 Journey to Joe Sterich number 61 Joe Toddlin, we take your deck round number 64 Kohler High Schooler tonight KLC post random lake and conference action hello everybody I'm Chris Wright the coach Mike Martin is down in Florida with his family in Disney World so I decided to get my son Tommy Wright to join me tonight Tom thanks for joining us tonight Tom why don't you tell us a little bit about yourself before we have the game my name is Tommy Wright, I just graduated from Oshkosh I play football here at Sheboyga and I know the teams well and I'm excited for the time here alright Tom thanks for everything I know that tonight Kohler comes in at 4 and 4 random lake at 1 and 3 I know you played on some pretty tough teams at north that struggled a little bit what do you do when your kids motivated and what did you guys do as a player when things weren't going so well well someone coached the blockies guys stay up and keep the team together keep it unified even if it's not building for this week or the next week yeah plenty of weeks left in the year to keep going and in the future keep them all together hey you don't want to lose anything that's a big thing and it's always tough we're at the halfway point of the season KLC they've already played three of the top four teams in a league which is really a tough thing for them so maybe the lighter teams are better this is the 2018 like random lake yeah today is good for today now we have Ryan Knight and everyone is ready to go now they got a senior quarterback you talked about it last night you got a pretty young squad here what does the seniors, the 11 seniors do for the younger guys to get them into that winning attitude explain the plays as they happen right after the play happened talk about what they saw what happened what did you see and then next time because coaches like to stick to the plays that work that's something that you're going to see next time next time you're going to see the next time on a pass away or on a play try some different tell them what they saw I think one of the things that tonight is good obviously the playing a team that's not as good you got to take care of the football even key football taking care of the ball not can you spot can you spot they could be dangerous I think we should quite be on the pitch they need you and the visitors from random lake fuller high school in the WIA require good sportsmanship by student-athletes coaches and spectators and education-based inter-scholastic events sportsmanship are expected and thank you very much the officials for tonight's game Larry McCann back-judge Jerry Stylen, line-judge John Maseeloff, head-linesman Michael Bacchus, umpire and the crew chief and referee this evening Bill Bacchus they've been assigned by the Big East conference so welcome gentlemen thank you for being here middle school student grant Cassidy they said a bottle was just a bottle that no one would ever notice me but I knew I could be more that one day I would make people smile oh sweetheart nothing said I got it okay I'm gonna go fix the lamp in your room you don't have to be perfect to be a perfect parent there are thousands of children in foster care who will take you quick update on baseball again Dodgers of 1-0 on the Cardinals and an interesting twist of events you make me wear my bike helmet taught me never to run with scissors and to follow the swimming rules you tell me to stay away from drugs to always buckle my seat belt so why do you keep a loaded gun in your drawer how safe is that you ask them to follow some safety rules now they're asking you in fact they're counting on you never let your gun get into the wrong hands remember always lock it up visit ncpc.org traditional light bulbs actually generate nine times more heat than light switch to energy start light bulbs and you'll realize just how much cash you were really burning through saving energy saves you money learn more at energisavers.gov got a corner? okay hi my name is Tim Bull I'm a ISA certified arborist with the city of Sheboygan I've been working here about a year one of the primary focuses of my job is to treat the ash trees the emerald ash borer is an insect that's been in Wisconsin for over 10 years and it's working its way kind of north from southern Wisconsin it's been found in Sheboygan for a few years now it's been around and the focus is for the city to try to save the ash trees before they all die there's about 5,000 ash trees on the street between the street and the sidewalk and just to give you a sense there's about 20 to 23,000 trees between the street and the sidewalk so 5,000 of those are ash trees so it's important for the city to not let all those trees die at the same time so the emerald ash borer is an insect where it gets in the tree it lays eggs the eggs hatch and burrow under the bark and they basically suffocate the tree as they feed now it takes a number of years before you'll see an effect from the insect but the important thing is when you're trying to save an ash tree is to treat it with an insecticide before you see the tree declining because by the time you see the effects that the tree is dying it could be too late sometimes it's not too late but many times the damage that's done is already done and can't be repaired so it's more of a preventative measure that we're doing and I've been treating ash trees for about six years now I've seen it work I've seen where I've treated a tree I came back two years later treated the same tree again and the tree was still healthy but maybe the neighbor's trees that were untreated were almost dead so I believe in it and research backs it up it's supposed to be over 96% effective as far as the city's plan their plan is to treat half the ash trees and remove half the ash trees because it's expensive either way you want to look at it if you want to remove them all it's a huge expense if you want to treat them all it's very expensive