Skip to main content

Outdoors: A special trip to Lake of the Woods

Well, I’m back home after spending three nights and two days up at Ballard’s Resort on the south shore of Lake of the Woods after enjoying a fishing trip organized by my daughter’s fiance, John Walz. He put together a group of 12 with six of us in each of the cabins. It was a fully guided two-day trip with each cabin rotating the same two guides from one day to the next.

On the Side: Get real, tough

Cable networks went with wall-to-wall coverage of the Independence Day parade shooting in the northern Chicago suburb of Highland Park. Six people were killed and 24 injured when a 22-year-old white male opened fire from the roof of a building. If you care about the other details of the event, you likely have already read and/or heard about them and perhaps discussed them.

Guest Commentary: Red, white and news

“How little do my countrymen know what precious blessings they are in possession of, and which no other people on earth enjoy,” ― Thomas Jefferson.

It Takes a Village to Raise a Senior: I really like golfing

Will I ever be good? I doubt it. I always say that my game is “good, bad and ugly.” That way I can also say my round was “more good than usual” or “it was a little uglier than usual.” I am not one to announce my score to just anyone.

Benefits of playing the sport are numerous. Golf provides movement for various parts of my body since I swing well over par for most holes. As a matter of fact, I may start suggesting after a bad hole that I played that way just to get more exercise.

Lawn & Garden: Managing garden pests with pollinators in mind

Every garden season is filled with beautiful and tasty surprises along with a few challenges. One challenge gardeners face each year is managing insect pests while keeping the pollinators safe. Fortunately, only a very small percentage of insects in our landscapes are harmful. The rest help pollinate plants, feed upon or parasitize bad insects, or help decompose plant debris.

Extension Outreach: Youth events for everyone are in full swing

Iowa State University Extension and Outreach is committed to providing resources and education to improve the lives of all Iowans. As the youth outreach coordinator in Clay County, my goal is to offer programming that is educational, exciting and widely available to youth throughout the county. This summer, we are already 10 camps in, and we're having such a great time.

Ready Seth Go: Hardline stances won't settle the abortion debate

I'm a tired young newsman, folks, but there's no way for me to not talk about what's happened in the last week. My generation has never known a world in which Roe v. Wade wasn't the law of the land — and in which it wasn't a surefire divisive issue.

On The Side: Pants on fire

Disingenuousness is a nice word people use instead of asserting that someone is lying.

There’s a lot of disingenuousness in our country regarding the Dobbs decision regarding abortion handed down by the U.S. Supreme Court last week.

Letter to the Editor: Supreme Court rulings

Racism is a component of the abortion debate in more ways than one. Consider Ben J. Wattenberg's book "The Birth Dearth: What happens when people in free countries don't have enough babies?" in which he explained that white people could become a minority in the United States within a few decades. A GOP nightmare. He had three suggestions to stop it.

1. Pay women to have babies. Because we'd have to pay women of all colors, that wouldn't work.

Letter to the Editor: Roe v. Wade

I read your latest "One Man's Perspective" and felt you nailed it with the one sentence, some 200 words into your editorial: "All life is precious, especially the most innocent, an unborn child." The 100-plus lines of the letter writer whose piece was juxtaposed next to yours was riddled with divisive and derisive comments that seemed to go on ad infinitum. Then again, you do end your literary efforts with the query, "What say you?" I have a few comments to share also.

Randy’s Review: ‘Elvis’

 

Elvis was a shooting star in every since of the word.

He burned bright and hot and flamed out way to soon. And that’s exactly how Austin Butler masterfully portrayed the “King of Rock 'n' Roll” in “Elvis,” which offers audiences a look at where he came from, his musical influences and those who shared in his rise to fame and his ultimate early and untimely death.

Pastor's Column: As the days of Noah

Although there are scoffers who deny that a great worldwide flood ever occurred, evidence from the cultural, linguistic, and archeological sciences weigh greatly in favor of the historicity of the flood. The arguments against the flood are not truly against its occurrence, but against the Creator’s existence. With the evidence weighing in favor of the flood, our interest should not be about “if” it occurred, but “why” it occurred.

The CommStock Report: Great reading advice

I have been a voracious book reader all of my life but could not begin to have kept up with Theodore Roosevelt who was said to have read a book per day even while president. I may average reading one book per week. I have switched to the more visual media of YouTube for many of my history lessons. I have read some books that I thought could be recommended for your summer leisure, worth the time spent.

Home Country

“From the cow to the plow, Dewey,” Windy said, leaning on a shovel. Windy Wilson was on another of his “helper days” and today it was Dewey Decker’s turn to be helped.

“What do you mean, Windy?”

“You know … a slogan for the business. From the cow to the plow. Fertilizer. Farming.”

Outdoors: Iowa Great Lakes Fishing Club sets spring seminar lineup

Here’s some pretty exciting news from the Iowa Great Lakes Fishing Club. Early each spring, the IGLFC hosts its annual Spring Fishing Seminar, and according to IGLFC president Terry Thomsen, the club just lined up Joe Henry, executive director for Lake of the Woods in northern Minnesota and veteran fishing guide and tournament angler, for its 2022 spring seminar on Wednesday, Feb. 8.

Outdoors: How Przekurat discovered bass

As a youngster growing up in Wisconsin, Jay Przekurat (Sha-Cure-Et) got to go fishing quite a bit with his dad, Jason. They mostly fished for walleyes. Walleyes are popular on the table in Wisconsin and many parts of North America due to their white, sweet, flaky flesh, but they focused on walleyes for another reason:

Subscribe to Opinions