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Chippewa Falls Area Chamber of Commerce getting ready for Farmer Appreciation Dinner
Chippewa Falls Area Chamber of Commerce getting ready for Farmer Appreciation Dinner

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Chippewa Falls Area Chamber of Commerce getting ready for Farmer Appreciation Dinner

CHIPPEWA FALLS, Wis. (WLAX/WEUX) – The Chippewa Valley is mooing with excitement. The Chippewa Falls Area Chamber of Commerce is getting ready for the 55th annual Farmer Appreciation Dinner. While dairy farmers play a vital role in the Chippewa Valley, we can't forget about the farmers growing corn, wheat, and other products that wind up on our dinner table. Along with an incredible chicken dinner, the evening will feature music, kids' activities, and ice cream. The Chippewa Falls Area Chamber of Commerce is not only celebrating the farmer with this dinner, but they are also dedicated to helping the next generation of farmers as well. Chamber Director of Commerce Programs and Partnership, Angela Kapp, explained, 'We have a school-to-skills program at the Chamber. Our workforce Development Director works with local school districts to get kids exposed to different careers that are right here in our community. So really filling that workforce pipeline, keeping our students here, kind of expanding or exposing them really to a lot of different careers. Farms are very technologically based nowadays as well. It's not just dairy, it's grain and everything. They kind of have to learn, but it's important to just recognize those individuals that really kind of are the backbone of our community.' The dinner is on Wednesday, June 18th, between 4 and 8 pm at the Northern Wisconsin State Fairgrounds. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Enbridge Line 5: A clear and present danger
Enbridge Line 5: A clear and present danger

Yahoo

time11-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Enbridge Line 5: A clear and present danger

Anti-Line 5 graffiti at Enbridge's pumping station in Mackinaw City, Mich. (Laina G. Stebbins | Michigan Advance) Canadian energy company Enbridge's Line 5 traverses an extremely sensitive ecological area across northern Wisconsin, 400 rivers and streams as well as a myriad of wetlands, in addition to a path under the Mackinac Straights between Lake Michigan and Lake Huron, all the while skirting the southern shore of Lake Superior. Such close proximity to the Great Lakes, lakes that hold over 20% of the world's fresh surface water, lakes that supply drinking water to nearly 40 million people, yes, that does indeed make Line 5 a ticking time bomb. Northern Wisconsin is also a very culturally sensitive area, home to the Bad River Reservation. The Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Chippewa were guaranteed rights to their lands by an 1854 treaty with the U.S. government. The easements for Line 5 across the reservation, granted to Enbridge by the Chippewa, expired in 2013 and the Bad River Band chose not to renew them. Enbridge continues to operate the line, illegally and in direct violation of the Bad River Band's right to sovereignty over their land. The Bad River Band has a guaranteed legal right to their land. They also have a right to Food Sovereignty, the internationally recognized right of food providers to have control over their land, seeds and water while rejecting the privatization of natural resources. Line 5 clearly impinges on the Band's right to hunt, fish, harvest wild rice, to farm and have access to safe drinking water. A federal court ruled that Enbridge has been trespassing on lands of the Bad River Band since 2013 and ordered the company to cease operations of Line 5 by June of 2026 (seems that immediate cessation would make more sense), but rather than shut down the aging line, Enbridge plans to build a diversion around the Bad River Reservation. They plan to move the pipeline out of the Bad River Band's front yard into their back yard, leaving 100% of the threats to people and the environment in place. Liquid petroleum (crude oil, natural gas and petroleum product) pipelines are big business in the U.S. With 2.6 million miles of oil and gas pipelines, the U.S. network is the largest in the world. If we continue our heavy and growing dependence on liquid fossil fuels, we must realize that we will continue to negatively impact the climate and the lives of everyone on the planet. Instead of moving to a just transition away from fossil fuels, liquid or otherwise, the government continues to subsidize the industry through direct payments and tax breaks, refusing to acknowledge the cost of pollution-related health problems and environmental damage, a cost which is of course, incalculable. There are nearly 20,000 miles of pipelines planned or currently under construction in the U.S., thus it would appear that government and private industry are in no hurry to break that addiction, much less make a just transition. While no previous administration was in any hurry to break with the fossil fuel industry, they at least gave the illusion of championing a transition to cleaner energy. The current administration is abundantly clear. Their strategy is having no strategy. They don't like wind and solar and they plan to end any support for renewable energy. They don't care if they upend global markets, banking, energy companies or certainly any efforts to help developing countries transition away from fossil fuels. Pipelines are everywhere across the U.S., a spiderweb connecting wells, refineries, transportation and distribution centers. The vast majority of pipelines are buried and many, if not all, at some point cross streams, rivers, lakes and run over aquifers. Pipeline ruptures and other assorted failures will continue and spillage will find its way into the bodies of water they skirt around or pass under. It's not a question if they will leak, but when. Enbridge controls the largest network of petroleum pipelines in the Great Lakes states, and they are hardly immune to spills. Between 1999 and 2013 it was reported that Enbridge had over 1,000 spills dumping a reported 7.4 million gallons of oil. In 2010 Enbridge's Line 6B ruptured and contaminated the Kalamazoo River in Michigan, the largest inland oil spill in U.S. history. Over 1.2 million gallons of oil were recovered from the river between 2010 and 2014. How much went downstream or was buried in sediment, we'll never know. In 2024 a fault in Enbridge Line 6 caused a spill of 70 thousand gallons near Cambridge Wisconsin. And Enbridge's most infamous pipeline, the 71-year-old Line 5 from Superior Wisconsin to Sarnia Ontario, has had 29 spills in the last 50 years, loosing over 1 million gallons of oil. Some consider Line 5 to be a 'public good' because, as Enbridge argues, shutting the line down will shut down the U.S. economy and people will not be able to afford to heat their homes — claims they have never supported with any evidence. A public good is one that everyone can use, that everyone can benefit from. A public good is not, as Enbridge apparently believes, a mechanism for corporate profit. Line 5 is a privately owned property, existing only to generate profits for Enbridge. If it were a public good, Enbridge would certainly be giving more attention to the rights of the Bad River Band, the well-being of all the people who depend on the clean waters of the Great Lakes and to protecting the sensitive environment of northern Wisconsin and Michigan. They are not. Their trespassing, their disregard for the environment, their continuing legal efforts to protect their bottom line above all else, only points to their self-serving avarice. The Bad River Band wants Enbridge out, and in their eyes it is not a case of 'not in my back yard' they do not want Line 5 in anyone's back yard. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