so a kind of compromise is to try to save half remove half over a three year period so this year 2017 I've treated between 1,100 and 1,200 ash trees to date and over the next year and over the next two years we'll get to that 2,500 mark where we've potentially saved half the trees now the city's doing a three year treatment process where every three years we'll have to retreat if we want the tree to continue to survive and right now the insecticide that we're using the active ingredient is M.emectin benzoate there's a number of different products that contain that it's able for two years where every two years you should retreat but a lot of research is saying you can get at least three years out of it so that's why the city's gone with the three year plan well first of all the process of picking which trees to save and which trees not to save stems from is the tree in a good location to begin with so if we're only going to save half the ash trees we want to save the ones that are in a good spot versus the ones that are not an ideal spot so we look for medians, grass areas between the road and the sidewalk that are at least six feet wide this one here that we're in is probably more like eight feet and we want to look for spots where there's no overhead power lines that the tree's growing into or if the tree's really buckling up the sidewalk or something like that maybe that's not an ideal tree to save so once we determine which trees we want to save the process is pretty simple we drill into the tree with a small about a little smaller than a pencil size hole and a tree will take anywhere from four holes to I had one this year that I had ten holes in so average I would say six or seven drills about an inch under the bark and then those holes get filled up you put up an injection tee in each one of those holes so it's all sealed and each one of those tees is connected with a small hose which all stems back to a bottle which has the insecticide in it now the tree, the amount of insecticide that's used depends on the tree size so the rate the city uses is a five milliliters per diameter inch of the tree now diameter is measured at breast height four and a half feet above ground so this tree here is 18 inches in diameter so 18 times five is 90 milliliters that this tree requires so as we're going down a street I have a guy helping me he measures them he records what's going to be used he records the address where the tree is and I get to the tree and I get to work drilling, setting it up measuring the chemical that's going in and once I get it all set it's just a matter of pressurizing the container, the bottle with the insecticide to get that insecticide to the tree and really it's just a bike pump that I'm using to pressurize and I give it about 30 pounds of pressure and that'll get the insecticide to the tree and it's up to the tree to take it in so every tree is different some trees take it right in some trees are a little slower sometimes you don't get that uptake the tree just refuses to suck anything up so then that's a sure sign that the tree is too far gone and there's no point in trying to save that tree so once I have it all set up and pressurized it's up to the tree to take it in and really I could increase the pressure to 40 pounds even 50 pounds but it isn't going to make a difference how fast the tree takes it in really the pressure is just getting the chemical to the tree and once the hoses are all clear so you can see the chemical is blue you can see it going in and once those lines are all emptied out then you can undo the pressure and unhook the tree and that's all that needs to be done when we leave a tree that we've treated we got a can of blue spray paint we put a dot on the street side of the tree roughly 2-3 feet off the ground and that is a symbol that we've treated that ash tree that we plan on saving that ash tree we'll also put a pesticide sign down that says keep off pesticide that's something that needs to be done it's required by the pesticide regulations for the state so those signs will leave for a day and we'll pick them up the next day but the blue dot will stay so we'll always know that tree was treated in 2017 as far as danger to people walking by or anything like that with the pesticide that we're using the word is caution on the label of this insecticide which is the lowest toxicity really it's not much to worry about since it's all going right into the tree itself there's nothing going to be on the grass or in the air or anything really to worry about as far as that goes as soon as I leave the tree and the blue dot will stay there but nothing else will be there that tree is safe to be around ice cream, please mom, please no, we're having dinner soon you don't have to be perfect to be a perfect parent there are thousands of children in foster care who will take you just... kids who play outdoors have healthier lungs totally did you know that boys that play with dolls make better husbands? my 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I did, it was totally true did you guys know statistically friendly kids have more friends? that's obvious did you know most people think they're using the right car seat for their kid but they're not? parents who really know it all know for sure that their child is in the right seat visit safercar.gov slash the right seat to make sure your child there's one thing you can never have sex without it's not something you buy or something you take in fact there's only one way to get it it has to be given to you freely it's consent because sex without it isn't sex it's rape consent if you don't get it you don't get it it's on us to stop sexual assault learn how and take the pledge at it'sonus.org everybody has a dream to see the ocean what the neighbors think even still you don't have to be perfect to be a perfect parent there are thousands of teens in foster care who don't need perfection