Before hitting the show circuit, families spend months preparing.
Take the Prices of Lee County.
Together, they select genetics for Brooklyn’s livestock projects, a choice ultimately impacting their overall herd. Decisions are made by patriarch State Sen. Randy Price, R-Opelika, and wife Oline; sons Cameron and Hunter; daughter-in-law Lisa; and 9-year-old Brooklyn. The fourth-grader at Beauregard Elementary School has a 3-year-old brother, Walton, who is destined for the ring, too.
“When our cows have calves, I’m happy because they could be my new show calves,” Brooklyn said.
Brooklyn and fellow exhibitors spend months working with their cattle, getting comfortable with the animals and grooming them for peak performance.
Beef Cattle Show judge Taylor Farrer of Indiana commended Alabama exhibitors on their daily practice.
“The cattle project, in my opinion, is one of the hardest projects kids can undertake,” Farrer said. “You can’t skip a day when you have livestock at home. It shows when you haven’t put time into these cattle.”
An all-in, tag-team feeling flows through livestock barns outside Garrett Coliseum as youth and their support systems groom animals to enter the ring. In market or breeding animal shows, livestock are judged on structure, soundness and strength, while showmanship tests competitors’ skills.
As youth and their livestock enter the ring, spectators flood the stands, where they anxiously watch for the judge’s final line-up or give gentle guidance from afar.
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