These three zodiac signs will feel the 2025 full Strawberry Moon in Sagittarius the most
These three zodiac signs will feel the 2025 full Strawberry Moon in Sagittarius the most

New York Post

time10-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Post

These three zodiac signs will feel the 2025 full Strawberry Moon in Sagittarius the most

Shoot your shot and try not to shoot off at the mouth, folks — the full Strawberry Moon in Sagittarius is upon us. Peaking on Wednesday, June 11 at 3:44 a.m. EST, at 20 degrees of Sagittarius, we'll all be under the optimistic arrows of this full moon — but three signs in particular are poised to feel its effects most acutely. Strawberry Moon 2025 4 Read on to see if your sign is among those most affected by the sweet, swashbuckling strawberry moon. Jelena – Advertisement The full moon in June is known by the Algonquin, Ojibwe, Dakota, Lakota, Chippewa, Oneida and Sioux tribes as the Strawberry Moon. It's the first flush of summer that coincides with the wild and widespread ripening of the ruby red fruit. Can dig. Read on to see if your sign is among those most affected by the sweet, swashbuckling Strawberry Moon. 4 Friendship or romantic relationships might shift during this time. Mia – Ahoy, Gemini! The Strawberry Moon is throwing a love light on your seventh house of trusted relationships, both platonic and romantic. Advertisement The seventh house, like the moon, is a mirror and this one offers course-correcting clarity. Given the truth, letting energy of Sagittarius, you may receive information about a friend or partner that changes the dynamic of your relationship. Regardless of whether these changes feel abrasive or amicable, they are here to help you deepen your bonds or break free from the bondage of them. 4 Virgos will be reflecting on how far they've come. Mia – Advertisement Hello Virgo! The Strawberry Sag Moon is transiting your fourth house of origin; home, nurturance, heart strings and umbilical cords. This is tender territory and a buried family secret or acute memory may surface for you. This is not meant to destabilize you, but to help you discern what you need to feel safe in the here and now — and to reveal how far you've come from where you've been. Pulled between the obligations of others and your own needs, remember that a healthy bond is a boundaried bond. Advertisement Draw the line, build your sanctuary and know that you can always go home to yourself. 4 The Sagittarius sign will need to let their guard down. Mia – Happy full moon to you, Sagittarius! The Strawberry Moon rises and shines on your first house of identity, heralding a moment of culmination and restructuring. There's nowhere to hide and nothing to do but drop the mask, lay down your defenses, speak what's true without fear of consequence and look long and hard at your unadorned self. The word adventure comes from the Latin adventura, meaning 'to reach, or something about to happen.' I hope under the light of your moon and the realization that anything can happen, you'll reach for the road that feels like freedom. Astrologer Reda Wigle researches and irreverently reports on planetary configurations and their effect on each zodiac sign. Her horoscopes integrate history, poetry, pop culture, and personal experience. To book a reading, visit her website.

