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1st Annual Roof Ryders Community Round-Up (Jasper County)

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June 6 @ 2:00 pm 8:00 pm

We’re bringing some East Texas talent to Brookeland! Join us June 6th as Gabe Shipp takes the stage at the 1st Annual Roof Ryders Community Round-Up! 

This is more than just an event, it’s a full day for the whole community with FREE admission, live music, food, bounce houses, water slides, raffles, pony rides, a mechanical bull, and more!

 Umphrey Pavilion – Brookeland, TX

Here is the link to sign up for your FREE family/community day of fun!!
https://callroofryders.com/events/

Questions? Give us a call
936-463-0100

Smart Watering: How Much Water Your East Texas Lawn Actually Needs

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Watering is one of the most important — and most misunderstood — parts of East Texas lawn care. Too little water and grass struggles. Too much water and lawns fall prey to fungus, shallow root systems, and surprisingly high water bills. In an area like Lufkin and Nacogdoches, where humidity is high and rainfall is unpredictable, finding the right balance makes a dramatic difference in how lawns look and perform through the summer.

Most East Texas lawns do best with roughly one inch of water per week, including rainfall. In hotter stretches, that may need to climb to 1.25 or 1.5 inches. But the total amount is only part of the equation. How that water is applied often matters just as much as how much is delivered, and it’s usually where homeowners go wrong.

Deep, infrequent watering is the gold standard. Watering a little bit every day trains roots to stay near the surface, where they’re most vulnerable to heat and drought. Watering deeply — enough to soak several inches into the soil — encourages roots to grow downward, where moisture is more consistent and temperatures are cooler. Two or three deep waterings per week almost always outperform seven light ones.

Timing is another critical piece. Early morning, generally between 4 a.m. and 9 a.m., is the best time to water. Wind is usually minimal, evaporation is low, and grass blades have time to dry as the day warms. Evening watering, by contrast, often leaves grass damp overnight — an open invitation for brown patch and other common East Texas lawn diseases.

A few simple checks can confirm whether watering is actually reaching where it needs to go. Pushing a long screwdriver or probe into the soil after watering is a useful test: it should slide in easily to about six inches. Grass that takes on a bluish-gray tint or holds footprints after being walked on is another sign that deeper watering is needed. Placing a small container in the sprinkler zone can also help track how much water each session actually delivers.

Flowerbeds often need slightly more water than lawns, especially newly planted beds. Drip irrigation and deep hand-watering are typically far more efficient than overhead sprinklers, which lose significant moisture to evaporation and often wet foliage in ways that encourage disease.

Irrigation systems themselves deserve regular attention. Clogged heads, broken lines, misaligned sprinklers, and overspray onto pavement quietly waste enormous amounts of water every week. A short inspection several times during the growing season often identifies small issues before they turn into large ones.

Smart watering isn’t about running sprinklers more often — it’s about using water in a way that trains grass to be stronger, healthier, and more self-sufficient. Lawns that are watered deeply, early, and consistently tend to look better, resist disease more effectively, and cost less to maintain throughout an East Texas summer.

Author: Billy Forrest

Kickoff With The Chamber (Angelina County)

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June 3 @ 11:30 am 5:00 pm

Join us on Wednesday, June 3, for a “Kickoff with the Chamber” event to officially launch the Alzheimer’s Association walk season. The Kickoff event starts at 11:30 AM and will be followed by a luncheon.

To attend the lunch, please register here >>> forms.gle/5VQLoWEruoCEZQXY8

Fixed Rate or Variable? Choosing the Right Electricity Plan

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There’s no single right answer — but there is a wrong one for your situation. Here’s how to tell the difference.

Walk into ten conversations about electricity plans and you’ll hear ten different opinions. Some folks swear by locking in the longest fixed rate they can find. Others ride the variable market and bet they’ll come out ahead over time. Most people are somewhere in between, often without a clear strategic reason for landing where they did.

The truth is that the right plan depends entirely on your situation — your usage patterns, your tolerance for monthly bill swings, your view of where the market is headed, and frankly, how much attention you want to pay to the whole subject. There’s no universal answer. There is, however, a wrong answer for almost every specific situation.

The Three Main Choices

Fixed rate. You pick a plan with a single price per kilowatt-hour, locked in for a term — usually 12, 24, or 36 months. The advantage is predictability. The provider takes the risk that wholesale prices will move against them, and they bake the cost of that risk into your rate. The disadvantage is that you’re paying a small premium for that certainty, and if market prices drop during your term, you’re stuck.

