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Home Sweet Home

I love seeing Dallas and the State Fair. I love the smell of the barns and the food walk as I call it. I saw, I ate, I talked, I swam (sitting in a heated hot tub), I slept and I am finally back to my humble home. The show goat is back in his pen after seeing the bright city lights of Dallas.

Nobody from our group of local FFA ers made the top lists. The kids all got “participation ribbons”, a free t-shirt and the experience of saying ” I showed at the State Fair of Texas”. Gator worked his butt off, but to be honest the goat was young and the big money goats were beside him on either side. Nobody worked his goat harder in the ring than Gator, but some days it is not meant to be. He came out, fussed for a minute and watched so more goats be shown.

As each kid got sifted out, the trend was clear. We have one Senior showing a sheep, a sheep that hates his ears touched. Which is a challenge when that is how you show them is by touching their faces. She was at the end of the last breed, by that time she was a funny girl. I had told her to smile, red lipstick, flirt and work that wild sheep no matter what. Her being a Senior and having Senioritis (disease that affects many Seniors, not being “full on” in competition). As she made ten feet without the judge pulling her, she knew what we knew she would have to work it. She smiled up and me and winked. I could have killed her, she laughed. She did a good job, but not a great job. Her Senioritis kicked in, she was being not the girl I know to show. She was tired and hungry, with a three hour drive ahead of her with two steers to feed when she made it home. She got her purple ribbon like most in the show and said “let’s go eat”.

She has been a great kid showing two to three steers a year, with a lamb every other time. But reality of sheep being bred to win, versus what you can afford had caught up with her. That and Senioritis, she was mentally done, she had stressed all day about the wild sheep. Gator had no comforting words since he had wrangled him for a 18 hours before she got there, this is a sheep that hates a halter. Unheard of!

We got back late, the goat got back even later. Gator and Dunk went to bed as we unloaded the goat to the pen. They had early class, and we knew it was not going to be hard just a bit of work. Poor goat was as whopped as the kids, he wanted to be in his pen as soon as possible.

Today we will sanitize every inch of him and the poor goat he is sharing the pen with, it was too late to do it. They have to be protected from disease and spraying the pen, the buckets, the clips and the goats is the only option. He will have months before the stress of a trip will happen again, it will much shorter and he will be fine.

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Category: Uncategorized  Tags: 4H, FFA, goats, kids  One Comment
Upside Down Tomatoes

I have heard of people being very happy with upside down tomatoes. You don’t need a fancy kit, you only need a 5 gallon bucket. Almost anything a farm uses comes in a barrel, a feed bag or a 5 gallon bucket. Well most things, other things come in really big tanks. We are forever trying to find creative ways of using what we have.

You can even buy a five gallon bucket at Home Depot. We went garage saling where a family used a plywood sheet and four Home Depot Buckets to display thier wears.

Tipnut has the link with all the instructions. Upside Down Tomatoes.

The latest goat news is Faith has two little boys. They were hopping around, buzzards circling! All four babies, and Splitear and Faith are safely housed in the chicken coop. It is a small coop, so we are in the process of moving another pen to house the rest of the families for a few days. It takes three days for the babies able to run fast enough from an owl or a buzzard.

So far they look good and healthy.

Our FFA banquet was last night. Gator won Greenhand Star In Placement Award. According to Gator that is the big kahuna. He has a nice placque, he ended up getting four awards. He is a go getter when it comes to Agriculture. His focus has always been more into animals than mechanics, and I am thrilled he is doing well.

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Proud Pictures

I am trying to upload pictures but right now I am over the limit. I will try and figure this out today!

The boys did well. A local grocery store where we buy our meat bought Sconicle’s goat. Farm Bureau and another local buyer bought Gator’s chicken. We don’t know our final amounts, because we have this thing called added money.  People and businesses that you know add money to your child’s animal. Dunk doubled his amount the last year with added money.

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Category: Uncategorized  Tags: 4H, chickens, FFA, goats, kids  2 Comments
Premium Sale Day

In a few short minutes Gator, Sconicle and me go to the mandatory meeting for the sale.  Sconicle did great, he came in fifth place but the top two goats in the weight class were owned by the same kid. When the class was over a dad looked at me and said, “Don’t worry your son is in the sale. My son will have to pull two of the first goats.”

We took an auction barn goat, to a prize winning goat. Hubby knew exactly what he was doing when he bought the goat. Dunk helped Sconicle train him during his spring break. Gator worked out that goat good with Lefty. It was a family commitment to make Sconicle get in the sale. He had one animal, many kids had four animals but all it takes is one good goat.

As the day progressed a young mom that I know was upset because the goats they brought looked worse than when they started. I told her goat showing is a trial and error process, I still feel like we don’t know enough. I wish every kid had the ability to get to the sale, and we as a family are going to help that family. They have sweet daughters, a wonderful family that only want the best for their kids.We all started where they did, and so many are snob goat parents. There is a group of us that are committed to be helpful if they want our help.

Sunday I will post a bunch of pictures from the show! Right now I am trying to take it all in!

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Goat Day

Our journey with the chickens was interesting if not breathtaking.  Gator showed the cockerels (males)  first, coming in about the upper middle. He was no where near may the sale. It was disappointing to me. As Hubby reminded me,  there was one more round to go. As luck would have it, Gator’s pullets (females) were next, there were less pens in that round. He came in 4th place! He is in the premium sale, he has been showing goats and chickens for years and finally his first premium sale! Saturday we will get him gussied up, with a his cowboy hat on and send him out with a pullet to make some cash, smile his way to making change! Regardless he did well. He competed in a competitive  showmanship class and handled himself well. I am glad he hung in the years that he did not make the sale. It makes it easier for him to enjoy Friday and Saturday.

Sconicle on the other hand has his work cut out for him. His okay goat, turned great goat is going up against 21 of great goats. The class he is in is filled with seasoned, committed goat showers. No one has a bad goat that I have seen. Any outcome has to be handled with joy, you are a David going against 21 Goliaths. I have done my best to prepare Sconicle. It will be a friendly competition, the best goat will win, and my prediction is the Grand will come from that class. No doubt about it!

The camera is still in the pickup so I won’t forget it, this weekend I upload some pictures. I got a few pictures Thursday, Friday I will get even more but Saturday I will take a lot.

It is late, and Princess is still dirty. She will be pretty by 8, maybe a bit damp but pretty!

Gator has agreed to show a goat for a family who has two goats in the same weight class. He will do a great job for them, they were thrilled Gator would do it. Everyone they know is a good shower is in the class already. This year Gator not having a market goat was a good choice. He may show a pig tomorrow, definitely show a breeding goat and a market goat. It will be a show day a kid dreams of. Sconicle can hardly wait to show Sam. They have bonded, he is old enough I have very little to do. I hand out keys, ask a few questions and he does the rest.

My job of proud mom continues another day!

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Category: Uncategorized  Tags: 4H, chickens, FFA, goats  One Comment