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Farmers get look at new Louisiana crops

BUNKIE — State and federal agency representatives attended a crops tour held by the LSU AgCenter on July 25 to give them idea of the agricultural diversity in central Louisiana.
The tour started near Bunkie at the James Deshotel sweet potato farm followed by a stop at the Todd Steele tree nursery. The tour then traveled to the Charlie Fontenot farm near Lebeau to hear about rice farming, stopped at the Lowrey cattle operation and ended near Melville at the Cannatella farm to get an overview of sugarcane farming.
Tara Smith, director of the AgCenter Central Region, said the tour helps build the relationship between the AgCenter and agricultural agencies. “The goal is the interagency cooperation opportunity, but the biggest goal is the training of the agency employees to help them understand issues faced by stakeholders,” she said
Agencies attending the event included several sections of the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture Farm Services Administration and USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service.
Kevin Wofford, LDAF director of pesticide and environmental programs, said the event has been held for several years, and it is beneficial for LDAF employees from across Louisiana to learn about the different agricultural operations in the state. “It’s gaining momentum, and it gets better every year,” he said.
At the first stop, Deshotel talked about the challenges of growing and selling sweet potatoes. He said the sweet potato business in south Louisiana almost shut down because of a quarantine imposed to prevent the spread of the sweet potato weevil, but the rule was amended to allow washed potatoes from south Louisiana to be shipped to a processor in north Louisiana.
At the Steele tree farm, Steele said he ships plants as far away as Washington state and Maryland.
AgCenter commercial horticulture specialist Jeb Fields said Louisiana has become 15th in the U.S. for volume in the nursery industry. “It’s a big, growing industry,” he said.
At the Fontenot farm, Vince Deshotel, AgCenter agent in St. Landry Parish, said the 7,000-acre operation has the advantage of good soil. “It’s probably as good as any in the U.S.,” he said.
Chris Davis, NRCS agent in St. Landry Parish, said Fontenot is his best conservation advocate.
AgCenter rice specialist Dustin Harrell described his research to develop agronomic guidelines for new varieties. He also talked about the growing trend of row rice, or furrow-irrigated rice.
AgCenter rice breeder Adam Famoso talked about the steps involved in developing a new rice variety.
AgCenter soybean specialist Boyd Padgett talked about his off-station trials. Padgett said flooding rains from Hurricane Barry caused considerable damage to soybeans in some areas. “We will not know the entire impact on the beans until we drop the combines into the fields,” he said.
At the Lowrey farm, AgCenter weed scientist Ron Strahan discussed control of Virginia buttonweed and smutgrass.
Scott Perry and Jesse Bellard, both of the LDAF Brand Enforcement Office, said prosecuting a case of cattle theft requires traceability of an animal to its original owner.
Bellard said taking regular photos of a herd provides some good identification, and brands also help determine ownership.
Perry said radio frequency identification tags will be required by 2023 for animals moved across state lines.
At the Cannatella farm, AgCenter corn specialist Dan Fromme said he had corn studies at 14 locations throughout the state, including the Cannatella farm. He would have had more locations but weather prevented planting in some areas.
Vince Cannatella said sugar cane has been grown at the farm for the past four years. “It’s been a good experience for us,” he said.
Vince Deshotel said St. Landry Parish had 7,000 acres of cane a few years ago, but that amount has more than tripled.
Randy Fontenot of the FSA said St. Landry Parish soybean acreage for 2019 is at 84,000, a decrease of 15,000 from last year.
He said rice declined by 1,600 acres for a total of 24,460 this year.
AgCenter pest management specialist Al Orgeron said sugarcane is one of the state’s oldest crops. The cost of planting is the biggest expense of a sugarcane crop.
Atticus Finger, plant breeder for the American Sugar Cane League, said experimental plots of cane will be planted this year at the AgCenter Dean Lee Research Station near Alexandria to help provide information on variety cold-tolerance traits for growers in central Louisiana.
Wofford gave an update on pesticide drift complaints. Last year, 38 complaints received involved the use of dicamba. “This year, we have three,” he said.
LDAF will sponsor a disposal program for unwanted pesticides in the fall.

