CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa - Sophomore Tyler HIxson of Davenport earned an athletic letter for outstanding participation on the Coe College baseball team during the spring 2012 season. Hixson, a graduate of Assumption High School, is the son of David and Jill Hixson.

Hixson is a second year letter winner in baseball. The baseball team is under the direction of 16th-year Head Coach Steve Cook. After finishing second in the Iowa Conference regular season standings, the Kohawks went undefeated in the Iowa Conference Tournament for the second-straight year, earning the league's automatic berth in the NCAA Championships. Coe placed third at the NCAA Regionals.

Sophomore Keenan McLaughlin of Pleasant Valley, earned an athletic letter for outstanding participation on the Coe College track team during the spring 2012 season. McLaughlin, a Pleasant Valley High School graduate, is the son of Patrick and Melinda McLaughlin.

McLaughlin is a first year lettter winner in track. The men's track and field team is under the direction of fifth-year Head Coach Michael Warta.

Morris aims to improve number of upland birds in Iowa

Marengo, Iowa - July 10 - Pheasants Forever (PF) and Quail Forever (QF) have named Brice Morris of Marengo, Iowa, as the organization's new Regional Representative for northern Iowa. Morris is a longtime supporter of Pheasants Forever and a founding member of the Hi Point Quail Forever chapter.

As Regional Representative, Morris will work to foster relationships with volunteers and supporters who have a mutual desire to improve wildlife habitat and raise awareness of Pheasants Forever's upland conservation efforts in Iowa.  He will also assist chapters as they raise and distribute funds for wildlife habitat improvements, develop quality upland habitat and provide youth education programs for the region.

"My main goal is to support our chapters in accomplishing our habitat, youth and conservation awareness mission," says Morris. "Some of the most dedicated PF chapters are in Iowa, and leveraging their strengths with new opportunities is needed to get Iowa's bird numbers back to where they once were." From helping chapters offer youth outings to spearheading more land acquisitions, ensuring habitat and public access forever, Morris "looks forward to being involved with every aspect of Pheasants Forever in Iowa."

Morris was born and raised in the Dike/New Hartford area. He graduated from Upper Iowa University in 2000.  Shortly after graduation, Morris began teaching K-12 physical education and health and coaching in southeastern Iowa.  Morris noted that his teaching background fuels his passion for youth involvement. He and his wife Shawna, along with their two children, own and operate Morris Kennels, where they have raised, trained, and trialed multiple English pointer field champions.

With Morris' Iowa roots, strong youth education background and knowledge of the outdoor industry, the Pheasants Forever team is excited for Morris to join their ranks and provide additional leadership to Iowa's 104 PF/QF chapters. "We are very pleased to welcome Brice to our Iowa team," notes Tom Fuller, Iowa PF/QF State Coordinator. "Brice grew up experiencing some of Iowa's best pheasant hunting and is driven to bring bird populations back to historical highs. He has the passion to assist our Iowa chapters in doing bigger and better things in the future, which is why Brice is an excellent fit to our staff and will help lead our strategic approach to bring back the birds."

Morris will begin work immediately and can be reached at (515) 360-8712 or Email Brice.  For more information about Pheasants Forever in Iowa, please contact Tom Fuller at (319) 321-9775 or Email Tom.

Pheasants Forever, including its quail conservation division, Quail Forever, is the nation's largest nonprofit organization dedicated to upland habitat conservation. Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever have more than 135,000 members and 700 local chapters across the United States and Canada. Chapters are empowered to determine how 100 percent of their locally raised conservation funds are spent, the only national conservation organization that operates through this truly grassroots structure.

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The Green Scene July 2012



Duck Creek July Special
Duck Creek

Beginning Friday, July 6 and ending July31 -

$10 off your next full priced round

If you pay for a full round with cart on any day
between 12pm - 3pm, you'll receive $10 off your
next full priced 18-hole round.

Redeemable at Duck Creek Golf Course only!

 

This special is for a limited time only during July.

 

Call Duck Creek at 563-326-7824 to book your tee time today!

 

 

Amateur Golf Tournament New

 



By: Michael Levin

I took my twin ten-year-old sons to a couple of Angels games this week, and I was shocked?shocked!?to discover just how little they knew about baseball.

