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Local food movement thriving on the High Plains of Kansas

High Plains Food Coop From left, Leon Atwell, Chris Schmidt, Chris Sramek and Jolene and Angela Singhateh of the High Plains Food Coop plan a delivery route from Becky’s Bierocks in St. Francis to a distribution site in Denver. The coop, which began taking orders in spring 2008, has seen a steady increase in sales and customers and the number of farmers in western Kansas and eastern Colorado who are members.
High Plains Food Coop
From left, Leon Atwell, Chris Schmidt, Chris Sramek and Jolene and Angela Singhateh of the High Plains Food Coop plan a delivery route from Becky’s Bierocks in St. Francis to a distribution site in Denver. The coop, which began taking orders in spring 2008, has seen a steady increase in sales and customers and the number of farmers in western Kansas and eastern Colorado who are members. Photo KHI News

By MIKE SHIELDS
KHI News Service

 — Thanks to early interest shown by chefs and small-scale area farmers, Douglas County, home of the University of Kansas, developed into one of the pioneer locations for the U.S. local food movement, which has been steadily gaining in popularity over the past 15 to 20 years.

Interest in local food is now so entrenched there that a recent consultant’s report concluded that the movement was at risk of stalling as it has become “relatively mature” with “well-established demand across a fairly broad spectrum of markets.”

In Lawrence, one can now buy locally grown foods at the chain groceries and the parking lot farmers’ markets, from the menus of many of the city’s restaurants or through the various Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) groups, including one that delivers subscription food baskets from farmers during the growing season direct to municipal workers each Thursday afternoon in the basement of City Hall.

Most of the area movement’s farmers, according to the report, are small operators, many with vegetable or berry plots or chicken runs on fewer than 10 acres.

At first glance these growers wouldn’t seem to have much in common with Chris Schmidt, who farms 2,000 acres of wheat and dryland corn and has about 150 beef cows in Rawlins County on the High Plains of northwest Kansas, bordering Nebraska and about 50 miles east of Colorado.

But Schmidt also is a local food movement pioneer. And while the Douglas County market is maturing, the one he and fellow producers in the High Plains Food Coop serve has been growing at the rate of about 40 percent a year, with expectations it could double or triple that in each of the next five years.

Members in four states

“Our first orders were in April and May of 2008. We had $1,100 in sales and about 30 customers in Denver,” said Chris Sramek, the cooperative’s vice president of consumers. “Now it is about $15,000 a month and about 300 customers. We had 12 farms in ’08, and now we have 50 farms participating in the coop. We have 700 to 1,000 items, depending on the season, available online for consumers to purchase directly from the farms. Our producers are actually spread across four states, a few in Nebraska, about 50 percent are in (eastern) Colorado, there’s one in the Oklahoma Panhandle and the rest in Kansas.”

Sramek was working as economic development director for Rawlins County when he and Schmidt and a few other area producers began looking at the idea of a local farmers’ cooperative. They hoped it would put more money in the growers’ pockets by promoting direct sales of food to customers instead of simply producing commodity crops of grain or protein destined to pass through an assortment of processors, wholesalers, retailers or other middlemen who each take a cut.

In 2005, some farmers and community development officials from Rawlins County and nearby Burlington, Colo., were among those who attended a workshop in Lindsborg sponsored by the the Ogallala Commons, a nonprofit group dedicated to revitalizing rural communities in the seven states that sit atop the massive Ogallala Aquifer.

Local foodshed’

The organization has identified 12 “assets” it considers key to sustaining community vitality, or commonwealth, one of which is the infrastructure to produce and market locally grown foods.

“It’s what we call the local foodshed,” said Darryl Birkenfeld, executive director of the Ogallala Commons. He is based in Nazareth, which is about 60 miles south of Amarillo in the Texas Panhandle.

After follow-up meetings, some Rawlins County farmers assembled a steering committee. A grant from the Rocky Mountain Farmers Union paid for a study, and by 2008 the High Plains Food Coop was up and running.

Birkenfeld said it remains one of few collective efforts on the High Plains to promote locally grown, sustainable food and to his knowledge is the only farmers’ coop focused on it.

A group called Local Llano promotes the production and marketing of local foods in the Llano Estacado region of west Texas and eastern New Mexico as part of a broader community development effort, but it doesn’t include a coop. There also are a number of individual farmers and ranchers who have developed ways to distribute their products directly to consumers.

