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But residents on both sides of that now undisputed Texas-Oklahoma border want no part in the summer fight. For Oklahoma rancher Monte Tucker, last summer was a breaking point, and it didn't make him feel any better Friday when he learned about his state's new dubious honor. Last summer felt like "opening an oven after cooking bread," said Tucker, who ranches in Sweetwater, in western Oklahoma. "We basically got up right about sun-up and did all we could until 11 in the morning, and we basically shut down almost
'till dark and kind of started up again. "I don't want to do it again, I'll say that much," he said. Last summer also took a toll on plants and trees, many of which were weakened by the intense heat. "We had to stop planting last summer because it was silly to plant in 100-degree temperatures," said Stephen Smith, who works at Southwood Garden Center and Nursery in Tulsa. "I've been in this business 30 years," he added. "And it was probably one of the worst temperatures I can remember."
[Associated
Press;
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