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2025 CoM Mayoral Cup produces thrilling final matches
2025 CoM Mayoral Cup produces thrilling final matches

The Citizen

time24-05-2025

  • Sport
  • The Citizen

2025 CoM Mayoral Cup produces thrilling final matches

There was thrilling action in the 2025 City of Mbombela Mayoral Cup finals at KaBokweni Stadium on May 18. In a nail-biting match, Bazooka XI FC were victorious, beating Junior Callies FC 2-0. Both teams began the game slowly but Callies started to dominate midway through the first half. Bazooka XI fought back and took the lead through a goal by Paulos Ngomane. Callies were awarded a penalty in the dying minutes of the first half, but Bazooka XI goalkeeper Vuyo Mokoena saved the spot kick before the referee sent both teams to half time. Bazooka XI were leading 1-0. In the second half, Ngomane scored his second, extending Bazooka XI's lead. Callies continued to attack with no luck. ALSO READ: Barberton musician desires to collaborate with famous producers Callies' goalkeeper, Sanele Nkosi, made two massive saves in the 60th minute of the game when Bazooka XI were looking to extend their lead. Callies missed another opportunity to register their first goal in the 72nd minute. The game ended 2-0. In another final match, the City Choice Academy U13s defeated Msogwaba Black Burn FC 4-0. In the U17 match, M3V Stars FC defeated Mthimba Football Academy 1-0. In the ladies final, Team Sgodzi Ladies defeated Junior Butterfly Ladies 2-1. The masters and legends' final game saw the Salubindza Masters being eliminated. They played against the Real Masters and Robert Shekwa scored the winning goal in the 72nd minute. The U23 match between Dankie Son FC and Mahusho Bayern FC had to be decided on penalties, after a 1-1 draw after 90 minutes. Despite Mahusho Bayern's rough start, they scored a goal in the 15th minute through Tshepo Mgwenya. ALSO READ: KwaMhlushwa hip-hop artist receives feedback on soothing EP However, in the second half, Dankie Son FC were awarded a penalty after a Mahusho defender handled the ball in the box. Simphiwe Nyundu scored for Dankie Son with a decisive penalty kick in the 80th minute. In the penalty shootout, Dankie Son was able to convert three kicks while Mahushu Bayern only scored one. At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Goats' appetite for thistles produces many benefits
Goats' appetite for thistles produces many benefits

