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Fresh flowers add 'life, color and happiness to our living spaces'

Last week I gave you some tips for keeping holiday blooming plants happy. This week I want to talk about fresh flowers and flower arrangements.
Fresh flowers have their own unique way of adding life, color and happiness to our living spaces. Handing your host a wrapped bunch of fresh flowers will nearly always bring an appreciative smile.
So if that recipient is you, here’s where what you do will make a big difference in the life expectancy of those flowers.
Start with a clean vase. When flower stems are submerged in water in a vase, deterioration happens. You don’t need to like it, but that is nature’s process.
As the deterioration progresses, bacteria forms, and that bacteria will clog the pores in the stems where water should flow, virtually shutting off the water supply and resulting in wilted flowers.
The bacteria also clings to the inside of the vase, and unless you clean the vase after using it, that bacteria starts doing its thing immediately the next time it comes in contact with water.
If the dishwasher didn’t/can’t clean the vase, a 10-percent bleach solution sloshed inside will. Rinse with clean water and you’re ready to go.
Next step is adding preservative to the water as you fill the vase. That preservative will not only feed the flowers but will also slow the development of bacteria.
Then you need to re-cut the stems. When the stem is removed from water, as it dries, it forms a callous on the cut end. That’s another natural process for the flower stem to try to retain what moisture it has. Re-cutting the stem removes that callous and allows intake of the water/preservative solution.
Cutting the stem on an angle gives a larger surface for water absorption and keeps the stem from sitting flat on the bottom of the vase.
Remove any foliage that would be submerged in the water – again the bacteria issue – and arrange the flowers as you like. Place the vase in an area away from direct sunlight and any heat source. Add water as you notice the water level dropping, but changing the water in the vase eliminates the preservative that you started with.
For flower arrangements arranged in floral foam in a container, all you have to do is be sure to add water … at least every other day! The size of the block of foam in relation to the size of the container determines how much of a reservoir for water is available.
The only way you have to determine the water level is to try to stick your finger between the wall of the container and the foam. If the foam dries out, the flowers are finished.
I see stores offering arrangements of Christmas greens stuffed in holiday-themed containers with little if any water reservoir. Making sure water is always available to keep that foam saturated will ensure that this type of arrangement will last for several weeks. … The alternative is a couple of days. 

Jack Boomgaarden

Jack Alan Boomgaarden, 63, rural Magnolia, died peacefully in his home Thursday, Dec. 9, 2021.
A funeral service was Monday, Dec. 13, at Rock County Sportsman’s Club in Luverne. Burial followed at Maplewood Cemetery in Luverne. Memorials may be directed to the Rock County Sportsman’s Club.
Jack Boomgaarden was born on April 3, 1958, to Alvin and Elaine (Arp) Boomgaarden at the Luverne Community Hospital in Luverne. He was raised on the family farm north of Magnolia, where he helped with chores and fieldwork. He enjoyed playing football, basketball and baseball. He later played for the Adrian A’s baseball team. He also enjoyed bowling, trap shooting, pheasant hunting and shooting pool. Following graduation from Magnolia High School in 1976, he attended school at Ridgewater Vocational & Technical School in Willmar, where he studied carpentry.
On Nov. 14, 1981, Jack married Debbie Walgrave at St. Catherine Catholic Church in Luverne. The couple made their home on the farm and were blessed with six children. Jack had a passion for farming, working the land and caring for the animals. He was a hard worker and took pride in providing for his family.
Jack was baptized at the Methodist Church in Magnolia. He was an avid sports fan and followed all teams in the area. He was a member of the Rock County Sportsman’s Club in Luverne, where he served as a past president of the club and donated his time and talents when able.
Jack is survived by his six children, Jessica (Brian) Knips of Magnolia, Melissa (Billy) Cowell of Luverne, Tera (Chris) Morgan of Excelsior, Micah (Dawn) Boomgaarden of Delano, Josh (Alisha) Boomgaarden of Beaver Creek, and Mariah (Ben) Raabe of St. James; 15 grandchildren, Jaden, Collin, Lucy, Tyson, Amira, Hannah, Emma, Harrison, Madeline, Calvin, Nolan, Wells, Lenox, Elouise, and Wesley; his father, Alvin Boomgaarden of Luverne; three brothers, Wes (LeAnn) Boomgaarden of Columbus, Ohio, Randy (Joan) Boomgaarden of Zumbrota, and Jeff Boomgaarden of Credit River; and other family and friends.
He was preceded in death by his mother, Elaine Boomgaarden and an infant brother, Dale Boomgaarden.
Arrangements were provided by Hartquist Funeral Home of Luverne, hartquistfuneral.com.
(1216 F)

