Stateline Bean

Friday, June 29, 2012

Kansas State

http://www.google.com/imgres

Good Morning All~I just wanted to write to let you all know that I recently got accepted into the Class of 2016 at Kansas State University Veterinary School.  As I pondered my acceptance, I had tough decision to make.  I have enjoyed getting to meet everyone and learning about dry edible beans in Western Nebraska.  I have grown a ton as a person as well as in my knowledge of the crop side of production agriculture.  Today will my last day in the office.  Please forward all of your questions to Dave at (308) 641.1244 or either office - Bridgeport (308) 262.1222 or Gering (308) 436.2186.  Thank you for making me feel so welcomed in this community!

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Construction


I would like to invite you all to come visit our new office arrangement in Gering.  We have added on a few offices out onto the dock area.  It has come a long way and looks great!


Tuesday, June 26, 2012

200th Blog

Monday, we reached 200 blog posts!  I hope everyone has been enjoying these posts as we have traveled through the last year of happenings at Stateline Bean.  My goal has been to share with you what I see and experience through my eyes at our bean elevator here in Western Nebraska.  I would like to thank you all for reading and I hope you have enjoyed staying up-to-date with your grower-owned bean producers cooperative.  :)

Antique Tractors

Monday, June 25, 2012

Seed Season in Review


I will always have fond memories of this seed season.  We had so many flat tires, breakdowns, and so much fun!  Teamwork is what it is all about!  Some farmers unloaded their own seed from our flatbed, other times Heath used their equipment to unload, and other times (when I got to go along) we unloaded the seed by hand.  We stopped along side the road a few times to change tires, check straps, or to adjust our load.  Always an adventure....

Now, let's pray we get some rain to get those beans up out of the ground!

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Wake Up Call


11:22 pm....the phone rang.  So late to be calling, but after taking the call, I realized there was a bad hail storm coming my way.  I was able to get the pickup in the garage and my potted flowers up against the house.  This was just the perfect amount of warning as this storm was not predicted earlier in the day.  It it hard and it hit fast.  I was sitting on my living room couch when it began....11:36 pm....the windows were being pelted with sideways hail with the wind coming out of the west.  The shingles were flapping on the roof and you could not see the country yard lights outside of the windows.  I just sat there and cried for the farmers who are exhausted from planting and irrigating (so early) and now they have the potential to loose it all.  11:41 pm, it was over and on to the next farm.....

Wow, now, more than ever, do I truly understand the phrase, 'it is not in my control.'  Mother nature is taking a rough toll on us through in all of her wild ways....forest fires, hail, and wind.  It makes you realize how blessed we are to have what we have, knowing that it will be there when get back.  This is something I totally take for granted some days.  There are people in Colorado losing their homes right and left and everything they own.  It is so very sad.

These beautiful chairs, for example, that my daddy made for me, sit outside my house.  Each night I look at them thinking, I should just sit and relax in those chairs and watch the sun go down.  Then last night, after waking up to that crazy storm, I realized that they might not be there when I wake up.  That wind was so harsh that it broke several windows on the west side....2 storm windows and 1 screen on the house and 1 window on the shop!  Luckily, my wonderful chairs were still there and not in shambles like all the trees, crops, and flowers!

I got up and took a bike ride to assess the fields from the road.  It looked like quite a bit of hail damage, but depending on the stage and type of crop, things may be ok.  We have already had several calls here at the elevator from farmers needing more seed to replant their bean fields.

Moral of the story:  I am thankful for the wonderful, much needed rain we got and I will work to simply enjoy the beauty of life.  You never know what tomorrow may bring.  "You have to be alive while you are living."

Monday, June 18, 2012

Hay Springs Test Plot 2012



Dave and some of the guys went up to Flats Farms in Hay Springs to help put in the test plot up there on June 6th, 2012.  They used Flats' new 36 row planter to put the beans in the ground.  TEAMWORK!

**Photos courtesy of Dave Dietrich and Heath Senkel.**

Monday, June 11, 2012

Beautiful Wheat in Banner County


I went to deliver a few extra bags of seed to help a farmer finish up his field and got to see some beautiful wheat gently blowing in the wind down in Banner County!


Saturday, June 9, 2012

The Valley


I feel so very blessed as I sit in my adirondack chair watching the sun go down.

Friday, June 8, 2012

While I was out....

Photo courtesy of Bill Benzel.
There was quite a bit of rain while I was out!  This photo was taken about a mile and a half south of Stegall, Nebraska on Thursday June 7th after a storm that came through the night before.  This rain gauge is showing 4.4 inches!  We just doubled our rainfall for the year.  There was some hail with this storm that destroyed some wheat in that area.  Despite the hail, we are thankful for the moisture as it is an answer to many prayers!

Thursday, June 7, 2012

BRC Food Certification Class


So, this trip snuck up on me very quickly.  I raced in South Dakota on Sunday and flew out of Denver on Monday evening.  I was actually in 5 different states in 2 days!  Crazy.....Nebraska, South Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, and Nevada.  I have never been to Vegas or anywhere close to experiencing anything quite like it.  