Some sun and rain: See Chippewa County's weekly forecast here
Some sun and rain: See Chippewa County's weekly forecast here

Yahoo

time10-06-2025

  • Climate
  • Yahoo

Some sun and rain: See Chippewa County's weekly forecast here

Chippewa County can expect some rain and some sun this week, with temperatures forecast in a range of 64 to 66 degrees, according to data from AccuWeather. You can search for more information on hourly, daily, monthly weather forecasts and current air quality conditions for your location here. Here's a breakdown of the weekly forecast for Chippewa County: Tuesday is forecast to have a high of 64 degrees with a low of 51 degrees and partly cloudy at night. Expect the daytime temperature to feel five degrees hotter at 69 degrees. There will be light rain during the day, with less than an inch of rain expected. Throughout the day, wind will be blowing south at 8.1 miles per hour. Tuesday's forecast high is below average for this time of year. The 30-year average maximum temperature for June 10 is 71 degrees. This internationally agreed-upon average represents climate data from 1991-2020 and is recalculated every 10 years. The forecast low is three degrees hotter than the established normal of 48 degrees for this time of year. Historically, this day is usually a bit wet, with an average 0.1 inches of precipitation. Chippewa County saw a record-breaking temperature high for June 10 in 1959 at 89 degrees. On this day in 1980, a record low of 28 degrees was set. Precipitation hit a record of 1.53 inches for June 10 in 2020. Wednesday is forecast to have a high of 65 degrees with a low of 48 degrees and clear at night. Expect the daytime temperature to feel five degrees hotter at 70 degrees. Throughout the day, wind will be blowing south at 11.5 miles per hour. Wednesday's forecast high is below average for this time of year. The 30-year average maximum temperature for June 11 is 72 degrees. The forecast low is one degree cooler than the established normal of 49 degrees for this time of year. Historically, this day is usually a bit wet, with an average 0.1 inches of precipitation. Chippewa County saw a record-breaking temperature high for June 11 in 2012 at 87 degrees. On this day in 1980, a record low of 31 degrees was set. Thursday is forecast to have a high of 65 degrees with a low of 46 degrees and partly cloudy at night. Expect the daytime temperature to feel two degrees hotter at 67 degrees. Throughout the day, wind will be blowing northwest at 9.2 miles per hour. Thursday's forecast high is below average for this time of year. The 30-year average maximum temperature for June 12 is 72 degrees. The forecast low is three degrees cooler than the established normal of 49 degrees for this time of year. Historically, this day is usually a bit wet, with an average 0.1 inches of precipitation. Chippewa County saw a record-breaking temperature high for June 12 in 1949 at 90 degrees. On this day in 1947, a record low of 34 degrees was set. Friday is forecast to have a high of 64 degrees with a low of 48 degrees and mainly cloudy at night. Expect the daytime temperature to feel one degree cooler at 63 degrees. Throughout the day, wind will be blowing east-southeast at 6.9 miles per hour. Friday's forecast high is below average for this time of year. The 30-year average maximum temperature for June 13 is 72 degrees. The forecast low is one degree cooler than the established normal of 49 degrees for this time of year. Historically, this day is usually a bit wet, with an average 0.1 inches of precipitation. Chippewa County saw a record-breaking temperature high for June 13 in 1956 at 90 degrees. On this day in 1968, a record low of 36 degrees was set. In Michigan, daily weather forecasts can be unreliable at times due to the volatile nature of lake effect — cold air passing over warm water that causes extreme low or high temperatures — and lack of weather-measuring coverage in the state, according to Dr. Jeffrey Andresen, the State Climatologist for Michigan. The USA TODAY Network is publishing localized versions of this story on its news sites across Michigan, generated with data from AccuWeather. Please leave any feedback or corrections for this story here. This story was written by Ozge Terzioglu. Our News Automation and AI team would like to hear from you. Take this survey and share your thoughts with us. This article originally appeared on The Sault News: Some sun and rain: See Chippewa County's weekly forecast here June 10-13, 2025