Jim VanHulzen

Calvin James “Jim” VanHulzen, 69, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, died peacefully at his home on Dec. 6, 2021, after a long battle with MS.
A funeral service was Monday, Dec. 13, at First Reformed Church in Sioux Falls. 
Calvin James “Jim” VanHulzen was born on April 17, 1952, to Herman and Helen (Tinklenberg) VanHulzen in Pipestone. He grew up around the Edgerton-Magnolia area and graduated from Southwest Christian High School in 1970 in Edgerton.
Upon graduation, Jim pursued an electrical degree at Jackson Vo-Tech. Jim met Linda Buss of Luverne at a movie theatre in Luverne, and they were married on Sept. 2, 1972, at the Methodist Church in Luverne. They lived in Luverne for seven years and have resided in Sioux Falls for over 40 years. Jim loved hunting and enjoyed his corvette cars.
Jim served in the United States Army Reserves for six years. He worked with electrical motors and wiring fire trucks before he started driving trucks. Jim was employed by Dan Dugan Transport until the company closed. He also worked at Dakota Corrugated Box Company until his MS illness caused him to retire.
Jim suffered from MS for over 30 years. Despite his illness, he faced each day with a smile and tried to live each day to the fullest with Linda’s care for him.
Jim was a member of the First Reformed Church of Sioux Falls and had served as a deacon.
Jim is survived by his wife, Linda; siblings Marianne Havemann of Grandville, Michigan, Jan (Rog) Reitsma of Sioux Falls, Barb (Verlyn) Ruiter of Leota, and Faith (Bob) Prins of Chandler; brother-in-law Roy (Judy) Buss, Luverne; sisters-in-law Shirley Anderson of Fairmont and Kelli (Carolyn) Voog of Centerville, South Dakota; and many nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents, his parents-in-law, Roy and Alice Buss of Luverne, and brothers-in-law Larry Anderson and LaValle Voog.
Arrangements were provided by Heritage Funeral Home of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, www.heritagesfsd.com.
(1216 F)

John Paulsen

John William “Jack” Paulsen, 80, Hills, died Tuesday, Dec. 7, 2021, at the Luverne Hospice Cottage in Luverne.
A funeral service was Friday, Dec. 10, at the Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Hills. Private inurnment will be at a later date in the Bethlehem Lutheran Cemetery in Hills.
John Paulsen was born on Oct. 5, 1941, at Luverne, the son of John and Martha (Thompson) Paulsen.  Jack was baptized at Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Hills.  He grew up on the family farm near Steen and graduated from Hills High School in Hills. After graduating, he attended South Dakota Beauty and Barber School in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Jack started working in Springfield, where he met Pat Rethwill.
Jack and Pat Rethwill were married on Oct. 20, 1962, in Springfield. They made their home in Springfield, then Cassin, and eventually moved to Jack’s family farm near Steen. In 1983 Jack and Pat moved into Hills. Jack started selling Pioneer Seed, and over the years he worked as a crop adjuster and also for the ASCS office.
Jack was a lifelong member of the Bethlehem Lutheran Church, where he served on the church council and as a deacon. Jack also served on the Rock County Rural Water Board and the Tuff Memorial Home Board.
Jack is survived by his wife, Pat, of Hills; their children, Todd (Jane) Paulsen of Le Center, Michael (Jen) Paulsen of Sioux Falls, and Jackie (Steve) Wells of Rock Rapids, Iowa; four bonus children, Darlene Vanden Huevel of Sioux Falls, Debra Vanden Bosch of Sioux Falls, Buddy Delfs of LeMars, Iowa, and Randy Delfs of Hardwick; six grandchildren, Molly (Tarey) Stewart of Lonsdale, John (Ashley) Paulsen of Le Center, Emily (Dylan) Baker of Le Center, Callista Paulsen of Sioux Falls, Ian Wells of Rock Rapids, and Sydney Wells of Rock Rapids; four great-grandchildren, Calla, Sophie, Jack and Sadie; one sister, Janice Delfs of Rock Rapids; and a bonus brother, Gregg (Jackie) Thompson of Hawarden, Iowa.
Jack was preceded in death by his parents and an infant sister.
Arrangements were provided by Jurrens Funeral Home of Hills, www.jurrensfuneralhome.com.
(1216 F)

