February 9, 2012

Camping reservations fill up early on DNR site

The snow is gone, the grass is getting greener, and Iowans are apparently anxious to get into the great outdoors. Iowa Department of Natural Resources State Parks Bureau chief, Kevin Szcodronski, says that’s pretty evident in the on-line campground registrations.

Szcodronski says the system lets you make reservations up to three months in advance, and the Memorial Day sites are all booked up.

The reservations for the Fourth of July just opened up and he says the same thing is happening. Szcodronski says half of the sites are made available through the on-line reservation system, so there is still hope you can get a place. But he says you’ll have to plan ahead.

He says if you don’t get a reserved site, you still have a chance to get one of the remaining “first-come, first served” sites.

Szcodronski says people have learned to get to the parks as early as the Tuesday before a holiday and his advice is to forget about trying to pull up the night before a big weekend to get a spot. Szcodronski says on-line reservations have been brisk since the system started.

Szcodronski says the major holiday weekends have always gone quickly, and he says the overall camping numbers have been up. Szcodronski says camping has become an activity that’s allowing people to forget their cares. He says people who are hard pressed and have lost their jobs look at the parks as a way to get away and relieve stress. Szcodronski says with no entrance fees, the parks are somewhere people can go and do something pretty inexpensively.

To see cabins, campsites or to check for their availability go to: www.iowadnr.gov, and click on the green “Online Campground Reservations” button on the right side.

Pastor gives last sermon before deploying with the Iowa National Guard

Tomorrow will be the last Sunday the congregations of two central Iowa churches will hear a sermon from their regular pastor for a while. Reverend Mike Willer is the minister to both Faith United Methodist Church in Webster City and the Kamrar United Methodist Church, but he’s also in the Iowa National Guard.

Willer says he’ll be spending a couple of months at his battalion headquarters in Waterloo for the 133rd Infantry. They’re preparing for a possible deployment and he’s going to be assembling the unit’s ministry team. Willer says the future is still a bit uncertain.

The unit’s members have been told they may deploy in late summer or early fall. The destination is likely Afghanistan and it would be for a full year. Willer says his job, when and if he goes overseas, will be much the same, just in a dramatically different location.

“It’s a congregation in of itself,” he says. “My battalion is made up of about 750 soldiers and during the deployment, my job is to be the pastor to them and take care of their spiritual needs.” That would include everything from offering the troops counseling to officiating weekly worship services.

By Pat Powers, KQWC, Webster City

Women skaters mix it up in roller derby

A contact sport involving women skaters, first developed in the 1930s, is making a comeback across the country and here in Iowa. There are now more than 500 organized roller derby teams in the U.S., including eight in Iowa. Women who join the teams say they enjoy the competition and entertaining the audience with outrageous outfits and nicknames like Elbow MacFearson and Hot Whips Houlihan.

They also take pride in the physicality of the sport. Lacy Brunnette, who is part of the Des Moines Derby Dames, was knocked to the floor during a recent practice session inside Des Moines’ Val-Air Ballroom. “I was skating around this corner here and I went airborne and apparently my head went back, I arched my back, then I belly-flopped into the floor and blacked out for like three seconds,” Brunnette explained. “I’m fine, but no more scrimmaging for the rest of the week ’til the bout.”

That first bout for the Des Moines Derby Dames came last Saturday in Iowa City. Lisa Edwards watched as the Derby Dames warmed up to play her team – the Old Capitol City Roller Girls. “The only way they can learn is if they get knocked down,” Edwards said. “They look good, their jerseys…they look nice. I haven’t watched them skate too much yet.”

The sport is dangerous and looks something like a football game on wheels. During the bout, the coach of the Derby Dames was carted off with a serious knee injury. The Old Capitol City Roller Girls dominated the bout, winning 192 to 81. Points are scored when a team’s “jammer” – skating around the circular rink – laps one of four opposing team members. Despite the loss, Lacy Brunnette said the punching, shoving and name-calling’s all in good fun.

“You know, you’re hitting these girls and competing against them, but I wouldn’t say there wasn’t any (joking) around,” Brunnette said. “I know the batter-up taunted me in the middle of the pack with a smile and said ‘are you going to hit me?’ I gave it a good attempt.” The Des Moines Derby Dames  make their home debut tonight (Saturday) when they host a team from Wisconsin at the Val-Air Ballroom. Some of their future opponents include the Quad City Rollers, the Omaha Rollers and the Muddy River Nightmares from Clinton.