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Carl Neubauer talks about farmers helping out local farmer
DOWNS — If one farmer falls, you can bet at least a dozen others will be there to help them back up.
In fact, 16 farmers and ag workers came Monday to help Mark Hines harvest 270 acres of cornfields in Downs after he fell off his combine and broke his leg, said Carl Neubauer, who coordinated the harvest.
Farmers work John Deere and Case combines to harvest soybeans on Friday in Mark Hines’ field near Downs. Hines broke his leg earlier this month after falling off a combine.
Also a Downs farmer, Neubauer spoke with The Pantagraph Friday before he, Fred Grieder and Mitch Bricker ran machines that reaped Hines’ remaining 160 acres of soybeans. He added more neighbors arrived later Friday with a third combine: a father-and-son duo, Rod and Allen Dryer.
Neubauer said the community showed Hines their support this week. On Monday, he counted eight trucks from six farmers working the fields, plus four combines from four others.
While Neubauer has never needed help because of an injury, he has needed a hand in the past due to harvest delays or bad weather, he said. He said the local farming community is strong and looks out for their own.
Carl Neubauer was one of the farmers who worked to harvest soybeans on behalf of a hurt neighbor on Friday near Downs.
“People turn out to help you if you have an issue or if you need some help to get done (with harvest),” Neubauer said.
Hines told The Pantagraph in an interview Saturday that he felt very grateful and blessed for the support. He said he was doing reasonably well since his injury, and he was moved Friday to a rehab facility in Monticello.
Over the years, Hines said he’s seen stories of farmers rallying together to help one in times of crisis. They made him proud to be a farmer, he said, but he also “just never thought it was gonna be me.”
Hines said he owes a debt of gratitude to all who helped and offered to help.
When he was injured Wednesday, Oct. 19, farmers started getting a group together the next day for his harvest, and Neubauer led the effort.
This aerial drone shot shows harvest progress made Friday in a Downs soybean field by farmers Carl Neubauer and Fred Grieder, supporting Mark Hines while he recovers from an injury.
“It’s typical in the farm community, you already knew something was amiss before you got the call that something had happened to (Hines),” he said.
Neubauer said once they had five or six people signed up, the calls and texts were pouring in, and it was almost trouble keep up with them all.
Harvesting soybeans is time-sensitive work for these crops pictured Friday near Downs.
McLean County Farm Bureau Assistant Manager Anna Ziegler told The Pantagraph in a telephone interview that it’s just one example of the ways farmers support each other. She also said the support is not uncommon — she hears at least once a year about farmers responding to another’s crisis.
“The ag community tends to band together and help them out,” she said. “For a lot of these farmers, they’ve lived here their entire life.”
Ziegler added many have known each other since they were kids, went through 4-H together and later joined the farm bureau.
A John Deere combine makes the rounds on a Downs soybean field Friday.
Neubauer said he’s known Hines since he was a child, and that they grew up and went to 4-H together.
Grieder, of Carlock, agreed it’s a natural instinct to help out one of their own. He also said as time goes by, there are fewer and fewer farmers, which makes it that much more important to help.
“It’s an assurance for those of us that we know if we go down, there will be somebody there to help us out,” he said.
Carlock’s Fred Grieder talks about helping out to harvest soybeans on Friday in a field near Downs.
We’ve all opened the fridge to discover the shelf life of fresh produce isn’t what we expected.
Discovering the cilantro from a few days ago has turned brown before you could make salsa, or that the carrots are too floppy to roast, isn’t just an inconvenience—it also has an impact on the environment. American consumers let about 67 million tons of food go to waste each year, according to a report from the Commission for Environmental Cooperation.
Pela compiled a list of 10 tips for properly storing fruits and vegetables to extend their freshness. Tips were sourced from GRACE Communications Foundation’s FoodPrint project and farm and education center Cedar Circle, as well as a variety of news outlets and authoritative food and recipe sites.
Some of the forthcoming produce hacks just require thinking ahead, such as separating certain vegetables and fruits. Others just require a basic understanding of the tools already at your disposal, such as your fridge’s crisper drawers. Since these drawers are more humid than the rest of the refrigerator, they’re ideal for storing leafy greens and thin-skinned vegetables like asparagus.
Keep reading to learn 10 easy ways to extend the shelf life of your produce.
Anyone who’s ever had the pleasure of eating a homegrown, sun-ripened tomato fresh off the vine knows there’s a huge difference in flavor from the typical grocery store tomato. Food science has revealed exactly why store-bought tomatoes have a mealy texture and bland flavor: Temperatures below 54 degrees actually stop the fruit from creating substances that contribute to its taste. A quick trip from the farm to the grocery store is enough to diminish a tomato’s freshness if it was held in a cold storage truck.
Whether you’re growing your tomatoes in your backyard or buying them from the farmers market, storing them at room temperature results in the most vibrant flavor and juicy texture. Once tomatoes hit peak ripeness, try to eat them as soon as possible—they spoil quickly thereafter.
A Serious Eats test found that fully ripe tomatoes can be moved to the fridge to extend their lifespan with minimal effects on the flavor.
Though potatoes and onions make perfect partners in a breakfast hash, they don’t store well together. Onions give off gasses that speed up ripening in potatoes, causing them to sprout faster.
