Engagement - County Star-News

Transcription

Engagement - County Star-News
A4
County Star-News
Thursday, April 16, 2015
Society & Lifestyle
Engagement
Feeling the heat? Let us help.
Lee’s Refrigeration
Duncan, Adams plan August wedding
Layne and Dawn Adams of
Ralls, TX and Jason and Sonja Stewart of Lubbock, TX are
proud to announce the engagement of their daughter, Morgan
Kailene Adams to Hayden Curtis Duncan of Shamrock, TX,
son of Curt and Mindy Duncan
of Mobeetie, TX.
Adams graduated Idalou
High School in 2011. She is
currently working on her degree in Agricultural Media &
Communications and will be
graduating from West Texas
A&M University this summer.
Duncan graduated Fort Elliott High School in 2010. He
received his RFO certification
from Clarendon College in
2011.
Presently Hayden lives and
works on a ranch near Shamrock, TX.
Adams is the granddaughter
of Kenny and Barbara Adams
of Ralls, TX, Joe and Roxie
Hesser of Garland, TX, Dennis
and Lavonda Espe of Amarillo,
TX, Tony and Kay Stewart of
Mansfield, LA and James and
Karen Stewart of Mansfield,
LA.
She is the great-granddaughter of Ruth Caddell of Caprock,
TX, Patricia Hesser of Rambin,
LA, Geraldine Nickens of Austin, TX, Eugenia Manning of
Mansfield, LA and Betty Poole
of Amarillo, TX.
Duncan is the grandson of
Joe and Ginger Duncan of Pampa, TX, Bill and Patsy Caswell
of Pampa, TX and Keven and
Janet Romines of Pampa, TX.
He is the great-grandson of J.L.
and Vivian Romines of Pampa,
TX and Betty and Ralph Reid
of Pampa, TX.
A small wedding is planned
in Amarillo August the 14th.
The event will take place at
Destiny’s Garden.
Vegetable study targets
water savings in the
High Plains
Vegetable production is not
new in the Texas High Plains,
but it is being re-examined in a
Texas A&M AgriLife Research
study to see if it might offer
a water-savings alternative to
some cereal grain production.
“Everybody knows we are
generally water short in the
Texas High Plains and can no
longer meet 100 percent of all
crop water needs,” said Thomas
Marek, AgriLife Research senior
research engineer for irrigation
water conservation and management in Amarillo. “We grow a
tremendous amount of corn for
the cattle industry. And we know
from our regional water plan that
corn production is going to have
to be reduced in the future.”
Marek said production changes, preferably to higher valued
crops such as certain types of
vegetables, may be a partial solution to sustaining future profitability for Texas High Plains’
producers, particularly those
within the northwestern area facing water shortages.
“Water is the largest input factor in economically feasible crop
production, so numerous water
management strategies have been
proposed by the region’s water
planning committee, the Panhandle Water Planning Group,”
he said. “One of those strategies
being considered is that of crop
changes to reduce irrigation water use.
“While water use for vegetables may not be less per acre
than that of some currently produced cereal grains, less overall
regional acreage may be required
to potentially maintain or even
increase existing profit levels for
producers,” Marek said.
He conducted a relatively
small demonstration in 2014
with several categories of vegetables at the AgriLife Research
James Bush Farm north of Bushland. This study was supported
by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research
Service’s Ogallala Aquifer Program, AgriLife Research and the
USDA National Institute of Food
and Agriculture.
Marek said they grew the higher value runner-type vegetables
such as squash, zucchini, cucumbers, as well as peppers, onions,
melons, tomatoes, black-eyed
peas and okra.
“We have a pretty definite
range of what we are evaluating at this point,” he said. “The
potential has been promising to
date.”
All vegetables were grown
under a single irrigation level
targeted at a high evapotranspiration, known as ET, level. A
weather station, which is part of
the Texas High Plains Evapotranspiration Network, was located near the plots and was used
to compute daily reference ET to
know what the actual water demand was.
Plots were planted on May 29
and again on June 10. This was
later than desired, but scheduling
conflicts prevented earlier operations. Irrigation was applied
using surface-flow irrigation. As
the total plot area was relatively
small, Marek said irrigation efficiencies were very high, and the
total amount of irrigation applied
from planting to harvest was
17.46 inches. The in-season rainfall in 2014 was 12.61 inches.