Stephanie West Death Notice

Stephanie West, 47, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, died Wednesday, Dec. 8, 2021, at Sanford USD Medical Center in Sioux Falls.
Visitation with family present will be from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 16, at George Boom Funeral Home in Sioux Falls. A funeral service will be at 2 p.m. Friday, Dec. 17, also at George Boom Funeral Home. 
A second funeral service is tentatively scheduled for 2 p.m. Monday, Dec. 20, at Nazareth Lutheran Church in Kenmare, North Dakota.  Please check for weather updates to confirm that services in North Dakota are happening as planned.  The family is requesting masks be worn at all services. 
Arrangements are provided by George Boom Funeral Home in Sioux Falls, www.georgeboom.com.
(1216 DN)

Cardinal girls start fast, finish strong Saturday

The Luverne girls’ hockey team welcomed section foe Mankato East to Luverne for an afternoon tilt Saturday, Dec. 11, at the Blue Mound Ice Arena.
The Cardinals took an early lead and never looked back on their way to a 5-2 win. The victory moves Luverne to 7-1 on the season
Luverne senior Billi Connell, a Division 1 Gopher softball commit, got the girls started just 5:42 into the first period.
She buried a rebound goal past Cougar goalie Anna Rader with the assist going to Macie Edstrom to give the Cardinals an early lead.
As in pretty much every period and game this year, it was only a matter of time before junior Kamryn Van Batavia would put one on the scoreboard at the BMIA. She found the back of the net with an unassisted goal with 4:26 left in the second period.
The Cardinals took a two-goal lead into the first period intermission with a 13-7 advantage in the shots on goal category.
Payton Behr gave the Cardinals a three-goal lead just over 5 minutes into the second period.
The Cardinals got another goal from Van Batavia to take a
commanding 4-0 lead midway through the period.
But Mankato East wasn’t ready to roll over. Mckenzie Keller beat Luverne goalie Cheyenne Schutz to bring the game within three for Mankato East.
The final five minutes of the second period were scoreless for the Cardinals and Cougars, with Luverne bringing a 4-1 lead into the third period.
Schutz had six saves in the period and shots on goal were 10-7 in favor of the Cardinals.
Connell started the third period beating Rader a mere 1:10 into the period to bring Luverne’s lead back to 5-1.
Mankato East Ava Tibodeau would cut the lead to 2-5 with a goal late in the third period, and that’s all the Cougars would get with the Cardinals notching another victory Saturday.
Schutz finished with an impressive 26 saves in the game, and the Cardinals with a 31 to 28 shot advantage.
The Lady Cardinals were set to host Windom on Tuesday, Dec. 14, before hitting the road to play Austin Friday, Dec. 17, and Rochester Mayo Saturday, Dec. 18.