‘A strong success’

“I think it’s a strong success,” Birkenfeld said of the High Plains Food Coop. “There has been a very dedicated group of volunteers … but it seems to have grown steadily and put down a strong foundation.”

Birkenfeld said farmers drawing from the Ogallala Aquifer produce 30 percent or more of the nation’s food, “but you would be hard-pressed to find food in the grocery stores from our regions.”

“If we’re going to have young people coming back to our communities to create careers and have families, then we need to invest in a local food system,” he said. “It fits very close to national trends, people wanting to know where their food is from and know their farmers. If you don’t have food resiliency, it is hard to attract people to live in your community. So a community that has a farmers’ market of whatever size, that’s a plus.”

Sramek said High Plains did a feasibility study last year examining the potential to meet growing demand for local food in Denver and other Colorado Front Range cities.

‘The market is there’

“There’s a lot of demand coming now from institutions and restaurants, not just the direct consumer, and looking at how this fits into the bigger picture of a local food economy,” Sramek said. “Straight and simple, the market is there. Can it be developed is probably the biggest question.”

The coop already is talking with a Denver consumers’ coop that wants to bring locally grown food into that city’s poorer neighborhoods, where it can be difficult to find affordable, nutritious food.

Sramek said the biggest barrier to meeting the demand in the Front Range cities may be a lack of farmers willing to try.

“We looked at all that,” he said, “and saw there is potential for the next five to seven years to grow to $1.5 million in sales. But our 50 producers could only supply about 35 percent of that.”

That means the current coop producers must grow more, or more farmers must be found. It also means there will be a need “for a more robust delivery system with more refrigerated trailers, more storage and more pickup points,” Sramek said.

Some members of the coop clearly have an eye on increasing production or have already started.

Sramek said a member in Bird City now has a commercial-scale hydroponic vegetable growing system in place, “working to provide more for an institutional and small grocery-type market.”

Coming home

Schmidt, president of the coop, is working with some other members to build a mobile poultry processing facility to USDA standards that could be pulled from farm to farm in order to meet the growing demand for locally grown chicken and turkeys.

Currently, the nearest chicken processing plant is about 250 miles away, he said.

In addition to his commodity farming, Schmidt sells beef, chicken and eggs through the coop.

The additional money from the coop sales has been a boon to his family’s farm.

“For one thing, it has made it possible for my nephew to come back to the farm,” said Schmidt, who farms with his brother. “He decided he’d like to come back to the farm if the opportunity was there, and this marketing has definitely made It possible. And at the present time we’re making plans where another family member can also come back to the farm. Hopefully in the next few months that will work out.”

Kansas considering new rules for no-gun signs

Screen Shot 2014-07-22 at 5.36.28 AMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt plans to have a public hearing in September on new regulations for signs that businesses and groups must post if they want to ban guns from their premises.

The hearing is set for Sept. 17 in the building near the Kansas Statehouse that houses the attorney general’s office.

A state law that took effect this month makes the open carrying of guns legal across the state. But businesses and groups still can ban both concealed and unconcealed guns from their premises if they post signs.

The new rules create signs for barring both concealed and unconcealed guns, allowing both, or allowing one and not the other.

Schmidt’s office said the hearing isn’t until September to provide 60 days for public comments.

 

Vandal opens oil stock tank, spills 188 barrels

Screen Shot 2014-07-22 at 5.27.37 AMGREAT BEND, Kan. (AP) — Central Kansas authorities are looking for whoever opened the valves on an oil lease stock tank over the weekend and caused 188 barrels of oil to spill to the ground.

Barton County Sheriff Brian Bellendir loss from the spill, which occurred between 1 p.m. Friday and 8:25 a.m. Saturday, resulted in a loss of more than $12,000.

The sheriff called the vandalism in rural Barton County a senseless act and urges anyone with information about the case to contact Crime Stoppers.

Two hospitalized after Monday evening accident

GARDEN CITY- Two people were injured in an accident just after 9 p.m. on Monday in Finney County.

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AMThe Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2009 Nissan Versa driven by Lorraine Katherine Miller, 67, Larned, was eastbound on Mary Street at U.S. 50 five miles north of U.S. 156 and failed to yield to the traffic signal

The Nissan was struck on the passenger side by a 2014 GMC pickup driven by Justin Don Boyce, 29, Cleo Springs, OK. The pickup was northbound on the U.S. on ramp.

Miller and Boyce were transported to St. Catherine’s Hospital.

The KHP reported Boyce was not wearing a seat belt at the time of the accident.