Otago Daily Times

time29-04-2025

  • General
  • Otago Daily Times

Goats' appetite for thistles produces many benefits

Mid Canterbury's John and Jane Harrison are impressed with how cashmere goals are controlling thistles and improving pasture quality on their Temora Downs mixed farm. Tim Cronshaw reports. Mid Canterbury's John and Jane Harrison are on the same page when it comes to bringing cashmere goats into their Temora Downs mixed farm to control thistles and improve their pasture quality. They run a 650ha busy sheep, beef, deer and cropping property near Mayfield and over the past year added a good-sized herd of cashmere does to the mix. The catalyst for going the goat way was being introduced to NZ Cashmere, which is looking to rebuild the cashmere industry. Mrs Harrison said they had had toyed with the idea of adding cashmere goats to their dryland farm a year earlier. "I did say we should get some goats after driving around one day, but we didn't go any further with it at the time and it wasn't until we saw the project with NZ Cashmere and Ag First where they were looking for sheep and beef farmers to run a two-year project that we put our name in for this." Mr Harrison has been impressed with their thistle appetite. "We hummed and hahhed for a while, and the Callies (Californian thistles) and Nodders (nodding thistles) were just rife so we went and tried out these goats and it's amazing what they've done. In two days they've just chewed out four hectares of thistles. One time I went to go check on them and the thistles were thick on the ground and I came back in a few days' time and they were all gone and the goats had their heads in the fence trying to get to the long grass in the tree yards." He had been going around circles trying to get on top of the unwanted thistles and a beef contract removed some sprays so they were pretty much down to costly and time-consuming options. A focus earlier on re-grassing, mainly using a ryegrass base with plantain, red and white clover, and sometimes, chicory, had helped them finish all their own stock, and improve the ewes' lambing percentages. However, with the high fertility pastures and heavy yearly rainfall came more thistles. In a couple of their paddocks which were reworked and regrassed about four years, ago they were so dense they could barely walk through them, he said. "This paddock right there was just red with flowers of Nodders. The goats were in the paddock next door and I didn't think they would get on top of this at all. So I topped half of it and then just chucked them in to see what would happen. This is five days later and look at it."Only the remnants of thistle stalks remain on the leased part of the farm with the pasture responding to the lack of competition. Californian thistles are a different ball game to their nodding cousins as they have a solid underground root system. When the first crop of thistles are either topped, weed-wiped or the goats are put on them, they often reappear twice as thick. Looks are deceiving though as that's when the farmer knows he has them on the run as the underground root system starts to become exhausted. Mr Harrison said he would barely need to top these paddocks again now he knew the goats would keep them down. The white-coated 150 mixed-age cashmere does, between 3 and 7 years old, will live in the 30ha block until they are mated and likely go out for the winter in a rough area beside the main lane. Their ability to graze on weeds unpalatable to other stock means they can go on old tree stump blocks, and the like, as long as there is some shelter to keep them out of the wind. In the two-month lead-up to shearing, the farmer will only need to make sure their coats are clear of thistles and other material so their cashmere fibre is clean. Good seven-wire fencing or a hot wire running around the perimeter is a must as their inquisitive nature means they need to be well contained. However, Mr Harrison has been surprised to learn how easy they are to handle. "There might be a mob of four or five of them who get out and they see or hear you coming and they run back to where they got out so then you know where the hole is and go and fix the hole. The odd time they run back somewhere else and can't get back so I just open a gate. Generally, if they get out they all get out when one finds a hole and the others follow. I had one paddock which didn't have any thistles and at the next one the gate was open and it had thistles. Anyway, they got through a gap in the seven-wire fence and skipped the paddock with no thistles straight to the paddock with thistles." In other paddocks at the top of the hill where the does had raised their kids, they too were full of Californian and Nodding thistles, but the weaned kids are keeping them down. The kidding rate on the low end of 87% is believed to be related to doe stress when they were transported by truck from Otago to North Canterbury before they were mated at their new home. This is expected to increase next season. The Harrisons are working with Rural Solutions farm consultant Graham Butcher to see how they can fine-tune the running of the does in their farm system with a focus on spray-free thistle management and improving their pastures over the next two seasons. Mr Butcher is overseeing the two-year pilot at Temora Downs on behalf of NZ Cashmere and following the economics of the flock. He said the many benefits of goats included reducing the high costs of controlling thistles and the savings from improving pastures. 'This is already a highly productive commercial farm which makes it a useful case to show how cashmere production can further support diversification, and farm profitability. The focus is on feed management on the farm. It revolves around economic returns and how you look at them. Understanding profitability of stock policy and matching that to the feed conditions on the farm is important." He said the browsing of scrub, thistles cutty grass, gorse and broom by goats was a useful addition for sheep and beef farmers as half of the feed they consumed was considered zero to low stock feed. "They also take cost out of the farm system by reducing your sprays.' The couple opened their woolshed doors to interested visitors at a field-day by NZ Cashmere under Andy May who is chief executive of Woolyarns, a 78-year-old business in Wellington supplying premium knitting yarns internationally. NZ Cashmere is looking to add to the more than 40 farmers on the books as it works to build the cashmere industry to a goal of supplying 1% of the international market dominated by China and Mongolia fibre. A scouring and processing facility made specifically for cashmere yarn is already off the ground. The plan to build cashmere numbers on a solid platform after the boom and bust of the 1980s was hatched when Mr May was contacted by veteran South Otago breeder David Shaw. Mr Shaw said farming typically wasted between 10% to 25% of feed and it was more difficult to manage weeds in hill country operations. Goats usually ate from chest height and started from the top to work down. They left the best grass and clover alone, whereas sheep started at the bottom and grazed up, he said. "By and large on our farm we do not have weeds any more and while there are a couple of things that are a headache the goats consume them, to turn them into product. We give them space to roam and by doing that they will pick out what they want which is typically not the best cream stuff that is going to your sheep and cattle. So there's an old adage that says you can put about 10% liveweight in goats on a farm and not really impact existing stock units because they are consuming different parts of the pasture." Cashmere prices are up to $150 a kilogram for a grade between 14.5 and 15.9 microns with 16 to 16.7 microns selling for $125/kg and 16.8 to 18 microns $110/kg. While this is appealing, the multi-purpose nature of the animal and the way it dovetails in their operation as a tool to support pasture improvement for their beef finishing is what grabbed the Harrisons. Temora Downs rises from 400 metres to 600m above sea level and catches 1200mm of rain a year. The 650ha property includes 260ha of leased land. The Harrisons run 2500 ewes, 110 beef cows, 170 stags and trading stock including buying store lambs as well as growing 20ha of barley and 30ha of winter feed for dairy cows. Another 150 cattle are on contract to be grown to 280kg by Anzco under conditions by its client Aleph Inc, a large family-owned Japanese company. Mr Harrison said one of the main reasons they took on cashmere goats was they would help them meet some of these conditions. "Our beef all goes to Aleph in a contract with Anzco and with that contract we are not allowed to use certain sprays so that knocks out quite a few of our thistle sprays and takes a long time to catch up on our weed work." While it looks like some of these sprays may soon be able to be used, the Harrisons would prefer to avoid them as they also take out valuable clover in their pastures. That just confirms to them the many benefits the goats are providing. Their appetite for thistle munching has turned a cost into a saving, helped reduce spraying and the fibre returns will add to their cash flow as well as integrate nicely with the rest of their stock policy. "We've got a good perimeter fence and they're not really getting out ... As long as you've got thistles for something to eat they're pretty cruisy."

What's The Deal With Ford's New Megazilla 2.0 Crate Engine?
What's The Deal With Ford's New Megazilla 2.0 Crate Engine?

Yahoo

time04-03-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

What's The Deal With Ford's New Megazilla 2.0 Crate Engine?

