One of the best ways to communicate nowadays is pictures. You know the saying, "a picture is worth a thousand words..." Well, instead of reading tens of thousands of words, this post has quite a few pictures...
This part of the fair is extremely long. It went from August 7th to August 11th, but
a lot happened in those days.
On Wednesday, Rachel and her friend MacKenzie got bored...
...this was the result. No, this is not a common occurrence at the sheep barn...at least, it
wasn't. But boredom, Kool-Aid, and an Oxford wool sheep seem to a equal a tye-dyed sheep.
This is Rachel and MacKenzie putting the "poor" thing back. Actually, it turned out great. There were some hilarious reactions to this "new breed."
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JAC - he sold two lambs |
We also weighed in our sheep. At the Clark County Fair, your lamb needs
to gain a certain amount of weight before being able to be sold at the
Junior Livestock Auction.
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Little Bo Peep and her miracle sheep |
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Rachel and her little lamb |
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The Little Shepherd with his not-so-little sheep |
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Me and mine |
Our lambs met the requirement, but barely. Three of the lambs scraped by, two of the lambs cleared it, though it was skeptical they would because of their initial weight, and one lamb made it by handsomely.
On Day 2 (Thursday, August 8th) we had our first sheep show. This was market class; basically, how good does your lamb look for the freezer...here are some pics -
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I just had to throw this pic in - the two on the right
(Pink and Purple) are Junior editors next year! |
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Jim and the judge |
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Z-man and Alisha |
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Line up during the show |
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Bo Peep and Coco |
This picture on the bottom right needs some explanation. At the end of the show, each club gets together it's top five lambs, and the judge grades which group has the best set of lambs. Our club placed second in that category (the gent second from the left held Reserve Champion for 4-H market lambs).
Well, that's it for this post. There's at least one more coming up on the second part of the fair, possibly two, so stay tuned!
Red: editor of the Coderlambian