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The following are real estate transfers filed in La Crosse County. By law, some transfers are exempt from transfer fees; these properties are listed without prices.
CITY OF LA CROSSE
Losey & State LLC to VSC Corp., 2415 Cass St.
Keith Belzer and Lisa Metz-Belzer to Lisa Metz-Belzer, 1217 Charles St.
Margaret Anderson-Chiraghdin to Goehner Investments 1 LLC, 931 and 929 S. 16th St., 1601 Jackson St., $182,000.
Derek and Julie Nordeen Revocable Grantor Trust to Derek and Julie Nordeen, 1408 King St.
Derek and Julie Nordeen to Felber Properties LLC, 1408 King St.
Clifford Strand to Christopher Strand and Nicholas Wateski, 1317 Caledonia St., $42,700.
Morton Revocable Trust to Richard Morton, 350 S. 28th St.
Richard Morton to Richard Morton Revocable Trust, 350 S. 28th St.
Sandra Winterfield to Andrew Dayton, 1825 Weston St., $124,000.
Kelly Strutz to Chadd Heilman-Schmidt and Adam Schmidt-Heilman, 1403 S. 28th St., $174,000.
Theresa Knothe to Ross Knothe Supplemental Trust, 2603 Prospect St.
Debra and Robert Ekern to Jessica Ekern, 1516 S. 10th St.
Daniel and Joanna Leach to Gregory Lundstad and Kelly Strutz, 3042 S. 29th Court, $179,900.
Kathryn and Michael Frie to WGW Holdings LLC, 2817 and 2819 Hass St., $57,150.
Norman Suhr to Chris and Sheila Eisermann, 1023 S. Eighth St., $68,000.
Michael Deal to Jennifer Steel, 2042 Prospect St., $15,280.
Richard and Sally Egan, Patricia Snow to Patricia Snow, 1422 Redfield St., $42,174.
Jonathan Powell to Haley Shepardson, 2226 Loomis St., $112,500.
Diane and Robert Midland to Matthew West, 1916 Barlow St.
Kratt Lumber Co. to Lexi Logsdon and Francisco Marquezpalmas, 1003 S. 25th St., $272,000.
Hub on Sixth LLC to Eric and Virginia Swails, 415 N. Sixth St., $210,000.
Hawkeye LLC to PE Rentals LLC, 919 Gould St., $1,200,000.
New Beginnings Christian Fellowship Assemblies of God to Kellogg Investments LLC, 122 N. Fifth Ave., $253,800.
Alexa and Christopher Lowry to Castle Investment Group, 913 Green Bay St., $100,000.
CITY OF ONALASKA
Kaye and Stanley Brueggen to Emily Everson, 1110 Well St., $124,000.
Emily and Miguel Guerrero to Ashlynne and Zachary Knutson, 1324 N. Third Ave., $320,000.
Edith MacDougal to Laura Anderson and Kevin Sipley, 618 N. 12th Ave.
Harold and Shirley Berberich to Kevin, Kraig and Kurt Berberich, 1213 La Crosse St.
Anne Besl to Katherine Miller and Christian Tischer, 512 S. Oak Ave., $166,400.
Terrance Herbst to MWT LLC, 3716 E. Emerald Drive.
Maria and Matthew Runde to Timothy and Laura Johnson, 3333 Emerald Valley Drive, $920,000.
HOLMEN
JMQ Properties LLC to Megalyn LLC, 3053 and 3049 Red Clover St., $79,900.
North Country Contractors of West Salem Inc. to Jason Berger, $365,623.
Charlene Timm Estate to Michael Burkhardt, $40,000.
WEST SALEM
Amanda and Scott Scholze to Kelly and Thomas Surrarrer, $133,000.
Jeffrey Frawley to Alexander and Lauren Jaromin.
Kevin Aleckson to Aben Farms LLC, $195,000.
Michelle and Robert Miller to Alleck and Holly Olerud, $320,000.
TOWN OF BARRE
Agnetha Ames to Agnetha Ames Trust.
TOWN OF FARMINGTON
Rita and Timothy Miller to Kimberly Buchholz and Vong Xiong, $240,000.
Leon and Ruth Pfaff to Craig and Roxanne Jaderston, $1,500.
Sandra and Steven Paisley to Kyle Kirchner, $165,000.
TOWN OF GREENFIELD
Daniel and Timothy Schneider to Thomas and Tracey Albrecht, $155,000.
TOWN OF HAMILTON
Jerrel Schomberg to the Jerrel and Denise Schomberg Revocable Trust.
Aben Farms LLC to Kevin Aleckson, $195,000.
TOWN OF HOLLAND
Dustin and Rhonda Berg to Paula and Stephen Hueners, $118,000.
Michelle Kelly to Michelle and Stacey Kelly.
TOWN OF ONALASKA
Mark and Xiaozan Anderson to Michelle McElligott and Phillip Randles Jr., $437,500.
Lorraine Shisler to Richard and Robyn Shisler, $90,000.
TOWN OF SHELBY
Kathleen and Robert Hancock Sr. to Hancock Family Trust.
James and Diana Birnbaum Revocable Trust to Town of Shelby, $39,900.
Continued here:
Photos: 9 homes recently listed in the La Crosse area - La Crosse Tomah Journal
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Following are recent property transactions recorded in the Loudon County Register of Deeds office:
Feb. 14
Lisa Wilkerson Sheman, Thelma W. Brown, deceased, and Frank P. Hughes III to Trever M. Branson, warranty deed, District 2, $101,900.
Terry C. Dysinger and Janett L. Dysinger to New Season Properties LLC, warranty deed, District 1, Toqua Hills, lot 6, block 16, $9,500.
Brian Edwards and Casey Edwards to New Season Properties LLC, warranty deed, District 1, Toqua Hills, lot 5, block 16, $7,500.
Kanzie Ngyuen, Hieu Nguyen and Joe Hieu Nguyen to Jonathan Shamblin and Stacey Shamblin, warranty deed, District 5, James T. Gibson, lot 1, $125,000.
Thomas Woods LLC to TW2 LLC, warranty deed, District 2, Thomas Woods, lot 14, $25,000.
Foshee Properties LP to Malissa Katherine Meadows and Katherine Lee Meadows, warranty deed, District 5, Eleven Estates horizontal property, unit 1, $125,500.
