76 Kids Compete
At Annual Event
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Timothy
Urbina guides his calf around the ring March 27 at the Seminole
Indian 4-H Show and Sale in Brighton.
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Morgan
Yates, right, holds her heifer as Adarius Ford and Shylynn
Testerman pet the animal before the 4-H show in Brighton.
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BRIGHTON The cold, rainy and blustery evening of March
27 soaked the Brighton 4-H grounds but didn't dampen the spirits
of 76 young competitors who vied for wins with their steer, heifer,
hog or small animal at the Seminole Indian 4-H Show and Sale.
While friends and relatives encouraged them from the stands,
4-H'ers from each reservation showed determination in the ring as
they displayed 52 hogs, 24 steers, 2 heifer yearlings and 19 small
animals for the judges.
Chade Osceola, of Hollywood, took top honors for grand champion
steer, while Ramone Baker, of Brighton, earned grand champion swine
accolades.
Seasoned 4-H'er Hunter Strickland, 15, remained busy this year
raising three heifers and a steer. It was her fourth year showing
heifers. Hunter showed a yearling, which she planned to breed after
the show, and she showed and sold a steer.
"I enjoy it, but it's a lot of work," she said. "It's expensive,
but you make your money back. The steer pays for the expense of
the heifers. In the end, I'll have a herd."
Participants in the three-year heifer program don't sell the
animals; they use them to breed their own herds. The first year,
they show a yearling; the second year, a bred heifer; and the third
year, a cow-calf pair.
Rodney Osceola said he believes the responsibility he learned
as a 4-H'er growing up in Brighton helped prepare him for adulthood.
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Aleah
Turtle, the intermediate showmanship winner, shows her 1,048-pound
steer in the ring as judge Clint McWater examines the animal.
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"The main thing is being responsible," he said. "You have to
get the animals fed. Just like you would a young child, you can't
put yourself before them. I hope that's what some of these kids
have learned."
In addition to caring for the animals, 4-H'ers learned the business
of livestock. They tracked every expense, including supplies and
veterinarian visits, and then they sold the animals and pocketed
the profits at the 4-H sale March 28.
Children begin the 4-H program at age 5 with small animals like
chickens, rabbits, goats, puppies, piglets and calves. At age 8,
they may upgrade to hogs, and by 10 the kids can raise steer.
"You get the young kids involved with small animals, and it
prepares them for the next level," said Brighton Board Rep. Larry
Howard. "At the end of the day, you are teaching them the responsibility
of caretaking these animals. It will serve them well in life regardless
of what they do."
CeCe Thomas spent two years in the small animal program and
proudly showed her first hog this year.
"Having a pig is more work. You have to spend a lot of time
with it every day," said CeCe, 9. "That's the most important thing,
so it gets to know you."
She raised the 240-pound hog from a piglet weighing only 36
pounds. Her efforts paid off. She placed first in her weight category.
"It's always a pleasure to come out and see what the kids have
worked on all year," said Immokalee Board Liaison Dorothy Scheffler.
"They do well and learn about hard work and the reward at the end."
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