Texas
Students learn about strawberries through Farm From School – Texas Farm Bureau
By Shelby Shank
Field Editor
Texas students learned about strawberries through Texas Farm Bureau’s (TFB) Farm From School program.
Kindergarten through fifth-grade students across the Lone Star State virtually “meet” with a farmer or rancher once a month through Farm From School on a video conferencing app.
This month, Kylie Demases, a farmer in Pilot Point, gave students a tour of Pecan Creek Strawberry Farm and taught them all about strawberries.
“Texas students tuned into our April Farm From School visit to learn all about strawberries from Kylie,” Jordan Bartels, TFB associate director Organization Division, Educational Outreach, said. “Students asked Kylie many questions about growing and picking strawberries.”
During the 30-minute virtual session, Demases discussed how strawberries are grown, different strawberry varieties on their farm and taught students how to pick the best strawberries.
Demases has 90,000 strawberry plants on her farm that were planted by hand in two days.
“We plant strawberries in the fall because they like the cooler weather. A strawberry plant can handle the cold all the way down to zero degrees,” Demases said. “Once it’s above 90 degrees, the plant stops producing any more blooms because it’s too hot.”
Demases explained to students the different stages of growth for a strawberry. The berry’s first stage starts with a flower-like bloom. Over 28 days, the strawberry transforms from a flower to the familiar red, ripe fruit enjoyed by many.
A single plant can have multiple berries growing on it at different stages.
“Similar to how your elementary school is filled with different grade levels, a strawberry plant can have different berries at different stages on it,” Demases said.
Students asked many questions about strawberries and were curious about the plastic beds around the strawberries, called plasticulture.
“The plastic traps the moisture in the ground for the plant and protects the berries from unwanted weeds,” Demases said. “The plasticulture also helps us use less water because when the sun is on the plant, it can’t evaporate the moisture outside of the dirt.”
When the strawberries are fully ripe, they are ready to be picked and harvested.
“The better tasting strawberries are the really red ones. You only want to pick solid red strawberries,” Demases said. “When they’re green or little, that means they’re not ready to be picked. If you pick it too early, the strawberry won’t ripen or get sweeter. Once you pick that strawberry off the vine, it’s done growing.”
More information about Farm From School
The last session for the spring semester will focus on watermelons.
Sign up for the fall 2024 program will open later this summer.
Click here for more information about the Farm From School program.
Visit texasfarmbureau.org/aitc for more information and the latest announcements on TFB’s Ag in the Classroom activities.
Texas
SCHEELS CEDAR PARK
Texas
Phoenix Merchant Partners and Texas Capital Alternative Asset Management Form Strategic Relationship
Phoenix Merchant Partners, an independent alternative asset manager, and Texas Capital Alternative Asset Management (TCAAM), a wholly owned subsidiary of Texas Capital Bancshares, formed a strategic relationship to provide customized capital solutions and direct lending to the core middle market across a diverse range of industries.
The relationship integrates the corporate and investment banking coverage network of Texas Capital with the structuring, underwriting and multi-cycle portfolio management expertise of Phoenix. Capitalizing on this powerful combination, Phoenix will launch its first vehicle, Spurstone Credit, in Q3/26. Structured as a perpetual-life, non-traded closed-end credit fund, Spurstone will be headquartered in Dallas, Texas.
Spurstone has already attracted interest from a group of anchor institutional investors. The vehicle’s investment mandate will focus primarily on delivering senior secured financing solutions to core middle-market businesses with annual revenues between $100 million and $1 billion that are currently underserved in private credit.
“As the only full-service financial services firm headquartered in Texas, we continuously look for ways to serve the needs of companies and their owners, both in Texas and in our industries of focus across the country. Working with Phoenix expands and accelerates our ability to offer proprietary private credit financing solutions to deserving clients. The Phoenix team shares our disciplined approach to asset structuring, capital preservation and portfolio management, as well as our passion for providing exceptional client service and delivering comprehensive solutions,” Daniel Hoverman, head of corporate and investment banking at Texas Capital and president of TCAAM, said.
The vehicle’s strategy is designed to address a critical structural liquidity gap for non-sponsored, family-owned and founder-led mid-market enterprises requiring flexible, non-dilutive senior capital to fund organic growth, strategic acquisitions and balance sheet optimizations.
“Proprietary origination remains the single biggest differentiator in the private credit landscape,” Art Mbanefo, founder and CEO of Phoenix, said. “Working with TCAAM unlocks unparalleled access to high-quality, founder-owned businesses across Texas and other economic centers like California, New York and Illinois. Together, we are bridging the liquidity gap for exceptional middle-market companies.”
Spurstone will be advised by a newly formed, Phoenix-sponsored registered investment adviser, Ryestone Advisors, which is currently applying for registration with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. TCAAM will be a minority economic investor in Spurstone’s investment adviser.
Texas
Texas man admits embezzling $3.2 million to pay student loans, fuel online gambling, prosecutors say
A Texas man who siphoned off millions from his employer to wipe out tens of thousands in student loan debt and bankroll extensive online gambling has pleaded guilty to federal embezzlement charges, prosecutors said.
Mitchell David Slentz, 34, of Kyle, pleaded guilty in federal court to embezzling more than $3.2 million from Austin Freight Systems, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Texas.
Financial oversight role detailed
Prosecutors said Slentz held broad responsibility for Austin Freight Systems’ finances, managing accounting operations, overseeing financial reports and internal controls, and handling vendor payment requests submitted to JPMorgan Chase.
Between October 2023 and March 2025, Slentz executed 147 fraudulent payments, diverting $3,277,937.35 into his personal accounts via interstate wire transfers. He used part of the stolen money to make two student loan payments — $25,000 and $33,887. He also gambled heavily on an online platform, depositing and winning more than $1 million, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.
Charges and court proceedings
Slentz was charged on May 14, appeared on June 8, and pleaded guilty Monday to wire fraud and engaging in monetary transactions with criminally derived proceeds.
A federal judge will determine Slentz’s sentence based on U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and statutory factors.
Investigation led by the FBI task force
The FBI Austin White Collar Crime Task Force handled the investigation.
CBS News Texas will provide updates as more information becomes available.
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