Report: Kansas wheat harvest 95 percent finished

Screen Shot 2014-07-22 at 5.14.27 AMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The 2014 Kansas wheat harvest is finally almost over.

The National Agricultural Statistics Service reported Monday that 95 percent of the wheat is now in the bin. Usually by this late in the year, all the wheat has been cut.

All the recent rains have helped the spring-planted crops in Kansas.

Corn is rated as 15 percent excellent, 49 percent good and 29 percent fair. Just 7 percent got a poor or very poor rating.

For sorghum, the agency reports 10 percent in excellent, 55 percent in good and 31 percent in fair condition. Just 4 percent got a poor rating.

Soybeans in Kansas are doing even better with 10 percent in excellent, 57 percent in good 31 percent in fair condition. Only 2 percent got a poor mark.

 

DAVE SAYS: Hands off the 529

Dear Dave,
My wife and I have $25,000 in credit card debt, $2,500 in medical bills and $89,000 each in student loan debt from when we each got our masters’ degrees. We make about $100,000 combined. Our son is 6 years old, and we have $18,000 in a 529 plan for him. Should we use that money to pay off debt instead?
Sean

Dave Ramsey
Dave Ramsey

Dear Sean,
I wouldn’t do that if I were you. You’ll get destroyed with penalties, because if you take money out of a 529 for anything other than college, you’ll be taxed at your current tax rate and hit with a 20 percent penalty. The other thing is you’ll have this weird feeling that you took money away from your kid.

Technically, it’s your money. You put it there. But when you did, it was in your child’s name. Plus, that doesn’t really solve your problem. You’ve got a ridiculous amount of debt, and that little bit won’t move the needle very much. Having more money in your hands isn’t the big answer here. What you both need is a behavior change when it comes to money.

My advice is to leave the 529 alone. Stop adding to it for the time being. Put any retirement saving you’re currently doing on hold, too. You guys need to start living on a budget, working a debt snowball plan and looking for extra income. Even tutoring would bring in some additional cash. I’ve got a feeling, too, that those masters’ degrees can provide you with more money than you’re currently making.

It can be done, Sean, but it’s going to take a lot of hard work and discipline. It may even take four or five years to get this mess cleaned up, but you can’t keep living without a plan!
—Dave

Dave Ramsey is America’s trusted voice on money and business. He has authored five New York Times best-selling books: Financial Peace, More Than Enough, The Total Money Makeover, EntreLeadership and Smart Money Smart Kids. The Dave Ramsey Show is heard by more than 8 million listeners each week on more than 500 radio stations. Follow Dave on Twitter at @DaveRamsey and on the web at daveramsey.com.

Child hospitalized after Monday truck accident

Screen-Shot-2014-07-03-at-5.13.15-AM.pngBURLINGTON- A child was injured in a Monday evening accident in Coffey County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 International truck pulling 1995 Fruehauf trailer and driven by James Anthony Noonan, 34, Wichita, was eastbound on 11th Rd., three miles east of Burlington. The driver was negotiating a turn, went left of center and rolled the truck and trailer on the driver’s side.

A seven-year-old child in the vehicle was transported to Coffey County Hospital. The driver and two other children in the vehicle were not injured.

The KHP reported all were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Sale pitches White Sox past Royals

By JOHN JACKSON
Associated Press

CHICAGO (AP) – Chris Sale pitched seven effective innings in his first outing since the All-Star break and Adam Dunn had two RBIs and scored a run to lead the Chicago White Sox to a 3-1 victory over the slumping Kansas City Royals on Monday night.

Sale (9-1) wasn’t at his best, allowing seven hits and a walk in seven innings, but he worked out of jams in the fourth and sixth innings. He struck out eight and now has allowed three runs or less in 14 of his 15 starts this season. Jake Petricka pitched the ninth for his fourth save.

Dunn went 1-for-2 with a pair of walks as the White Sox for the fourth time in six games.

Danny Valencia went 1-for-2 with a RBI for Kansas City, which has dropped four straight and seven of eight. The Royals had a team meeting before the game, but couldn’t turn around their fortunes as they dropped two games below .500 (48-50).

Royals starter Jeremy Guthrie (5-9) gave up three runs on five hits in six innings to get the loss. He had been 4-0 against the White Sox with the Royals before Monday.

The White Sox took a 2-0 lead in the first inning as the first four batters reached base. Adam Eaton singled, Alexei Ramirez was hit by a pitch and Jose Abreu reached on an error by Valencia at third base to load the bases.

