The Rooster Crows – July 7, 2023

By Bill Anderson

It was looking as if 2023 would go down in the record books as a year with no Spring season. Temperatures in the region went directly from the ice, snow and below freezing of April to the dry weather and 90 degree highs of May and June. “What’s going on?” we asked. Not to worry. Mother Nature corrects her mistakes, if she ever makes any, and the cool, moderate temperatures that normally accompany the season of Spring are now being bestowed on Rutland and vicinity during the first several days of July, at the beginning of what should be the season of Summer and hot weather. Are these unusual weather conditions the result: of global warming; of air pollution; of rising sea levels; of increased numbers of shark attacks; of melting ice caps; or are unusual weather conditions just the usual, normal condition of the weather in North Dakota? In the meantime, we’ll do what we’ve always done about unusual weather conditions in North Dakota – we’ll talk about them. The Assembled Wise Men will have the topic on the Round Table agenda for the next several weeks, and for as long as “unusual weather conditions” persist.

The Scottish poet, Robert Burns, once wrote, “Oh, would the gift the Giftie G’ie us, to see ourselves as others see us. The people of the Rutland community were recently given that opportunity, and it was not at all unpleasant. Back on Thursday, June 22, a panel of local folks met at the Nordland Fellowship Hall in Rutland with Rural Leadership of North Dakota Class IX, a group consisting of community leaders from across North Dakota. The local panel consisted of: Sonja (Anderson) Christensen; Hal Nelson; Katie (Rust) McLaen; Bill Anderson; and Abby Erickson. On Friday, June 30, the following message was received from Katie Tyler, Extension Specialist and Program Director: “…I have had the privilege of traveling across North Dakota to various communities to hear their stories and see their passions with Rural Leadership North Dakota (RLND). However, I can honestly say that none have compared to Rutland! You have a special community, and the pride in which you and the panel of leaders from Rutland portrayed your small community was uplifting. Thank you for taking the time to talk to us, share the stories and lessons learned, and have lunch with us! It was truly an honor to learn from you, and you reminded me of what being a true North Dakotan was all about! Your time with RLND Class IX was a great example of community spirit, which was inspiring to us all. Thank you for your time. Please let me know if I can ever help with anything (besides perhaps coming to Uff-da Days and sampling some lefse!). Sincerely, Katie – Katie Tyler, Ph.D. Extension Specialist and Program Director Rural Leadership North Dakota. Office: 701-231-5640; Cell: 701-361-0869.” Thanks to Katie Tyler and Rural Leadership of North Dakota for visiting Rutland, and thanks for the pat on the back, too. Now the pressure is on the Rutland community to live up to Katie’s opinion.

Bob & Linda (Marlowe) Silseth visited in Rutland, at the home of old friends Larry & Carolyn Christensen, on the afternoon of Saturday, July 1. They even made a brief stop at The Lariat Bar to inhale the ambience and sample the wares. The Silseths were back in their home communities to attend the Havana School Reunion from Friday, June 30, to Sunday, July 2. This year was also the 60th anniversary of Bob’s graduation from Havana High School as a member of HHS Class of ’63. Bob & Linda are now retired after spending most of their working careers coaching and teaching in public school systems in South Dakota and Minnesota. They now reside at Detroit Lakes MN, but report that they are considering a move to Bemidji MN in the near future, in order to be closer to children and grandchildren. A grandson, Chase Silseth, is currently carrying on the family’s baseball tradition as a pitcher in the Los Angeles Angels organization. 

Bill Anderson, accompanied by Great-Grandson Brody Mahrer, is planning to take a brief trip to Branson MO from Sunday, July 9, to Wednesday, July 12, to attend a reunion of Marine Corps veterans who served in Delta Company, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment in the Republic of Vietnam back in 1969-70. As a result, The Rooster Crows column for Friday, July 14, will be among the missing, unless someone else decides to write one. Bill & Brody should be back in time to get one written for the 21st, though.

The Rutland City Council is scheduled to meet at 5:00 p.m. on Monday, July 10, at the Rutland Town Hall to discuss a number of topics important to the future of the community.

Meanwhile, on the national scene, the adoption of a “Declaration Of Independence” by the Second Continental Congress meeting in Philadelphia PA on July 4, 1776, 247 years ago, continues to send ripples through history, ripples that get stronger with the passage of time. Perhaps no decision made by men has done more to alter the course of history, or improve the condition of mankind, than the courageous decision made by the 56 American Patriots who signed the Declaration that would be their death warrant if their revolution had failed or would affix their names in the firmament of Heaven if the revolution succeeded. The nation for which they laid the foundations is still a work in progress, the last, best hope of humanity, and it is still the best nation on the face of this Earth. It has been, indeed, the land of the free and the home of the brave. Long may it be so.

