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Get It Growing: Mulch makes gardening easier

Mulching is an easy-to-do, labor-saving gardening technique all gardeners should take advantage of. A mulch is a material, usually organic but sometimes inorganic, that we use to cover the soil surface around plants. Mulching beds is an important part of sustainable landscaping.
Organic mulches, such as leaves, chopped leaves, pine straw, ground pine bark, dry grass clippings and newspaper, are all derived from once-living materials. They are popular for their ease of use and attractive appearance (except for newspaper) and because as they decompose they add beneficial organic matter to the soil. These are the most popular mulches.
Inorganic mulches are derived from nonliving sources and include such materials as plastic sheeting, landscape fabric or weed barriers, stone chips or gravel. Rubber mulch made from recycled tires and synthetic pine straw are inorganic mulches that have the look of organic mulches but last longer.
Some of these mulches, like black plastic, are not very attractive and are only suitable in more utilitarian situations such as a vegetable garden. In more decorative areas, unattractive inorganic mulches, such as landscape fabric, may be covered with a layer of organic mulch for appearance’s sake.
The first and foremost reason to use mulches is to control weeds. Whoever said, “A job well done doesn’t have of be done again,” never weeded a garden. Every time weeds are removed, new weed seeds germinate, creating the problem all over again. Mulches work to stop this by blocking sunlight from reaching the soil surface. Most weed seeds need light to germinate because this tells them they are close enough to the soil surface to sprout and grow. When covered over with mulch, they think they’re still deep in the soil and will not germinate.
To create this barrier to weed growth, organic mulches have to be applied thick enough to do the job. Too often, gardeners spread mulch as thin as possible just to cover the soil. This will be ineffective in preventing weeds. Apply organic mulches at least 2 inches thick for best weed control.
Organic mulches are not as effective in controlling persistent perennial weeds such as nutsedge, oxalis, Bermuda grass, torpedo grass and others that grow from below-ground bulbs or rhizomes or run into beds from surrounding areas. But they can help. Woven weed barriers or landscape fabric often do a better, though not perfect, job controlling these difficult weeds.
Another important function of mulches is conserving moisture in the soil. By slowing down evaporation from the soil surface, mulches keep beds from drying out as fast. This is especially important in hot, dry weather. Your plants receive a more even supply of moisture, and you save money on your water bill. Shallow-rooted plants with limited root systems, such as bedding plants and vegetables in sunny areas, are particularly benefited.
Organic mulches also insulate the soil and moderate soil temperatures — keeping the soil warmer in winter and cooler in summer — which helps the roots. They can even reduce freeze injury to whatever part of the plant they cover in winter.
Black plastic used in the vegetable garden during winter and early spring helps warm the soil by absorbing the heat of the sun. This keeps winter vegetables growing vigorously and allows for earlier planting of spring vegetables. As the weather warms up in April, black plastic mulch should be covered with an organic mulch to shade it and prevent excessive heat buildup. Black plastic should not be used to mulch permanent plantings, such as under shrubs or around trees.
Have you ever worked hard to turn the soil in a bed until it is nice and loose only to watch rain and watering beat it down again until it’s just as hard and compacted as it was before? You will find that if you mulch as soon as you finish bed preparation and planting, the mulch will substantially prevent soil compaction. A looser soil is easier for roots to grow through and absorbs water faster.
There is no one best mulch. Which one you choose depends on a variety of factors, including the gardening situation, your preference based on appearance, what’s available, cost and durability. I like to recycle yard wastes such as leaves and dry grass clippings and use them as is or allow them to partially compost and then use them. It’s cheap (free), effective and attractive. If you are lucky enough to have access to free pine straw, it makes ideal mulch. You can also purchase bales of pine straw rather economically or chopped pine straw by the bag.
If you currently are not using mulches in you gardening efforts, I strongly recommend you give them a try. You’ll be amazed at how much work they save you weeding and how nice they can make a garden look. If you are mulching, remember that their primary function is not just decorative, and apply mulches thick enough and throughout your landscape beds and gardens.