Man accused of attacking dating partner

A Morgan City man was arrested and accused of attacking his dating partner, Morgan City Police Chief James F. Blair reported in a news release.
—Keithen K. Humphrey, 30, of Cardinal Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 9:56 p.m. Thursday on charges of aggravated assault on a dating partner, simple kidnapping, false imprisonment armed with a dangerous weapon and possession of drug paraphernalia, and a warrant for domestic abuse battery by strangulation.
Officers were called to a Belanger Street residence about a disturbance.
Officers were met by the victim and Humphrey as they arrived on the scene.
Officers learned from the victim she and Humphrey were in a dating relationship. The victim told officers earlier she was in the Brownell Homes area when Humphrey took her vehicle without permission, Blair said.
She advised that while attempting to call for help, Humphrey pulled up to her and threatened her with bodily harm to get in the vehicle with him and Humphrey drove her to the Belanger Street residence, Blair said.
The victim said that while inside the residence, he threatened her with a knife.
During the investigation, a warrant check revealed the Morgan City Police Department held a warrant for his arrest for domestic abuse battery by strangulation.
The warrant stems from a July 21 incident with the same victim. Humphrey was jailed
Blair also reported that the Morgan City Police Department responded to 37 calls of service and the following arrest was made:
—Raul Miguel Navarez, 56, of Roderick Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 2:05 p.m. Thursday on a warrant for sexual battery. The warrant stems from a complaint filed with the Morgan City Police Department on July 25.
Officers were dispatched to an apartment complex on Roderick Street to investigate a sexual battery complaint. Officers learned from the complainant and witness that Navarez had touched the victim inappropriately in a sexual way. Navarez fled the area and officers were unable to locate him. A warrant was later issued for his arrest. On Thursday, Navarez was located in the parking lot of the City Court of Morgan City. He was jailed.
St. Mary Parish Sheriff Blaise Smith reported that the St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office responded to 34 complaints and the following arrests were made:
—Herman Terrell Solone, 27, of Fifth Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 8:12 p.m. Thursday for charges of domestic abuse battery by strangulation. A deputy was dispatched to a residence in Berwick in reference to a domestic abuse complaint that happened earlier in the evening at a residence in Bayou Vista. With the assistance of the Berwick Police Department, the deputy made contact with the victim and Solone. During the investigation, it was learned that Solone was in an altercation with the victim. Solone was jailed with no bail set.
—Frances Lee Boudreaux, 34, of Lake Palourde Road in Amelia, was arrested at 3:12 a.m. Thursday on two warrants for failure to appear on the charges of improper lane usage and driving under suspension. A deputy was patrolling the area of La. 182 in Amelia when he observed a vehicle without operable license plate lights. The deputy conducted a traffic stop and made contact with the driver, identified as Boudreaux. The deputy learned that Boudreaux held an active warrant for her arrest. She was jailed with bail set at $704.
Patterson Police Chief Garrett Grogan reported the following arrests:
—Nicholas Anthony Gamble, 39, of Grace Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 5:13 p.m. Thursday on charges of simple criminal damage to property. He was jailed and released on a $250 bond.
—Adontay Rayshaun Owens, 21, of Railroad Avenue in Patterson, was arrested at 5:13 p.m. Thursday on charges of theft and aggravated battery. He was jailed with no bond set.
Berwick Police Chief David Leonard Sr. reported that there were no arrests.

City receives honorable mention at LMA convention

The 2019 Louisiana Municipal Association convention was held this past week in Monroe and the City of Franklin received an Honorable Mention Community Development Achievement award.
“This award is not just for the mayor’s office or the city council, but for all of Franklin,” Mayor Eugene Foulcard said. “This is an award for the entire city because it shows that Franklin is moving forward and will continue to move forward. As I’ve always stated, there are positive things we are doing that you, as city officials and citizens are working extremely hard on each and every day in all areas.”
Foulcard continued, “As we attend this event, we are able to bring back much knowledge and resources. We are able to network with other municipalities as they can learn from us and we can learn from them. We are already working on an achievement to possibly win first place for 2020. In the words of my late uncle Albert Foulcard, ‘If you don’t go, you don’t know.’”