Well, that’s the news from Rutland for this week. For additional information about what’s going on in the little city that can, check out the community’s internet web site at www.rutlandnd.com and take a look at the Rutland Facebook page while you’re at it, too. Don’t forget to patronize your local Post Office and remember to keep the pressure on the U.S. Postal Service and the North Dakota Congressional delegation to SAVE OUR POST OFFICE! Later.

The Rooster Crows – June 30, 2023

By Bill Anderson

It started at about 11:00 a.m. on Thursday, June 22, with a rain shower that produced approximately .1 of an inch of rain here. It wasn’t much, but for parched crops it was a start. The consensus among the Wise Men was that there wouldn’t be any more rain for a while, but the Wise Men were wrong! On the afternoon of Friday, June 23, a steady rain had settled in, and it rained steady until the early morning hours of Sunday, June 25. Mike Wyum reported that the 2 rain gauges in his garden averaged 1.8”; Rodney & Leif Nelson reported that the gauge at their farmstead 5 miles south of Rutland showed 2.0” on Sunday morning; Lyle Erickson said that his Mother’s rain gauge, at her home in Rutland, registered 1.9”; Norbert Kulzer reported 2.2” in his gauge at 415 Gay Street; and, Roger Pearson reported that his gauge at 409 Gay Street, only a few feet west of Norbert’s, showed 1.8” on Sunday morning. The corn, soybean, and wheat crops, which had appeared to have been put under considerable stress by the drought, heat and wind of the previous few weeks, were refreshed, revived, rejuvenated and revitalized by the renewed supply of H2O.

Chuck & Mary Beth Anderson and Mike & Debbie Banish have been touring areas west for the past week, and were at Gardner MT on Thursday & Friday, June 22 & 23. The 2 couples are on a voyage of discovery and exploration, retracing some of the route that took the Lewis & Clark Expedition to, and through, the Rocky Mountains back in 1805. During the weekend of June 24 & 25, they were doing some exploring and sight-seeing in Yellowstone National Park. The Park is the oldest National Park in the US, having been established during America’s Centennial Year, 1876. Both couples have their homes on wheels with them. Chuck & Mary Beth have a 5th wheel travel trailer towed by a 1 ton pickup truck; and Mike & Debbie have a deluxe motor home towing a Jeep that is used for exploring the back country. As with Lewis & Clark, the Anderson & Banish Expeditions of Discovery were over when they got back home, the Banishes on the evening of Tuesday, June 27, and the Andersons on Wednesday, June 28.

The Annual Meeting of Rutland Housing Inc. was held at 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday, June 21, at the Rutland Town Hall. Carolyn Christensen and Bill Anderson were re-elected to 3 year terms on the Board of Directors. Board member & Secretary/Treasurer Bert Siemieniewski reported that the corporation finished the previous year in the black, and that all 14 of the corporation’s apartments are now occupied and generating rental income. Rutland Housing Inc. was formed back in 1971 with the intention of taking advantage of a low interest FmHA loan program intended to provide housing for elderly and low income persons. Earl Anderson, Rudy Anderson, Aldon Donaldson, Norbert Kulzer & Skip Sjothun were the corporation’s initial set of directors. The first apartment house, a 4-plex on Main Street, was completed and occupied in 1972. The first tenants were: Art & Nora Spande; Bella Peterson & Palmer Thompson; Esther Erickson; and Tina Kuester. The second apartment house, a 4-plex at the corner of Ross & Cooper Streets was built in 1973, and the corporation’s 3rd apartment house, a 6-plex at the corner of Gay & Dakota Streets was built in 1975. The current members of the Board of Directors are: Delores Lysne, President; Bill Anderson, Vice-President; Carolyn Christensen, Secretary; and Bert Siemieniewski, Treasurer/Manager. There is one vacant Director’s position on the Board, and anyone interested should contact Delores Lysne or Carolyn Christensen.

Continue reading “The Rooster Crows – June 30, 2023”

The Rooster Crows – June 16, 2023

By Bill Anderson

The evening of Wednesday, June 7, was the time, and Rutland, North Dakota, was the place for a thunderstorm to deliver another timely .6 of an inch of rain. Crops are growing fast, and some cornfields are already past the knee high stage. Wheat fields are green and growing fast, but some local experts are concerned that the excessive heat of the last week in May and the first week in June may have caused some damage to the plants’ ability to produce seeds. Well, we have to worry about something. Might as well be wheat!