Dan. W. Loftis and Lezlee M. Loftis to Roger K. Frantz, trustee of the Roger K. Frantz Living Trust, warranty deed, District 1, Willington Place, unit 11, $182,500.
Roy Bryan Petett to DR Horton Inc., warranty deed, District 1, Cedar Grove, lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29 and 30, $1,410,000.
Wendell C. Redmond, Jeannette Redmond, Jeanette Redmond, Janette R. Walker, Janet M. Walker, Jack Redmond and Suzanne Redmond to Wendell C. Redmond and Jeannette B. Redmond, warranty deed, District 5, Jack Redmond, lot 1, $25,000.
Kenny E. Baker to Michael E. Julian and Frankie R. Julian, warranty deed, District 3, $40,000.
Feb. 18
Tony Butler, Jim Cherry, David Johnson, Alex Sherrill, David Thompson and Jerry Watson, trustees of the Nashville Road Church of Christ and Nashville Road Church of Christ, to Michael Hall and Sheldon Presley, trustees of Greenback Church of Christ and Greenback Church of Christ, quit claim deed, District 3, 5 acres, Town of Greenback, $0.
Frederick T. Fehl and Sheryl W. Fehl to David L. Cunningham, warranty deed, District 1, Toqua Greens, lot 25, block 8, $326,000.
Jack Redmond and Suzanne Redmond to Candace S. Johnson, warranty deed, District 5, 5 acres, Jack Redmond, lot 2, $396,900.
Randy Wheeler Austin to Joshua M. Songster and Jennifer Songster, warranty deed, District 2, Randy Wheeler Austin property, lot 2, $245,000.
Randy Wheeler Austin to Jennifer Songster and Joshua Songster, warranty deed, District 2, Randy Wheeler Austin property, lot 1, $37,500.
Yvonne Toon, executor, Betty P. Hicks, deceased, Yvonne Carson, Thomas Anthony Hicks and Betty M. Hicks, deceased, to Volhomes LLC, warranty deed, District 2, Johnson, lot 10, $76,000.
AKJ LLC to Mashburn Home Builder LLC, warranty deed, District 1, Mialaquo Coves, lot 15, block 20, $4,000.
Shawn Travis Vineyard and Jimmy Paul Vineyard, deceased, to Wendell C. Redmond and Janette R. Walker, warranty deed, District 3, Fort Loudon Estates, lot 19, $212,000.
Don L. Franklin to John Matthew Little, warranty deed, District 3, Franklin Estates, unit 2, lot 41, $25,500.
Randall Sparks and Debra Sparks to Whitney Hawkins, warranty deed, District 5, Randy K. and Debra L. Sparks, lot 3, $90,000.
Steven Sloan and Natalie Owens to Lucas Aaron Saylor and Symarah D. Saylor, warranty deed, District 1, John W. Simpson, lots 9 and 10, $168,000.
Mary Ruth Dunsmore to Joseph Michael Dunsmore and Sandra Shaw Dunsmore, warranty deed, District 5, 21.21 acres, $85,000.
Feb. 19
Otis Riley Washington Jr., and Luther Cordell Washington, deceased, to John A. Kaprocki and Lynne A. Kaprocki, trustees of the Kaprocki Family Living Trust, warranty deed, District 1, Tanasi Shores, lot 6, block 12, $208,000.
Lori A. Orlando to Richard W. McLeod Jr., and Sandra A. McLeod, warranty deed, District 1, Tanasi Greens, lot 11, block 6, $395,800.
Paula G. Miller and James H. Miller to Richard A. Moore Jr., warranty deed, District 2, $209,000.
WR Development Corporation to Edward Toro and Denise Hardin, warranty deed, District 3, WindRiver, phase 2, lot 145, $347,900.
Virginia R. Tolbert, trustee of the Helen Margaret Rose Revocable Living Trust, and Virgil Rose Jr., deceased, to Bruce Burger and Gerri Burger, warranty deed, District 3, Fort Loudon Estates, lot 35, $425,000.
Feb. 20
Patricia A. Winters to Thomas R. McDermott and Sandra W. McDermott, warranty deed, District 5, Avalon, unit 7, lot 41, block F, $578,000.
Teresa A. Hightower to Justin G. Locascio, warranty deed, District 2, 1.27 acres, $240,000.
Johnna E. Pope, Morgan A. Pope and John E. Pope, deceased, to Richard Neal Hagenson and Shona Renea Hagenson, warranty deed, District 1, 21.18 acres, $130,000.
Cyndie Hill to Joseph J. Wallace, warranty deed, District 1, Roberson Springs, lot 13, $17,500.
Arlin Gurley to Leilani S. Doyle and Daniel J. Doyle, warranty deed, District 2, Thomas Woods, lot 6, $476,514.
Feb. 21
Wilson & Associates PLLC sub trustee, Frances L. McConkey and Theodore W. McConkey to Braden Cutshaw, trustees deed, District 2, Lenoir City, lot 20, block 14, $47,581.
Karen Graham to Madewell Homes LLC, quit claim deed, District 1, Toqua Point, lot 26, block 11, $0.
Darlene R. Moore to Darlene R. Moore and Luther A. Moore, quit claim deed, District 2, $0.
Magen Shedden to Magen Shedden, quit claim deed, District 4, 30.37 acres, $0.
Richard F. Fortney and Joni P. Fortney to David Osterman and Debbie Osterman, quit claim deed, District 1, Chatuga Point, lot 36, block 9, $0.
Gregory L. Jackson and Alice H. Jackson to Jerry Byrd and Diane Byrd, warranty deed, District 5, Avalon, unit 1, lot 48, $470,000.
Teresa Fay Primo and Michael Bivens to Kimberly P. Carman, warranty deed, Jackson Crossing, phase 3, lot 9R, $189,000.
Daniel A. Dunlap and Tina J. Dunlap to Macklin C. Allan and Rachel L. Allan, warranty deed, District 2, Hardin Estates, lot 27, block G, $172,000.
Albert T. Purino to Michael L. Patterson and Brenda Ann Patterson, warranty deed, District 1, Tanasi Shores, lot 3, block 2, $10,500.
Jerome Horvath to Teresa Primo, warranty deed, District 2, James Hamilton, lots 123, 124 and 125, $40,000.
Kenneth Hunt to Remoda Diane Burch and Richard Burch, warranty deed, District 1, .44 acres, $13,500.