Kellogg: Frozen foods hot with millennials

NEW YORK (AP) — Kellogg, known for Frosted Flakes and Froot Loops cereals, says millennials are hot for its frozen foods, helping boost the company’s sales.
Sales of Eggo waffles and MorningStar Farms veggie burgers, both in the frozen foods aisle, jumped more than 10 percent during the first three months of the year, Kellogg said Thursday.
“The millennial generation really thinks about frozen differently than other generations,” said CEO Steve Cahillane. “It’s kind of the new fresh and the new convenient.”
Artificial colors and flavors were recently removed from Eggo, which helped increase sales, Cahillane said. And the packaging of Eggo and MorningStar were also updated.
“We expect frozen foods to continue to grow,” said Cahillane.
Kellogg, which has struggled with falling sales as more people avoid processed food, has been working to change consumer perceptions of its food. In October, it bought protein bar maker RXBar, which promotes its bars as being made with just egg whites, fruits and nuts.
In the first quarter, Kellogg said total revenue rose nearly 5 percent from a year ago to $3.4 billion, beating Wall Street expectations. Besides frozen foods, RXBar and Pringles also sold well, the Battle Creek, Michigan-based company said.
It reported net income of $444 million, or $1.27 per share, in the three months ending March 31. That’s up from $266 million, or 75 cents per share, in the same quarter a year ago.
Adjusted earnings came to $1.19 per share, 12 cents above what analysts expected, according to Zacks Investment Research.
Shares of Kellogg Co., which are down about 16 percent in the last year, rose 2.5 percent to $58.08 on Thursday.
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Parts of this story were generated by Automated Insights using data from Zacks Investment Research.

Retired husband’s wardrobe too casual for wife’s comfort

DEAR ABBY: When I met my husband, he dressed impeccably — suits, sharp sport coats, monogrammed shirts, freshly pressed dress slacks, top-of-the-line leather shoes. Even when we went out with friends for a casual night or a movie, he still dressed well in current, fashionable clothing. I fell in love with a man who dressed beautifully (my father was known for his attire as well, which is perhaps why I like the successful look). Now that he’s retired, his jeans always look dingy (they’re not dirty; they just look like they are), his sneakers look worn, and he just doesn’t ...

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Review Outdoor Writer Flores' year is a good one

In the 2011 movie “The Big Year,” Brad Harris, played by Jack Black, sets out to see how many different species of birds he can observe in one year. In the comedy, he competes against Stu Preissler, played by Steve Martin and Kenny Bostick, played by Owen Wilson.
The movie has all sorts of twists and turns across the United States and Canada, taking the three birders through some absolutely breathtaking country in pursuit of their goal of being the best. To be a birder on this level one has to have an amazing mind that is capable of distinguishing the tiniest details with near photographic memory.
The current American Birding Association (ABA) “Big Year” record is held by American, John Weigel, who spent 2016 observing 780 different species of birds.
Each Spring, from the middle of March through the middle of May, I spend a lot of time in the local bottomland hardwoods and coastal marshes observing migrating birds. I’m not interested in seeing how many different species I can count. I prefer to take their picture, attempting to get the best image I can. Also, the more rare the bird is “to me personally,” the better. But, it’s not uncommon for me to see 20 to 30 different species during my morning outings. This may not come close to a big year, but it is a pretty big day from a birding standpoint.
I’m also someone who enjoys learning all I can about a particular species and the habitat it lives in. This spring I decided to change things up a little. After spending several weekends birding here in St. Mary Parish, I moved these activities westward in late April to the Texas gulf coast towns of Fulton, Rockport and Corpus Christi, and then southwest to the town of Ozona as part of my spring vacation.
Corpus Christi happens to be known as the “Birdiest City in America.” After spending a couple days there, it was easy to see how it came to get that title.
Louisianans are well aware of our ongoing problems with coastal erosion and the loss of wetland habitats. What’s more, how wetland loss impacts our wildlife and fisheries. Corpus Christi happens to have a few problems of its own.
Much of southeast Texas continues to grow in population – a good thing. But, with any increase in human population, there is also an incremental impact on the landscape. For thousands of years migratory birds have utilized this part of the Gulf of Mexico coastline, stopping just long enough to rest and restore their energy, before moving on to their breeding grounds.
While in Corpus Christi, I met Callan Price, who works for Nueces County Coastal Parks as an Environmental Specialist. On a small piece of land, several acres in size along the North Padre Island beach, Price watered various plants near a boardwalk. Come to find out, the little piece of property was part of a habitat restoration project at the Packery Channel Nature Park.
Price said, “The whole purpose of this project is to figure out and measure the migratory birds’ use of the plants here, so we can better predict fallouts and know how to support them to help bird populations sustain themselves. This project is really great, because we know we are gathering information, where someday we can possibly assemble a kind of comprehensive manual for restoration projects or even commercial or home landscaping. It would be great to have plants in landscaping projects that would support our wildlife.”
There were some real treasures along the Texas coastline. A few of the birds we observed and took pictures of were black-throated green warblers, Cape May warblers, American redstart, and black poll warblers. In all, my wife and I counted some 54 different species of birds in the two days we spent in Corpus Christi, many we’d never seen before.
From Corpus Christi we drove west, leaving the humid sea-level ecosystem of the gulf coast, to Ozona, Texas, where the average annual rainfall is 19 inches.
There, we met up with Twistflower Ranch owner Mike McCloskey to do some nature viewing and birding. McCloskey’s 5,800 acre ranch rests in the middle of dry overgrazed habitat that once was short grass prairie, before it was used for sheep and cattle.
One of the problems with overgrazing is the plants that take the place of bluestem and other prairie grasses. And, one of the most damaging plants to those grasses is the tarbush that can range 1 to 4 feet in height. What McCloskey has done is work with various agencies, Federal and State, in developing riparian restoration strategies on his ranch to enhance wildlife by eradicating tarbush.
So far McCloskey has treated some 60 acres and is under a current contract for 600 more – and it seems to be working. McCloskey showed us some knee-high pastures of grass that has come back from desolation.
McCloskey, 72, and a retired environmental engineer is passionate about his quest in restoring his ranch saying, “By the time I die or run out of money, I’d like to restore this land as much as I can to what it looked like in the 1860s or 1870s, before the European settlers came with their sheep and cattle and overgrazed it and let these invasive species of plants come on to it.”
While on McCloskey’s ranch we sat in a blind along Live Oak creek – a dry river bottom that sees water about once every three years. Overlooking a little manmade oasis we sat seeing Scott’s and Bullock’s orioles, pyrrhuloxia, spotted towhee, vermilion and ash-throated flycatchers, and painted and varied buntings – not to mention deer, javelina (peccary), and gray fox.
In all, unofficially, Christine and I saw perhaps another 30 species of birds on Twistflower Ranch, bringing our Texas total to over 80 this past week. When I include my 2018 Louisiana spring birding numbers, I know I’m well over 100 different species of birds that I’ve observed mostly in the wild this year.
His may not be a “Big Year” for the better birders, but this spring it has been for me.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Flores is The Daily Review’s Outdoor Columnist. If you wish to make a comment or have an anecdote, recipe or story you wish to share, you can contact John K. Flores at 985-395-5586 or gowiththeflo@cox.net.

