Straight walled ammo can be used in rifles, or so I heardYou don’t know the hunting regulations do you? Iowa doesn’t allow rifles, only shotguns with deer slugs. Stop being so dramatic.
O yeah! Those guys shooting dem deers with ARs is da worst!No one should eat wildlife from Iowa. In the case of four legged animals... there's nothing left to eat after hunters use their AK-47 or AR-15 to bring a target down.
An "AR" in its conventional package fires a .22 caliber bullet. It's so ****ing small the DNR has determined it is not ethical to kill deer with.Rednecks need big guns to compensate for "other" shortcomings.
.450 bushmaster is a hell of a deer round. Not like the .308s and 30-06s the boys a couple hours west get to use but more than serviceable for deer.Straight walled ammo can be used in rifles, or so I heard
Bess Truman was once asked why she didn't get her husband to use the word fertilizer instead of manure. Bess replied that it took her 40 years to get him to say manure.Oh. It's just manure. Manure's not that bad. I don't even mind the word 'manure.' You know, it's, it's 'nure,' which is good. And a 'ma' in front of it. MA-NURE. When you consider the other choices, 'manure' is actually pretty refreshing.
I know very little about guns and really don't want to know anything about guns. What I do know are there are many gun owners that overdue it. The "you ain't taking my guns from me" are especially entertaining.An "AR" in its conventional package fires a .22 caliber bullet. It's so ****ing small the DNR has determined it is not ethical to kill deer with.
FWIW, Big Creek Lake beach has been closed multiple times because due to water contamination.Do Iowa streams and waterways ever get fished anymore?
I wouldn't eat any wild fish caught in the Midwest.
That’s a you problem. We are protecting America from socialism up here.Damn Iowa sending shit down the crick to the Gulf of Mexico again.
Drama Queens gonna Drama Queen. Helllloooo!You don’t know the hunting regulations do you? Iowa doesn’t allow rifles, only shotguns with deer slugs. Stop being so dramatic.
An umbilical is a supersized garden hose...there literally is no tank.To put the Kossuth County spill into prospective the guy hauling pig manure with a tank thru the field is probably using a 10,000 gallon tank.
My biggest concern would be say manure weighs 6 pounds a gallon. That guy is weighing 110,000+ going down the road loaded. A semi is regulated at 80,000 pounds.
It likely was an 8" or 10" hose at 200 psi. They run them a couple miles so the hose break was not probably near the pump or where they were spreading. They thread them under roads in drainage culverts sometimes. No idea if that was what they had done here. A drainage culvert would typically be dry. They run under driveways and roads to keep water from pooling on the uphill side til it would run across the top of the road during rains.Why would that be next to a creek?
It likely was an 8" or 10" hose at 200 psi. They run them a couple miles so the hose break was not probably near the pump or where they were spreading. They thread them under roads in drainage culverts sometimes. No idea if that was what they had done here.
Well I wasn't there but the area near there is gently rolling so there would be creeks around. Exactly where the farm was or it's topography is not discussed.That didn't really answer the question...
Well I wasn't there but the area near there is gently rolling so there would be creeks around. Exactly where the farm was or it's topography is not discussed.
Accidents also happen. The custom manure guys sometimes run around the clock in shifts. I drove over both the creek and the river mentioned today just before 5 and there were numerous operations spreading at various sites. There is a very small window when ground conditions are fit prior to planting and the winter manure needs spread. The fall applied window is much wider after the crops are off and before the ground freezes.Understood.
It's like how everyone was incredulous that Florida had fertilizer byproduct waste stacks near the Tampa Bay estuary.
Stupid shit happens all over.
That is a you tube video of an organic dairy spreading their manure with an umbilical. 3.5 million gallons 4.5 miles away.
Damn.
I bet you could grow some prize-winning tomatoes with a set up like that.
Countryside Bar-B-Q sauce is actually made a few miles up the highway. A very Iowan sandwich or crockpot choice.Damn.
I bet you could grow some prize-winning tomatoes with a set up like that.