Each vegetable was evaluated on a bedded, two-row, 20feet long plot size. Row spacing
was 30 inches. Vegetables were
hand-harvested on a two-tothree-day basis. Data regarding plant count, harvested fruit
number, total harvested weight
per picking and water use were
recorded for each harvest event.
Several things Marek said they
determined with the first round
of the study were: earlier planting would help increase yield
output per plant; and plant establishment with transplants needs
to be augmented by the use of
protective wind cylinders due to
early season high wind speeds in
2014.
“We had area folks driving by
the field who asked ‘what are all
those white things out there in
Continued on Page 5
315 N. Main • Shamrock, TX
(806) 898-9431
JT Haynes-Broker (806) 367-8334
Sherry Palmer-Realtor (806) 898-9431
Members of Multiple Listing Service
800 S Main- Brick 3/2, corner lot, Gazebo in Back
703 E 9th--- Brick, 4/3, half a block with Mother-in-law
quarters in back.
Commercial
209 N Main- Great Business, Financially Sound, Fully stocked
and Turn Key. Don’t miss this one!
911 N Main- Well Developed and Profitable Business. One of
a kind in Shamrock.
6809 Old Kent Road- Amarillo, TX- 3/2, Master Patio, Close
to Windsor School.
121 E. 3rd • Shamrock, TX • (806) 256-5337 • (806) 334-0133
TX. Lic. # TACLB29650C
For Your Air Conditioning &
Heating Service & Sales
• Commercial Refrigeration Service & Sales
• Home Refrigeration Service & Sales
• Preventative Maintenance Service Provided
Now Accepting Visa and Mastercard
Harvester Cleaners
Laundry Depot •Pick-up/Drop Off
Tuesday and Thursday
Harvester Cleaners
(806) 665-2222
Laundry Depot
(806) 216-1086
Shannon’s
Morgan Kailene Adams and Hayden Curtis Duncan
Clarendon 5K
Realty
207 E. ROUTE 66 • SHAMROCK, TX 79079 • 806.256.1616
Monroe Shannon - Broker - 806.256.2485 or cell 806.676.0373
Fleeta Shannon - Realtor - 806.256.2485 or cell 806.216.0118
Ken Baxter - Realtor - 806.256.2485 or cell 806.334.0123
Larry Clonts - Realtor - 806.256.2485 or cell 806.334.1143
Bill Layman - Broker - 806.334.7783
www.landsoftexas.com • www.shannonsrealty.com
RESIDENTIAL
•NEW LISTING: 5777 FM 1547 -- This refurbished 4 bdrm with 3 bath home
allows country living at its finest! Energy efficient with zoned heating and cooling and a fabulous modern kitchen with top of the line appliances. This place
has all the amenities including 8 acres. Call for appointment. UNDER CONTRACT
•316 North Texas--2 bdrm, 1 bath, living/ dining area. This well maintained
home has an adjacent living/ storage room with garage and cellar. Will be sold
with furnishings. PRICE REDUCED
•820 South Main--We have just listed this nice three bedroom home on a corner
lot. Privacy fenced and carport. Great condition! Shown by appointment only!
•NEW LISTING: Remodeled three bedroom brick close to school. Energy efficient.
•415 E. 1st, 3 bdr, 2 ba home on large lot with carport and storage/office.
•406 E. 3rd. 4 bdr, 2.5 ba., brick home, CH&A, large lot.
•110 S. Iowa -- 2 BR, 1 BA brick, 1 car detached garage, storm cellar.
ACREAGE
•NEW LISTING: 1550 Co. Rd. E/ Collingsworth County -- Located on Co.
Rd. E between Co. Rds 120 & 130. 640 acres cross fenced with water from wells
and ponds. Excellent grazing and an abundance of wild life.
•NEW LISTING: 5251 Co. Rd. 150/ Collingsworth County -- Residence &
20 acres and an additional 105 acres surrounding Samnorwood School. Great
residence for families or hunting lodge with surrounding acerage for hunting and
grazing. Half mile from pavement.