Angeron ready to help Fort Hays baseball

Drake Angeron was a standout player on Central Catholic High School’s baseball team through his senior year in 2017. Now, the former Eagles star and centerfielder is getting set to enter his first season at Fort Hays State University in Kansas, where he’s continuing his baseball career after a successful season at Dodge City Community College Conquistadors in southwestern Kansas. This past spring with Dodge City, Angeron batted .370 with 71 hits in 192 at-bats. He hit three home runs, seven doubles and two triples, while collecting 25 RBIs. He was named to the All-Conference team and recently finished a ...

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Saints pen Jacquizz Rodgers, waive Rob Kelley

METAIRIE (AP) — The New Orleans Saints are giving veteran running back Jacquizz Rodgers a chance to make his third different team in the NFC South Division.
The 29-year-old Rodgers, who practiced with New Orleans on Saturday for the first time, has been added to the roster in place of former Washington Redskins and Tulane running back Rob Kelley. The Saints waived Kelley after bringing him in earlier this week.
Rodgers says signing with the Saints was a “no-brainer” because New Orleans consistently has fielded one of the NFL’s top offenses under coach Sean Payton and has a history of making good use of versatile running backs as both rushers and receivers.
Rodgers has played eight seasons in the NFL with Atlanta, Chicago and Tampa Bay. Last season he gained 410 yards from scrimmage, with 304 yards coming on receptions.

Astros formidable, but great rotations can fall short

Yes, the Houston Astros can still be beat, even after assembling baseball’s newest super rotation.
The Astros acquired six-time All-Star Zack Greinke from Arizona just before Wednesday’s trade deadline, adding him to a pitching staff that already included Justin Verlander and Gerrit Cole. Then, as if to show off, Houston threw a combined no-hitter Saturday night against Seattle — with Aaron Sanchez, another new acquisition, tossing six innings.
Still, recent history tells us that in baseball’s fickle postseason, even a trio of aces often isn’t enough. Here’s a look at some of the best rotations of the wild-card era — and how those teams ultimately fared.
Atlanta Braves (1995-99): The Atlanta trio of Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine and John Smoltz actually joined forces before the wild-card era and stayed together into the new century, but the peak was probably the mid-to-late 1990s, when the Braves won three pennants and a World series in a five-year span. Maddux won the Cy Young Award in 1995, Smoltz in 1996 and Glavine in 1998.
Oakland Athletics (2001-03): The A’s won 301 games in a three-year span behind Tim Hudson, Mark Mulder and Barry Zito, but they never won a playoff series with that group.
Chicago Cubs (2003): The Cubs appeared set for a lengthy run of success when they entered the postseason with Kerry Wood, Mark Prior and Carlos Zambrano — all age 26 or younger. But their pennant drive fell apart at Wrigley Field at the end of the NL Championship Series, and Prior and Wood couldn’t stay healthy after that.
Houston Astros (2005): Houston’s first World Series appearance came in 2005, at the tail end of an impressive nine-year stretch for the franchise. The Astros had Roger Clemens (1.87 ERA), Andy Pettitte (2.39) and Roy Oswalt in that pennant-winning season.
Philadelphia Phillies (2011): Philadelphia’s incredible rotation largely lived up to expectations as the Phillies rolled to a 102-win season. Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee and Cole Hamels all finished in the top five of the National League Cy Young vote, and Philadelphia also had Oswalt and Vance Worley (11-3, 3.01 ERA) contributing. A Division Series loss to the Cardinals proved again that adage about how anything can happen in a short series.
Detroit Tigers (2014): After the Tigers acquired David Price at the deadline, they had the previous three American League Cy Young winners in the same rotation — Max Scherzer, Price and Verlander. They also had a future Cy Young winner in Rick Porcello and the previous year’s ERA champ in Anibal Sanchez. Still, Detroit barely won the AL Central and was swept in the Division Series by Baltimore.
Washington Nationals (2017): According to Baseball-Reference.com, only two teams in the past 90 years have had three pitchers accumulate at least 6.0 WAR: The 2011 Phillies and these Nationals. Scherzer won the Cy Young Award, with Stephen Strasburg finishing third and Gio Gonzalez sixth. Washington still couldn’t win a playoff series.
Elsewhere around the majors:
ON THE ROPES
While Houston was adding a star pitcher, the Yankees and Red Sox were conspicuously quiet at the deadline. New York has pitching concerns but leads the AL East by 7 1/2 games. Boston, on the other hand, has dropped eight straight after a four-game sweep at Yankee Stadium.
The Red Sox trail by 14 1/2 games in the division and by 6 1/2 in the wild-card race. The defending champs are now in serious danger of missing the postseason.
HIGHLIGHTS
Things definitely got weird in Philadelphia on Friday night when the White Sox beat the Phillies 4-3 in 15 innings. Philadelphia pitcher Vince Velasquez was put in left field and threw a runner out at the plate in the 14th. He also made a diving catch in the 15th.
Outfielder Roman Quinn, who homered and stole two bases in the game, ended up pitching the last two innings and took the loss.
LINE OF THE WEEK
Quinn’s bizarre night would have been a fun choice for this spot, and Houston certainly had the best team line in its no-hitter — but the top individual performance goes to Nelson Cruz, who homered three times in Minnesota’s 11-3 win over Kansas City on Saturday night. It was his second three-homer game in 10 days.