I don't mean to criticize my sons.  They know an awful lot about things that I'll never know.  Juggling.  Magic. Origami. And technology, of course.

But the one thing I knew about when I was their age was baseball.  I grew up in New York in the 1960s, and I came of age with Gil Hodges' Mets teams of that era.  So a couple of trips to the ballpark with my sons this week?they each got their own game?brought me back to my own childhood and shed a light on just how different things are today from back then.

For one thing, when my dad took me to the ballpark, the men had the tattoos and the women had the earrings.

The fundamental difference between my childhood and my sons' is that there were far fewer entertainment options back in the sixties, and there were far fewer screens in each home.  You might have had one color TV and then an old black-and-white somewhere in the house.  No computer, no computer games, no consoles, no iPhones.  The Internet?  It was barely a gleam in the eye of Al Gore.  We had Yoo-Hoo, not YouTube.

With fewer options, baseball mattered more.  We kept score of the games, both at home and at the stadium, in scorecards or in scoring books.  I'd be hard-pressed to tell you exactly why we did so, but we did.  The first purchase upon arrival at the stadium was always a program for a quarter, and a golf pencil for 10 cents.  Learning the art of keeping a meticulous scorecard was a bonding experience between father and son.  It also was a cause for conversation with one's neighbors in the seats around you.  Was that double play 6-4-3 or 4-6-3?

Baseball's greatest positive is its devotion to nuance and detail, two items that have little meaning in the slam-bang Internet era.  The game?on any given night and over the course of a season?rewards patience and deep knowledge of traditions and rules.  The vicarious thrill of watching a rookie pitcher, newly elevated from Triple A, striking out the side.  Seeing a player come back after a devastating injury, or an undesired trade, or a bout with the bottle.  It's soap opera for men and boys.  But all that detail is lost if all that matters is the long ball that makes SportsCenter.

W. P. Kinsella, the author of Shoeless Joe, which became Field of Dreams, put it best.  The action in an average three-hour baseball game could be compressed into five minutes, Kinsella wrote in Field of Dreams.  The rest of the time is spent thinking about what might happen, what could happen, what should happen, what did happen, and what should have happened.  So I said to one son, as his game began, "I'd like to point out some things about what's going on.  Let me know when you want me to stop."

To which he responded, "You can stop right now."

And then there's the matter of when to leave.  Back in the day, it was a point of honor never to leave a game until the last out, no matter how one-sided the contest might have been.  This provoked ongoing family debates, because my father never wanted to stay until the end.  He wanted to leave in the eighth, to beat the traffic.  But my boys were more than content to pack it in after five innings.

It didn't bother me any.  Both of the games we attended, interleague affairs with the Giants, were incredibly slow-paced.  That's another change from the sixties?just how long it takes to play nine innings.  Pitchers seem to take forever to work now.  Players are taught to be patient at the plate, to work the count.  Just get up there and take your cuts, fellas.  I've got to get to work in the morning.  Leaving early, therefore, no longer indicates weak moral character.  It just means you've seen enough.

In the 1960s, kids my age were devoted to one team and knew not just the starting lineup of that team but the starting lineups of every team in both leagues.  And had the baseball cards to back it up.  Everybody knew how many games out, or in front, their team was.  My sons' generation, by and large, doesn't read the standings.

It's frustrating.  I want my sons to notice the pace of a home run trot and the pitcher busying himself with the webbing of his glove after someone's gone yard on him, instead of watching the fireworks display.  I want my sons to know when to hit and run, when to sacrifice, how to recognize a perfect bunt, and how to tell a wild pitch from a passed ball.  But this is lore that may never matter to them the way it did, and does, to me.

When I was in law school, I clerked for two law professors, and one of them, Marshall Shapo, a renowned torts professor, entered the office one day bearing an expression of rapture.  He and his adolescent son had enjoyed an entire conversation in the car consisting solely of names of old ballplayers.  Van Lingle Mungo.  Dazzy Vance.  Stan Musial.  Pee Wee Reese.  I always dreamt of having a similar shared moment with a son, but it would appear that that's not on the horizon.

I'm sure we'll find something else to connect over.  It doesn't look like it'll be Van Lingle Mungo anytime soon.  But before I go, does anybody know what the Red Sox did last night.