LeBlanc overcomes injuries to continue football career at ULL

Hard work and dedication have become terms thrown around in today’s sport’s vernacular, but for Central Catholic’s Cooper LeBlanc, it sums up his high school football career. LeBlanc accepted a preferred walk-on offer to play college football at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. He held a signing ceremony Wednesday at Central Catholic to commemorate the occasion. “Every year, I’ve had some type of injury that threatened not only my football career but my later life,” LeBlanc said. “I only played one complete season, my senior year, and still managed to stay on folks’ radars.” He said he was “thankful” to still ...

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Police: Two arrested on drug charges after stop

Two suspects were booked on multiple drug charges Wednesday after Morgan City police stopped the driver for questioning in a hit-and-run crash, Police Chief James Blair said in a news release.

—Charles A. Duval Jr., 31, of Park Road in Morgan City, was arrested at 8:07 a.m. Wednesday on charges of possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute, possession of drug paraphernalia, obstruction of justice, driving under suspension, switched license plate, registration required and no insurance and on a 16th Judicial District Court warrant charging him with failure to appear for a hearing, a 16th Judicial District Court warrant charging him with failure to appear for trial and on a city court warrant charging him with two counts of failure to appear to pay a fine.

—Gia N. Dardeau, 33, of Toups Street in Berwick, was arrested at 8:07 a.m. Wednesday on charges of possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute, possession of drug paraphernalia, resisting an officer and obstruction of justice.

Patrol officers observed Duval operating a vehicle in the area of La. 182. Duval was being sought for questioning in an April 29 investigation in regard to a hit and run, Blair said.

Duval’s driver’s license was also known to have been under suspension. The vehicle was traveling into Berwick when the officer attempted to initiate a stop. The vehicle had pulled into an establishment on La. 182 when Duval was seen exiting the vehicle and discarding an object in front of the vehicle, Blair said.

Dardeau, who was identified as an occupant, allegedly picked up this item and ran into the establishment, Blair said. Dardeau was apprehended inside the establishment when she resisted the officer, Blair said.

Dardeau was in possession of suspected methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia. Duval had several active arrest warrants through the 16th Judicial and Morgan City courts.

The vehicle Duval was operating had a license plate displayed that belonged to another vehicle, did not have registration as required and was not properly insured, Blair said.

Police found evidence linking both Duval and Dardeau to the suspected methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia and that the drug was intended to be sold in illicit sales, Blair said. The duo was jailed.

Blair reported that officers responded to 40 calls and reported the following arrest:

—Tristan Fabre, 18, of La. 400 in Napoleonville, was arrested at 8:38 p.m. Wednesday on charges of possession of marijuana second offense, obstruction of public passages and no driver’s license.

Narcotics division detectives observed a vehicle stopped in the middle of Robin Street obstructing the roadway. A stop was initiated when Fabre was identified.

Fabre was in possession of suspected marijuana and also did not have a valid driver’s license, Blair said. Records indicate that Fabre had a prior marijuana offense within the past year. Fabre was jailed.