•160 acres .5 miles North of I-40 @ Lela exit on FM 3075 and County Road Z.
Improved grasses, five wire fence and one water well. A great place to hunt or
run a few cattle.
•3 Acres just off Hwy 83, Twitty, TX.
•200 S. Arkansas -- Vacant lot, approximately 1.5 acres. CONTRACT PENDING
COMMERCIAL
•316 S. Houston - 2,884 sq. ft., 170.5 ft. x 150 ft. lot, C H/A PRICE REDUCED
•901 S. Main - Office building, 2,337 sq. ft., CH&A, 5 office suites, reception
area, work area, file room, 2 restrooms and handicapped access
•NEW LISTING: 117 N. Main, 6,000 square feet, rental income available.
WE NEED YOUR
LISTING...
FIRST
FIRST EQUITY
EQUITY REALTORS
REALTORS
RICHARD
HEFLEY,
ABR,
CNS
RICHARD HEFLEY,
ALC
806.468.4892
806.468.4892 OR
OR CELL
CELL806.898.1786
806.898.1786
NEW TO MARKET: 80 acre ranch, Collingsworth County,
COURTESY PHOTO
Robin McGonigal and Sylvia Zaiontz both competed in the
Chance Mark Jones Roar N Run 5K in Clarendon April 11.
Zaiontz placed second and McGonigal third in their age division.
NEW LISTING
Texas, hunting, cattle ranch, weekend retreat, excellent
fences, great location for second home, good set of stock
160 acres,
pens, rebuilt windmill and pond, big trees, native grass,
brush, mule deer, white tail deer, turkey, quail and dove.
big trees, creek,
brush, love grass,
submersible pumps,
excellent fences,
abundant
LOOK
AGAIN: 6wildlife.
miles east of Wheeler -- 80 acres
E
C
!
I
PR TION
UC
D
RE
on Hwy. 152. Big trees and 64 acres under new
CRP contract. First time on the market in 65 years.
Seep pond. Deer, turkey, quail, dove and hogs.
• PRICE REDUCTION! 640 Acres NW of Shamrock. Combination farm, ranch
E
IC D!
and hunting property. High density wildlife area (quail, deer, turkey, dove).
E
PR C150
U
ED cross
Acres wheat, good stand of grass, big trees, brush. Excellent fencesRand
fences, steel barn, with new tank and pipe corral. Potential for irrigation develAGRICULTURAL
COLLINGSWORTH
COUNTY -- 1 SECTION OF LAND with live water, spring fed creeks and ponds,
opment.
1 mile of highway frontage, deer, dove, hogs, quail and turkey
landsoftexas.com
thelandconnections.com
COMMERCIAL
OFFICE BUILDING/HOUSE, CO RD 17, Excellent opportunity for business or residence
Wheeler Realty, LLC
112 E. Texas • Wheeler • 806/826-5541
www.wheelercountyrealestate.net
#186 NEW LISTING- 300+ acres love grass, pasture, trees,
water well, fenced with 1/2 mile I-40 frontage! Excellent opportunity for hunting, recreational or commercial use. Adjacent to
airport on east side.
#185 NEW LISTING- 4 BR/1 BA, brick home, basement, carport, fenced, 1134 S Main St.
#184 NEW LISTING- Friday Night Restaurant, 510 S Main St.
#183 NEW LISTING- 3 BR/1 ¾ BA, brick home, den, large
utility room, double garage, cellar, covered patio, 24’ X 40’
shop, 1211 S Alan Bean Blvd.
#182 4 BR/ 4 BA, brick, 608 S Canadian St. PRICE REDUCED!
#181 2 BR/ 1 ¾ BA, brick, 1107 S Main St. PRICE REDUCED!
#180 2 BR/ 1 ½ BA, 205 N Main St.
PRICE REDUCED!
#179 Fin’s Red Bird Café + 13 Storage Buildings, 508 S Main St.
#178 3 BR/ 2 BA, brick, 1005 S Main St. PRICE REDUCED!
#176 3 BR/ 2 BA, brick, 804 S Red River St. PRICE REDUCED!
Peter D. Denney, Broker