As some of you may know, we are working very diligently to achieve the next level of food certification through a standard called the BRC (British Retail Consortium) Issue 6.  This will open us up to trade with more customers.  I have been working on this since I was put in charge of the safety stuff.  As I was digging deeper and deeper into it with my crew and with Les Dale, our food safety consultant, I realized the need for more information and training.

Several weeks ago, I did alot of random internet searches to find just the right class that would allow me to network with other processors as well as learn how to use the standard to prepare for our upcoming audit.  I found just the class located in Denver, not too far away.  When I contacted them about the class, it had been canceled due to lack of participation....so I looked into Dallas and Nashville....also canceled.  So, what does that leave...Las Vegas.  Now most of you may think, "Oh, that is great, what an awesome vacation and place to have a conference."  I'd like to disagree with you right now.


This country girl was totally not prepared for Vegas.  When I arrived I had a shuttle all lined up that would take me directly to my hotel upon my arrival.  The driver kindly grabbed my bag and asked where I needed to go.  I proceeded to tell him, "The Tropicana hotel."  I was his first stop of the trip.  I got out and the first thing I noticed as I walked in was all the crazy lights and games and people everywhere!  I must have looked ridiculous!  I just stood there and took it all in.  (P.S.  I still had my pants tucked into my boots from the strip search at the airport!  They made me mail my pink pocket knife home with 3-4 weeks delivery, so we were off to a great start!  My knife would have been fine in my checked bag accept the fact that they wanted $20 to check my bag and then couldn't guarantee that my bag would make it from Denver to Vegas with me.  Seriously?!)  This very nice woman, running one of the card games, gently nudged me in the right direction to the check-in area.  I stood in line for about 15 minutes until it was my turn.  Turns out I was not a registered guest at this hotel and there are actually two Tropicana hotels....mine was the Hampton Inn at Tropicana.  Who would have known!?  LOL!

I had two options:  1.5 mile walk with a suitcase/in cowboy boots, in downtown Vegas or public transportation.  At this point I almost broke down.  It was 100* and blowing dust, I had just run a half marathon the day before, and quite honestly I was scared to take the public transportation.  The bell hop could see my concern and offered for me to go inside and get the phone number of the free shuttle from my real hotel to where I was standing.  He said that it comes a couple times per hour and he hadn't seen it in a while so it would probably be there shortly.  I went back inside and stood in line again, once again, when I heard, "Ma'am, ma'am....your shuttle is here!"  Music to my ears.  I was taken on a very quiet little shuttle with only one other person on it straight to my hotel doorstep.  I even got to talk to the driver about my Strip at Night 1/2 Marathon I'm running there in December.  He was super nice!  Actually everyone there was nice as far as people that work there!

Once I got checked in, I went to my hotel room and stayed...all night!  I closed the curtains in the room and didn't even look outside!  Turns out the hotel didn't have any food other than breakfast in the morning so I could either go walk the strip and eat at a restaurant or order food in the room.  I definitely wasn't going out by myself in Vegas and order in food was really expensive so I decided to just eat trail mix I had in my suitcase.  Well about 10:30 pm I couldn't wait any longer and I broke down and ordered food to the room.  It turned out to be pretty good.

My class started the next morning at 8 am, right there in my hotel, thank goodness!  I went to the fitness center before class and happened to meet one of the three other people involved in my class.  He was from Case Chicken Farms in Ohio.  Our instructor was from Texas and the other two people were from Florida and North Carolina.  We represented a very diverse group as we had a chicken slaughter facility, dry edible beans, and an actual auditor.

Let's just say that everyone in the class had been through several audits before and so they all helped me out tremendously by giving me examples and making the Standard become a reality to me.  At first it was just a book that had lots of rules in it, but now, after networking with my classmates, I am able to find my way through it and work on implementing it here in our facilities.  It was extremely beneficial for me to attend this class as now, if I passed the test, I will be considered BRC certified.  This just allows us to let our customers know that we are working towards this lofty goal of achieving BRC status which is globally recognized for food safety.

After class, our instructor had a car and offered to take us out to eat and for a drive on the strip.  This was the perfect amount of "going out" for me.  I could see from a distance all the happenings in Vegas, but felt safe as I was not driving or taking public transportation.  We ate at the Hard Rock Cafe.  Very good.  They even gave me a free poker chip which was requested by a friend of mine's son!  Perfect!


Day Two of the class continued to cover the depth of the Standard and we actually walked through how a real audit would go.  It was great!  We finished up with a 50 question multiple choice test which will be used to show our completion and certification of taking the class.

I was finally able to relax by the pool a little bit the last night.  It was totally needed and I was happy to be surrounded by palm trees within a gated area where I could not see any of the craziness that was going on outside.  :)                


Moral of this story is don't go to Vegas alone!

A Way of Life....


Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Monday, June 4, 2012

Friday, June 1, 2012