Patriot boys fall to tough Lions in border match-up

The Hills-Beaver Creek Patriots opened up their 2021-22 basketball season Saturday afternoon in Rock Rapids, Iowa, where the hosts claimed a 90-61 victory.
Central Lyon opened the game on an 18-6 run on the way to a 58-25 lead at the break.
The Patriots battled in the second half, outscoring the Lions 36-32 on their way to a 90-61 defeat.
Drew Leenderts (16 points) led the way for the Pates, knocking down four of eight shots from behind the arc. Cole Baker was the only other Patriot in double figures scoring 11 points.
Ty Bundesen (9 points, eight rebounds and four assists), Troy Durst (8 points and 4 rebounds), and Liam Raymon (7 points, six rebounds and four assists) also had solid outings for the Patriots.
H-BC was scheduled to host the Luverne Cardinals Tuesday night in Hills for the Patriots’ home opener.
 
Box score
Baker 4 1 0-0 11, Raymon 1 0 5-6 7, Harnack 1 0 0-0 2, Page 0 0 0-0 0, Leenderts 2 4 0-0 16, Bundesen 2 1 2-2 9, Gehrke 0 0 0-0 0, Metzger 1 0 0-0 2, Taubert 0 0 0-0 0, Tatge 0 0 0-0 0,  Durst 4 0 0-0 8, Scholten 0 0 0-0 0, Harris 3 0 0-0 6, Wiersema 0 0 0-0 0
 
Team statistics
HBC: 24 of 62 (39 percent), 7 of 8 free throws (86 percent), 33 rebounds, 16 turnovers
MCC: 37 of 71 (52 percent), 7 of 13 free throws (54 percent), 37 rebounds, 8 turnovers

Cardinal boys open season with two loses

The Luverne Cardinal boys’ basketball team opened the 2021-22 campaign with two losses over the past week.
The Cardinals hosted the Jackson County Central Huskies Dec. 7 and came up eight points short, falling 48-40. 
On Saturday Luverne faced Fairmont in Pipestone and lost 55-35. 
The Luverne Cardinals were next scheduled to play the Hills-Beaver Creek Patriot boys in Hills Tuesday night, Dec. 14. Results of that game will appear in next week’s edition.
The Cardinals host the Marshall Tigers Thursday, Dec. 16, and the Redwood Valley Cardinals Friday night before having two weeks off for the Christmas holiday break. 
 
JCC 48, Luverne 40
Luverne opened its season by hosting Jackson County Central as part of a girls’-boys’ doubleheader Tuesday, Dec. 7. 
The Cardinals started with a strong first half, building a 15-7 lead over JCC with about eight minutes remaining in the first stanza.
The Huskies then went on a 10-0 run to take the 17-15 lead with four minutes left in the half. At halftime the Huskies led the game 24-22.
In the second half, neither team scored for the first five-plus minutes.
JCC then slowly built a lead up to eight points, which was its largest lead, a few different times in the second half. 
With five minutes left in the game, Luverne got to within two points, 39-37, but that was as close as the Cardinals could get. The game ended as a 48-40 victory for JCC.
“I was happy with our team’s effort,” Luverne head coach John Sichmeller said. “Defensively we did a good job for the most part.”
“We just couldn’t get any shots to fall, and that was the difference in the game,” Sichmeller added. 
Luverne shot just 33 percent overall from the field, making 56 percent of two-point shots and just 17 percent from behind the three-point line. 
Offensively Luverne was led by senior starters Casey Sehr and Connor Overgaard, both with 12 points in the game. 
Senior Nathaniel Cole-Kraty tallied seven rebounds for the Cardinals. 
 
Fairmont 55, Luverne 35
The Luverne Cardinals and the Fairmont Cardinals met Saturday afternoon in Pipestone in an early season Big South Conference crossover game. 
The Cardinals of Fairmont came away with the twenty-point victory, 55-35. 
Luverne scored the first points of the game and maintained small leads until six minutes remained in the first half when Fairmont took a 13-12 lead. 
Luverne scored just one point for the remainder of the half, and Fairmont led 28-13 at halftime. 
In the second half Fairmont maintained and enhanced its lead. Luverne did score 22 points in the second half, but Fairmont’s 27 second-stanza points assured its victory.
Overall, LHS coach Sichmeller found some positives in his team’s early season efforts.
“We did a lot of nice things defensively,” Sichmeller said. 
“They (Fairmont) had a lot of size down low and are a very physical team so it was good for our guys to go against that.”
Nathaniel Cole-Kraty and Eli Radtke led the Cardinals with eight points each. Tyson Cowell added seven points for Luverne. 
Connor Overgaard tallied nine rebounds in the contest, while Cole-Kraty pulled in seven boards and recorded four steals.

