I know this topic has been beat to death, and there are a WIDE range of causes from other time commitments on todays kids to price of just a sale barn calf, but I went to our county fair this morning to see only 55 calves (by my count about 28-30 kids and about 15 families)... down a lot from just 5 years ago, asked around and a neighboring county only had 27 and the sale only had 9...
one thing I think that is effecting it is the kids unwillingness to have "just a project" I see it in sthletics, the "If I can be the stud why bother" I wonder if there is a "who cares so-n-so is gonna win it" attitude that prevents some kids from showing a calf from their herd.... granted the time commitment is real, but I truly believe that the skills learned with a county fair Livestock project of any kind but especially a calf are the very skills that our society is lacking in young adults.
Any ideas how to turn it back? at this rate there will be just a handful of kids showing and that is certainly not good for the club calf industry, but bad for the cattle industry as a whole.
one thing I think that is effecting it is the kids unwillingness to have "just a project" I see it in sthletics, the "If I can be the stud why bother" I wonder if there is a "who cares so-n-so is gonna win it" attitude that prevents some kids from showing a calf from their herd.... granted the time commitment is real, but I truly believe that the skills learned with a county fair Livestock project of any kind but especially a calf are the very skills that our society is lacking in young adults.
Any ideas how to turn it back? at this rate there will be just a handful of kids showing and that is certainly not good for the club calf industry, but bad for the cattle industry as a whole.