Variable rate. Your price floats with market conditions. Sometimes that’s cheaper than fixed, sometimes considerably more expensive. Variable rates can look attractive when the market is calm, and can produce shocking bills during periods of stress. For most households, variable rates are not the right choice — they reward sophistication and active monitoring that most of us don’t have time for.

Indexed or pass-through. A variation on variable, where your rate is tied directly to wholesale market prices plus a fixed adder for the provider’s margin. These can work well for businesses with the operational flexibility to shift load away from peak hours. For typical homes, they’re risky — during a Winter Storm Uri or similar event, indexed customers can see bills in the thousands of dollars for a single week.

Questions to Ask Yourself

Before shopping for a plan, take a few minutes to think through the following:

  • How much electricity do you use in a typical month, and how does it vary by season? This is the single most important number, and it’s right there on your bills from the past year. A house that uses 2,500 kilowatt-hours in August and 600 in April has very different needs than one that’s relatively flat year-round.
  • Could you absorb a much higher bill if things got bad? If a 50 percent jump in your monthly electric bill would be a real problem, fixed-rate is almost certainly the right choice.
  • How much attention are you actually willing to pay? Variable and indexed plans require active management. If you’re going to set it and forget it for a year, fixed is the only sensible option.
  • When does your current plan expire? Almost every fixed-rate plan rolls into a much higher month-to-month rate when it ends. Calendar that date and start shopping 30 to 60 days early.

The right plan is the one that fits how you actually live and use power — not the one with the lowest sticker price or the longest term. Get those questions answered first, then shop.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

A few patterns that consistently cost Texans money:

  • Shopping on the headline rate. That number on the front of the offer assumes a specific level of usage — typically 1,000 or 2,000 kilowatt-hours per month. If your actual usage is different, your effective rate will be too. Always check the Electricity Facts Label, which shows what your average price will be at different usage levels.
  • Letting the plan auto-renew. Auto-renewals almost always happen at significantly worse pricing than what’s available in the open market. The provider isn’t being malicious — they’re just not your friend. Shopping at renewal is your job.
  • Ignoring the fine print on minimum-usage fees. Some plans charge an extra fee in months when you use less than a certain amount. If you’re a snowbird, or your family travels in summer, those fees can add up.
  • Not factoring in delivery charges. When you compare two plans, the energy charge is what changes — but the delivery charges from your wires company are the same either way. A plan that looks 20 percent cheaper on the energy line might only be a small percentage cheaper on the total bill.

For Small Business Owners

Most of the same principles apply, with two additional considerations.

First, commercial bills typically include demand charges based on your peak 15-minute usage during the billing period. That makes the contract structure conversation more complex, because you’re not just managing the energy charge — you’re managing your peak demand. A walk-through of your operation with someone who understands these things can sometimes turn up easy savings.

Second, longer contract terms tend to be more available and more competitively priced for businesses than for households. If you’re a stable operation with predictable usage, locking in 36 months at today’s pricing might be a better move than waiting.

Whatever you decide, the worst choice is no choice at all. Defaulting onto a holdover rate, or auto-renewing without shopping, is how thousands of Texas families and businesses end up paying more than they need to. A couple of hours of attention every year or two is the cheapest investment in your monthly budget.

— Lee Miller

Lee Miller publishes Texas Forest Country Living and is co-founder of Amerigy Energy, a Texas-based electricity brokerage.

Kids Talk About God by Carey Kinsolving and Friends

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Why Did Jesus Say, ‘It Is Finished’?
 
“If I finish my vegetables, I get dessert,” says Caleb, 8. “But Jesus didn’t get dessert. He got a spear in his side.”

Caleb’s comparison might sound humorous, but it reminds us that when Jesus said, “It is finished,” on the cross (John 19:30), he wasn’t talking about ending a small task. He was talking about completing the greatest mission of all time.

“Jesus meant that he finished paying for our sins,” says Abigail, 10. “He took the punishment we deserved.”

From the beginning of the Bible, God promised to send a Savior. All the sacrifices in the Old Testament pointed forward to a perfect Lamb who would take away the sin of the world. Jesus, the Lamb of God, was that sacrifice. When he said, “It is finished,” he meant that the debt of sin had been paid in full.

“Jesus didn’t just die,” says Lucas, 9. “He completed a rescue mission.”

