2010 High School State Trap Shoot Championships Posted: June 15, 2010
It's the state championships. You step up to the line, take a deep breath and concentrate. It's good advice as you cradle the ball for that last second foul shot in basketball... or position your shotgun during the final round shootoff on the trap shooting range.
More than 500 Iowa high schoolers took their best shots this month at the 2010 state high school trapshooting championships, near Cedar Falls. "In the last three years, we've been growing about 100 competitors a year," notes Ben Berka, shooting sports coordinator with the Department of Natural Resources. "We see a 'cluster' effect. One school starts; then another wants it."
The state finals are the culmination of a two-month competitive program, which saw 130 different matches across Iowa. Each fielded from 20 to 250 young shooters. Results are displayed online, so every shooter knows who to beat, when he-or she-gets to state. This year, more than 70 girls toed the 16 and 19 yard shooting lines at state. They joined about 465 boys at the nearly mile-long trap range, north of Cedar Falls.
New Hampton won the team title, in a shootoff over Maquoketa, after each team finished with 472 broken clays, out of 500 thrown. Osage was third (458), with Nashua (454), Northwood Kensett (453) and Mason City Red (449) breaking into the top six, among the 92 competing teams. Some schools sent more than one five-member team to the meet.
In the individual boys competition, Cody Mercer (Charles City) took the shootoff over Samuel Beaver (St. Ansgar), after each had knocked down 99 of 100 in the four regular rounds. Right behind them were Nick Arthur (Lynnville-Sully), Bryce Haines (Iowa City West), Robbie Marzoff (New Hampton) and Jaycob Clark (Maquoketa). Each broke 98 clays, with a shootoff settling the final order.
Girls compete with the guys in the team competition, but are recognized separately in the individual honors. Calleen Anderson (Ogden) broke 88 clays, to edge Kayci Klobassa (Osage) for top honors. Following them were Jade Johnson (Mason City), KJ King (Waterloo West), Ruth Kiela (Nashua-Plainfield) and Megan Meissen (New Hampton), whose 83s had to be sorted out through a shootoff as well.
The day prior to the High School Championships, high schoolers and middle school shooters competed in the Scholastic Clay Target Program meet. That, along with the high school meet results and the season-long league finishes produces the Iowa Team Cup winner; won for the second year in a row by Maquoketa High School.
Most schools in the competition offer the trap shooting opportunities as a club or school activity. Also available in Iowa are sporting clays, skeet and archery. "It teaches shooting in a safe manner. Boys and girls compete equally," notes Berka. "Coaches and school officials tell us it catches a lot of kids who maybe aren't participating in other activities."
And in an increasingly urban society, the shooting sports offer a venue to the outdoors. "Coaches are familiar with safe shooting. Many are hunters," says Berka. "It offers avenues to hunting and conservation to any one who wants to pursue them."
More information on the shooting sports, including shotgun coaching certification for adults is available at Here.
MORAVIA, Iowa - The annual spring walleye egg collection at Lake Rathbun ended two weeks ago and the conditions could not have been better. Fisheries crews with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources collected adult walleyes for nine nights to supply the hatchery with enough eggs to produce 51 million walleye fry.
The bulk of those adult walleyes can be traced to the 2006 year class. Walleyes are an important resource at Lake Rathbun and their popularity continues to grow.
"While we caught a lot of fish, this 2006 year class could be so much larger," said Mark Flammang, fisheries biologist for the DNR at Lake Rathbun. "Our walleye population is down, but the weather was perfect and that attracted a lot of fish to the dam."
Walleyes have not always been as prominent in the lake as they are today. In the 1980s, the population crashed. A major effort to increase walleye survival in the 1990s re-established the population and the lake began its run as a major player in the Midwest walleye fishing world.
Then, the 2000s brought four years of flooding that knocked the walleye population back down. Read the rest...
CRESTON, Iowa - Introductions will most likely be necessary to reacquaint the frequent campers and anglers with the all new Green Valley State Park after the park and lake emerge from a 20-month-long facelift, later this spring.
"In the campground, we left the trees, but basically started over," said Jim Lawson, supervisor for Iowa State Parks whose district covers Green Valley. "There won't be much resemblance to the old park."
The facelift included adding full hook-up sites, removing a number of campsites to increase the size of each site, redesigning all the camping pads, a new electrical system upgrading from 30 amps to 50 amps, and each site will have a new picnic tables and fire grills. The campground will have a new shower building installed this spring. New pit latrines were added at the campground, the cabins and the north picnic area. A third camping cabin was built.
Green Valley will also have a new playground that was donated in part, by the family of Greg Haley, who was the park manager when he passed away in January 2009. It was built by volunteers.
By Orlan Love, Steve Gravelle and Kaj O'Mara By KCRG Intern
Story Created: Feb 19, 2010 at 9:07 AM CST
Story Updated: Feb 19, 2010 at 10:14 PM CST CEDAR RAPIDS - The risk of the Cedar River flooding here this spring has increased dramatically in the past three weeks, according to a flood forecast released Friday by the National Weather Service.
Three weeks ago the service pegged the spring flood risk at Cedar Rapids at 33 percent greater than normal. The comparable figure Friday is 69 percent.
The liquid content of the snowpack and elevated river and soil moisture levels are the chief factors contributing to the increased risk of spring flooding, the Weather Service said.