Cardinal wrestlers continue strong individual performances

The Cardinals wrestling team traveled twice to Jackson last week and returned with two medals.
On Tuesday, Dec. 7, they lost both team matches to Jackson (79-0) and Redwood Valley (50-12) but won a couple of individual matches against Redwood Valley.
At the JCC Pizza Ranch Invite Dec. 11 two Cardinal wrestlers placed and as a team they placed 12th.
The Cardinals travel to Redwood Falls for the Riot on Friday and Saturday. 
“We have four days to sharpen our tools before another tough tournament,” said head coach Jordan Kopp.
“In just a couple of weeks, we are seeing some of the best wrestlers the state has to offer in class A and AA.”
 
JCC and RV triangular 
Against two strong programs, the Cardinals struggled to get anything going and lost both team matches.  
“Tuesday we wrestled a highly ranked team in state in Jackson,” Kopp said. “The kids went out and wrestled hard, but didn’t back down or fear the competition, which speaks highly of our team.”
He said the competition with Redwood went better.
“We won a couple of matches against Redwood,” Kopp said, “and our young kids gained more varsity experience.” 
 
JCC Pizza Ranch Invite 
The Cardinals placed two wrestlers, and for the second weekend in a row, Braydon Ripka stood on the podium.  
After losing his first-round match in a 7-4 decision to Hutchinson’s Parker Peterson, Ripka battled back first by pinning Adrian’s Rilee Heidebrink in 2:35. 
He then secured an 8-4 decision over JCC’s Skyler Andrews before losing again to Peterson 9-7.
In his fifth-place match Ripka topped Maple River’s Byron Getchall 5-2.  
“It could’ve gone a lot better, but I’m proud I wrestled back to the placement rounds,” Ripka said. “I wrestled a total of five matches in a day which was pretty tiring.” 
Luverne’s Rayden Boyenga secured a sixth-place finish and Noah Mehlhaff went 1-2.
“Jackson’s tournament always brings tough competition. We were missing a few guys that possibly could have placed as well,” Kopp said.
“The team wrestled hard and some came up a little short, but we gained more experience at a highly competitive level.”

Patriots' defense leads the way to 56-16 win over Murray County Central Rebels

The Lady Pates led the way from start to finish Thursday, Dec. 9, in Hills where they claimed a 56-16 victory over the Murray County Central Rebels.
The Patriots (29 steals) were able to run a full-court press and force the Rebels into 46 turnovers in the contest.
Layla Deelstra (10 points and four assists) led the defense for the Patriots with nine steals in the game.
The home team sported a 22-9 advantage after the low-scoring first half before pulling away in the second half for a 56-16 final score. 
Leading the way for the Patriots were senior Kenadie Fick (17 points and five steals), senior MacKenzie Voss (10 points and 10 rebounds), and sophomore Lanae Elbers (eight points and six rebounds).
The Patriots were scheduled to visit Luverne Tuesday night for a Rock County battle with the Luverne Cardinals.
 
Box score
Fick 4 2 3-3 17, Rauk 0 0 0-0 0, L Deelstra 1 1 5-8 10, Voss 5 0 0-0 10, Bork 1 0 0-2 2, Steinhoff 0 0 2-4 2, Anderson 0 0 0-0 0, O Deelstra 0 1 0-0 3, Elbers 3 0 2-2 8, Fagerness 0 0 0-0 0, Spykerboer 0 0 0-0 0,  Harris 1 0 0-0 2, E Deelstra 0 0 0-0 0, Kueter 0 0 0-0 0
 
Team statistics
HBC: 20 of 62 (32 percent), 12 for 20 free throws (60 percent), 33 rebounds, 23 turnovers
MCC: 5 of 40 (13 percent), 4 for 4 free throws (100 percent), 24 rebounds, 46 turnovers

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