Let’s look at the scene. Roman soldiers had nailed Jesus to a cross. They divided his clothes and cast lots for his tunic. Nearby, his mother Mary stood with a few faithful followers. Jesus saw her and made sure she would be cared for, saying to John, “Behold your mother!” Even in his suffering, Jesus cared for others.

Then, knowing everything was accomplished, Jesus said, “I thirst.” A soldier offered him sour wine on a sponge. After receiving it, Jesus said, “It is finished!” and gave up his spirit.

“Jesus didn’t mean he was finished,” says Hannah, 11. “He meant the work he came to do was finished.”

In Greek, the word the New Testament uses for “It is finished” is tetelestai, which means “paid in full.” It was often written or stamped on bills to show that nothing more was owed. Jesus declared that the price for sin had been fully paid.

“Now we don’t have to pay for our own sins,” says Tyler, 10. “Jesus did it for us.”

Jesus didn’t say, “I am finished,” but it is finished. Jesus completed the work of redemption, the sacrifice for sin, and the defeat of death and Satan. That means there’s nothing more we can add to earn salvation. It’s a gift, completed and offered freely by Jesus.

“Sometimes people try to be good enough to go to heaven,” says Emily, 12. “But Jesus already did everything. We just believe in him.”

This moment wasn’t the end of Jesus’ story. It was the beginning of ours. Because he finished the work on the cross, we can begin a new life through faith in him. The curtain in the temple was torn in two when Jesus died, showing that access to God was now open to all who believe.

“Jesus made a way for us to be close to God again,” says Samuel, 11.

The cross looked like a defeat, but it was actually the greatest victory ever. Jesus completed the plan that had been set in motion before the world began. He lived a perfect life, died a sacrificial death, and declared the work finished.

Think About This: Jesus said, “It is finished,” because he had completed the work of saving us. Nothing more needs to be added. We are saved by his grace through faith alone.

Memorize This Truth: “So when Jesus had received the sour wine, He said, ‘It is finished!’ And bowing His head, He gave up His spirit” (John 19:30).

Ask This Question: Are you trusting in your own efforts or in the finished work of Jesus to make you right with God?

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Kids Talk About God is designed for families to study the Bible together. Research shows that parents who study the Bible with their children give their character, faith and spiritual life a powerful boost. To receive Kids Talk About God twice a week in a free, email subscription, visit www.KidsTalkAboutGod.org/email

Free Naloxone (Tyler County)

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May 28 @ 9:30 am 1:00 pm

SAVE A LIFE! Naloxone (Narcan) education specialist for region five with ETCADA is providing a free Narcan and Narcan education to the communities. They are going to be in Woodville, Texas at the Allen Shivers Library by the gazebo on May 28th from 09:30-13:00 in order to help equip our community with information on opioids, opioid overdose, and how to reverse an overdose and save a life.

2026-2027 Season Reveal: Angelina Arts Alliance

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June 5 @ 12:00 pm 5:00 pm

Join us on Friday, June 5, for our First Friday Luncheon, presented by Lufkin Coca Cola Bottling Company. We are excited to welcome Angelina Arts Alliance for the reveal of their 2026-2027 season lineup.

A special thank you to our monthly sponsor, Spot On Pest Control, for helping make this month’s luncheon possible.

Register by Wednesday, 6/3, and be entered to win $100 in our On-Time Drawing, presented by Servpro of Lufkin & Nacogdoches >>> bit.ly/June-FFL-26

Interested in sponsoring a future luncheon or Chamber event? Email us at Admin@LufkinTexas.org for more information.

3rd Annual Pancake Fundraiser (San Jacinto County)

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May 23 @ 8:00 am 11:00 am

It’s that time of year again

Join the all‑volunteer 501(c)(3) EMS team at San Jacinto County First Responders for a morning that’s tasty and life‑saving.

When: Saturday, May 23, 2026
Time: 8:00 AM – 11:00 AM or until sold out
Where: 21 S. Counts Road, Point Blank, TX 77364
$10 pancake platter with bacon and all the fixings!

Every plate helps us better equip volunteers and refurbish the station so we can keep serving our neighbors. Your donation can save lives.

Why it matters: SJCFR is an all‑volunteer organization providing professional emergency medical care and support across the county. Our mission is to render care until an ambulance arrives and to assist at community events and educational efforts.

We operate as a non‑profit entity, relying on our budget from the SJC ESD, fundraisers, and donations to support volunteers and station needs.

Call to action: Share this post, mark your calendar, and stop by May 23rd — your donation makes a real difference.

