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Skrewk Member

Joined: 06 Jul 2005 Posts: 40 Location: Belgrade MT
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Posted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 9:00 pm Post subject: |
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[quote="Chuckie"]that's all well and good, gives a person hope, keep on fighting the ggod fight, right?[/quote
Exactly!
Them darn kids can give a fella a reason for getting up in mornings.
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Oldtimer Rancher

Joined: 10 Feb 2005 Posts: 24735 Location: Northeast Montana
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Posted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 9:06 pm Post subject: |
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| Skrewk wrote: |
My mother was an extension agent for 35+ years, I put in my 10 years in 4-H and am now a county beef superintendant and I have seen all the thing you folks have described and it is very discouraging, but, one day I was griping about the 4-H beef program and next thing I knew I was beef superintendant.
Now I'm not going to pretend that we as a beef programs have fixed all the problems but we have darn sure improved things, and even on the worst days just one thank you from a member has kept me coming back.
P.S. It has never been just one thank you either
So I guess I'm saying if its broke, try and fix it, even if you cant get it fixed they way you want, just one sincere thank you from a 4-H'er will make your day and maybe even your year. |
Good for you Skrewk-- And I agree that their are still 4-H and FFA kids that are learning a lot- and doing the work on their own...I pretty much told my kids the same thing FH's hubby told his--- that they needed to do the work too....Everyone of my kids knows one saying that they've heard 1000 times over- your horse eats before you do!! I would help them all I could, but the final product was up to them......
I often wonder what these parents that buy these kids the steers they never see, or the $10,000 horses that live at the trainers, think they are teaching them......
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Oldtimer Rancher

Joined: 10 Feb 2005 Posts: 24735 Location: Northeast Montana
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Posted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 9:18 pm Post subject: |
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| Chuckie wrote: |
and i can promise you, there is nothing worse than getting these calves at the kill plant. they don't drive, they will lick the knocker, but they remind the help that these animals aren't just a number, they deserve a little respect, as BEINGS. it's too easy nowadays to think of these cattle as numbers and $, and nothing else.
some of us do know what it is to kill an animal, to see the life go out of them and to respect that. not enough, but some. to know that their sacrifice is to our good. i think everyone in this country should have to not only raise an animal, but participate in it's end. and then eat it; it's the way the world is: survival. especially in this country. just my opinion... |
Chuckie- I usually buy a market lamb at the 4-H sale-- I was raised around sheep and like lamb but haven't owned any for 30 years...
One year I bought a young neighbor girls first 4-H lamb- when she came to thank me after the sale she had tears running all over the place with the idea of parting with that lamb... I talked to her folks a few minutes later and told them they could take it home if they wanted and keep it- but they said no, it would go to slaughter with the rest- that she needed to learn about the real world....Sometimes those first lessons are the toughest.......
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Faster horses Rancher

Joined: 11 Feb 2005 Posts: 19605 Location: SE MT
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Posted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 9:23 pm Post subject: |
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Well, we KNOW what it is teaching them and many have learned the lesson well. It is evident when they don't show up for work, when they don't go to bed at a decent time, when they just aren't RESPONSIBLE citizens in general. Their irresponisible actions reflect what they have gleaned thus far in life.
Not all kids, now I don't mean to lump them together. But far too many, I fear have not been taught self-discipline and responsibility.
I have done my time working with kids. And like skrewk mentioned, it can be a heady experience; or it can be a headache, depending on the kids.
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sw Rancher

Joined: 14 Feb 2005 Posts: 1374
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sw Rancher

Joined: 14 Feb 2005 Posts: 1374
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Chuckie Member

Joined: 11 Mar 2005 Posts: 367 Location: northeast nebraska
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Posted: Sat Oct 01, 2005 8:16 pm Post subject: |
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excuse me. i have to take issue with the "mothers" comment. perhaps it's because i'm a single parent, and i don't have the $$ to buy a "winning" club calf, we just have home-bred cattle to work with.
where are the dads in your club? are all the men in your part of the country mute? or are they all just single parent homes with only mothers to head the household? or does the plate of cookies buy something?
don't you try to put the lack of leadership/ethics and morals on the women, ok? it takes two. and if there aren't two, then ONE has to do both. you try it once. see if you can be both a mom and a dad, see how good you are at it and then judge those of us who have to do both.
sounds to me like you're kinda, shall we say, displacing blame on to the easiest target (mothers), while not taking responsibility for results.
i will agree that there are mothers (and fathers!!) who feel that their kids should win no matter what, and those parents should just shut up (but they are usually the most vocal about 'it's not fair'). but please DO NOT lump us parents who are single (by choice or fate), with the whiners in general.
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Red Barn Angus Member

Joined: 07 Aug 2005 Posts: 279 Location: Eastern KS
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Posted: Sat Oct 01, 2005 11:07 pm Post subject: |
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| I used to attend the 4-H sales to buy several animals on behalf of the bank I worked for. Generally we would try to buy animals that belonged to customers kids but every now and then a youngster whose parents were not well known would have an animal that was not getting much of a bid and I would bid the price up just to try and even things up. Now and then I'd buy one of them and I always kind of enjoyed that. It seemed like the well known parents or the bigger spenders would have the highest bids on their kids animals regardless of the color of the ribbons won. I very much admire the 4-H program but don't care much for the politics of it. Sounds like it is the same everywhere.
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Faster horses Rancher

Joined: 11 Feb 2005 Posts: 19605 Location: SE MT
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Posted: Sat Oct 01, 2005 11:24 pm Post subject: |
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That was a great thing to do. I always thought some of the kids that needed the better price, often didn't get it. Seems like my husband and I tend to favor the underdog.
As with anything, "one has to take the tail with the hide", as my dear deceased ole buddy used to say.
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greg Rancher

Joined: 27 Jul 2005 Posts: 1066 Location: Alberta Canada
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