Michael S. Murr, Debbie Irvin, Tom Murr, Sandy Patton and Reba Kathleen Yates Murr, deceased, to Michael R. Tessendorf, trustee of the Michael R. Tessendorf Declaration of Trust, warranty deed, District 1, 6 acres, $225,000.
AKJ LLC to Norman L. Holtz and Sharon L. Mitchell, trustees of the Holtz Mitchell 2017 Joint Trust, warranty deed, District 1, Toqua Coves, lot 27, block 6, $3,800.
Nick R. Seagle to Richard Gerstenberg and Mary Gerstenberg, warranty deed, District 1, Tanasi Shores, lot 13, block 19, $3,250.
Claudia Maria Hernandez to David Osterman and Debbie Osterman, warranty deed, District 1, Chatuga Point, lot 36, block 9, $5,000.
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Property Transactions: March 4 | Business - news-herald.net
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(MENAFN - Caribbean News Global)
By Caribbean News Global contributor
KINGSTOWN, St Vincent Presenting the 2020 budget last month, St Vincent and the Grenadines minister for finance Camillo Gonsalves noted that last year, the government introduced the Pedestrian Access for Village Enhancement (PAVE) programme funded through grant financing from the United Arab Emirates. Phase One of the PAVE programme began in late 2019, with physical works in many communities commencing last month.
'The PAVE access paths, walkways, steps, handrails, wheelchair ramps, and inter-village connections will markedly and measurably improve the quality of life, comfort, access and safety of the most vulnerable populations in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
'Many of our commitments under the Sustainable Development Goals to reduce poverty, improve infrastructure, build climate resilience and make communities accessible and sustainable are partially addressed by the PAVE programme. Over the two-year life of PAVE, the project will build almost 40 miles of access paths in villages across Saint Vincent and the Grenadines,' Gonsalves said.
Addressing the issue of road repair and reconstruction finance minister Gonsalves requested Vincentians to identify a strip of roadway in urgent need of repair.
'Despite record expenditure on construction and rehabilitation over the past two decades, the condition of our road network remains a sore point. The generally excellent condition of our Windward, Leeward and Vigie Highways is belied by the uneven quality of the secondary and feeder roads that take most commuters to those main thoroughfares.'
Gonsalves further pointed out that 'the road network requires constant and very expensive upkeep, due to the mountainous terrain, heavy rainfall, and an upsurge in the number of cars on the road.
'In the last two decades, we have experienced an eightfold increase in the number of automobiles in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, an increase that shows no signs of abating.
'As recently as 2013 and 2014, an annual average of 940 cars was imported to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. However, over the last four years, that average has shot up to 1,680 cars per year, a 79 percent increase. Last May, a record 263 vehicles arrived at Port Kingstown, an ominous harbinger of future traffic jams and escalating pressure on our road network.'
Despite all of those problems gazing Dr Ralph Gonsalves-led government, the Vincentian minister for finance said that the government is committed to maintaining the highways and roads in a responsible and sustainable manner.
'Budget 2020 allocates over $39 million to the repair and construction of roads and bridges this year, not including the $15 million subventions to the Buildings, Roads and General Services Authority (BRAGSA).
These resources and additional support that is being creatively sourced will form part of a multipronged programme of road repair, rehabilitation, and reconstruction, taking into account our fiscal constraints, the increasing stresses on our road network, and our desire to build back better.
'Two overlapping road reconstruction projects, funded by Kuwait and the OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID), will spend $14 million on the reconstruction of roads in Belair, Benjamin Bristol, Brighton, Calder, Carriere, Chapmans, Colonaire, Copeland Mountain, Erie Hill, Enhams, Fair Hall, Gomea, Greiggs, Lammie Mountain, Maloney Mountain, Mongoyia, Ottley Hall, Palmyra, Richland Park, Sayers Village, Veryvine Mountain and Montreal Gardens.
'These represent almost 50 kilometres of roadway that will be repaired under this programme. While construction work on the Kuwaiti-funded rehabilitation programme began in earnest in 2019, it was plagued by administrative challenges that unduly lengthened contractors' approval and payment processes.
'The ministry of transport and works, in consultation with our Kuwaiti partners, has resolved these challenges. As such, we expect accelerated progress on these roads in 2020. Road reconstruction will also take place under the CDB-funded Natural Disaster Management Programme (NDM).
'Budget 2020 allocates $10 million to the NDM programme of works. Roads and bridges in Langley Park, Maroon Hill, Dickson Village, Gracefield Mountain, and Ferguson, among others, will receive attention under the NDM in 2020.
'In addition to the complete reconstruction of roads envisaged by the Kuwait, OFID and NDM programmes, BRAGSA plans a comprehensive campaign of patching and repairs to less seriously affected thoroughfares. The minister of transport and works will likely speak to this far-reaching patching and repair programme over the course of our debate on budget 2020.'
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Major infrastructure works underway in St Vincent and the Grenadines - MENAFN.COM
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Clever feeding and bedding kit is helping livestock farmers shave hours off their daily routine.
Weve picked out some of the best ones from the many entries to our 2020 Inventions Competition
Check out the videos for some of the entries below too.
See also:Workshop tips: How to make the perfect MIG weld
David Boyd built a slick swing-down frame to ensure trouble-free calf feeding.
The first of two moving sections involves a box-section frame that can hold six buckets.
This pivots down to put the buckets in their feeding position and carries shields between each calf to prevent the greediest members of the group pilfering from their neighbours.
The second moving part is the headlock, which prevents fast-drinking calves from bothering slowcoaches.
It means Mr Boyd can get on with other jobs while the calves are feeding, safe in the knowledge that each one has sunk its allotted amount.
He can also quickly identify sick animals if they have gone off their milk.
Pneumonia was proving a problem for Nick Eccles hutch-housed calves, so he decided to assemble a circulation system that would maintain a fresh breeze through the accommodation, no matter the weather.
This, he hoped, would reduce issues on windless days when the hutches have a habit of getting stuffy, exacerbating infections.
The starting point was a solar fan, typically used to ventilate caravans, that was sourced from China for a meagre 25.
It was neatly grafted into the roof of the hutch, drawing stagnant air out and encouraging a fresh flow through the entrance. It also has a battery to keep it spinning on still days.
We have seen several cubicle brush attachments over the years of our Inventions Competition, but few look as polished as Andy Dymonds so-called Xtra Arm.