About: New York Times best -selling author Michael Levin runs BusinessGhost.com and blogs at http://deathofpublishing.blogspot.com. He has written with Baseball Hall of Famer Dave Winfield, football broadcasting legend Pat Summerall, FBI undercover agent Joaquin Garcia, and E-Myth creator Michael Gerber.  He has written for the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, CBS News, the Boston Globe, the Los Angeles Times, and many other top outlets. You can 'like' him on Facebook here...www.facebook.com/BusinessGhost

With temperatures already predicted to top at 100 degrees, the Bix 7 race committee has cancelled the Iowa American Water Bix at 6 and the trials for the Quad City Bank & Trust Battle Up Brady scheduled for this Thursday, July 5th. Due to the cancellations last Thursday and this week, an extra week has been added to the schedule. There will be scheduled Bix at 6 practice runs and Battle Up Brady trials on July 12th and now July 19th beginning at 6 PM.
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA - 07/02/2012 - Mark Davis of Mt. Ida, Arkansas, has won the Bassmaster Classic in 1995 and is a thorough fisherman. He's a threat to win any bass tournament he enters and to catch the biggest bass in the tournament. Davis is one of the 18 pros who John E. Phillips' interviewed for his new $0.99 Kindle eBook "How to Catch the Biggest and Most Bass in Any Lake."

 

"My secret to catching the most bass I can is to do whatever is required on whatever lake I'm fishing at that time of the year to catch bass," Mark Davis explains. "If I have to fish a 1/16-ounce crappie jig on 6-pound-test line in 30 feet of water to make a bass bite, then that's what I'll do. If I have to fish a Rocket Shad spinner bait in 1-foot-deep water to catch a bass, then I'll do it. To catch the most bass on any lake, you need to be willing to fish with whatever lures and tactics required to make a bass - any bass and size - to bite.

 

"If I'm going to catch the biggest bass in any lake, I'm going to fish a 3/8-ounce or a 1/2-ounce Premier Elite jig. I'll use the black-and-blue color with either a pork chunk trailer in the black-and-blue color or some type of crawfish imitation for a trailer. I'll put that jig in the heaviest cover I can find - either in shallow or deepwater. I'll fish the jig slowly to catch really-big bass. My second choice for a big-bass lure will be a Strike King Series 5 crankbait. I can fish this lure through cover really well. I'll fish it around stumps or logjams or swim it across the top of grass. If I only can pick one color, I'll select watermelon shad. This lure is pearl-colored with a bright green back."

 

To consistently catch bass, decide the obvious pattern and bait for fishing that pattern, and then do something completely different. When you break rules of bass fishing, you'll use various lures when you're not supposed to, you'll fish water that most other anglers won't fish, and you'll use tactics that break all the rules to catch more and bigger bass.

 

To learn more about how to catch bass from some of the best bass fishermen in the nation, get the new Kindle eBook, "How to Catch the Biggest and Most Bass in Any Lake" by John E. Phillips. You can go to http://www.amazon.com/kindle-ebooks and type-in the name of the book to find it.


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Youthfest

Calling ALL youth in the Quad Cities and surrounding areas to come and celebrate with Davenport Parks and Recreation and many partnering organizations at our 19th annual YouthFest! This year TourthFest will return to Fejervary Park. There will be all types of environmental, cultural and physical activities including obstacle courses, bounce houses, basketball, skateboarding, chalk art, recycled kite making, and youth gardening information! FREE!

Fejervary Park, 1759 W 12th Street

Wednesday, July 11 10:00am - 2:00pm


Family Friday Night Series

For all our great Family Friday Night events everyone gets two slices of pizza, lemonade, and whatever great activity is planned!

Register in advance online (Click Here): $2.50 per person.

Pay at event: $4.00 (Kids 3 and under are free).

6:00pm - 9:00pm

 

July 6 - Run the Prairie

Discover the greatness of this tour by taking advantage of seeing a reconstructed prairie.

Where: Sunderbruch Park

4500 Telegraph Road

 

July 13 - Movie Night - "Happy Feet"

Davenport Junior Theatre is thrilled to host a Movie Night! All movies are rated PG and are for all ages.

Where: Nighswander Jr Theatre

2815 Eastern Avenue

 

July 20 - Golf and Movie

Come join us at Red Hawk and enjoy the 3 par golf course, a bucket of balls to use at the range and to top that we have dinner and a movie.

