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Inside Dakota AgInside Dakota Ag   
Commentary on the news, events and people shaping agriculture in the Dakotas.
 
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Bad end to bright night
Posted on November 05, 2009 at 9:06 AM
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Is anybody else wondering what the three Dickinson State University softball players who died this week thought they were doing driving around in a cattle pasture?

News reports said they had told friends they had gone out star grazing. I’ve heard star gazing is a popular outing, especially with tourists from urban areas. These girls were from
California and ManitobaI enjoy walking out to the edge of the shelterbelt out back of the barn and staring up at the Milk Way myself. But their version of star gazing apparently involved driving their 4 x 4 Jeep Cherokee through somebody’s private pasture in the middle of the night.

 

They ended up driving into a stock pond and drowning in 10-12 feet of water. Why they couldn’t get out of the Jeep, I don’t know.

 

The sheriff’s spokesman hasn’t said they were trespassing, but confirmed they were on private property. One TV report said they were two miles from a main road.

 

This was a terrible accident and I feel sorry for the families.

 

Perhaps this accident could have been avoided if someone had explained to the girls that wide open spaces aren’t really empty, that they belong to someone and that they can be full of danger for those who are unfamiliar with the country.

 

Clearly, DSU and other university officials need to include some rural orientation for their out-of-state students.

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Posted by sdinlanm on November 9 at 8:34 AM  

This ia no doubt a terrible tragedy.  It saddens me that these young lives ended so soon and so horribly.  My hunch is that they were driving in unfamiliar terrain without headlights and their vehicle had electric locks and windows - that shorted when they drove into the pond.  This highlights why it's a good idea to carry some type of heavy metal tool/object in your car (along with other emergency gear) for smashing glass if this ever happens.  Very, very sad.

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Bad end to bright night
Posted on November 05, 2009 at 9:06 AM
Bad end to a bright night
Category: At the Statehouse/Capital
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About The Writer
Inside Dakota AgLon Tonneson has covered Dakota and Minnesota agriculture for 25 years. A South Dakota State University graduate, Lon worked on several weekly newspapers in South Dakota and southwest Minnesota before joining the staff of The Farmer magazine in 1980.

"I wanted to write about the biggest business in the Midwest – and that was agriculture," Lon says. "It turned out to be a good choice. Agriculture is still one the biggest industries in the region today and there are constantly new things to cover."

The Farmer assigned Lon to the Red River Valley. For one of his first assignments, he teamed up with a veteran freelancer reporter to investigate loan programs targeting financially distressed farmers. The story exposed an advanced fee loan fraud scheme being run out of Winnipeg, Canada, and won the freelancer and Lon writer of the year awards from the American Agricultural Editors Association.

Lon grew up on a hobby farm. As a teenager he raised horses, dairy calves and pickles and worked for a neighboring farmer. His interest in alternative enterprises continues. For the past 15 years, Lon and his family have operated a fall entertainment farm – the Lon Pumpkin Patch. It attracts thousands of visitors from the Fargo, N.D.-Moorhead, Minn., area each year.

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