The first iteration was assembled from scrap found on his farm at Colyton, Devon. However, after fine-tuning the design, he is hoping it will appeal to other dairy farmers looking at ways to improve bed cleanliness and reduce instances of mastitis.
Its attached to the front of a tractor a two-wheel-drive New Holland, in Mr Dymonds case via a mounting plate that can be adapted to suit different models.
A locking pin at the top of the main frame holds the brush in its upright position when out of work. The pin can also have a rope attachment, allowing it to be pulled free without leaving the tractor seat.
Power is provided by a single spool, and brush speed is altered by adjusting a flow restrictor in the hydraulic line. A non-return valve means the brush will only spin one way, so it remains static as the hydraulic ram retracts into its upright, locked position.
Custom spacers allow the brushs working height to be adjusted as the bristles wear and there are three grease points for maintenance.
To take a little of the hassle out of handling sheep spread over a large area, David Devine from County Londonderry, Northern Ireland, built a neat mobile race to tow behind his ATV.
His multi-use design incorporates a foot-bath and weighing crate and has the option of three-way shedding. It can also carry 10 x 1.8m and 10 x 1.2m hurdles on board.
He says the setup is particularly handy in the summer, when ewes and lambs are running together in small groups. It means he can send all the animals through the foot-bath and quickly single out the heaviest lambs.
A simple strap and winder allows him to raise the rear of the crate, making it quick to remove and refit the wheels.
The entire frame was built in Mr Devines farm workshop and the only components he bought in were the plastic foot-bath and the Salter clock.
Once the frame was completed, he had it galvanised, before fitting a chequer plate floor and 6mm stock board on the sides.
It took a few months to put together and cost about 1,500.
Eighteen-year-old Molly Robson built a feed hopper to slot in the back of a John Deere Gator, reducing the sheep feeding workload for her grandparents.
The container is strapped onto hooks on the UTVs rear deck, so can easily be taken out and put back in using a telehandler. Feed is emptied through a sliding shutter on the side.
Being 6ft 8in tall comes with its own unique set of challenges, especially when bending over to trim cows feet.
This issue has prompted lofty Ayrshire farmer Nigel Rowney to modify his 35-year-old Wopa cow crush to lift each one of the 600-strong herd 800mm off the floor to save breaking his back.
The crush is powered from the mains and runs a hydraulic power pack. There are four rams on each corner from various front-end loaders the farm has owned over the years Massey Ferguson and David Brown units are on two of the corners.
The animal walks on and Mr Rowney raises it via a little hand control button, trims the feet and then lets it down again. He reckons his design has saved thousands on anything brand new.
This year we can officially claim that the Farmers Weekly Farm Inventions Competition has gone global, with our first entry from Tasmania, Australia.
Dairy farmer Rob Frampton milks 400 cows and to put an end to having to pick up and manhandle heavy calves, he came up with a trailer that lowers to the ground using an electric winch.
The so-called Kaleeya Calf Carrier has a clever, but simple, design where the wheels are attached to a U-shaped frame that only has two permanent attachment points at the rear of the trailer body.
During transport, the front of this is clamped to the drawbar, giving the trailer a normal ride height.
But for loading, the clamp is released and the winch is wound out, allowing the front of the U-shaped bar to rise and the rear of the trailer to drop slowly to the ground.
Mr Frampton has also fitted one-way gates so he doesnt have to fiddle around with latches and he opted for a mesh floor, which gives plenty of grip and makes it easy to keep clean.
He says the trailer is also handy for fencing work, as makes it easy to load heavy rolls of wire. Mr Frampton put the trailer together in his shed and had it galvanised to make it last longer.
To avoid using tractors and trailers to block openings when moving cattle, Keith Maxwell built a set of cattle guide gates to help funnel the animals to their destination.
The sets weigh about 150kg and have three gates in, with a single span measuring 3.9m long by 1.4m high.
These are self-standing, thanks to some big feet at the base, but Mr Maxwell admits they work better when slightly staggered for extra stability.
Based in East Lothian, Mr Maxwell has made six sets in total and all are galvanised before use. Helpfully, he can shift them around on the front of the telehandler and each set can be pinned to a neighbour to make some long runs.
The metal needed to build a set costs about 100 and then a further 90 for the galvanising. Mr Maxwell tends to make the gates in his spare time and reckons it takes less than four hours to manufacture a full set.
Wanting to spend less time bedding cow pens without spending vast sums on an extra tractor, Cumbrian farmer Ian Cleasby has mounted a sand spreading box on top of his cubicle scraper to combine the two jobs.
The Scrapenser holds enough sand to bed more than 100 cubicles and is the right width to be loaded by a skid-steer loader bucket.
Under the sand is a hydraulically driven toothed belt to propel the sand into the cubicles, and the belts speed can be adjusted via a control panel.
A clever hinged design brings the contents at the back of the box onto the belt at the front to make sure all the sand is spread.
Cows can then return to their cubicles quicker and it can be run on any tractor with a two-way spool valve with the belt able to discharge from both sides.
Mr Cleasby is starting to sell these commercially after the first idea way back in 2003. The retail price is 3,900.
Raking sand in cow cubicles was a two-hour job each day for Richard and David Pike while looking after their 350-strong herd in Gillingham, Dorset.
Then they had the idea popped to convert the old Terex dumper that was sat in the yard without a job into a cubicle leveller. They removed the body and attached a full-width cubicle rake to the front.
It works from the same hydraulic feeds as before, with the arm cobbled together from an old McConnel hedgecutter.
Once the farmers had realised it was a bit of a game changer, they treated the setup to some new bushes and beefed up the design a little. It took a few days to build and saves hours of raking a day and .
James Small was having issues with cattle turning around when waiting to go into the crush. After realising there was nothing on the market to suit his need for a self-adjusting cattle squeeze, he set about designing and building his own.
The self-adjusting side squeeze can accommodate any size of animal consecutively without the need for manual adjustment.
The sides are set narrow and as an animal walks in, the boarded sides move and apply only light pressure on the animal.
Once the cow walks through, the squeeze returns to its original size, ready for the next animal. The springs that apply the pressure are from Mr Smalls defunct childrens trampoline, and the whole build cost about 300, labour included.
He says it works with four-month-old calves, right up to the biggest bulls on the farm, set within the Mendip Hills, Somerset. Since it was built, he hasnt had any of the 250-strong herd attempt to turn around and Mr Small says it helps to keep them calmer before going in the crush.
