In the Houston area there are some this way for pigs at least. A group of breeders put together a truck load of 30-60 head. The kids draw numbers and pick their pig. All head cost 300 (last I saw this was 2018).
CanyonAg77 said:
Years ago, I heard a suggestion:
Chapter or county level shows only. A pen of animals is purchased for all who want to show, pick your animal by lottery, raise it, then show it at the end of the year.
Seems like an idea to revisit.
I raised chickens in 4-H. The first couple of years, it was exactly as you describe. Everyone going to the county show put in an order for 25 chicks from the same place. They were delivered all at once to the local feed store.CanyonAg77 said:
Years ago, I heard a suggestion:
Chapter or county level shows only. A pen of animals is purchased for all who want to show, pick your animal by lottery, raise it, then show it at the end of the year.
Seems like an idea to revisit.
Im thinking way back to my days in Dumas in the late 80s/early 90s, and they may have done it this way.CanyonAg77 said:
Years ago, I heard a suggestion:
Chapter or county level shows only. A pen of animals is purchased for all who want to show, pick your animal by lottery, raise it, then show it at the end of the year.
Seems like an idea to revisit.
aggie0959 said:
In the Houston area there are some this way for pigs at least. A group of breeders put together a truck load of 30-60 head. The kids draw numbers and pick their pig. All head cost 300 (last I saw this was 2018).
Its DumbassB-1 83 said:Im thinking way back to my days in Dumas in the late 80s/early 90s, and they may have done it this way.CanyonAg77 said:
Years ago, I heard a suggestion:
Chapter or county level shows only. A pen of animals is purchased for all who want to show, pick your animal by lottery, raise it, then show it at the end of the year.
Seems like an idea to revisit.
Joseph Freshwater, Sr said:aggie0959 said:
In the Houston area there are some this way for pigs at least. A group of breeders put together a truck load of 30-60 head. The kids draw numbers and pick their pig. All head cost 300 (last I saw this was 2018).
A lot of the larger chapters do this, now and honestly it's better this way. The lottery goats are now $500, though, and going up every year. People are spending stupid money on freaking goats (and everything else) of all animals and it's getting to where even the commercial does are outrageous.
I saw some comments from the victim's family about how you can't even cheat and while I sympathize completely with the victim, there is rampant cheating across all species. Even broilers which are the most level playing field are getting packed with illegal substances. Hopefully this girl gets some jail time.
When I made the auction, likewise 40 years ago, it wasn't big money. A few hundred bucks both time. It certainly didn't cover the costs that my parents had spent on animals and food, but they of course let me keep the auction money. I used it to buy a computer.Burdizzo said:
County shows are not without fault either. My one experience 40 years ago was that if you made the sale but had not gone to the trouble of lining up a buyer(s) you basically got market price. My ag teacher didn't tell me that important part. Consequently at the last second I went and talked to the bookkeeper for the local feed store at the last minute. She had been their delegate to bid on animals at the show because the owner hadn't bothered to show for the sale. She was the only buyer I knew and consequently the only bidder on my animal. So when my animal sold, it barely covered the cost of the animal plus feed, not to mention I had bought all my feed from the buyer and my dad did tons of business with them.
The lesson I learned from showing animals and making money is that it is about 25% physical labor and about 75% building a relationship with a buyer.
Burdizzo said:
County shows are not without fault either. My one experience 40 years ago was that if you made the sale but had not gone to the trouble of lining up a buyer(s) you basically got market price. My ag teacher didn't tell me that important part. Consequently at the last second I went and talked to the bookkeeper for the local feed store at the last minute. She had been their delegate to bid on animals at the show because the owner hadn't bothered to show for the sale. She was the only buyer I knew and consequently the only bidder on my animal. So when my animal sold, it barely covered the cost of the animal plus feed, not to mention I had bought all my feed from the buyer and my dad did tons of business with them.
The lesson I learned from showing animals and making money is that it is about 25% physical labor and about 75% building a relationship with a buyer.
I guess our relative expectations out FFA/4-H were different. For me it was an extra-curricular activity. I always knew I was going to study engineering, not poultry science.Burdizzo said:
That is also true. The experience factor is largely unmeasurable.
I was able to parlay my FFA experience into a HLSR scholarship, which at the time was $8000 over four years. It made the difference between me being able to attend A&M and staying at home and attending SWT. That said my scholarship award was tenuous. I was not high enough in my FFA Area to get awarded and got put in a statewide pool of applicants. I was lucky enough to get one that way. My ag teacher commented that if I had shown a better profit on my projects, it would have looked better on the application.
The other lesson I learned was that profit comes hard in agriculture.
torrid said:I guess our relative expectations out FFA/4-H were different. For me it was an extra-curricular activity. I always knew I was going to study engineering, not poultry science.Burdizzo said:
That is also true. The experience factor is largely unmeasurable.
I was able to parlay my FFA experience into a HLSR scholarship, which at the time was $8000 over four years. It made the difference between me being able to attend A&M and staying at home and attending SWT. That said my scholarship award was tenuous. I was not high enough in my FFA Area to get awarded and got put in a statewide pool of applicants. I was lucky enough to get one that way. My ag teacher commented that if I had shown a better profit on my projects, it would have looked better on the application.
The other lesson I learned was that profit comes hard in agriculture.
It sounds like you were studying agriculture, so I can see how the FFA experience is important in the scholarship applications.
Quote:
Pete Christy, KCBD
Guys
The Anton Ag Department needs your help.
Somebody broke into the Ag Barn last night and cut the fence and stole all of the show goats that were set to go to the Hockley County Fair in a few weeks.
These Ag kids also had goats killed by a pack of dogs last fall and now their new goats have been stolen.
They want to get the information out as fast as possible so maybe the goats can be returned.
CanyonAg77 said:
Copied a Facebook post from a Lubbock TV stationQuote:
Pete Christy, KCBD
Guys
The Anton Ag Department needs your help.
Somebody broke into the Ag Barn last night and cut the fence and stole all of the show goats that were set to go to the Hockley County Fair in a few weeks.
These Ag kids also had goats killed by a pack of dogs last fall and now their new goats have been stolen.
They want to get the information out as fast as possible so maybe the goats can be returned.
Maybe drop them off at "The Train Station" in Yellowstone.plain_o_llama said:
Perhaps if Taylor Sheridan ever does his 6666 series this type chicanery getting out of hand might warrant a couple episode sub-plot.