St. Mary Parish Sheriff Scott Anslum reported that deputies responded to 57 complaints and reported the following arrests:

—Jahmarcus Paddio, 21, of N Gertrude Street in Abbeville, was arrested at 4 p.m. Tuesday on two warrants charging him with failure to comply with the terms and conditions of drug court.

A corrections division deputy located the active warrant for Paddio who was already incarcerated at parish jail. Bail was set at $200,000.

—Ashton Martinez, 18, of Aristile Road in Bayou L’Ourse, was arrested at 10:15 a.m. Wednesday on a warrant charging him with possession of drug paraphernalia.

The warrant was issued after a deputy located a marijuana grinder in Martinez’ vehicle during a traffic stop. Martinez turned himself in at the St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office in Franklin. A deputy transported Martinez to parish jail for booking. Martinez was released on $1,500 bail.

Berwick Police Chief James Richard reported the following arrest:

—Quandon Favors, 30, of Cherry Street in Patterson, was arrested at 10:01 p.m. Wednesday on a warrant charging him with disturbing the peace. Favors posted $176 bail.

Patterson Police Chief Janis Merritt reported no arrests.

Wheel House for May 3

SCHOLARSHIP
Deadline is Friday, May 4, for application for Artists Guild Unlimited’s scholarship. Portfolios and written material should be hand delivered to the AGU Everett Street Gallery, 201 Everett St., Morgan City, 1-4 p.m. or contact scholarship chairman Vera Judycki, 985-518-3062 or 985-385-0175.

HAMBURGERS
St. Luke Baptist Church, 1709 Harry D St., Patterson, Brotherhood selling barbecued hamburgers, chips and drink, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, May 5. Donation $5.

FISH DINNERS
Sold by Little Zion Baptist Church, 2746 Sixth St., Berwick, 10 a.m. until on Saturday, May 5. Menu: fried fish, jambalaya, green beans, salad, bread, dessert and drink. Donation $8. To order call 985-385-6233.

HAT DAY
At Little Zion Baptist Church, 2746 Sixth St., Berwick, 8 a.m. Sunday, May 6. Everyone invited.

LYNN GREEN

Lynn Green, 57, a native of Franklin and resident of Colfax, died Sunday, April 28, 2018 in Colfax.
Visitation will be Saturday from 9 a.m. until services at 1 p.m. at Triumph Baptist Church in Franklin. Burial will follow in Franklin Cemetery.
He is survived by a brother, Wilson Brown of Baldwin; five sisters, Geraldine Brown and Doris Starks, both of Morgan City, Joyce Johnson and Sandra Green, both of Franklin, and Celeste Stansberry of Marietta, Georgia; and a host of other relatives.
He was preceded in death by his parents and four brothers.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

DORETHA WILLIAMS

Doretha Williams, 91, a native of Terrebonne Parish and a resident of Houma, died Thursday, April 26, 2018.
Visitation will be from 9 a.m. until services at 11 a.m. at Beacon Light Baptist Church in Gray. Burial will follow in Garden of Memories Cemetery in Gray.
She is survived by two sons, Frederick Wallis of Franklin and Lloyd Wallis Jr. of Morgan City; a daughter, Geraldine Simmons of Houma; 12 grandchildren; 12 great-grandchildren; one great-great-grandchild; a brother, Henry Williams of Houma; and a host of other relatives.
She was preceded in death by her sons, a granddaughter, a great-grandson, parents, three sisters, paternal grandparents and maternal grandparents.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

BARRONE CHARLES

Barrone Charles, 51, a native and resident of Franklin, died Monday, April 23, 2018 at Iberia Medical Center in New Iberia.
Visitation will be Saturday from 9 a.m. until services at 11 a.m. at Jones Funeral Home Chapel in Franklin. Burial will follow in the Lutheran Cemetery in Franklin.
He is survived by five sons, Barrone Collins and Garmone Collins, both of Sulphur, Shawn Charles and Iravian Jones, both of New Iberia, and Braelen Charles of Lafayette; one daughter, Kennedy Charles of Lafayette; two stepchildren, Joel Brown of Lafayette and Bianca Henry of St. Martinville; five brothers, Rodney Robinson Sr. and Ronald Robinson, both of New Iberia, Raleigh Robinson Jr. of Lafayette, Willie Provost of Morgan City and Milton James of Baldwin; two sisters, Lisa Charles of Houston and Rona Charles of New Iberia; 10 grandchildren; and a host of other relatives.
He was preceded in death by his parents, a daughter and a brother.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
Phone: 337-828-3706
Fax: 337-828-2874

Morgan City Review
1014 Front Street, Morgan City, LA 70380
Phone: 985-384-8370
Fax: 985-384-4255