In a bid to speed up the chopping of beet going into cattle and sheep feed, Oliver Uffold, who farms near Craven Arms, Shropshire, created an electric pulping machine.
The starting point for the build was an old GHL chaff cutter, which he cut up and spilt the chopping rotor in half. He then remounted the two halves with the blades meshing and rigged up the driveline so they rotate toward one another.
This means the beet can be tipped into the top of the machine with a wheelbarrow, before being finely chopped and falling through a hole he cut in the bottom.
Power is provided by an electric motor that sits in place of the old petrol engine, and drive is sent to the first rotor via a belt.
Drive to the second rotor comes from a sprocket at the opposing end of the first rotor and the chain passes over an idler gear to reverse the drive to the second one.
Finishing touches included fitting a remote greasing bank for the bearings and installing weld mesh guards to protect all moving parts.
An integrated ramp was also fashioned out of an old set of twisted John Deere combine steps, making it easier to bowl the wheelbarrow up to the hopper.
According to Mr Uffold, the machine is significantly faster than the Bamfords Root Pulper they used to use and the finer chop makes it easier to mix in with concentrate cattle and sheep feed.
Regular inventor Marcus Tucker came up with a portable sheep foot-bath to speed up the treatment due to their spread-out locations around the village of Talaton, Devon.
He is a strong believer that sheep should have regular foot-baths, so he made a 2.4m race to accommodate the bath he already owned.
A no-spill wooden cover was added so it can be transported without spillages and, when the sheep dont need foot treatment, the cover can be walked on. It raises the animals up by 250mm to an ideal height for drenching.
There is a small race section that has a guillotine gate on the exit and a swing gate on the entrance. Handily, the whole unit can be picked up by pallet forks and taken to wherever it is needed and there is space for a couple of 25-litre drums inside.
It took a couple of days to knock up and cost about 600, including labour. The whole frame was made out of hollow steel box section and has been galvanised to protect it.
Dairy farmer Philip Davies has developed his own automatic flood wash system to keep shed passages, the parlour and outside collecting yards clean for his 220-cow herd.
He first developed the system for his milking parlour 19 years ago, but the latest iteration has added automated functions to eliminate operator input.
The setup centres on an 18,000-litre tank, which he mounted on 3m-high stilts in the shed. A 12cm Mono water pump brims it with recycled water until it is tripped by a level sensor.
In work, a double-acting pneumatic cylinder powered by the parlours compressed air system and engaged by a 24V DC solenoid valve opens butterfly valves on a pair of 35cm pipes.
The plumbing system is gravity fed, so when the valves are opened, a tsunami runs through the two 60m-long walkways. The same system also produces a strong enough flow to clear the 12m-wide collecting yard.
Complete automation comes by way of a timer-based control. It has two settings the first determines the times between washes and the second dictates how long the valves are open for (typically 30secs).
Mr Davies says the system produces a far cleaner finish than a scraper tractor and its a massive time saver, too.
In all, it cost roughly 6,000 to assemble one-third of which went on the pump.
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Video: Time-saving feeding and bedding kit inventions - FarmersWeekly
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Is graphene the new oil? – ft.lk -
March 5, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Graphene is 200 times stronger than steel and harder than diamond. Its also flexible and transparent. Graphene is also the best heat and electricity conductor. As can be expected, the research community is very excited about this wonder material, and the business world follows suit
The Economist magazine published an article in 2017 about the new commodity that was fuelling a lucrative fast growing industry. It predicted the possible need of antitrust regulator stepping in to control the monopolising the said commodity, similar to US government intervention to restrain Rockefeller familys Standard Oil Company in 1800s. Since this publication by the magazine, the topic has generated much discussion and Data is new Oil became the common catchphrase in conferences, public speeches and magazine columnists.
The basis of The Economist argument was the massive wealth created by data companies during the last decade surpassing the wealth of rich oil companies. There were six energy giants in the 2016 list of top 10 companies in terms of market capitalisation. They were Exxon Mobil (US), Gazprom (Russia), Royal Dutch Shell (The Netherlands), British Petroliam (UK) and Petro China (China). But none of them were in the 2019 list. They were all replaced by digital new kids from US and China whose primary assets are digital intellectual property and data. Seven digital companies, namely Apple (US), Microsoft (US) , Amazon (US), Google (its parent company Alphabet/US), Facebook (US), Tencent (China), Alibaba (China) were occupying the slots and none of the oil companies made it to the top 10 list of 2019.
Replacement for oil
However, with the rise of electric vehicles and the decline of internal combustion engine for transportation, a question arises whether The Economist magazine got it right. By 2025, the electric battery will become the new oil barrel as the world drives to electrify its vehicles. Then a question arises whether the new oil is data or graphene?
It is a fact that fortunes of data is yet to unfold. Raw fossil fuel in the era of kerosene oil did not become the wonder commodity until the internal combustion engine was invented resulting the proliferation of mass land, sea and air transportation. Similarly data will create its augmented wealth when companies develop the real art of monetising the data for business use.
While data companies continue to create wealth, the electric vehicles era will create new wealthy nations and companies. And these new wealthy nations will be the countries rich in natural resources which would be used to fuel electric vehicles.
Growth of electric vehicles
Electric vehicle enthusiasts believe that the era of the internal combustion engine is over. That means era of oil is reaching the end of its life cycle similar to coal automation cycle ended in mid of nineteenth century. The winning electric technology will be the one that allows power units to store energy when the wind blows and the sun shines, while being able to release energy that can respond to the swings in demand. The only widespread and reliable technology at the moment is the lithium-ion battery which is being widely used from the thinnest smartphone to the heaviest electric bus.
The lithium-ion technology has been around for a decade and its mass production and use have made it significantly cheaper over time. It does, however, have its shortcomings, one of which is its inability to store energy for long periods.
On a global scale, electric vehicle sales have a recorded 63% year on year growth in 2018. Figures in 2019 that are yet to be released would be even impressive. Not only electric cars but an electric air craft which can fly more than 500km have already been tested successfully. More electric vehicles on the roads will not only mean cleaner air, but better health and longer life-expectancy.
Cobalt and batteries arms race
Cobalt is used to create the lithium-ion batteries required for electric vehicles and energy storage. The mineral is used to produce lithium-ion batteries used to power electric cars, laptops and smartphones. Critical to the construction of batteries, it has emerged as central to some of the industries set to determine the future. Roughly 10Kg of cobalt is needed to make an electric car.
