At
the end of the “business” part of the day was the Scramble Sheep
judging. Those who attend the Logan County Fair scrambles night may
be seeing a red flag here. At the Wednesday night scramble there are
chickens, pigs, goats, and calves, but there are NO sheep. So how
does the sheep show include a scramble event?
Jim, John and Jared Coers are the superintendents of the show. Also
the owners of 3-J Farms, the Coers have a keen interest in seeing
sheep production grow in Logan County, starting with kids
participating in raising lambs. To help encourage kids to
participate in raising sheep, the Coers devised their own scramble
program, where kids file applications for the lambs.
John Coers explained that the program started with
giving three sheep and has expanded to five, but will have to stop
there. He said the kids file their applications and are selected to
raise following the guidelines of the other shows of maintaining
good records, learning showmanship, and of course raising a healthy
lamb.
He said when fair time rolls around, the records are judged pre-fair
by Lincoln Community High School Ag Teacher and FFA sponsor Molly
Schempp who is also a Logan County 4-H alumnus with experience with
sheep.
The Thursday morning judging then included showmanship and the
judging of the animal itself.
John Coers also pointed out that the winner of the
Scramble will receive a traveling trophy that was hand made by Jared
Coers.
When the judging took place the youngsters paraded their animals in
front of the judge and worked hard to demonstrate the rules of good
showmanship.
In the class the five participants were Race Sherren,
Preslee Sherren, Harper Bell, Remington Houser, and Raylon
Schreiner.
This year’s winner was Raylon Schreiner.
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The Grand Champion Wether was Rophan Allspach
The Reserve Champion Wether was Raylon Schreiner
The Grand Champion Ewe was Jayce Coers
The Reserve Champion Ewe was Shelby Heyen
The Grand Champion Ewe Lamb was Raylon Schreiner
When the scramble sheep judging was completed, the day took a turn
from business to party starting with the annual Sheep Show picnic,
which obviously featured lamb as the primary protein.
After lunch, the first event on the docket was the PeeWee
Showmanship event. This is an an event where that the littlest of
littles get to show off what they know about showing sheep. For some
it is strictly business, while for others it is a lot of fun and a
chance to pour some lovin’ on a fuzzy sheep.
[Nila Smith] |