Dunn then singled up the middle against the shift — essentially hitting the ball to the normal shortstop position — to score both Eaton and Ramirez.

The Royals trimmed the lead in half in the fourth. Alex Gordon singled with one out, stole second and then scored on a two-out single by Valencia. The next batter, Alcides Escobar, doubled down the left-field line and it appeared the score would be tied, but Valencia was nailed at the plate as left-fielder Alejandro De Aza and Ramirez got the ball to catcher Tyler Flowers for the putout to end the inning.

The White Sox regained the two-run edge in the sixth as Dunn scored on a sacrifice fly by Gordon Beckham to make it 3-1.

NOTES: Royals 1B Eric Hosmer was scratched about an hour before game time with a right hand contusion. He was hit on the hand with a pitch by Boston Red Sox pitcher Jon Lester in Sunday’s game at Fenway Park. . White Sox pitching coach Don Cooper is suffering from vertigo and missed a second straight game on Monday. Bullpen coach Bobby Thigpen took his place. . K.C.’s Salvador Perez was back in the lineup after sitting out Sunday with a groin strain. He originally was going to catch but switched to DH when Hosmer was scratched. “He feels much better,” manager Ned Yost said. “He’s not a speed demon to begin with. It’s still probably going to affect him a little bit running, but he can catch and swing and do everything else.” . Abreu doubled in the seventh to extend his hitting streak to 12 games. . LHP Bruce Chen (1-2) takes on Scott Carroll (4-5) in the second game of the series.

Conservative super PAC opposes Huelskamp in race

Rep. Huelskamp and LaPolice
Rep. Huelskamp and LaPolice

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A conservative Republican super PAC seeking to unseat U.S. Rep. Tim Huelskamp is spending more than $108,500 in the Republican primary race for the sprawling 1st Congressional District of western and central Kansas.

A filing with the Federal Elections Commission Monday shows the Now or Never PAC out of Kansas City, Missouri, is putting money into mailers and other advertising against him.

Huelskamp is a tea party favorite known for his criticism of the GOP leadership in Washington. He is seeking a third two-year term.

He is challenged in the GOP primary by Alan LaPolice, a Clyde farmer and educator.

The PAC money is the latest blow to Huelskamp’s re-election bid to this agricultural district. The Kansas Farm Bureau and the Kansas Livestock Association have also refused to endorse him.

Judge dismisses tribal lawsuit on land for casino

Screen-Shot-2014-07-21-at-5.12.21-AM.pngWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A federal judge has dismissed the lawsuit brought by an Oklahoma tribe seeking to build a casino on suburban Wichita land.

U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson dismissed the lawsuit Monday after the Interior Department earlier had notified the court that it rejected the Wyandotte Nation of Oklahoma application to take the Park City land into trust so the tribe can build a casino there.

Robinson ruled last year the decision was up to the Interior Department, but had retained jurisdiction to ensure the federal agency processed the application in a timely manner.

The tribe said Friday that the Interior Department decision gave the tribe the option to submit a new application addressing accounting issues that formed the basis for the denial.

Group joins crowded ad space in Kansas Senate race

Senate Conservatives Fund President Ken Cuccinelli
Senate Conservatives Fund President Ken Cuccinelli

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Washington-area group backing tea party challenger Milton Wolf’s bid to unseat Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts is spending more than $423,000 on radio and television ads ahead of the Republican primary.

The ads from a political action committee tied to the Senate Conservatives Fund also are mixing with the candidates’ own statewide spots.

Senate Conservatives Fund President Ken Cuccinelli said Monday that Wolf remains the underdog against three-term incumbent Roberts but the fund believes Wolf can win.

Wolf is broadcasting his own television ad, noting that the senator’s official residence in Dodge City is rented space in a home owned by supporters. The conservative group’s ad hits similar themes.

Roberts’ campaign began a television ad last week blasting Wolf for repeatedly not voting in local elections and state primaries.

2014 Ellis County Fair Judging Results (UPDATE)

4-HThe 2014 Ellis County Fair is July 12-19.

A schedule of events is available at the Ellis County Fair Website.

For photos of the 4-H judging and other activities during this year’s Ellis County Fair, visit the Facebook page Ellis County 4-H – It’s Legit!