There was a lawsuit in the 90s Iowa counties lost over the local board of supervisors in each county's right to deny building permits for livestock facilities. Land O Lakes paid for it. Unless it has changed the only environmental test is a dnr permit for the manure storage and I believe if it is under the building it is almost an automatic rubber stamp. Some of the nuisance laws have also largely determined if it's zoned ag neighbors have no suit to object.Today's issues are the result of the Iowa Selects and Christensen Farms of the world. Massive operations where the owner doesn't live on the property.
The USDA's policies have encouraged larger operations with it's subsidy programs. Iowa has encouraged larger operations because of it's lenient pollution standards.
Not a good combination.
So that would qualify as being "up shit creek"?Several hundred thousand gallons of manure spilled into a Lyon County creek Wednesday and, in a separate incident on the same day, another 10,000 gallons of manure also spilled into a Kossuth County creek that flows into the Des Moines River.
In Rock Rapids, Bernie Baker of Rock Bottom Dairy reported spilling "several hundred thousand gallons of manure" after "an irrigation unit became stuck," according to an Iowa Department of Natural Resources news release Wednesday evening.
The manure flowed through fields, which included cover crops or pasture, before it eventually flowed northwest of Rock Rapids and into Mud Creek, according to the DNR. When DNR staff arrived at the creek at about 3:20 p.m., "many dead fish," including bullheads, minnows and chubs, were found on the scene.
Due to the creek's slow flow rates, the manure-laden water is moving slowly downstream, according to the release, and the DNR recommends those who depend on the creek as a water source, such as livestock producers, should monitor conditions for the next few days.
DNR staff helped stop the spill and plan to continue to monitor the clean-up and assess how many fish were killed, according to the release.
Separately Wednesday afternoon, the DNR responded to a spill of 10,000 gallons of manure into Kossuth County's Lotts Creek, which is about two miles northeast of West Bend.
► More:Agricultural runoff puts Iowa's Raccoon River on list of 10 most endangered nationally, group says
As Precision Pumping, a commercial manure application company, was applying manure in the area through an umbilical rig, a hose detached from its pump and "flopped" into the creek, spilling thousands of gallons of manure into the creek before the pump could be shut down, according to the DNR.
A large number of dead fish were discovered as a result of the Kossuth County spill, as well.
DNR officials said recovering the manure, which was flowing downstream, would be "impractical" due to the creek's high banks, wide channel and swift flow. About 10 miles downstream of the spill, Lotts Creek flows into the East Fork of the Des Moines River.
"While not insignificant, the spill is not expected to impact downstream water supplies," DNR officials wrote in the release, adding that the department's environmental specialists are testing water samples.
According to the release, the DNR is considering "appropriate enforcement action," but did not specify what those actions might entail.
Cindy Martens of the DNR, the media contact for the Lyon County spill, said that Rock Bottom Dairy will receive a violation with referral and penalty. The media contact for the Kossuth County incident could not immediately be reached for comment.
Manure spillage comes at the heel of new report warning Iowa of pollutants in Racoon River
In an annual report published by American Rivers, an environmental advocacy nonprofit based in D.C., the group listed Iowa's Racoon River as among the top 10 most endangered rivers for the first time due to runoff from livestock facilities, such as manure, and farm fields.
“We’re sounding the alarm because pollution in the Raccoon River is putting drinking water supplies and public health at risk,” said Olivia Dorothy, American Rivers' Upper Mississippi River Basin director.
The Racoon River ranked ninth on American Rivers' list, which claimed that manure runoff "contributes to a clean-water crisis."
High nitrate levels remain an issue for water quality in Iowa, as well as other pollutants such as microcystins, which are toxins from blue-green algae blooms.
Community activists have spoken out against the amount of manure flowing into Iowa's water system, as well.
How a plan for the 3rd-tallest skyscraper in Iowa
Hundreds of thousands of gallons of manure spill into a pair of northwest Iowa creeks, DNR officials report
The manure spilled into waterways in Kossuth County and Lyon County Wednesday, according to an Iowa DNR news release.www.press-citizen.com