Instead, store your potatoes in a cool, humid place, ideally between 38 and 42 degrees Fahrenheit and between 80% to 90% humidity, such as a basement or root cellar. Potatoes won’t last as long in the fridge. Either way, make sure not to rinse potatoes until you’re ready to prepare them: they last longer if they’re unwashed.
Just because you carry all your fresh produce home from the market in the same bag doesn’t mean they can all be stored together. Some fruits like apples, bananas, citrus, and tomatoes give off ethylene gas as they ripen, which can also speed up the ripening process of other vegetables stored nearby. In fact, some ethylene producers should be stored alone to avoid anything becoming unintentionally overripe.
Keep your apples, apricots, bananas, avocados, melons, mangoes, onions, pears, persimmons, tomatoes, and plantains away from each other for best results.
Fresh herbs can be particularly tricky to store due to their delicate nature. Basil is a great example: You might think the fragile leaves would require some coddling in the fridge, but they’ll actually turn brown in cold temperatures. Instead, keep your bunches of basil fresh for longer in a cup of water at room temperature as you would a bouquet of flowers (trim the stems first to maximize water uptake).
If the basil came with roots intact, place the plant in a small gardening pot and backfill with a high-quality potting mix. Water the plant regularly and be sure it has access to full sunlight.
Celery is one vegetable that should never be stored at room temperature, as the stalks will quickly become limp rather than crisp.
For optimum results, wash and dry the celery, then wrap it tightly in a dry towel and store in the crisper drawer. It should remain fresh for about two weeks. If you can’t use it all up by then, try chopping it into small pieces, then freezing it. Though the celery will lose its signature crispness in the freezer, it still works in soups, stews, and any recipes requiring a mirepoix.
Even if the avocados you brought home from the grocery store seem like they’ll never get ripe, resist the temptation to leave them in plastic produce bags. Plastic traps moisture, which can cause the fruit to rot before it ever gets ripe. Instead, store avocados alone at room temperature. Like apples, avocados emit ethylene gas as they ripen—a helpful trait if you’re trying to get a rock-hard avocado ready to turn into guacamole. Simply place the avocado and apple in a paper bag for a day or two, then check to see if the avocado has softened.
During the first few months of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, regrowing scallions, otherwise known as green onions, in a glass of water went about as viral as any home cook project can. Whether you plan on sprouting your green onions or not, they should be stored root-down in a glass of water.
You can either store scallions at room temperature in a sunny spot to keep them growing or set the cup in the fridge with a plastic bag over the top for extra humidity. The refrigerated method works equally well for asparagus, but you cannot regrow asparagus the same way green onions regrow.
Sweet, juicy peaches are one of summer’s greatest joys. Next time you bring home a haul of this stone fruit, remember to store them at room temperature until they’re fully ripe.
To speed up the ripening process, you can use the same paper bag method that you’d use for unripe avocados. Once they’re soft and fragrant, peaches are ready to eat—but if you’re not quite ready, you can place them in the fridge in a loose bag for up to five days. Watch out for wrinkly skin: That’s a telltale sign that you’re running out of time to eat a peach before it spoils.
Summer at the farmers market often means an abundance of summer squash like zucchini. Place the unwashed zucchini in an open paper or plastic bag, then store it in the crisper drawer for one to two weeks.
If you have more squash than you can handle before it goes bad, try freezing it. Wash and slice the zucchini into rounds, then blanch it in boiling water for one minute. Drain and cool the zucchini, then keep it in the freezer for up to three months. A quicker method is to simply shred the squash and freeze it in a vacuum-sealed bag. Large quantities of the vegetable can be used later for breads, casseroles, soups, and homemade veggie burgers or pancakes.
If you’re lucky enough to have a root cellar, it’s easy to store carrots: They’ll remain fresh for as long as six months. Those of us with limited space can turn to the refrigerator for an assist.
First, remove the carrot tops from the root—the tops can be wrapped in a wet paper towel and stored for use in herb-forward sauces like pestos. You can keep the carrot roots fresh for up to three weeks in the fridge by submerging them in cold water. Just remember to change the water every four days or so, once it becomes cloudy. Don’t want to fuss around with a pitcher full of water? You can also store carrots in an airtight, zip-top bag in the crisper drawer.
This story originally appeared on Pela and was produced and distributed in partnership with Stacker Studio.
Contact Brendan Denison at (309) 820-3238. Follow Brendan Denison on Twitter: @BrendanDenison
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Breaking News Reporter
Brendan Denison is our breaking news reporter. Denison was a digital content producer for WCIA-TV in Champaign and a reporter for The Commercial-News in Danville. He can be reached at (309) 820-3238 and bdenison@pantagraph.com.
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Farmers work John Deere and Case combines to harvest soybeans on Friday in Mark Hines’ field near Downs. Hines broke his leg earlier this month after falling off a combine.
Carl Neubauer was one of the farmers who worked to harvest soybeans on behalf of a hurt neighbor on Friday near Downs.
This aerial drone shot shows harvest progress made Friday in a Downs soybean field by farmers Carl Neubauer and Fred Grieder, supporting Mark Hines while he recovers from an injury.
Harvesting soybeans is time-sensitive work for these crops pictured Friday near Downs.
A John Deere combine makes the rounds on a Downs soybean field Friday.
Carlock’s Fred Grieder talks about helping out to harvest soybeans on Friday in a field near Downs.
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