The vast majority of the planets cobalt is located within the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) where a plethora of interested parties are engaged in a frantic contest for control over mining operations. DRC produces 60% of the worlds supply of cobalt. In 2009, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) had an estimated $24 trillion in untapped mineral deposits, including the worlds largest reserves of Coltan and significant quantities of the worlds cobalt. The United States Geological Survey estimates that the DRC has one million tons of lithium resources.
Mineral looting in DRC
After Rwanda, Uganda, and Burundis successful 1998 invasion of Eastern and South-eastern DRC in the second Congo war (1998-2003), mass scale looting took root, according to the United Nations. While initial invasion tactics were still being worked out, military commanders were already making business deals with foreign companies for Congos vast mineral reserves.
Between September 1998 and August 1999, stockpiles of minerals were illegally confiscated from Congolese businesses, piled onto trucks, and sold as exports from the confiscating countries. An American mineral field executive allowed rebels to use his private Lear jet in return for a $1 billion mining deal (source: Wikipedia).
The Western mining companies rush to acquire coltan-rich land in the rebel territory of the DRC was a classic continuation of the pattern of exploitation for gold and diamond in late 18th and early 19th centuries.
US lost the cobalt race
On the cobalt front, China controls seven of the largest DRC mines. Over the past decade, China has systematically set about creating and securing global supply lines in strategic raw materials, including securing its own forward supplies of key raw materials and battery-ready high-grade chemicals for its electric vehicle sector, at the expense of the rest of the world.
Emergence of the wonder material: Graphene
Early In 2004, Konstantin Novoselov and Andre Geim, two physicists at the University of Manchester discovered graphene. At just the width of an atom, graphene is the thinnest material known to humans, and also the strongest. Graphene is 200 times stronger than steel and harder than diamond. Its also flexible and transparent. Graphene is also the best heat and electricity conductor. As expected, the research community is very excited about this wonder material, and the business world follows suit.
Graphene for electric cars and mobile phones
Many experts predict that graphene will become a key raw material in electric vehicle batteries for the next decade. Both synthetic graphite and natural graphite, in the form of the intermediate product spherical graphite, are graphite products used in the anodes of lithium-ion batteries.
In a remarkable local development, Ceylon Graphene Technologies (CGT), a joint-venture between Sri Lanka Institute of Nano Technology (SLINTECH) and LOLC group recently announced about its plan to produce the worlds first graphene applied lead acid battery. Huawei has been tipped to release a smartphone with graphene-assisted batteries in the near future. The batteries are said to be able to charge fully in a matter of minutes and have an increased battery capacity and life.
The commercialisation of graphene is just in its infancy, but already dozens of new companies have been established to develop graphene based material, graphene production processes and other related activities. Several large and public companies (such as Samsung, Intel, Nokia, IBM and Sony) are involved in heavy graphene research. These companies may be on the forefront of graphene research, especially in high-end fields such as electronics and photonics.
Graphene in Sri Lanka
Like many other worlds bests, such as Ceylon Blue Sapphire, Ceylon Tea and Ceylon Cinnamon, Sri Lankas graphite is known to be one of the purest form of graphite on the planet with around 98% purity. It is sad to note that over a century, Sri Lanka has been exporting purest graphite in its raw form.
The Government recently 2020 announced the decision by the cabinet of ministers to approve a project for Kahatagaha Graphite Mine to develop value added graphite based products through private sector investments.
This is a great step for taking the country forward to prosperity through the wonder material graphite and its electric car powering era. Graphite mines were nationalised in the 70s by the United Front Government and Sri Lanka has the rights for the remaining graphite reserves which will be worth than oil in the era of electrics cars. However, out of our nationalised mines of Bogala, Kahatagaha and Kolongaha, Bogala graphite mine has been acquired by a foreign company.
That is an indication that the Graphene Rush had already begun in Sri Lanka more than a decade ago, as the German company GraphitKropfmuhl AG bought 90% ownership of Bogala graphite mine as way back as in 2005. It exports raw Ceylon graphite at a price less than $ 3 per kilogram and sell value added graphite in Germany at an estimated value of $ 2,000 per kilogram if not more.
Sri Lanka gearing up for the graphene era
The Mahinda Rajapaksa Government formed the Sri Lanka Institute of Nano Technology in 2012 as Public Private Partnership (PPP) which has been playing a pioneering role in graphene research, value addition and commercialisation in the country. Sri Lanka Institute of Nano Technology has private sector shareholders LOLC, Brandix, Dialog, Hayleys, Loadstar, Lankem Ceylon, and MAS Holdings. The first graphene and advanced material company in Sri Lanka, Ceylon Graphene Technologies was established in June 2018.
Gold deposits in Sri Lanka
In the meantime Professor Athula Senaratne, a renowned geologist and the former Vice Chancellor of University of Peradeniya recently announced the discovery of gold reserves in the Seruwila area.
How the West become rich
It is no secret how the West became rich and prosperous. In addition to many other reasons such as the innovations and inventions during the last three industrial revolutions, looting the rest of the world was one big factor. They conquered countries rich of natural assets to rob the wealth through military invasions and various conspiracies.
The West became rich and the countries which were the victims continue to be poor and people are imposed with engineered conflicts one after another as part of the continuous looting strategy.
The table shows the wealth worth billions of sterling pounds looted from only one goldmine in Witwatersrand, South Africa by the British during the Gold Rush within the very first decade of 20th century.
Right step forward
On the 27 last month the Government announced that it does not intend to sign the MCC agreement. The writer sees this as the right step towards safeguarding the precious natural resources of the country. Sri Lanka is rich of the purest form of graphite in the world and in a recent announcement, renowned geologist and academic Professor Athula Senaratne disclosed that Sri Lanka possesses a vast quantity of gold deposits. Land liberalisation under MCC would have weakened the control over sovereign land under which vast deposits of precious mineral deposits worth billions of dollars are lying underneath our sovereign land.
On 6 February Cabinet Spokesmen Minister Bandula Gunawardena and Ramesh Pathirana announced the decision by the Cabinet to approve a project for Kahatagaha Graphite Mine to develop value added Graphite based products through private sector investments. This is a great step for taking the country forward to prosperity during the wonder material graphene powered electric car era. It is said that President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, a technocrat backed by professional advisors has well understood tech priorities to deliver his vision for prosperity.