Where: Red Hawk Golf Course

6364 Northwest Blvd

 

July 27 - Roosevelt Center Friday Nights

We explore through games, arts/crafts, music, snacks, language, and literature activities a different country each month of the summer.

Where: Roosevelt Community Center Gym

1220 Minnie Avenue

 

Red White and Boom

Be sure not to miss all the excitement at Modern Woodmen Stadium and the surrounding riverfront parks. Games, activities, fireworks and more! Our Mobile Playground will be out and entertaining the entire family.  It's a Fourth of July tradition!

 

Tuesday, July 3rd 5:00pm - 9:00pm

 

Friends of Vander Veer Summer Concert Series

Vander Veer Logo

Enjoy great music in a beautiful setting - Vander Veer Botanical Park! All concerts are FREE to the public, and feature music for the entire family. Bring your lawn chairs and a snack and enjoy a fun evening at Vander Veer.

 

Thursday, July 12 6:30pm - 8:00pm

 

 

Summer Repertory - Junior Theater On Tour

Junior Theater Mainstage

Summer Repertory - Junior Theatre On Tour

Summer Repertory brings short plays to many venues during the 2-weeks of its touring season. Performances are free and open to the general public! Be sure to bring out those packed lunches and join us for a show:

 

Monday, July 2nd

10:00am

Fairmount Library, Davenport

Tuesday, July 3rd

10:30am

Harrington Park, Davenport

Thursday, July 5th

10:00am

Eastern Avenue Library, Davenport

Friday, July 6th

10:00am

Family Museum, Bettendorf

 

11:15am

Vander Veer Park, Davenport

 

 

 

Monday, July 9th

10:00am

Fairmount Library, Davenport

Wednesday, July 11th

10:00am

Center for Active Seniors (CASI), Davenport

 

11:15am

Schadt Park, Silvis (12th Street & 4th Avenue)

Thursday, July 12th

10:00am

Eastern Avenue Library, Davenport

Friday, July 13th

10:00am

Family Museum, Bettendorf

 

11:15am

Vander Veer Park, Davenport

 

July is the month of adult league tournaments!

Coed Softball Tournament- July 14th at Lindsay Park

Coed Kickball Tournament- July 21st at Lindsay Park

Women's Softball Tournament- July 28th at Lindsay Park

Coed Soccer 11v11 Tournament- August 4th at Davenport Soccer Complex

 

Summer Soccer Leagues begin the week of July 8th- register now!

 

All Fall Adult leagues begin in August- registration is open now!

 

Coaches Courts! Every Tuesday night in July, middle school aged basketball players can play at Centennial Park and be supervised and learn some skills! 6 to 8pm.

 

Click here for more information and to register online!

 


City Golf Tournament
Amateur Golf Tournament New
Duck Creek Golf Course - July Special

Duck Creek

 

Watch for a special coming up in July at Duck Creek Golf Course. Play 18 holes with a cart between noon and 3pm and receive a $10 gift card toward your next round! The special will start soon in the first part of July. Check at the clubhouse at Duck Creek.

  1. Offer is valid 7 days a week
  2. Gift card only applies with full price greens fees on next round

Also check out our pro shop special:

  1. Clothing - 1 item 20% off, 2 items 25% off both, and 3 items 30% off all three
  2. Bags / Shoes 20% off

by gardening expert, TV/radio host & author Melinda Myers

Add a little extra color and motion to your summer garden with containers designed to attract birds and butterflies. Many garden centers continue to sell annuals throughout the summer and many of these mid-season annuals are a bit bigger, providing instant impact.

It's easier than you think to attract birds and butterflies and the good news is you don't need a lot of space to do it.  Container gardens give you the ability to attract wildlife to your backyard, patio, deck or even balcony. Simply follow these four steps and your garden will be filled with color, motion and a season of wildlife.

1-      Provide food for birds and butterflies.  Include plants with flat daisy-like flowers like pentas, zinnias, and cosmos to attract butterflies. For hummingbirds, include some plants with tubular flowers including nicotiana, cuphea, salvia, and fuchsia. And don't forget about the hungry caterpillars that will soon turn into beautiful butterflies. Parsley, bronze fennel, and licorice vines are a few favorites that make great additions to container gardens. You can even create containers that will attract seed-eating birds. Purple Majesty millet, coneflower, coreopsis, and Rudbeckias will keep many of the birds returning to your landscape.