Beef
Senior Champion Showman – Conrad Vajnar
Senior Reserve Champion Showman – Lane Pfannenstiel
Junior Champion Showman – Abigail Dickinson
Junior Reserve Champion Showman – Heather Scheck
 
Champion Market Beef – Lane Pfannenstiel
Reserve Champion Market Beef – Colton Vajnar
 
Champion Bucket Calf – Amelia Jaeger
Reserve Champion Bucket Calf – Wyatt Grabbe
 
Champion Supreme Heifer – Jacob Schmeidler
Reserve Champion Supreme Heifer – Anna Kuhn
 
Champion Angus Heifer – Anna Kuhn
Reserve Champion Angus Heifer – Jacob Schmeidler
 
Champion Hereford Heifer – Jaylinn Pfeifer
Reserve Champion Hereford Heifer – Monica Towns
 
Champion Limousin Heifer – Tanner Werth
 
Champion Maine Heifer – Jared Pfeifer
Reserve Champion Maine Heifer – Konnor Pfeifer
 
Champion Simmental Heifer – Lane Pfannenstiel
Reserve Champion Simmental Heifer – Kirk Pfannenstiel
 
Champion Commercial Heifer – Jacob Schmeidler
Reserve Champion Commercial Heifer – Heather Befort
 
Champion Fitting & Showing –
Senior Champion – Jared Pfeifer
Senior Reserve Champion – Conrad Vajnar
Junior Champion – Abigail Dickinson
Junior Reserve Champion – Taylor Weidenhaft
 
Herdsmanship Champions –
Beef – Good Hope
Sheep – Bits & Spurs
Swine – Buckeye Jr. Farmers
Goats – Victoria Vikings
Poultry – Buckeye Jr. Farmers
Rabbits – Big Creek Astros

*****

4-H Animal Management Skill-a-thon
Senior Champion – Lane Pfannenstiel
Senior Reserve Champion – Conrad Vajnar
Junior Champion – Jacob Schmeidler
Junior Reserve Champion – Lane Fischer

4-H Banner
Champion – Gemini Jrs. 4-H Club

4-H Educational Display
Champion – Elissa Jensen
Reserve Champion – Jill Pokorny

4-H Electric
Champion – Dustin Rajewski

4-H Fiber Arts
Senior Champion – Meredith Martin
Senior Reserve Champion – Meredith Martin
Junior Champion – Alicia Feyerherm
Junior Reserve Champion – Maggie James

4-H Foods
Senior Champion – Haley Robben
Senior Reserve Champion – Nate Walters
Special Sr. Foods Award – Haley Robben
Junior Champion Foods – Kaleigh Weber
Junior Reserve Champion Foods – Katy Walters
Best Cookie – Heather Befort
Best Bread – Katie Weisenborn
Special Bread Award – Katie Weisenborn

4-H Notebooks
Champion – Nate Walters
Reserve Champion – Anna Kuhn

4-H Photography
Senior Champion – Elizabeth Smith Moore
Senior Reserve Champion – Rylee Torline
Junior Champion – Emily James
Junior Reserve Champion – Emily George
Sunflower Composition Award – Luke Montgomery

4-H Plant Science
Senior Champion Crops – Lane Pfannenstiel
Junior Champion Horticulture – Quentin Rupp
Junior Reserve Horticulture – Katy Walters

4-H Posters
Champion – Chloe Purinton
Reserve Champion – Kaydawn Haag

4-H Poultry
Champion Poultry – Jill Pokorny
Reserve Champion Poultry – Jill Pokorny
Senior Champion Showman – Jill Pokorny
Senior Reserve Champion Showman – Breanne Kruse
Junior Champion Showman – Cadence Dickey
Junior Reserve Champion Showman – Callie Lane

4-H Small Pets
Champion – Meg Taggart
Reserve Champion – Elizabeth SmithMoore

4-H Spacetech
Senior Champion Rocket – William Martin
Junior Champion Rocket – Jacob Schmeidler
Junior Reserve Champion Rocket – Dakota Metzler
Champion Robotic Exhibit – Nic Park

4-H Swine
Champion Senior Showman – Jared Pfeifer
Reserve Champion Senior Showman – Lane Pfannenstiel
Champion Junior Showman – Abigail Dickinson
Reserve Champion Junior Showman – Konnor Pfeifer
Champion Market Hog – Konnor Pfeifer
Reserve Champion Market Hog – Jaylinn Pfeifer