On the 10 February 2020 Ceylon Graphene Technologies (CGT), a joint-venture between the Sri Lanka Institute of Nano Technology (SLINTECH) and LOLC group announced its plan to produce the worlds first graphene applied lead acid battery. This will be done with the commissioning of CGTs latest plant to convert locally mined raw graphite to worlds purest Ceylon graphene.
These developments signal that country is in the right path to leverage precious natural assets to realise its development objectives. Sri Lanka should be smart enough to manage geo-political complexities and not to be another victim nation destroyed due its own valuable natural assets.
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The New Orleans Police Department has released photos of porch priracy throughout Uptown. Contact the Second District, 504-658-6020, with any information on the suspects below.
3200 block of Upperline (via NOPD)
NOPD officers are searching for a suspect a package theft in the 3200 block of Upperline Street.
On Feb. 21 around 2 p.m., the pictured man reportedly stole the victims package from the front porch of her residence.
He may be driving a 2007 silver Chrysler PT Cruiser, bearing Louisiana license plate 593CHV.
3600 block of Octavia Street (via NOPD)
The NOPD is also seeking assistance from the public to identify and locate the pictured subject who is wanted in connection with a package theft that occurred in the 3600 block of Octavia Street.
On Feb. 20 between 4:51 p.m. and 5:20 p.m., the pictured individual walked onto the victims front porch, stole two packages and fled the scene.
3200 block of Upperline Street (via NOPD)
Two subjects were involved in a theft incident that occurred on Feb. 20.
The pictured man and woman were captured on security cameras walking on the front porch of a home in the 3200 block of Upperline Street, and seen stealing packages.
2400 block of State Street (via NOPD)
Another package theft occurred on Feb. 19.
At about 6:30 p.m., the pictured man was seen on video surveillance walking onto the front porch of the victims residence in the 2400 block of State Street and stealing a package from the porch.
4500 block of South Tonti Street (via NOPD)
The NOPD also is seeking to locate and identify a suspect in the investigation of a package theft that occurred on Feb. 14.
At about 4:10 p.m., the above woman was seen walking onto the front porch of the victims residence in the 4500 block of South Tonti Street and taking a package containing two 810 picture frames and a pack of footie socks. The suspect then fled the scene on foot.
Anyone with information regarding identity and whereabouts of any of the above suspects is asked to contact Second District detectives at 504-658-6020. Citizens with information that can help solve a crime are asked to call Crimestoppers at 504-822-1111.
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Citing a shift to its brewing operations and ongoing construction on Market Street, Bills Front Porch has closed its doors. Its owners plan to convert the space into a taproom and event space. (Port City Daily photo/Mark Darrough)
WILMINGTON After a nearly four-year run on Market Street, Bills Front Porch has announced it will close and convert the building into a full-time taproom and event space for the companys growing brewing operations.
The brewpup part of a Bills campus that includes Captn Bills Backyard Grill, a large sand volleyball court complex, and a new brewing production facility announced the decision Tuesday morning on its Facebook page. A new taproom is expected to open inside the building on March 17.
Bills is a family-run business, owned by John Musser and his daughter Brookes Musser, whose husband Donnie Stone helps run the brewerys operations with head brewer Jim Deaton.
The decision was based on two years of construction on Market Street that hurt customers ability to reach the location, a shift towards beer production, and a desire to condense business operations.
We made this decision based on multiple factors, according to the Facebook announcement. One reason is due to the opening of our production facility and continuing to shift our focus to the beer side of the business. We also took a hit with the road construction that took place on Market Street. During the three-and-a-half years we were open, two of those years our customers had to work really hard to get into our parking lot to come eat with us, which over time took its toll.
The decision was also made to condense the companys operations to spend more time with a growing family, according to the post.
The building is now planned to be converted to a full-time taproom and event space called Bills Brewing Co. Taproom. Taproom customers will be able to order food from Captn Bills next door, which will now offer Bills famous fried chicken, tater tot skillets, the Pub-Fil-a and other favorites from the original Bills Front Porch menu, or they can bring their own food.
The new taproom will be open Tuesday-Thursday from 4 to 9 p.m., Friday from 4 to 10 p.m., Saturday from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The Mussers also plan to host special events in the taproom, including beer dinners with local vendors, pop-up food nights, and weekly specials and events.
They also announced that Bills Food Truck will continue to serve the Wilmington area.
We thank you all for the support youve shown us and continue to show us and we hope to see you on March 17th as we open the doors to Bills Brewing Co. Taproom, according to the post.
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"Perfection is the killer of business," says the physical therapist coach.
March4, 20207 min read
Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.
In this series called Member Showcase, we publish interviews with members of The Oracles. This interview is with Aaron LeBauer, PT, DPT, and owner and CEO of LeBauer Consulting, LLC, business education for physical therapists. It was condensed by The Oracles.
What was a defining moment early in your life?
Aaron LeBauer: I attended Duke University to go to medical school like my father, grandfather, and uncles. But when I sat down with my first night of chemistry homework, I was paralyzed. I stared at the first question, fighting the urge to quit for hours.
Finally, I broke down into tears, realizing that I didnt have the desire or commitment to become a physician. I didnt want to spend four hours on homework each night for the foreseeable future I wanted a life too. From that day forward, I knew that I was on a different path to help people. Theres more to life than studying in the library all day.
Share an interesting fact about yourself that not many people would know.
Aaron LeBauer:I lived in Israel for a year after college before moving across the country to San Francisco with my best friend. For six weeks, I slept on the porch couch that belonged to a friend of a friend until we found an apartment. It was during an El Nio, so it rained on me almost every night.
For about a year, I barely got by working as a temp and in restaurants, until I started dreaming about racing bicycles as I had in college. So, I became a bike messenger and loved every minute, even though I was making half of what my classmates earned in their management and banking jobs. I eventually focused on amateur racing full time and spent a summer racing in Europe alongside future Tour de France riders.
What was your biggest challenge starting in business? How did you overcome it?
Aaron LeBauer:I worked as a massage therapist for six years before earning my doctor of physical therapy degree. After seeing 43 patients in one day, I knew that I couldnt treat patients effectively with the insurance model. So, I opened my physical therapy clinic to treat patients as unique individuals, without influence from insurance companies, even though that meant we didnt accept insurance.