Kelly Hawkinson of Dillon MT arrived in Rutland on the evening of Sunday, June 11, for a visit with her uncles, Bill Anderson and Paul Anderson. Kelly drove in from Deadwood SD, where she had served as secretary/statistician for a Professional Bull Riders (PBR) event on Saturday evening. Rodeo, like everything else in the world these days, is changing its ways to cope with the demands of the modern world. It used to be that rodeo participants were all on their own, paying their own way and having no obligation to share a winner’s cash prize with anyone. Those old boys also had the opportunity to pay all of their own medical bills and buy all of their own gear. The new breed are now organized into teams, with owners and sponsors on hand to pick up the expenses and share in any winnings. The new arrangement affords rodeo participants more security, but, if rodeo participants were interested in security, would they have chosen to be cowboys and rodeo performers in the first place? Kelly plans to be heading back to her home base at Dillon MT on Saturday, June 17, with a stop at Bismarck for another PBR event. Kelly is a granddaughter of the late Earl & Irene Anderson of this community, and the daughter of Rutland native, the late Harvey O. “Andy” Anderson.

Mark & Kathy Wyum departed Rutland on Monday, June 12, bound for Rochester MN, a checkup and a crop tour of southern Minnesota. Southern Minnesota is classified as a “drought” zone right now, while Sargent County is classified as having sufficient moisture to support the growth of a grain crop. Even so, what is a drought in southern Minnesota would normally be classified as ample moisture in southeastern North Dakota. Well, we’ll have Mark explain it to us when he gets back.

The management of The Lariat Bar in Rutland reminds all that the Rutland Rib Fest is once again on the calendar, scheduled for Saturday, August 5, 2023. For information about entering the competition for the title of “Best Ribs In Rutland!” take a look at the Lariat’s Facebook page, or give the Lariat a call at 724.6239. Community wide rummage and yard sales are also scheduled to be held all over Rutland on Saturday, August 5. .

Sargent County Public Health is planning to distribute another round of Covid-19 Vaccine Booster Shots this Summer and early Fall. According to Shay Lynn, the shots will be available to anyone who is over the age of 65 and had their last booster shot more than 4 months previously. The County Public Health Footcare crew that is scheduled to be in Rutland on Thursday, June 15, will also have some of the new vaccine available at that time. The Covid-19 pandemic is officially over, but no one told the covid-19 virus that it had to pack up and go home. The virus is still with us, and anyone interested in avoiding it should call Sargent County Public Health at 701.724.3725. An ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure, the old-timers used to say.

Continue reading “The Rooster Crows – June 16, 2023”

The Rooster Crows – June 9, 2023

By Bill Anderson

The thunderstorm that rumbled through on the afternoon of Saturday, June 3, Presented Rutland with .65 of an inch of rain, according to Roger Pearson’s rain gauge, and with .6 of an inch of rain according to the rain gauge of his neighbor, Norbert Kulzer, a few feet to the east. The rain came in a hurry, with the storm lasting only a few minutes, but it was a welcome relief from the incessant wind and heat of the preceding week. Cameron Gulleson reported that the storm also deposited .6 of an inch of rain on the Gulleson Farm, a mile and a half east of town. The rain fell in a narrow band, with only a few drops north of ND Highway #11 and an equally parsimonious amount 2 miles south of town. Well, this is the time of the year when it does rain on the just and the unjust, alike, but neither at the same time nor in equal amounts.

Rodney Erickson reports that the process of acquiring a new Post Office in Rutland continues to make progress, although at what seems to an outside observer to be a snail’s pace. The Postal Service proposes to lease approximately 700 sq. feet of Rodney’s building, the original Prindiville’s Saloon, now at the corner of First & Arthur Streets, and has had an office floor plan drawn up that has been approved by the powers that be at the USPS and by Rodney. After the Post Office is up and running, Rodney will still possess enough space in the building to create a professional office and a small studio apartment. Rodney is hopeful that the new Post Office will be open before September 30, 2023, the second anniversary of the closure of the old Post Office. Rodney also reports that he has been working full time getting his new, well, new to him, ready for the upcoming aerial application season. His new spray plane is an Air Tractor Model 802, powered by a 1,350 horsepower turbo prop engine. He states that this plane has an 800 gallon capacity, about 300 gallons more than his old plane. The plane is currently housed in a hangar at Bear Creek Flying Service’s facilities at Oakes ND. Bear Creek Flying Service is owned by Rodney’s friend and fellow aviator, Travis McPherson of Oakes. Rodney says that he expects to be heading up north, to the area around Bottineau and Rugby during the last week of June to begin applying fungicide and herbicide in that area before moving down to Nebraska to apply agricultural chemicals to corn fields down there. Then he will be heading back to Central North Dakota to apply fungicides and insecticides to sunflower fields, and then back up to North Dakota’s northern tier counties, along the Canadian border, to apply herbicides and desiccants to wheat and canola fields in that region of the State. By then, it will be time to put the plane back into the barn and begin working on getting it ready for next year. Too bad that he can’t find anything to do in his spare time. Oh, that’s right, he owns and operates Wheaton-Dumont Co-op’s grain handling facility, the Rutland Elevator, here during the remainder of the year, when he isn’t remodeling his family’s home.