2-      Include water for both the birds and butterflies.  It's a key ingredient and a decorative small shallow container filled with water can be included in a large container.  Or include a free-standing birdbath within your container collection.  I used a bronzed leaf birdbath in just this way.  It created a great vertical accent, added interest to a blank wall and provided a water supply for the birds.

3-      Give them a place to live and raise their young. Add a few evergreens, ornamental grasses, and perennials to your container garden.  Use weather resistant containers that can tolerate the extreme heat and cold in your garden.  Then fill with plants that are at least one zone hardier.  Or add a few birdhouses.  These can be included in the container or mounted on a fence, post, or nearby tree.

4-      Skip the pesticides, please.  Nature, including the birds you invite into your landscape, will devour many garden pests.  Plus, the chemicals designed to kill the bad guys can also kill the good bugs and wildlife you are trying to attract.  And, if pests get out of hand, use more eco-friendly products like soaps, Neem, and horticulture oil as a control mechanism.  And, as always, read and follow label directions carefully.

And to conserve time and energy, try using one of the self-watering containers or hanging baskets that are on the market.  This helps to make it both easy and convenient when time constraints and vacations get in the way of providing ideal care.  I recently tried using one of the Gardener's Supply Easy Roller self-watering containers.  I filled one with wildlife-friendly petunias along with papyrus and golden moneywort.  After a five-day trip during hot dry weather I returned to find my container garden in great shape and hummingbirds visiting the flowers.

So gather your family and get started planting your wildlife container garden today.

Nationally known gardening expert, TV/radio host, author & columnist Melinda Myers has more than 30 years of horticulture experience and has written over 20 gardening books, including Can't Miss Small Space Gardening. She hosts the nationally syndicated Melinda's Garden Moment segments which air on over 115 TV and radio stations throughout the U.S. and Canada. She is a columnist and contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and writes the twice monthly "Gardeners' Questions" newspaper column. Melinda also has a column in Gardening How-to magazine.  Melinda hosted "The Plant Doctor" radio program for over 20 years as well as seven seasons of Great Lakes Gardener on PBS. She has written articles for Better Homes and Gardens and Fine Gardening and was a columnist and contributing editor for Backyard Living magazine.  Melinda has a master's degree in horticulture, is a certified arborist and was a horticulture instructor with tenure.  Her web site is www.melindamyers.com

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June 27 - Tonight's Bix at 6 training run has been cancelled due to the expected high temperatures (close to 100º with a heat index around 107º).

Projects Will Create Park Space and Jobs

CHICAGO - June 23, 2012. Governor Pat Quinn today announced $12.3 million to help communities build and improve parks. The Open Space Lands Acquisition and Development grant program (OSLAD) increases green space and provides more opportunities for outdoor recreation. The 42 projects announced today are expected to create more than 200 jobs statewide.

"Parks and green space within our communities are important to improving the quality of life for Illinois residents," Governor Quinn said. "These grants will help make sure that families are able to spend time outdoors enjoying nature, especially in urban areas."

The projects announced today will involve developing and constructing new parks and facilities such as picnic shelters and boat ramps. In some instances, funding will enable communities to purchase land to be used for future green space.

This year, the OSLAD program, administered by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR), is funding 39 park projects throughout Illinois. Three additional projects announced today are receiving federal funding through the Land and Water Conservation Fund, which provides matching grants to states and local governments to help acquire land.

"OSLAD grants are vital to communities in many ways and meet a core IDNR priority of leaving no child inside," said IDNR Director Marc Miller. "These grants create jobs, help make local communities even more attractive to other potential businesses and residents, and provide important outdoor recreation opportunities to citizens and visitors alike."

Grant recipients are responsible for contributing at least half of the total project cost. The $12.3 million awarded statewide this year combined with the grantees' share will result in more than $26.4 million of local acquisition and development projects to enhance the quality of life in Illinois.

The OSLAD program is funded through the Real Estate Transfer Tax, which is part of every property sale in Illinois. These projects demonstrate an investment on the part of local units of government to enhance the quality of life for residents, which attracts business growth and job creation locally.

The OSLAD program began in 1986 and, not including today's projects, has provided approximately $352 million for 1,557 local agency park projects.

 

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