Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Seed Prepay Discounts

This is a reminder that the 8% Seed Prepay Discount is OVER on January 31st!  Call or come by the Gering Office to take advantage and reserve your favorite varieties.  Also, if you anticipate needing Yellow Pea Seed for this year, supplies are beginning to get tight.  Please let me know as soon as you know what you need. 

Monday, January 21, 2013

Pea Grower Sign-up

Our Field Pea Grower Meetings and Membership Drive are going exceptionally well!  We have hosted 4 meetings to date and have had attendance of over 60 growers!  This week we will be in Kimball, Sidney, Big Springs, & Imperial.  I hope to see some new faces on our travels...  By tomorrow, we should be able to take memberships from ANY state... Stay tuned...


Field Pea Grower Meeting in Albin, WY

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Panhandle No-Till Partnership

Stateline will be taking part in the Panhandle No-Till Partnership's Winter Conference on February 20-21, 2013 at the Gering Civic Center in Gering, Nebraska.  They have an excellent program put together for producers in various stages of implementation or management of no-till practices.  Registration can be done on-line at http://panhandlenotill.org/index.php/events/
 
We hope to see you there!
 
Panhandle No-Till Partnership Field Day at Watson Brothers Farm - 2012
 

Monday, January 14, 2013

Meetings, Meetings...

The first full week of January was full of meetings for Dave Dietrich & I...  Monday started out with a Nebraska Dry Bean Commission Meeting and discussion of the funding we will provide for the 2013 year.  A wide variety of projects were proposed and we did our best to allocate funds in support of various topics and interests from dry bean production & breeding to the development of new products with dry bean ingredients.

Tuesday was the Annual Dry Bean Day hosted by the Nebraska Dry Bean Growers Association.  The day started out with a power-outage, but we were soon up and running with many interesting presenters & booths.  

 
Wednesday we hosted the first two of our Pea Grower Meetings!  We had a nice turnout at both Alliance & Hay Springs and appreciate everyone who came!  We will continue with meetings in Gering, NE & Albin, WY this week.

Thursday was the Crop Production Clinic for this area at the Gering Civic Center.  I renewed my pesticide license and learned about new herbicides, fungicides, and some tools that will be useful in determining what growers are able to produce in limited irrigation situations. 

Friday was a welcomed snowstorm!  Fortunately we didn't have to travel anywhere.  Even though the wind blew most of the 2-4" we received in the ditch, we hope the mountains got a good dose...

Monday, January 7, 2013

Updated Pea Grower Meeting Schedule

Here is the updated schedule for the Field Pea Grower Meetings.  Everyone is welcome to attend!

Field Pea Grower Meeting Schedule

Wed., January 9th – 9:00 am

Alliance Public Library

Wed., January 9th – 1:30 pm

Hay Springs Community Building

Wed., January 16th – 1:00 pm

Gering - Farm & Ranch Museum

Thur., January 17th – 1:30 pm

Albin Community Center Conference Room
 
Wed., January 23rd – 9:00 am

Kimball – Kimball Eagles

Wed., January 23rd – 1:30 pm

Sidney - South Platte NRD

Thur., January 24th – 9:00 am

Big Springs Fire Hall

Thur., January 24th – 2:00 pm

Imperial – Eagles Club

Friday, January 4, 2013

Nutrition - What Dr. Oz says about Beans

The article below shows us that Dr. Oz is a Bean Fan!  Available online by clicking on the title below.

The DoctorsAs if there weren’t already loads to love about beans, these tasty and oh-so-satisfying legumes are looking even more appealing thanks to a headline-grabbing new report. Eating beans regularly knocks down high blood sugar, lowers blood pressure and cuts the risk of heart disease by a respectable 8 percent. A healthy boost for more than 100 million North Americans who have diabetes, prediabetes or a related health risk called metabolic syndrome. (Other legumes, like peanuts and green beans, are also good for you, but they’re not the beans we are talking about here.) Beans are high in protein and can help flatten your belly and reduce belly (omentum) fat — the toxin-filled flab that threatens your vital organs.
 
