicholas Waters

As winter plods along – come Spring and gopher mounds – homeowners and farmers find themselves playing a familiar song – fiddling while Rome is burning.

Let’s make a mountain out of a molehill. Those mounds on your lawn and pasture could be moles, but they’re more than likely gophers; Plains Pocket Gophers to be pragmatic – Geomys bursarius to be scientific.

These rodents dig and chew, and the damage they can do goes beyond the mounds we mow over. Iowa State University cited a study in Nebraska showing a 35 percent loss in irrigated alfalfa fields due to the presence of pocket gophers; the number jumped to 46 percent in decreased production of non-irrigated alfalfa fields.

The internet is replete with academic research from coast-to-coast on how to curtail gopher populations, or at least control them. Kansas State University – then called Kansas State Agricultural College – also published a book [Bulletin 152] in February 1908 focused exclusively on the pocket gopher.

To read more, pick up a copy of the April issue of NTFR magazine. To subscribe by mail, call 940-872-5922.

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Country Lifestyles

When A City Girl Goes Country

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By Annette Bridges

Everyone needs a room with a view that makes their heart happy. My honest favorite panorama would be either the mountains or the ocean. I have yet to convince my hubby to make permanent moves to either, although he does enjoy the visits as much as I do.

The location of our house on our ranch does not provide the expansive field of vision of our land that I would enjoy. So, I have created a room decorated and furnished in a way that gives me smiles, giggles, and a wonderful peace-filled feeling when I am hanging out in it. I am in that place right now writing this column. I am in a lounging position with my computer in my lap on the chaise that was once my sweet mama’s. I had it reupholstered this year to give it a fresh look.

To read more, pick up a copy of the April issue of NTFR magazine. To subscribe by mail, call 940-872-5922.

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