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			 On 
			Wednesday night, the stands were filled with crowds cheering on the 
			kids. After Lesleigh Bennett sang the National Anthem, the Clover 
			Cheer Club opened the evening’s event with a cheer to inspire 
			participants. 
			
			In the scrambles, children organized by age groups 
			worked to catch different sizes and types of animals turned loose on 
			the track. 
			
			Sixteen adorable children between ages five and seven 
			scurried around trying to catch one of the many chickens.  The kids 
			learned just how challenging it could be as the chickens dodged back 
			and forth hoping to escape capture.   
			
			As each child caught the chicken, they were given a 
			goodie bag and one lucky child caught the golden rooster, winning a 
			$5 bill. 
 Next up, 12 children between the ages of eight and10 tried to 
			harness one of six wily goats who were scrambling across the track. 
			The first child to catch a goat wrestled with it as he tried to get 
			a rope around it. Goat number five gave kids a run for their money 
			before finally getting caught.
 
			 
			  
			
			Then 12 pre-teens and young teens between 10 and 15 
			years of age struggled and wrangled with six slick pigs slathered 
			with conditioner, which can be a daunting task. To make it even more 
			challenging, the kids arms are covered in soapsuds. 
			 
			
			The slippery pigs kept trying to slip out of their 
			grasps and there was some added excitement when two pigs escaped 
			into the stands and tried to slip under the bleachers before being 
			caught and taken back to the track.  
			
			For the final and most exciting part of the evening, 
			18 kids between the ages of twelve and eighteen participated in 
			a calf scramble with them struggling to harness a big feisty calf 
			that can weight up to 350 pounds.  This feat took a lot of strength 
			and skill and many times, the calves dragged the teenagers around 
			the track as they tried to rope them. Still the sweaty and exhausted 
			kids persevered as they attempted to catch a calf. 
			 
			
			Those who caught calves get to keep them to raise for 
			next year’s steer competition to be judged next year during the 
			scrambles evening.  
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			Eight of last year’s winners brought their calves 
			back to be judged on grooming, confirmation and showmanship.  The 
			overall winner of this year’s steer competition was Vivienne Pratt. 
			 The judge commended all of the steer competition contestants for 
			their public speaking ability. 
			
			Judges call the fair’s calf scrambles the best show 
			and granddaddy of all other scrambles.   
			
			_small.jpg) 
			
			_small.jpg) A big announcement 
			was made during the 4-H Scrambles Night. Pam Tibbs will be inducted 
			into the 4-H Hall of Fame at the Illinois State Fair on August 13th
 
			
			The evening included the awarding of scholarships, 
			recognition of seniors finishing out their many years in 4-H and a 
			4-H leader being inducted into the 4-H Hall of Fame.  
			 
			
			Another event before the calf scramble was an alumni 
			game where males working in groups of two stack approximately 25 hay 
			bales on a trailer and then unload and stack them again on the 
			ground.  Those who completed the task in the fastest time, which was 
			less than five minutes, won the competition.  
			
			The evening’s events were lively and entertaining. 
			One audience member who had never been to a scramble said the kids 
			were cute and seemed to enjoy themselves.  The kids watching the 
			event were often wide-eyed with excitement.  
			
			[Angela Reiners] |