Taking down the bath house


The bath house at the Lyons pool came down this week as construction for the new bath house and pool will soon be underway. The new pool will be open to the public next summer, 2014.

The bath house being taken down. Photo Credit/Denise Gilliland, Kat Country Hub

The bath house being taken down. Photo Credit/Denise Gilliland, Kat Country Hub

IMG_4338 IMG_4339 IMG_4340 IMG_4341 IMG_4342 IMG_4343 IMG_4344 IMG_4345

Getting to Know You


Kat Country Hub has started a new column called Getting to Know You. Questions are asked to an area individual to help others get to know more about people in the area communities.

If you would like to participate, contact me at katcountryhub@gmail.com

Delbert and Carol Polenske

Delbert and Carol Polenske

Below is the first installment.

Carol Polenske

 

Occupation: Hair stylist at Deb’s Hilltop Hairworks, Pender, NE and helping my husband, Delbert, keep our trucking company, Polenske Trucking, running smoothly.

Family: Husband, Delbert, two children, Justin and Ashley and one step son Alex. Justin recently got married to Shantel. They have three children, Belle Warner age eight and two boys, Carter three and Camden two.

Where do you live: I live in Bancroft, NE. I was born and raised here.

What was your favorite childhood food? Pizza.

What chore do you hate doing? Dusting. Don’t all housewives hate dust bunnies?

What is your favorite time of day? Sunset, evening hours.

What are your hobbies? Walking and crocheting.

What is your favorite song? Blown Away by Carrie Underwood.

What do you miss the most about being a kid? Spending quality time with my grandparents that are now gone.

What is the best part of waking up? Waiting for my morning phone call from my husband to see what part of the states he is in that day.

What would you name an autobiography of your life? The Trials and Tribulations of Multi-tasking, Being a Cosmetologist and a Truck Driver’s wife!

If you had 30 minutes of free time, what would you do? Take a walk with my dog Abby while listening to music on my Ipod. 

I have a dream


Today marks 50 years since Martin Luther King’s “I have a Dream” speech. What are your thoughts on his speech. Has the country moved forward in the last 50 years? Please share your thoughts.

 

I Have a Dream Speech
Martin Luther King’s Address at March on Washington
August 28, 1963. Washington, D.C.

When we let freedom ring, when we let it ring from every village and every hamlet, from every state and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God’s children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual, “Free at last! free at last! thank God Almighty, we are free at last!”

Bonnie Lou (Huffman) Bacon, 82, of Lyons


BONNIE LOU (HUFFMAN) BACON was born to Daniel Taylor and Pauline M. (Tuma) Huffman October 21, 1930, at Howells, Nebraska.  She grew up on a farm north of Decatur, Nebraska,  and graduated from Decatur High School in 1949.  She departed this life to be with her Lord and Savior on Monday, August 26, 2013, at St. Luke’s Medical Center, Sioux City, Iowa, at age 82.

On June 12, 1

Betty Bacon

Betty Bacon

949, Bonnie married Harold Lewis Bacon at the Presbyterian Parsonage in Lyons, Nebraska.  Four children were born to this union, Michael Dale, Laurie Ann, Jon Daniel, and Kelly William.  The family lived on farms in the Lyons – Decatur area until they moved to their current home in the 1970’s.

Bonnie loved the Lord passionately, and didn’t keep it to herself.  She often passed Christian books and CD’s to family and friends.  While in the hospital, she said to those around her to go to the next rooms and pray for the sick, as “they need it too.”  Bonnie put her faith to work, when she traveled to Grand Forks, North Dakota, as a volunteer, to assist those in need following a devastating flood in 1997.  She has been attending church at the Light of the World Gospel Ministries in Walthill, Nebraska.

Spring was a special time for Bonnie as she enjoyed planting and working in her flowers and yard, a wonderful time for prayer and reflection.  Her flowers were beautiful and a real reminder of God’s creations and perfect love.

Bonnie was a farm wife who loved to cook, clean and do laundry.  During harvest, she prepared many meals for her family and hired men, then delivered the meals to the field.  She was always trying new recipes to share and no one ever left her table hungry.    Bonnie’s kitchen was a haven for her family, where she offered wise counsel, love and support.

Her grandchildren were all very special and both Bonnie and Harold followed most of their school activities, attending many sporting events, concerts and other activities. And rarely did they miss a Birthday Party for their great-grandchildren.  In 1976 the Bacon’s opened their home to Koko, a foreign exchange student from Japan, through the Nebraska 4-H exchange program.

Bonnie, along with her cousin and dear friend, Mary Anderson, owned and operated an interior decorating business for many years.  Also, she was employed by Home Instead and Nebraska Aging providing compassionate help and care to the elderly.  In the last several years, Bonnie has sold her baked goods at the Farmer’s Market every Friday, during the summer, in Lyons.  Her specialties of cinnamon rolls and pies were sold out quickly and her many patrons learned to come early to make a purchase.

She was preceded in death by her parents, sister and brother-in-law, Betty and Alfred (Red) Zerbest and brother, Melvin Huffman.

Survivors include her husband of 64 years, Harold, of Lyons; daughter, Laurie (Ken) Moody of Gothenburg, NE; sons, Michael (Bonnie) Bacon of Dakota Dunes, SD, Jon (Shelly) Bacon of Lyons, Kelly (Kelly) Bacon of Waterloo, NE; brothers, Doyle (Cheryl) Huffman of Lyons, Daniel (Jennifer) Huffman of Onawa, IA; sister-in-law, Melva Huffman of Decatur, Betty Bacon and Mary Bacon both of Lyons; special friend, Janny Huffman of Decatur; fourteen grandchildren; twenty-one great-grandchildren; nieces, nephews and many other relatives and friends.

