MFM Update September 11, 2007
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The estimated time until the DVDs are complete is three weeks. They will be available on the LFUR website when they are. New news postings will be coming up soon. Keep checking back with us!
-Siku
Zoo- Grizzly Escapes August 17, 2007
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It’s not a grizzly and it’s not 700 pounds — but it is still on the loose.
That’s according to police in Ontario, Canada, who first described a bear that escaped from a zoo as a grizzly weighing 700 pounds.
Police near Fort Erie, Ontario now say the animal is a 300-pound Syrian brown bear that goes by the name Willy.
They say the bear escaped late last night from the Zooz Nature Park in Stevensville, a rural area a few miles across the border from Buffalo, New York.
Police have closed off some streets in Stevensville and a helicopter from the sheriff’s department in Niagara County, New York is being used in the search for the animal .
One police official says today isn’t the day to be “lounging in the back yard.”
(Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Heatwave July 7, 2007
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HELENA, Mont. – If a record-breaking heat wave doesn’t lift soon, cattle rancher Sharon McDonald may see her hay crop turn to dust.
Oppressive temperatures eased a bit in some parts of the West, but McDonald’s central Montana ranch baked under triple-digit heat. Forecasters reported little relief in the days ahead, saying the weather system that brought the high temperatures could last well into next week.
In Montana, where cattle outnumber residents by more than 2 to 1, livestock and people sought shade and drought-weary farmers watched for damage to grain.
“We are trying to get our hay up before it disintegrates,” said McDonald, a rancher near Melville. “It just gets crispy and just falls apart.”
Warnings of excessive heat were posted Friday for much of Idaho, Nevada, Utah, Oregon and Washington state.
Air conditioners — and even swamp coolers — were predictably hot sellers at the hardware store.
“I’m telling you, it has been nuts,” said Dennis VanDyke, a manager at Power Townsend in Helena. “The only thing I am getting calls for is air conditioners.”
VanDyke said some people prefer swamp coolers, which use a fan and the condensation of water to cool the air, over the more power-hungry air conditioning units.
“They are being bought faster than we can put them on the shelves,” he said.
Records set:
In Montana, temperatures above 100 are usually not seen until August. The normal July high in Helena is 83 degrees — not the 105 expected Friday.
By midday, records were already set or tied in the Montana cities of Cut Bank, Great Falls, Havre, and Bozeman.
The Montana Department of Transportation said it was putting maintenance crews to work early in the morning so they could finish by midday.
In Boise, where it was headed well above 100 degrees Friday, some found it was too hot to play at a public water fountain.
“We’ll probably leave soon. Two or three o’clock is about my limit before I want to get in some air conditioning,” mother Monica Player said as children ran through jets of water.
Temperatures were expected to ease slightly in Southern California. Phoenix saw a modest drop, a relatively cooler 111 degrees compared to 115 Thursday. With the approach of Arizona’s summer rainy season, humidity levels have started climbing along with power demand.
Heat remained an issue along the border. The bodies of six suspected illegal immigrants have been found since Monday in southern Arizona deserts, all likely victims of heat illness while trying to walk into the U.S. from Mexico. The toll, while high, is not unusual during hot spells in the region.
(C) AP NewsSource