The Delaware Gazette

Steve Hartzler

Steve Hart­zler, 65, died Thurs­day (May 31, 2012) at his home on South Galena Road after an extended illness.

Record-setting NM fire spreading in all directions

RESERVE, N.M. — A mas­sive wild­fire in the New Mex­ico wilder­ness that already is the largest in state his­tory spread in all direc­tions Thurs­day, and experts say it’s likely a pre­view of things to come as states across the West con­tend with a dan­ger­ous recipe of wind, low humid­ity and tinder-dry fuels.

Off-the-charts pollen spreads allergy misery

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Allergy sea­son has come early and hit with a wheez­ing vengeance in parts of the South and Mid­west this year, thanks largely to an unusu­ally warm win­ter. Abun­dant pollen is caus­ing watery eyes, snif­fles and sneezing.

Tornadoes in Southeast kill 6, flatten houses

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LEXINGTON, N.C. — A day after deadly tor­na­does struck the South­east, sur­vivors looked for what they could sal­vage, hud­dled in loved ones’ hos­pi­tal rooms and shared sto­ries of how they made it through the furi­ous storms.

2 million ordered to leave as Irene takes aim

MOREHEAD CITY, N.C. — Whip­ping up trou­ble before ever reach­ing land, Hur­ri­cane Irene zeroed in Fri­day for a cat­a­strophic run up the East­ern Seaboard. More than 2 mil­lion peo­ple were told to move to safer places, and New York City ordered the nation’s biggest sub­way sys­tem shut down for the first time because of a nat­ural disaster.

Baked Apple: Heat wave hits urban northeast

NEW YORK (AP) — The urban North­east baked like a potato wrapped in foil Fri­day as record-breaking, 100-degree tem­per­a­tures and steam­bath humid­ity com­bined with the heat-trapping effects of asphalt and con­crete to make mil­lions of peo­ple miserable.

Estimating corn yields

I was on our weekly agron­omy con­fer­ence call Mon­day morn­ing and Jim Noel, NOAA mete­o­rol­o­gist, told us that weather fore­cast­ers are call­ing for a shift in the weather from wet­ter than aver­age like we had this spring and early sum­mer, to drier than aver­age. That after­noon we got 1.5 inches of rain in Ostran­der. It was a lit­tle funny at the time, but as I drive around the county and the state there is no doubt that a drier weather pat­tern did kick in around late June. Noel says that fore­cast­ers are pre­dict­ing that this type of weather pat­tern will likely con­tinue into August as well. Fore­cast­ers are not pre­dict­ing a drought but are say­ing that the rain­fall will aver­age at or below normal.

Wildfire becomes 2nd largest in Ariz. history

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SPRINGERVILLE, Ariz. — A fero­cious wild­fire that has dri­ven thou­sands from their homes in east­ern Ari­zona grew to 486 square miles Tues­day and set its sights on the biggest tar­get yet — two of the most pop­u­lous towns in the fire-scarred mountains.

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