When Data Isn’t Enough

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On the judgment calls no spreadsheet can make for you

My uncle farmed the same land for fifty years, and he could tell you the yield of every field going back to the seventies. He kept the numbers in a spiral notebook on the dash of his truck. He knew what each row had produced in a wet year and a dry one, what cost per acre had done what, and which varieties had made him money and which had broken his heart. He loved the numbers. He also knew exactly where the numbers ended and something else began.

I watched him stand at the edge of a field one October, looking at a crop that, by every metric in his notebook, was ready to come off. He stood there a long time. Then he said, “I’m going to wait another four days.” I asked why. He said, “Something about the sky. I don’t like it.” He was right. The rain came on the day he would have been combining. He got four more days of sun and brought in the best harvest of that decade.

There is no column in a notebook for what he was reading. There is no dashboard that would have warned him. There is only the accumulated judgment of fifty years of standing at the edges of fields, and a man with the humility to know that data carries you to a certain line, and past the line, something older has to do the work.

“Every generation rediscovers what farmers and sailors have always known: the data is necessary, and it is not enough.”

The abundance that did not bring certainty

We are living through the greatest abundance of data in human history. Every year, the tools sharpen. Every quarter, the dashboards get faster. And yet the leaders I work with, in boardrooms and in small businesses across East Texas, report the same strange phenomenon. They are drowning in information and starving for clarity. They have more numbers than they know what to do with, and the decisions that matter most remain stubbornly unresolved by any of them.

This is not a failure of the data. It is a feature of leadership itself. The decisions that shape an organization’s future are almost always the ones where the numbers run out before the choice does. Whether to trust this person. Whether to expand into this market. Whether to close this chapter. Whether to stay in the fight or walk away from it. These are not spreadsheet decisions. They are human ones, and they require a faculty the data cannot replace.

Scripture names this faculty clearly. “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him” (James 1:5, KJV). Wisdom is not more information. Wisdom is the capacity to apply what you already know, under conditions where certainty is impossible, and to act with conviction anyway. It is a different thing from knowledge, and it is available, James suggests, from a different source.

What the data actually does

Data is a wonderful servant and a terrible master. At its best, it clears away the noise so the signal can be heard. It surfaces patterns too large for one person to notice. It protects you from the confirmation bias that would otherwise rule the day. It answers the answerable questions, and leaves you with the ones that were always going to require judgment.

At its worst, data creates a false sense of resolution. The chart looks confident. The projection has three decimal places. The conclusion seems inevitable. The leader, tired from a long week, accepts the conclusion rather than interrogating the assumptions behind it. And the assumptions, it turns out, were always the real story. The chart was just dressed up in their clothes.

Proverbs, which is largely a book about wisdom under uncertainty, puts it plainly. “The prudent man looketh well to his going” (Proverbs 14:15, KJV). He looks. He does not accept. He does not delegate his judgment to the chart. He looks well, which means he is willing to do the slow work of understanding what he is actually being shown, and what he is not.

“The chart is not the decision. The chart is an input to the decision. The decision remains yours.”

Three disciplines for deciding when the numbers run out

Name what the data cannot tell you

Before you reach for another report, write down what the existing data actually answers, and what it does not. The data can tell you what happened, and, with some confidence, what is likely to happen next if nothing changes. It cannot tell you what a person will do under pressure. It cannot tell you whether a culture will hold. It cannot tell you whether a promising initiative is being championed for the right reasons or the wrong ones. It cannot tell you whether the market you are about to enter will be the same market in eighteen months, because markets, like weather, are made of things the dashboard does not measure.

Knowing what the data cannot tell you is not a concession. It is a clarification. It focuses your judgment on the part of the decision where judgment actually lives, and it protects you from the false confidence of a chart that answered a smaller question than the one you were really asking.

Pressure-test the assumption, not the number

Behind every forecast is an assumption. Often several. The assumptions are usually the weakest link in the analysis, and the part leaders examine least, because the output looks solid and nobody wants to pick at the scaffolding underneath it.

When a projection feels off, do not challenge the output. Challenge the input. Ask which assumption, if shifted by even ten percent, would change the conclusion entirely. If such an assumption exists and you cannot defend it with conviction, the data is not telling you what you think it is telling you. It is telling you a story whose premise is fragile. Build decisions on the premise, not on the conclusion.

Ask what you would do if the data were silent

Here is a discipline I return to often. Imagine, for a moment, that the spreadsheet did not exist. Based on what you know about the people, the market, the mission, and the moment, what would you do?