4-H Visual Arts
Senior Champion – Nate Walters
Senior Reserve Champion – Jill Pokorny
Junior Champion – Colton Pfannenstiel
Junior Reserve Champion – Zoe Martin
Selected for State Fair – Zoe Martin, Colton Pfannenstiel, Lane Pfannenstiel, Jill Pokorny, Nate Walters

Open Class Food Preservation
Champion – Donna Maskus
Fresh Preserving Awards
Fruits – Becky Pokorny 1st
Pickles – Donna Masks 1st, Tammy Drylie 2nd
Soft Spreads – Linda Beech 1st

Open Photography
Champion Adult Photography – Gary Good
Reserve Champion Adult Photography – Brooks Barber
Champion Junior Photography – Kaleigh Weber
Reserve Champion Junior Photography – Kaleigh Weber
Champion Professional – Rachel Harmon
Reserve Champion Professional – Rachel Harmon

*****

4-H Dog Results
Champion Dog Obedience – Callie Lane, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Senior Champion Dog Showman – Elizabeth Smith Moore – Gemini Jrs. 4-H Club
Junior Champion Dog Showman – Callie Lane, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Open Dog
Champion Dog Obedience – Lindsay Naegele
Open Horse
Champion Mare – Carmeron Kilian
Champion Gelding – Jaylinn Pfeifer
Champion Miniature / Shetland Pony – Rosston Eckroat
Western Pleasure – Champion 9 & Under – Cadence Dickey
Western Pleasure – Champion 10 – 13 – Taylor Weidenhaft
Western Pleasure – Champion 14 – 17 – Jill Pokorny
Western Horsemanship Champion 9 & Under – Cadence Dickey
Western Horsemanship Champion 10 – 13 – Taylor Weidenhaft
Western Horsemanship Champion 14 – 17 – Jill Pokorny
Reining Champion – 10 – 13 – Emma Pope
Reining Champion – 14 – 17 – Jill Pokorny
Fastest Time Barrels – Taylor Weidenhaft

*****

4-H Horse
Champion Showmanship 14 & Older – Jill Pokorny, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Champion Showmanship 9 – 13 – Taylor Weidenhaft, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Champion Showmanship 7 – 8 – Kate Pope, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Grand Champion Halter Horse – Taylor Weidenhaft, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Reserve Champion Halter Horse – Jill Pokorny, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Top Senior Performer – Western Pleasure – Jill Pokorny, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Top Junior Performer – Western Pleasure – Taylor Weidenhaft, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Top Senior Performer – Horsemanship – Jill Pokorny, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Top Junior Performer – Emma Pope, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Top Performer – Reining – Kelli Buxton, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Faster Time – Sr. Barrel Racing – Mesa Eckroat, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Faster Time – Jr. Barrel Racing – Jaylinn Pfeifer, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Faster Time – Sr. Pole Bending – Kelli Buxton, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Faster Time – Jr. Pole Bending – Taylor Weidenhaft, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Faster Time – Sr. Flag Race – Lakin Eckroat, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club
Faster Time – Jr. Flag Race – Taylor Weidenhaft, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club

*****

4-H Fashion Revue

With nearly 60 entries in this year’s event, there were a lot of great looking outfits shared by 4-H members and Cloverbuds.  Everyone did a great job modeling their new outfits.

Receiving special Champion honors were:

Senior Construction Revue Champion – Kelli Buxton, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club

Junior Construction Revue Champion – Katy Walters, Buckeye Jr. Farmers 4-H Club

Junior Construction Revue Reserve Champion – Cadence Warfield, Gemini Jrs. 4-H Club

Senior Young Women’s Buymanship Revue Champion – Monica Towns, Ellis Sunflowers 4-H Club

Senior Young Women’s Buymanship Revue Reserve Champion – Elissa Jensen, Buckeye Jr. Farmers 4-H Club

Junior Young Women’s Buymanship Revue Champion – Katy Walters, Buckeye Jr. Farmers 4-H Club

Junior Young Women’s Buymanship Revue Reserve Champion – Aubry Appelhans, Bits & Spurs 4-H Club

Senior Young Men’s Buymanship Revue Champion – Nate Walters, Buckeye Jr. Farmers 4-H Club

Senior Young Men’s Buymanship Revue Reserve Champion – Nate Walters, Buckeye Jr. Farmers 4-H Club

Junior Young Men’s Buymanship Revue Champion – Jacob Schmeidler, Buckeye Jr. Farmers 4-H Club

Junior Young Men’s Buymanship Revue Reserve Champion – Dakota Metzler, Ellis Sunflowers

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