Ford announced the 7.3-liter, gas-fired, naturally aspirated, pushrod V8 Godzilla engine to its friends and associates way back in February of 2019. At first it was just a truck engine, a big ol' V8 mill that put down a relatively sedate 430 horsepower and 475 pound-feet of torque in stock trim. Pretty good for hauling around building materials or landscaping equipment, but nothing that was going to set the drag strips aflame, as it were. That said, it had a lot of potential and it didn't take long for hot rodders to figure out how to squeeze a bunch more horses out of the big engine with just a handful of basic, off-the-shelf mods — upwards of 600 of them, in fact. They even wanted the massive engine implemented into other vehicles. Never ones to rest on their laurels, the big brains at FoMoCo immediately got to work making an in-house hot-rodded version of their big, new V8 to beat the aftermarket at its own game. Godzilla hadn't even made it into Tokyo yet, as it were, before FoMoCo was teasing a bigger, stronger, angrier version called the Megazilla. Megazilla? Really guys? When MechaGodzilla was right there? Anyway, the Megazilla engine kept Big-G's displacement, iron block, compression, and general construction and tossed a bunch of hi-po go-fast parts at it — Callies forged H-beam con rods, Mahle forged pistons, CNC-ported cylinder heads, etc. This bumped the Godzilla's output to 615 horsepower and a whopping 638 pound-feet of torque. Not bad, but I think we can do better. Read more: The 2024 Ford Ranger Raptor Is Exactly What You Want It To Be Ford obviously agrees with me, because in January of 2025 the company unveiled plans for an even bigger, angrier Megazilla, the cleverly named Megazilla 2.0. Now, we all know there's no replacement for displacement, right? Well, there's a corollary to that old saw — boost. Megazilla 2.0 has the same 7.3-liter, iron block, pushrod V8 as the Megazilla and Godzilla mills, but this one has a blower! In fact, it has a 3.0-liter Whipple supercharger — the same one used on Ford's smaller, higher-tech Coyote crate engine — that provides enough boost to push an alleged 1,000-plus horsepower out of the Godzilla mill. We love forced induction, don't we, folks? Okay, so, why is this such a big deal? Well, for starters, the fact that the nerds over at Ford Performance were able to force enough air into an iron-block, pushrod V8 to produce north of a thousand horsepower without blowing it, themselves, and half of Dearborn clear to Saturn is a feat in and of itself. Then there's the engine's shape and size. Despite being roughly the size of a 351 Windsor as the Godzilla platform weighs nearly 700 pounds, a small-ish blown V8 with tough as nails internals and a torque curve wider than the Katy Freeway is going to be a godsend for racers. While its official "off-road use only" status will keep it out of the hands of workaday hot rodders, it sounds like just the thing for trophy trucks, desert racers, prerunners, and drag racers of all kinds. Despite its heft, being able to drop more than a thousand reliable horses into a spot the size of an old small block opens up all kinds of possibilities. As stated earlier, details about the new Megazilla 2.0 are still pretty sparse. Its official launch isn't slated until fourth-quarter 2025, and a lot can happen over the course of six to eight months in the auto industry. Obviously, we'll keep you abreast of the situation until then, and if anyone at the Detroit Desk sees a bigger, badder, blown Godzilla stomping around Metro Detroit, you'll be the first ones to know. Want more like this? Join the Jalopnik newsletter to get the latest auto news sent straight to your inbox... Read the original article on Jalopnik.

Lingenfelter's 7.0-Liter Upgrade Brings Over 700 HP to C8 Corvette
Lingenfelter's 7.0-Liter Upgrade Brings Over 700 HP to C8 Corvette

Yahoo

time28-02-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Lingenfelter's 7.0-Liter Upgrade Brings Over 700 HP to C8 Corvette

⚡️ Read the full article on Motorious Lingenfelter Performance Engineering is pushing the limits of the Chevrolet C8 Corvette with its latest high-performance offering: the Eliminator Spec S, a naturally aspirated 7.0-liter LT2 V-8 delivering over 700 horsepower and 600 pound-feet of torque. This new powerplant, designed for both the C8 Stingray and the all-wheel-drive E-Ray, is currently the highest-output naturally aspirated engine available for the mid-engine Corvette. On the dyno, the setup produces 577 horsepower and 528 lb-ft of torque at the rear wheels, which Lingenfelter estimates translates to more than 700 hp at the crank. To achieve this level of performance, Lingenfelter partnered with Callies to develop a set of custom components, including H-beam connecting rods and a forged crankshaft. The engine also features 4.125-inch MAHLE Power Pack pistons, a COMP Cam camshaft tuned for the dual-clutch transmission, and a stock-style oiling and scavenging system to maintain reliability under high loads. However, this kind of performance doesn't come cheap. The Eliminator Spec S package is priced at $29,950, with additional upgrades available. Buyers can opt for a $2,395 carbon intake manifold, a ported throttle body for $480.95, or a Halltech cold air intake for $795. Exhaust upgrades include a CORSA Xtreme system for $3,978.99 or CORSA headers for $2,495. With its naturally aspirated design and big-block power, the Lingenfelter Eliminator Spec S offers a compelling alternative for Corvette enthusiasts looking for extreme performance without forced induction.

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