U.S. women’s volleyball team secures Tokyo Olympics bid

BOSSIER CITY (AP) — The U.S. women’s volleyball team secured its berth to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics on Sunday, beating Argentina in straight sets Sunday at a Tokyo Women’s Volleyball Qualification Tournament.
Coach Karch Kiraly’s third-ranked Americans went unbeaten in Pool C of qualifying this weekend, rallying from a set down and again from a 2-1 deficit Saturday night to beat 16th-ranked Bulgaria before a 25-22, 25-17, 25-13 victory over No. 11 Argentina.
The U.S. has never won an Olympic gold medal, capturing bronze in the Rio Games three years ago. Now, the Americans have qualified a year out — a different path than during the last Olympic cycle when they had to win a second qualifying event in January 2016 at Lincoln, Nebraska, after missing out with two losses at the 2015 World Cup in Japan as just the top two teams from that event secured bids then to Rio.
“We can be really proud with how we fought through here, especially the challenge that Bulgaria through at us down two sets to one and the nice response we put together,” Kiraly said. “This is huge for the program. Everybody knows that we are going to Tokyo. We got that ticket locked in. We worked really hard for that this year. That helps in the planning, and it makes it that much closer in the distance. It is not that much distance to Tokyo.”
This deep U.S. squad has some familiar Olympic veterans such as Jordan Larson, Kelsey Robinson and Kim Hill along with a mix of young players. The Americans beat No. 23 Kazakhstan in straight sets Friday.
In addition, middle blocker Tori Dixon is back in a key role with the U.S. after she was forced to miss the 2016 Olympics with a left knee injury that required reconstructive ACL surgery. She won Sunday on her 27th birthday.
“I am really glad with how we played, how we performed. It is a best birthday present ever, honestly,” Dixon said. “Our outsides and Jordan Thompson did a great job. They came in and carried a big load all summer long, especially today.”
Opposite Jordan Thompson will return to the University of Cincinnati this fall having gained valuable national team experience. Thompson had a match-high 16 points with 13 kills, two aces and a block in Sunday’s match, which was delayed by about 30 minutes by a power outage in the arena.
“This experience is only going to help me going back to college, and adjusting back to the level of play in college,” Thompson said.