On Friday, June 2nd, Renee Larson, Colleen Sundquist, and Diane Pierson presented a check to Chelsey, Four Seasons Healthcare Center Activity Director, in the amount of $2,085.00, the amount raised from the Spring Plant Auction held on Monday, May 22. Unable to attend were plant auction organizers Val Bjork and Ione Lunneborg. Sixty-three bidders vied for a variety of plants and garden items with the bidding getting very raucous at times to the delight of everyone. Miss Sargent County, Autum Zirnhelt and Miss Sargent County 1st runner up, Anna Hoistad assisted throughout the evening. Several residents of Four Seasons attended the auction, and thoroughly enjoyed the evening. The committee extends a huge thank you to the community for helping raise funds to help fund various outings and events at Four Seasons. Thanks to Ione Lunneborg for the information in this report.

Continue reading “The Rooster Crows – June 9, 2023”

The Rooster Crows – May 5, 2023

By Bill Anderson

The rain last Thursday & Friday, April 27 & 28, and the wind that ripped and roared through the community from Thursday April 27 through Monday, May 1, felt more like late March or early April than late April and early May, but a quick check of the calendar has confirmed that we are already into the 5th month of the year with no appreciable field work on the 2023 crop yet completed. Even though the high temperatures have only been up in the mid-50’s lately, the lengthening days have done away with most of the snow that blanketed Sargent County with a layer of the white stuff several feet deep only a few short weeks ago. The forecasted high temperature of 72 degrees for Wednesday, May 3, was the first time that the thermometer has hit the 70 mark since November 1 of last year. 

Local farmers are anxious to get into the field, but some neighbors may have thought that Joe Breker was rushing the season a bit when they spotted Joe out with a self-propelled combine on recently tiled fields on the northerly 2/3 of Section 6, Twp. 129 Rge. 54 LTL, in Tewaukon Township. Joe explained that he was using the weight of the combine to level the filled trenches of the tiling project so he can plant a crop of radishes without wrecking his planter on rocks and dirt clods that were brought to the surface when the tile was installed. The radish seed won’t be ready for harvest until mid to late August. According to Joe, the tile was installed last Fall as part of “The Tri-Farmer Tile Project”, a cooperative effort that involved Joe, Dennis Pherson Jr., and Jerry Woytassek. The tile lines, once installed, allow what used to be excess spring moisture to drain away, taking alkali and other undesirable elements with it, leaving a field that can more easily be planted, and harvested. Joe says that the radishes he plants this Spring will hopefully yield seed that will be sold to other farmers to seed a soil conserving cover crop once their main cash crop, usually corn, soybeans, or wheat, has been harvested. So, although a combine on a bare field at the beginning of May might not be the conventional method of employing that particular implement, it is all part of the no-till and minimum till farming methods employed by many progressive, conservation minded farmers in this 3rd decade of the 21st Century. 

Hal Nelson & Bill Anderson of this community drove up to Fargo-Moorhead on Friday, April 28 on a multi-purpose mission. Bill visited his wife, Kathy Brakke, at Lilac Homes Memory Care in Moorhead; Bill & Hal called on Joel Heitkamp at radio station KFGO AM 790 to discuss North Dakota current events and history; and they stopped in to check out preparations for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Day program and exhibit that would be presented at the Fargo Air Museum at Hector Airport on Saturday & Sunday, April 29 & 30. They also checked out gas prices at a major Fargo discount store and discovered that the price there was 5 cents a gallon higher than Rutland Oil Company’s price right here at home. That will teach them to buy at home!

Sunday, April 30, was the 5th Sunday of the month, and was Pastor Julie Johnson’s day off at the TNT Parish. At the Nordland Congregation here in Rutland, lay members presented a skit about the blind beggar whose sight was restored by Jesus on the Sabbath Day. The established church leaders 2,000 years ago condemned both Jesus and the blind man for healing and being healed on the Sabbath. Actors in the skit were: Mike Wyum; Randy Pearson; Steve Wyum; Carolyn Christensen; Kathy Wyum; and Larry Christensen. Those involved delivered the message proficiently, efficiently, and effectively.