FUNERAL SERVICE: Friday, August 30, 2013, 10:00 am from the First Presbyterian Church in Lyons.

VISITATION: Thursday, August 29, 4-8 pm with family receiving friends and a 7 pm Prayer Service all at Pelan Funeral Home in Lyons. Visitation will also be held one hour prior to service at the church.

BURIAL: Lyons Cemetery, Lyons

MEMORIALS: To the family

Poison Ivy


John Wilson

John Wilson

News Column

John Wilson

Extension Educator

August 30, 2013

Poison Ivy

One of my funniest home visits occurred about this time of year several years ago. As we walked around the yard, the homeowner asked me to identify a vine growing up a large tree. I assured her it was poison ivy, pointed out how to identify it, and how to get rid of it.

I must not have been a very good teacher because about 15 minutes later she grabbed a plant in a flower bed with obvious insect damage and asked what was wrong with it. I told her I wouldn’t be concerned about the insect damage, but asked if she recognized the plant. After a few moments of silence, I asked if the leaves looked like something we’d looked at earlier.

A couple more moments of silence were followed with a sheepish, “It isn’t poison ivy, is it?” Our visit was cut short when I confirmed her identification. The only problem was, in those few moments she had also scratched her neck and swatted a couple of mosquitoes. She did take the precaution of having her husband open the door so she didn’t leave any residues from the poison ivy on anything as she headed for the shower.

Anyone who has suffered through the agony of a poison ivy rash learns pretty quickly to avoid the plants whenever possible. Poison ivy is common in uncultivated areas, such as fence rows, roadways, ditches, and woodlands, but it can also find its way into home landscapes. All parts of the plant contain an oil which causes an allergic reaction resulting in the rash.

Learning to identify poison ivy is the first step to controlling it. The old saying is, “Leaves of three, let it be.” This refers to the structure of a poison ivy leaf, which consists of three smaller leaflets. The leaflets are 2-4 inches long, and dull or glossy green in color with point tips. In fall, leaves turn a beautiful orangey-red. The middle leaflet is generally larger than the two side leaflets. The edges of poison ivy leaves are quite variable and can be lobed, toothed or completely smooth.

Plants can grow as an upright woody shrub, a trailing shrub that grows along the ground, or as a woody vine. Vines climb trees quite high and develop a mass of aerial roots along the stem, resulting in the appearance of a “fuzzy rope” growing up the tree. Poison ivy produces yellowish-green flowers, which later develop into waxy, white, berry-like fruits. Birds love these berries and after eating them, spread the seeds.

Poison ivy can be effectively controlled by hand pulling, spot treatment of the leaves with a herbicide or by cutting woody plants down and painting a herbicide on the stump. Hand pulling is most effective on small plants when the soil is moist. Remove each plant’s entire root, because sections of roots left behind can resprout.

Wear rubber, chemical resistant gloves, long sleeves, long pants, shoes and socks to avoid skin contact. When finished, wash clothing and gloves separate from any other family laundry and rinse the washing machine afterwards.

Spot treat individual plants with a selective, brush-killing herbicide containing triclopyr, or a non-selective herbicide like glyphosate if damage to nearby plants is not a concern. The herbicide can be applied anytime during the growing season but it is most effective in late summer to early fall.

Use a sprayer to wet the foliage with herbicide, but avoid soaking the soil or allowing herbicide to drift or splash onto non-target plants. Poison ivy is a difficult plant to control, so repeat applications will usually be necessary. Finally, woody shrubs or vines can be cut down and the stump painted with a herbicide, which will translocate into the roots and kill them.

Once the plants have died, remove them but always use safety precautions when handling dead poison ivy. Even though the plants are dead, the toxins remain. Dispose of the plants completely, but don’t add them to your compost pile or burn them. Inhaling the smoke from poison ivy as it burns can result in an internal rash. If you have contact with poison ivy, wash as soon as possible with soapy water to break down the oily compound which causes the rash. For more information on poison ivy control, contact your local UNL Extension office.

Bonnie L. Bacon, 82, of Lyons


BONNIE L. BACON, 82 years of rural Lyons, Nebraska, passed away Monday, August 26, 2013, at St. Luke’s Medical Center in Sioux City, Iowa.

FUNERAL SERVICE: Friday, August 30, 2013, 10:00 am from the First Presbyterian Church in Lyons.

VISITATION: Thursday, August 29, 4-8 pm with family receiving friends and a 7 pm Prayer Service all at Pelan Funeral Home in Lyons. Visitation will also be held one hour prior to service at the church.

BURIAL: Lyons Cemetery, Lyons

MEMORIALS: To the family

Social Speaks: Striking Syria


What do you think of the United States taking action against Syria?

Corey McCullock, LDNE Class 2013


This is the third installment of 2013 graduates and where they are now.

This summer was like any other I would say, other than the fact that it could be my last at home!

I worked this summer so that makes it very… not fun. To be leaving home feels like I am opening up a new chapter of many in my life that will take me where I wanna go.

My future plans are to open up a new business and move back to the local area of Lyons. Also, build a house in the country.

In five years I hope to be taking classes for my Masters and working for Peter Kiewit, at least until I gain some experience.

Corey McCullock

Corey McCullock

Growing up in a small town is amazing! All my roommates had more than 300 kids in their class, and I had 12. I would of never been able to have the opportunity to get to know every single person in the school. It also gave me the chance to know many people in the community. You have a sense of peace in a small town that can never be found anywhere else. And I could see the stars in Lyons, here in Omaha, not so much.

Peggy Jensen’s Boston Terriers, Jette, 10 and Megge, 7


Jette and Megge

Jette and Megge

Russ and Connie Peterson’s Springer Spaniel, Shelby


Shelby

Shelby