AGU hosting Hansen painting workshop

The Artists Guild Unlimited is hosting a painting workshop lead by Louise Hansen, a Louisiana watercolorist and illustrator from Baton Rouge, at its Everett Street Gallery in Morgan City.
An artist meet and greet reception will be held at 6 p.m. Aug. 9 along with a “gallery talk.”
The workshop will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Aug. 10-11. The workshop is suitable for anyone age 16 or older. Non-members of the guild may sign up by calling the gallery at 985-385-9945 or by going to the gallery at 201 Everett St. in Morgan City during gallery hours of 1 to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Friday.
A fee of $50 will be charged to non-members. Participants may work with any painting medium and their own photos or drawings to use for subject matter.
Hansen studied art at the University of Southern Mississippi and pursued a career in Jackson, Mississippi, and Shreveport in commercial art as an illustrator.
After retiring, she moved to Baton Rouge where she began studying transparent watercolor, a media she had always admired, and felt would best express the colorful and lively personality of Louisiana.
Hansen has taken workshops from such notable artists as Judi Betts, Pat Weaver, Birgit O’Connor, Tom Jones, Tony Couch, Lauren McCracken, Soon Y. Warren and many others.
She is president and signature member of Louisiana Watercolor Society and a member of the board of Associated Women in the Arts. She is also a member of The Art Guild of Louisiana, and River Regions Art Association.
Hansen has won many awards for her watercolors and has been juried into regional, national and international shows. Her paintings can be found in local and international private collections.

