Mega Menu

Mega menu is possible in BS5 but we will need to create a custom template layout for the navigation widget. The following is a hard-coded example.

Card Hero Template

This is the default Bootstrap 5 Hero card.

Click Here

Video Banner Header

This is an example of a video banner

Click Here

Font Awesome 6

FA6+ icons will work on all widgets.

The FMH Icon box will need a new version created because the styling is broken in Bootstrap 5 templates (this has nothing to do with FA).

FMH Icon Widget

Icons can now be used in Content blocks by pasting the HTML tags from www.fontawesome.com into the HTML editor.

Here are some new icons from Font Awesome 6

 face-awesome

 envelopes

 wheat-awn

Bootstrap Components

Code snippits from http://getbootstrap.com pasted into Content Blocks.

h1. Bootstrap heading

h2. Bootstrap heading

h3. Bootstrap heading

h4. Bootstrap heading

h5. Bootstrap heading
h6. Bootstrap heading

        

Nav Tabs

Nav Pills

Accordion

This is the first item's accordion body. It is shown by default, until the collapse plugin adds the appropriate classes that we use to style each element. These classes control the overall appearance, as well as the showing and hiding via CSS transitions. You can modify any of this with custom CSS or overriding our default variables. It's also worth noting that just about any HTML can go within the .accordion-body, though the transition does limit overflow.

This is the second item's accordion body. It is hidden by default, until the collapse plugin adds the appropriate classes that we use to style each element. These classes control the overall appearance, as well as the showing and hiding via CSS transitions. You can modify any of this with custom CSS or overriding our default variables. It's also worth noting that just about any HTML can go within the .accordion-body, though the transition does limit overflow.

This is the third item's accordion body. It is hidden by default, until the collapse plugin adds the appropriate classes that we use to style each element. These classes control the overall appearance, as well as the showing and hiding via CSS transitions. You can modify any of this with custom CSS or overriding our default variables. It's also worth noting that just about any HTML can go within the .accordion-body, though the transition does limit overflow.

Tables

# First Last Handle
1 Mark Otto @mdo
2 Jacob Thornton @fat
3 Larry the Bird @twitter

Alerts

Image Carousel

Modals

Sitefinity Widgets

Default, out of the box, Bootstrap 5 templates available for widgets.

The navigation template used above is called Horizontal.

Navigation Widget - Tabs Template

Navigation Widget - Pills Template

Breadcrumb

Card

This is an example of the Card template

Click Here
Simple Card

This is an example of the Simple Card template

Click Here

List Widget - Expandable List Template

Precision Claims FAQs

List Widget - Simple List Template

Crop Claims Reminders

  • How To Report MPCI Claims
  • MPCI Claim Reporting Deadlines
  • Appraisals
  • Production Records by Unit
  • Production Delivered to a Commercial Elevator
  • Production From Precision Farming Technology Systems
  • Production Weighed and Farm Stored
  • Authorization for Load Records, Storage Structure Marking, or Combine Monitor Records
  • Fed Production
  • Quality Adjustment
  • What is a Simplified Claim?
  • What can insureds do to expedite the claim process?

List Widget - Anchor List Template

Quality Control Review FAQ

Quality Control Review FAQ

What can an Insured do to prepare for a review?

Third party documentation (i.e. summary/settlement sheets from the elevator) is required when applicable and available. Insureds are expected to have available hard copy records that will 1) support the total production raised for the crop/county/year being reviewed and 2) that can demonstrate how production was kept separate between various units, practices and types (if applicable).

Insureds will also want make themselves available to meet with the quality control reviewer as the reviews will need to be completed before the claims can be processed.

What can Agents do to prepare for a review?

Agents can encourage their producers to begin assembling the production history documentation that will be necessary to complete the APH Review. Agents may also want to be sure all current year policy documents have been submitted to the FMH home office so that the Contract Review can be completed without delay.

How does the review process begin?

Once a claim is reported, FMH adjusters will be in contact with policyholders and/or agents. They will discern which policies will need a review and take the steps necessary to initiate these reviews. At that point FMH’s Compliance Field Specialist will oversee the review completion to ensure that all the components of the review are completed by objective and unbiased persons and according to RMA procedures.

Documents List - Documents List Template

Documents List - Documents List Template

News Widget - News List Template

News list template is the only template available by default.