Other therapists said that this wouldnt work, and on top of that, we opened during the 2009 recession. But I believed that if people spent $85 on a massage, they would pay at least that much for physical therapy. I knew that patients needed my help, but they didnt realize that physical therapy was the solution. I learned to market directly to patients instead of physicians by adapting strategies from other industries.
How did your business get started?
Aaron LeBauer:I started my coaching and consulting business to help other physical therapists build clinics like mine. One day, I told my wife, Andra, I just gave so-and-so all the details about how I started my practice and they didnt even say thank you. She gave me the best advice: Dont give anything for free when you expect something in return.
The next day, another business owner insisted on paying me for my advice. That same day, I wrote down my consulting rates, created my blog, and started sharing answers to common questions I received. Within a month, I was invited to speak at a major physical therapy conference. Thats when I knew I had hit on something special.
Whats your favorite quote?
Aaron LeBauer:My favorite quote is by the great hockey player, Wayne Gretzky: You miss 100% of the shots you dont take. After I briefly consider my options, I just shoot. If you dont take a chance, youre never going to score.
I work with highly educated entrepreneurs who have been taught that if youre going to do something, it has to be perfect but perfection is the killer of business. If you listen to your fear of imperfection and failure, youll never even put the ball in play. You can only make an impact by taking the shot.
Whats the biggest common leadership mistake?
Aaron LeBauer:There is no better way to make someone feel small and unimportant than micromanaging their every move and decision. I hated being told what to do and when, which kept me from excelling as an employee.
Ive found that the best way to lead is by empowering employees to make decisions and show up with solutions. If you micromanage, theyre only going to come to you with problems, which takes away your time and energy from growing your business.
How do you evaluate a good business deal?
Aaron LeBauer:By watching the market and researching. I need to truly understand the product, as well as the value and day-to-day results it delivers. I also must be willing to walk away, because as soon as I turn to walk away, the deal gets better. But if I approach it thinking, I must have this, Im a passenger on the emotional roller coaster and not in the drivers seat.
How do you prevent burnout?
Aaron LeBauer:By focusing on what I do best and enjoy most. I try to spend my days focused on what I would do for free. If something irritates me, gets tedious or boring, or creates anxiety, I delegate it to someone who enjoys it. If I can focus 70% to 80% of my time on what fills me up and lights my fire, burnout doesnt have a chance.
What are you working on right now?
Aaron LeBauer:Im growing my clinic and coaching business to help 25,000 people locally and 100 million worldwide to avoid unnecessary surgery. I can only treat so many patients myself, so Im helping other physical therapists build successful businesses.
Im also redefining retirement by doing what I love from anywhere I want and creating more time for my family and kids, who are 8 and 10 years old. Last year, I spent 81 days out of the office with them. This year, I hope to at least match that.
What do you want to be known for, or what do you want your legacy to be?
Aaron LeBauer:I want to be known as an amazing, present husband and father who worked relentlessly to save people from unnecessary surgery. I want to change the culture of the health and wellness industry in the U.S. and help people understand that they need to see their physical therapist first when they are injured or in pain to help them see their bodies as strong, competent, and capable, not harmful, threatening, or broken down.
Follow Aaron LeBauer on Instagram or visit his website.
The words and opinions expressed in this interview are those of the interviewee alone. What worked for them may not work for everyone. Any claims in this article have not been independently verified.
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How Aaron LeBauer Went From Sleeping on a Porch in the Rain to Changing the Healthcare Industry - Entrepreneur
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NEPTUNE CITY - Animal control officers rescued eight dogs, some of them puppies, who were left outside infilthy conditions in the freezing coldearly Saturday morning, officials said.
After midnight on Saturday the law enforcement division of the Monmouth County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals responded to a call originally made to the Neptune City Police Department about excessive barking in an apartment complex, the Monmouth County SPCA said in a statement.
One of the dogs rescued from freezing and deplorable conditions outside a Neptune City apartment Feb. 29.(Photo: From Monmouth County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals)
Officers found eight dogs"stuffed together in small crates, and living outside on a freezing cold porch with only a plastic tarp to protect them fromthe elements," according to the statement.
The dogs were living in their own urine and feces and didn't have access to food, water or any source of heat, the SPCA said. Temperatures fell below freezing early Saturday and the dogs were trembling from the cold at the time they were rescued, officials said.
Animal control officers gave the dogs water and food at the scene, which they "drank and ate ravenously," according to the statement. The pooches were brought to the SPCA shelter in Eatontown and were given blankets and a warm place to sleep.
A medical assessment found that the dogs all had intestinal parasites, overgrown nails, skin sores and some had ear and skin infections.One adult dog was covered in scars and wounds, the SPCA said.
SPCA: Adoptions, vet clinic open again after flu quarantine
MORE: Dogs from quake-riddled Puerto Rico seek New Jersey homes
The statement did not say whether anyone had been charged in connection with the rescue, although officials did say the matter will be resolved "in court." The SPCA did not immediately return a request for more information.
The rescued dogs will remain in the Eatontown shelter until the case is resolved, but may eventually be eligible for adoption, officials said. The Monmouth SPCA launched a fundraising campaignMonday to care for the dogs.
New Jersey 101.5 shared news about a recent bill introduced into the NJ State Assembly that would allow abused dogs and cats the right to an attorney. Asbury Park Press
Looking for the trusted place to find the best home service providers? Find local pros.
Andrew Goudsward covers crime and breaking news. Contact him at agoudsward@gannettnj.com; 732-897-4555 or@AGoudsward on Twitter.
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ALACHUA COUNTY, Fla. (WCJB) -- A porch pirate was arrested in Gainesville Sunday after deputies said someone recognized him from footage released on social media.
According to the arrest report, Ryan Lindemann, 24, was seen at the Oakmont neighborhood on Saturday stealing packages.
A Ring doorbell video showed a man wearing a Pentatonix shirt and pulling up in front of a house and taking packages.
ASO was called to a Publix on Sunday after someone recognized Lindemann wearing the same clothes. A deputy approached Lindemann and showed him the ring doorbell footage. Lindemann said, well, there's no denying that's me."
Deputies searched his car and found the stolen packages. He also admitted to stealing multiple packages before and selling them to make money after he dropped out of college.
Lindemann was charged with burglary and larceny. He was booked at the Alachua County Jail with bond set at $12,000.
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"Well, there's no denying that's me." Porch pirate confesses to crime caught on camera - WCJB
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