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  • The traditional foliage trimming for the season might not be too common in our region, but there are holly varieties that can succeed on the High Plains!
  • This week, Luke recaps a recent striper fishing trip on Lake Texoma with his friends Bill Carey and Bill's son Chris with Striper Express www.striperexpress.com .
  • The holidays always take me back to a time with family, so today we'll wander back to the memories I have of visits with my dad, planting and growing in our very own garden.
  • For his Christmas show, Luke talks about a recent deer hunt out in West Texas with great friends Bryan Davis, Larry Weishuhn, Jeff Rice and Scott Campbell.
  • I’ve been thinking about libraries. Even some of the tiniest of towns on the high plains have them. Those libraries may be located in back rooms of city offices, converted church basements, defunct stores, or even former homes. No matter how humble the venue, these places can serve a variety of community purposes.
  • Living in Texas where there is lots of free ranging wild pork, Luke has talked and written a lot about just how tasty wild pork can be. But he devotes this show to a skillet method of preparing venison backstrap. Well, click and listen to the show. I'm betting this just might fire you up enough to brave the late season cold weather and stock your own freezer with tasty venison.
  • This week on Growing on the High Plains, tune in for part two of our deep dig on the splendid amaryllis.
  • Out of France and into Switzerland we drove. The mountain villages in the Alps were deserted in mid-June. The ski season had just ended and the white water rafting and mountain biking seasons had not quite begun.
  • Luke and his longtime friend Bill Carey with Striper Express www.striperexpress.com give an account of what's happening now and, what to expect as Fall progresses.
  • Hello, Radio Readers! I’m Jane Holwerda from Dodge City KS. We’ve been talking about Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. This 19th century American novel is the second in our Fall Book Read: “Rivers and Meandering Meanings.” Set loosely before the Civil War, the central characters are Huckleberry Finn, an11-yr old orphan from what we might call the wrong side of the tracks, and a 30-something fugitive slave. Together, Huck and Jim attempt to flee the laws and mores that restrain them by rafting the Mississippi River.
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