What's the big deal about large roadside attractions? There's a lot to love
What's the big deal about large roadside attractions? There's a lot to love

Yahoo

time20-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

What's the big deal about large roadside attractions? There's a lot to love

The May long weekend marks the official start of summer road trip season and Kyler Zeleny — a fourth-generation sausage-maker in rural Alberta — expects to see a whole lot more tourists rolling up to see a giant Ukrainian kielbasa. The massive meat monument in the town of Mundare, 80 kilometres east of Edmonton, was the brainchild of Zeleny's grandfather, Edward Stawnichy. "The thinking was if we're making sausage and we've got a bunch of Ukrainians here, let's erect a Ukrainian sausage — a kielbasa," says Zeleny, now the assistant manager at Stawnichy's Mundare Sausage. The kielbasa, which went up in April 2001, is 12.8 metres — about 42 feet — tall. The family's charitable foundation is said to have paid $120,000 for the red fibreglass structure that stands in a park not far from the meat processing plant. Zeleny says the larger-than-life link (pun intended) to the 66-year-old family business has helped the company grow. It now has 80 products in more than 300 stores. He's proud of the sausage sculpture. "There's just something about small towns getting behind creating really kitsch ideas as a way to drive people into towns," says Zeleny. WATCH | Dive into the backstory of this substantial sausage sculpture in Alberta: Craig Glenday, editor-in-chief of Guinness World Records, circles the globe weighing and measuring big things. Glenday said Alberta has about 40 claims of the world's largest things, according to the website Large Canadian Roadside Attractions. The rest of the country is dotted with giant structures that include a fiddle, a canoe paddle, a nickel, an axe, a whole bunch of animals and giant food. "It's a really fascinating collection," said the London-based Glenday. IN PHOTOS: Some of Canada's super-sized spectacles: He says roadside attractions grew up alongside North America's car culture and finding these off-the-beaten-path destinations is half the fun. "It's a weird thrill, isn't it, when you're driving and you see something off in the distance and think, 'What is that?'" says Glenday. "It's intriguing and it gets the adrenaline rushing, it's quite exciting." Glenday said Guinness World Records recently certified the world's largest dream catcher. It hangs from a massive wooden frame at the powwow grounds on Rama First Nation, not far from Orillia, Ont. A dream project Its creator, 61-year-old Bob Williams, spent more than a year planning and crafting the structure, which weighs 900 kilograms (1,985 pounds) and is about 13 metres (42-ish feet) in diameter. Williams has been building dream catchers for half his life, but never something on this scale. To be a traditional dream catcher of the Chippewa territory, no metal could be used, said Williams. So it's made of 2,100 metres of rope, 1,500 metres of sinew and flexible trees collected from the bush near his house. "I choose those woods for a reason, because they have a lot of meaning for our culture — ash and willow, we work with them a lot," said Williams. Hoisting the creation into place was a bit like handling "a great big anaconda," he said. "It was scary, I tell you. I didn't realize how flexible the dream catcher was. Lifting it off the ground took, like, 300 people," says Williams. The record for the largest dream catcher was previously held by Lithuania at 10 metres in diameter. But because dream catchers were created in North America by the Ojibwe people, Williams wanted the world's largest to be located in Canada. "I wanted to make that happen in Rama." Darryl Lem hasn't seen the dream catcher yet, but the recent retiree and motorcyclist enthusiast has seen more than a few giant landmarks while travelling the highways. "There's the happy rock in Gladstone, Man., a great big Viking in Winnipeg Beach and the Wawa goose," said the 59-year-old, who's been taking in the big sights over about seven years of touring. "We did Route 66 last year and saw everything from the big muffler man and all sorts of attractions," said Lem. He considers it a bucket list kind of thing. "Who doesn't want to ride a couple thousand kilometres to see the biggest ball of yarn and get an ice cream?"

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