Fitness trackers: The most steps might not win

When Sonia Anderson got her first Fitbit step tracker, her poor pooch, Bronx, had no idea of all the steps that were coming.
The device — which counts every step Anderson takes and displays those steps on an app — was a Christmas gift from her daughters two years ago.
At the time, Bronx, a Yorkshire terrier, was younger and could still manage the additional walks up and down the trails along the sprawling apartment complex in Alexandria, Va., where Anderson lives. Anderson was on a mission to clock 10,000 steps a day.
More recently, as Bronx hit age 13, the dog started coming to dead stops during these long treks, as if to ask: What’s going on here?
Like many other folks 50 and older, the 63-year-old Anderson has been commandeered by the step-tracker craze that began about a decade ago, and her dog is an unwilling victim.
Anderson has bought into the $26 billion global step tracker industry and matches her daily count with her Fitbit-wearing friend, Landy Sorensen, 43. The two women have become inseparable Fitbit fanatics and competitors at the Arlington Food Assistance Center, where they amass additional steps every Friday morning while volunteering in the food bank. Now, they diligently count each other’s steps on their cellphone apps in real time — and compete to record just one more step than the other.
“My Fitbit made me a friend I’d have never had,” Anderson said.
It might also help her live longer, according to a recent Harvard University study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The study concluded that among older women, as few as 4,400 steps per day helped to lower mortality rates.
With more steps per day, mortality rates decreased before leveling off at 7,500 steps, the study found.
In other words, the magic marketing number of 10,000 daily steps embraced by so many wearers of these devices — from Fitbits to Garmins to Samsungs to Apple Watches — may be about 2,500 steps more than necessary.
Truth be told, even the woman behind the study — who concedes that she, too, is enamored of her step tracker — can’t say how many steps are the right number for each walker.
“No one size fits all,” said I-Min Lee, an associate epidemiologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and a professor at Harvard Medical School.
But no matter how many steps you take, merely wearing and using a fitness tracker — particularly for older women, older men and other people who tend to be somewhat inactive — “can be beneficial not only to your health but to your quality of life,” Lee said.
Of course, some folks go over the top with their trackers — and proudly post their more unusual stats on social media sites such as Reddit. Like the vegan fitness buff who posted a video about logging 50,000 steps a day for five days. And the warehouse stocker who said that he slogged 20,000 steps a day on the job. And there’s also the guy who credits his Fitbit for helping him slim his 40-inch waist to a svelte 34 inches.
Clocking miles is even popular with workers who are on the clock. C-SPAN network, for instance, ran a month-long walking challenge sponsored by its health insurance plan, Cigna. The step competition among C-SPAN departments, which ended July 3, totaled 22,862,341 steps walked by 74 participants from 12 teams, spokesman Howard Mortman said. That’s an average 9,966 steps per day per person. More specifically, he said, that’s a total 1,028,805 calories burned — and 294 pounds lost. (For the record, the cable network’s digital media team won.)
For Anderson and Sorensen, fitness tracking has created a special bond — and a way to keep close tabs on each other. Like the day when Sorensen noticed that Anderson had suddenly doubled her step output. She immediately texted her and discovered that Anderson was on a European vacation and that her sightseeing had doubled her daily count. Another time, when Anderson noticed that Sorensen had barely logged 2,000 steps, she sent a concerned text asking: “Are you OK?”
“I thought it was so sweet of her to check in on me,” said Sorensen, who said the problem was actually a battery issue. “This is the kind of connection I wouldn’t otherwise have.”
Sorensen averages about 15,000 steps daily — roughly between 5 and 7 miles — and often tucks her early-generation Fitbit into a specially designed gold bracelet, so folks can’t even see she’s wearing one. When she wears this bracelet to formal affairs, no one suspects she’s tracking her footwork, she said.
Harvard’s Lee said she first got interested in wearable devices five years ago during a workplace program that promoted healthy lifestyles for doctors. Lee received a free device — whose familiar brand name she prefers not to publicize — and was asked to form a team of walkers. Lee, 59, is hesitant to discuss her step count because she believes the sheer act of regularly exercising is far more important than the sum total of steps. But, after some cajoling, she said she averages about 15,000 steps per day.
Studies show that 150 minutes of moderate activity, such as walking, can lower the risk of heart disease and stroke, improve sleep, help reduce weight gain and improve bone health.
Perhaps no one knows that better than Tom Holland.
He’s an exercise physiologist and sports nutritionist who has regularly appeared on “Good Morning America” as a fitness coach.
He also has worked as a personal trainer with thousands of clients — many of whom use step trackers. He’s a huge fan of fitness trackers because they get people moving.
“The fitness tracker is the first step to getting people off the couch,” he said. At the same time, he is put off by the much-ballyhooed 10,000-step daily goal, which he said is arbitrary.
“We need real numbers to shoot for,” he said. Holland, who recently turned 50, prefers recommending smaller amounts of exercise — not big feats such as 10,000 steps. “I’m a big believer in excessive moderation. Don’t do a lot a little bit — do a little bit a lot.”
Unless, of course, it involves himself.
Like the 70,000, or so, steps he clocked in a recent 50-kilometer trail run. Because Holland also is a triathlete, he not only uses a Fitbit from time to time but also sometimes slaps on “smart” sunglasses or T-shirts or shorts that track fitness data. Most often, however, he wears a Garmin fitness tracker that measures his steps, his sleeping habits and his heart rate.
“I’m not an addict,” he said jokingly, “but if you see me passed out on the side of the road, check my tracker, please.”
As for Anderson’s little dog, Bronx, he sometimes gets extra incentive to go on those walks. Occasionally, Anderson brings along her daughter’s English bulldog, Winston, whose namesake is the British statesman Winston Churchill. Perhaps, in a cosmic nod to future step trackers of all kinds, it was Churchill who said it best: “I never worry about action, but only inaction.”

Conference attendee wants to stay out of the picture

DEAR ABBY: I’m going to a professional conference, which has the usual presentations, vendors and activities. Every time I go, there’s always a photographer. It’s annoying. When a photographer sneaks up to take photos, it distracts the presenter. Then the camera is usually swung around to shoot the audience. I have been photographed many times while I was browsing through the vendors. I have never given my permission to have any of them published. The photos appear on state or national organization websites for viewing by association members (not the general public). What are my rights? Am I the only ...

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