If the answer is the same as what the data suggests, the data is confirming your judgment, and you can move with confidence that the numbers and the instinct are pointing the same direction. That is a good place to act.

If the answer is different, you have uncovered something worth examining honestly. Either your instinct is reading a signal the data has not yet captured, or the data is pointing you past a hesitation you have not been willing to name. Both are worth surfacing. Neither resolves without reflection, and the reflection itself is more useful than another report.

Solomon, at the beginning of his reign, asked for this exact faculty. Not more knowledge. Not more advisors. “Give therefore thy servant an understanding heart to judge thy people” (1 Kings 3:9, KJV). An understanding heart. The Hebrew suggests a heart that listens — to the people, to the situation, to the quiet voice beneath the noise of the day. It is what every leader needs, and what no algorithm will ever provide.

Leadership Reflection

•  Which decision on your desk right now is waiting on data that will not actually change your view once you have it?

•  Which assumption behind your current forecast, if it shifted by ten percent, would unravel the conclusion entirely? Can you defend that assumption with conviction?

•  If the dashboards went dark tomorrow, which of your current decisions would you actually make differently — and what does that tell you?

•  When did you last pray for wisdom before a decision, rather than more information?

The faculty that gets returned to its rightful place

My uncle has been gone for years now, but I still think about him standing at the edge of that field, looking at a sky he could not have explained to an insurance adjuster. I think about what it cost him to develop that faculty. Fifty years of wet falls and dry springs. Fifty years of notebooks and losses and recoveries. Fifty years of listening, not just to the weather radio, but to something underneath it, something the weather radio was not equipped to hear.

The leaders who will matter most in the coming decade are not the ones with the most data. They are the ones who have kept developing their judgment while everyone else was outsourcing theirs. The data will keep improving. The judgment call will remain a human thing — a slow thing, a prayerful thing, a thing built over years of paying attention to what the notebooks cannot capture.

Whatever decision is on your desk this week, honor the data. Look at it well. And then, when you have taken it as far as it can go, do not wait for a certainty that was never coming. Go stand at the edge of the field. Look at the sky. And make the call only you can make.

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A note from Lee: If any of this lands where you are right now, and you would value an unhurried conversation with someone whose job is to help you see clearly, the door is open. connect.msgresources.com/leadership-advisory

Livestock Guardian Dog Research Focus of May 21 Webinar

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Livestock Guardian Dog Program on Tuesday, Apr 18, 2023 in San Angelo, Texas. (Michael Miller/Texas A&M AgriLife Marketing and Communications)
The Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service will host a webinar on the importance of predatory behavior as it relates to livestock guardian dogs, LGDs, on May 21. (Michael Miller/Texas A&M AgriLife)

Leading grazing systems’ predator management researcher Linda Van Bommel to speak

The Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service will host a webinar on the importance of predatory behavior as it relates to livestock guardian dogs, LGDs, on May 21. 

The webinar is free and will begin at 3 p.m. Participants must register on the LGD Facebook page

The Texas A&M AgriLife Research and Extension Center at San Angelo is home to a unique research program dedicated to LGDs and their role in reducing predation of sheep, goats, poultry and other livestock. The webinar is part of an ongoing series focused on LGDs featuring AgriLife Extension and industry experts who cover a wide range of relevant topics.

Linda Van Bommel, Ph.D., postdoctoral researcher with the Fenner School of Environment and Society in Canberra, Australia, will be the featured speaker. Van Bommel specializes in LGDs and predator management in grazing systems. 

She has worked extensively with livestock producers across Australia to improve guardian dog management and reduce livestock losses. Her research focuses on the effectiveness, behavior and impacts of LGDs on the environments in which they work. 

Van Bommel has produced a LGD best practice manual, which is a resource for ranchers worldwide on LGD use. 

“I’m very excited to have Dr. Van Bommel as our featured speaker for this webinar,” said Bill Costanzo, AgriLife Extension livestock guardian dog specialist, Bryan-College Station. “She has been a leader in LGD research for many years and is an expert in the effective use of the dogs protecting livestock.”

Would you like more information from Texas A&M AgriLife?

Visit AgriLife Today, the news hub for Texas A&M AgriLife, which brings together a college and four state agencies focused on agriculture and life sciences within The Texas A&M University System, or sign up for our Texas A&M AgriLife E-Newsletter.

For more resources including photo repository, logo downloads and style guidelines, please visit the Resources for Press and Media.