Continue reading “The Rooster Crows – May 5, 2023”

The Rooster Crows – March 10, 2023

By Bill Anderson

As of Friday, March 10, the arrival of Spring, the Vernal Equinox, on Monday, March 20, will be only 10 days into the future. So far, though, there is no sign of the imminent arrival of spring-like weather conditions on the horizon. The weather gurus just predict more snow on more snow, without any letup in sight. The old timers used to advise that Spring, in all her glory, would not arrive until after Easter, which is on the first Sunday after the first Full Moon after the Vernal Equinox. In 2023 Easter will be on Sunday, April 9, so don’t look for any nice weather until then, unless an exception to “The Old Timers’ Rule” is found, and then all bets are off.

The actual snowfall amount from the blizzard of Tuesday February 28 and Wednesday, March 1, was higher than the 5 to 9 inches that had been originally predicted. Sargent County Sheriff Travis Paeper was of the opinion that about 10 inches of new snow had fallen on Forman and vicinity by Thursday afternoon. Rutland’s City snow removal specialist, Scott Haan, was of the opinion that Rutland had been blessed with more than 12 inches of the stuff. The snowfall on Sunday, March 5 and the early morning of Monday, March 6, deposited about 2 inches of new snow on the Rutland area, according to City Maintenance worker Scott Haan, with the amount decreasing to the north and east, while Havana reported 7 inches of new snow, with the amount increasing to the south and west. Rutland folks don’t mind being on the short end of snowfall totals at this time of year.

The United States, at least most of it, switches to Daylight Savings Time at 2:00 a.m. this coming Sunday, March 12. At 2:00 in the morning on the appointed day we will all spring one hour into the future, resetting our clocks and watches to 3:00 a.m. We will continue to live an hour ahead of where we would have been without Daylight Savings Time until 2:00 a.m. on Sunday, November 5, when we will all fal back into the past one hour, regaining the hour of sleep we lost on the morning of March 12. One of our Founding Fathers, Benjamin Franklin, first proposed Daylight Savings Time in America in an effort to save on candles during the Revolutionary War. As there were no Standard Time Zones at the time, though, and every community set its clocks, if it had any, by the Sun, the idea did not catch on. American and Canadian railroads adopted the Standard Time Zones on November 19, 1883, in an effort to keep their trains from running into each other. In 1918, during World War I, the Congress made the railroad’s Standard Time Zones the law of the land, and imposed Daylight Savings Time on the entire nation, as part of the war effort to save on energy. The Day light Savings Time provisions of that measure were repealed in 1919. During World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt imposed Daylight Savings Time on the entire nation again, in February of 1942, proclaiming it to be “War Time”, and it remained in effect until the War ended in September of 1945. After World War II, some States continued to use Daylight Savings Time during the Summer months, usually between Memorial Day and Labor Day, and some States just stayed with Standard Time. Minnesota adopted the summer use of Daylight Savings Time, and some of North Dakota’s larger cities on its eastern border, such as Fargo, also adopted it. Later on, North Dakotans approved an initiated measure that outlawed Daylight Savings Time and made Standard Time, or, as Rutland’s John Narum called it, “God’s Time,” the official time of the State. In 1973, during the Arab oil embargo, President Nixon imposed year-round Daylight Savings Time on the entire country as an emergency measure to conserve energy. A lot of people, including John Narum, did not like Daylight Savings Time during the Winter months, and Congress later put Nixon’s proclamation aside with the adoption of the current National Law on the subject. The law has been modified from time to time, but, so far, it has caused no insurrections or revolutions in the Lower 48. John Narum never did adopt Daylight Savings Time, and kept his watch set on Standard Time to the end of his days, and, presumably beyond.

All roads led to Rutland on the evening of Friday, March 3, as fish fry aficionados headed for the little city that can to enjoy the most recent incarnation of the Rutland Sportsmen’s Club’s Annual Great Northern Pike Fish Fry at the Rutland Town Hall. According to Club President, Shannon Hajek, 246 free will donors contributed $4,263.00 for Sargent County’s Food Pantry. Once again, there was fierce competition between the pan fryers and the deep fryers for the public’s favor, and at least one pretty girl, a Rutland native, preferred the deep fried version. The competition is expected to continue into 2024, however, and both groups are fine-tuning their spices and techniques in preparation for next year’s fish fry on Friday, March 1, 2024. Don’t miss it. It’s the best known, and the best tasting, fish fry in the Tri-State region.

Continue reading “The Rooster Crows – March 10, 2023”