Why We Support St. Baldrick's: Brenda's Story

May 29, 2024, 14:27 by Eric Riche
FMH is proud to support childhood cancer research through fundraising for the St. Baldrick’s Foundation – a cause that’s very personal for FMH employee Brenda Trenter. Read Brenda’s story, in her own words.

Brenda's Story

It was September of 1998. I was ten years old and had just started fifth grade. I remember spending the summer before that year going to the pool every day and sleeping. Anyone who's had a ten-year-old knows this is typical: pool, friends, sleep, repeat. But even after the school year began, I'd go right to sleep when I got home, maybe eat dinner, and then go right back to bed.

For a couple days, my parents chalked it up to adjusting back to a school routine, but when it continued, they got concerned. I wasn't concerned -- I remember being excited to leave school one day for a doctor's appointment.

The visit to my primary care doctor revealed that I was anemic (low red blood cells) and my white blood cell levels were a little elevated, but otherwise there wasn't anything to indicate something was wrong. My lab results were sent to a specialist, and I went back to school. Soon, there was another doctor's appointment on the schedule. I thought, Awesome! I get to miss more school!

The appointment was at Blank Children's Hospital to do more blood draws and tests. My ten-year-old understanding of anemia was that my blood was low, like when your car is low on gas, so when the nurse took vial after vial of my blood, I told her I didn't have that much blood, so she should be careful not to take too much.

There was so much waiting, and I was so bored I'd rather have gone back to school. After what seemed like forever, they came back in to say they still weren't sure what was going on, but they wanted to do a couple more tests: a bone marrow biopsy and a spinal tap.

They explained to me what those would be like. I said, No, thank you. I'm no longer in need of your services, and I need to get back to school. Really, I think I just cried, because needles are scary and these were going to be really big needles.

Once the tests were done, the results came back, and the doctors came into the room to say that I had Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia. I was ten, so this meant nothing to me except that we were finally done, and I could go home now. My parents were crying, but I didn't really understand what the big deal was. I was told I'd have to stay in the hospital for a while -- maybe a week -- and while I was a little bummed, I was mostly excited because I thought it

would be like staying at a hotel or going to camp. What kid wouldn't like to do that?

What followed was three years of varying degrees of chemotherapy treatment, two hospital stays, two surgeries to place, then remove, a Port-A-Cath, hundreds of doctor's appointments, and countless blood draws, spinal taps, and bone marrow biopsies to track the cancer's progress.

You might think that death would be the scariest part of having cancer, but for a ten-year-old girl, the scariest part was losing my hair. It will grow back. You get to wear hats. Those were things adults said to me that were supposed to make me feel better, but they didn't. Losing my hair was a visible sign that I was different and that something was wrong with me. I couldn't hide my illness and pretend to be normal when I was missing all my hair.

I went through treatment from ages ten to thirteen (grades 5-7). I just wanted to fit in, to be cool, and I wanted people (especially boys) to like me. I wanted my classmates to notice my awesome new cargo pants or my Tamagotchi, not that I was bald and had a puffy face from medications. Having cancer marked me as different, weird, and uncool.

At the time, I took this all in stride. I still had friends, people liked me, and I was a good student. Plus, I quickly found out that if you make fun of yourself first, it's less likely anyone else will make fun of you. Now that I'm an adult and have kids that are this age, I can see what a profound impact this had on my psychosocial development.

By the time I started junior high at a new school, my hair had grown back somewhat, and I was surrounded by people who didn't know I was the cancer kid. I was determined to keep it that way. I was so ashamed and embarrassed of being sick and bald that I hid that part of my life. I never talked about having cancer with anyone -- even through my young adult years.

I've decided to shave my head at this year's St. Baldrick's event for a couple of reasons. First and foremost, I'm shaving my head to raise money to give back to research that saved my life. I wouldn't be alive today if it weren't for research and development of childhood cancer treatments.

On a more personal level, I want to shave my head to prove to myself that surviving cancer isn't something I need to keep being ashamed of. I'm shaving my head because I survived.

Thank you to Brenda for sharing her story!

You can donate to Brenda and all FMH St. Baldrick's participants here. Support our shavees and Wild Hair participants at our live event on June 20! We're excited to see you there!

Blog Posts Widget - Blog Posts Lists Template