That’s a stellar payday from a versatile food you can serve cold as a salad, room temp as a party dip, warm as a comfort-food side dish, baked into muffins or piping hot as a hearty main dish!

Inside your favorite bean — whether it’s white, pink, red, black, pinto, lentil or garbanzo — is a squadron of powerful, health-boosting compounds. A half-cup of beans gives you 6 grams of satisfying fiber: 2 grams of blood sugar-lowering soluble fiber and 4 grams of colon-cleansing insoluble fiber. But that’s just the beginning. Beans are a starchy food, but the type of starch they contain digests v-e-r-y slowly. They have a low glycemic index, which keeps blood sugar lower and steadier than faster-digesting carbohydrates like refined flour in pasta or bread. In fact, 10 percent to 20 percent of the starch in beans never gets digested at all!

Beans are a great source of the blood pressure-controlling minerals potassium and magnesium. They’re also packed with chemicals called phenols that protect cells throughout your body from oxidative damage, which helps explain the mighty bean’s reputation for lowering risk for some forms of cancer and reducing odds for heart disease. Getting into the bean habit also can cool off chronic, bodywide inflammation — another way they help lower your odds for diabetes, heart disease, cancer and more.

“But how many beans do I have to put on my plate ... and how do I deal with the, er, side effects?”
Glad you asked. One cup of beans a day delivers their health benefits, and rinsing them thoroughly (either after you soak dried beans or when you take them out of the can) removes gas-generating sugars. (Dr. Mike suggests putting Bean-O in the water you soak dried beans in!) Still rumbling? You can take Bean-O by mouth before you eat beans; that’ll break down starches in your gut before gas-producing bacteria do it for you. So now you’re ready to up your bean intake.

Beans at breakfast. Have beans instead of toast with your eggs. Add a little hot sauce, guacamole and fat-free sour cream for a Tex-Mex morning treat.
Take beans to the party. Mix black beans with corn kernels, chopped tomato, pepper, lime juice, olive oil and seasonings for a hearty salsa. Toss cooked white beans with olive oil and seasonings for a great dip. Create homemade hummus, a Middle Eastern spread with chickpeas, tahini and other ingredients. Check realage.com for recipes.
Bake with beans. Trendy, gluten-free bean flour adds flavor, protein and tenderness to muffins, quick breads, even cakes. White bean and chickpea flour also work well in baking. Black-bean flour is terrific as a thickener in sauces.
Serve a new comfort food. Warm beans seasoned with your favorite spices and a dab of oil are a great replacement for mashed potatoes. Serve skinless, herbed chicken, grilled salmon, or shrimp skewers on a bed of white beans flavored with rosemary, garlic and a dash of olive oil.
Try a meatless or nearly meatless bean entree. Three-bean chili, lentil burgers, bean soups and stews — there are plenty of ways to harness the satisfaction of beans in a meatless meal. Or add a little meat, like lean pork or chicken; you don’t need a lot with this versatile all-star on board.

- Mehmet Oz, M.D. is host of “The Dr. Oz Show,” and Mike Roizen, M.D. is Chief Medical Officer at the Cleveland Clinic Wellness Institute. For more information go to RealAge.com.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Pinto Trials - 3 Year Average

As promised, I finally put together a 3 year average of our pinto trials on both Flats Farms & Henkel Farms. This information may prove to be a tad bit more helpful than individual years... If you have any questions or comments, please let me know!

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Happy New Year

I hope everyone had a fabulous Christmas & New Years!  I took a little break from the blogging - and am back at it now :)  Stateline is currently taking your bean seed orders.  Please stop by to reserve your favorite varieties!  I know Mother Nature is going to play a huge role in the crop acres planted this spring, so keep us informed of your plans and we will do our best to accommodate any changes you have.  Both dry beans and peas are excellent crops for limited irrigation situations.  If you have questions about herbicide carryover, fertility, or variety selection, please contact Dave Dietrich or myself to assist you in planning for the upcoming crop year.  It seems that uncertainty is everywhere when it comes to the weather, economy, and government policy... Let us at STATELINE be the people you can count on!