By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- The 2004 Dixie National Sale of Junior Champions
was an event for the record books as buyers set a new high
total and paid a record price for a market hog. More
than 60 buyers at the Feb. 12 sale paid $197,684 for the 35
champion animals displayed by 4-H and FFA members. The
previous record of $186,701 was set in 1999. Gov.
Haley Barbour told exhibitors that lessons such as
self-reliance and responsibility learned raising and showing
livestock will serve them well the rest of their
lives. "The
animals out here today look like shiny pennies and the kids
are so proud of them, and rightly so," Barbour
said. Eager
hog buyers paid top dollar for the grand champion hog, a
cross shown by Hinds County 4-H'ers Walter and Walinda
Jackson and Porche and Kenyatta Scott of Jackson. Buyers
Wilson Packing Co. and Wilson Farms Inc. paid $55 a pound
for a total of $13,970 for this hog. Walter
Jackson, 15, has shown hogs at the Dixie National for eight
years and has had an animal in the Sale for five of those
years. He attributed his success to good hogs and good luck.
"You have to put a lot in, but you get a lot out," he said
of the work involved in showing his grand champion
hog. Gale
Chrestman, 4-H livestock specialist with the Mississippi
State University Extension Service, said an improved economy
and buyers' continued support of the life lessons learned in
livestock projects prompted buyers to set a new sale
record. "Friendly
bidding drove up the price on the record-breaking hog,"
Chrestman said. "Mr. Jack Wilson has been a friend of the
sale for many years. He felt it was time to break a
record." The
high steer at the sale went for $13 a pound for a total of
$16,939; the top lamb sold for $46 a pound for a total of
$6,670; and the top market goat sold for $2,937 at $33 a
pound. "I
don't know how you can put a price tag on what you do for
youth," said David Waide, president of Mississippi Farm
Bureau and one of the buyers at the Sale. "The kids work
hard showing animals, and we're glad to help that
effort." Youth
use proceeds from the sale to continue their livestock
projects and to fund their future college
educations. "We try
to make all the Farm Bureau-members' animals make a
little bit more at the Sale than the other animals," Waide
said. "We're trying to support this youth program because of
the potential it has on the future." Of the
eight steers in the Sale of Junior Champions, five were from
Smith County. Extension area livestock agent Lance Newman
said volunteers, parents, youth and businesses help make the
county's livestock program a success. "Everyone
works together to benefit the kids," Newman said. Charles
Waldrup, Smith County Extension director, said the
experience of showing animals is just a small part of what
the youth learn. "This
is one of the few programs that the whole family can
participate in. They all have something to do, and
exhibitors can work together," he said. Exhibitors
who did not qualify for this year's sale competed for 20
$1,000 academic scholarships given to outstanding youth by
generous supporters of the Dixie National Junior Livestock
Show. Five premier exhibitors each received scholarships of
$500 or $1,000, while the exhibitors of the supreme beef
female and bull each received $1,000
scholarships. Released:
Feb. 19, 2004
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
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Dixie National
sale set new
record high
Contact: Gale Chrestman, (662) 325-3515
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:08
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