Experienced eye, cool head needed in lamb competition
CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 1 year, 7 months AGO
Senior Reporter Cheryl Schweizer is a journalist with more than 30 years of experience serving small communities in the Pacific Northwest. She began her post-high-school education at Treasure Valley Community College and enerned her journalism degree at Oregon State University. After working for multiple publications, she has settled down at the Columbia Basin Herald and has been a staple of the newsroom for more than a decade. Schweizer’s dedication to her communities and profession has earned her the nickname “The Baroness of Bylines.” She covers a variety of beats including health, business and various municipalities. | August 14, 2024 3:09 AM
MOSES LAKE — That lamb just would not behave.
It didn’t want to enter the arena for market lamb competition. It didn’t want to follow the other lambs as the judge sent them around in a circle. Its owner, Liam Segura Jones, tugged and pushed, and the lamb pushed back and escaped.
It was Liam’s first time in the show ring, but he wasn’t very nervous, he said, although there were a lot of people watching market lamb competition on the first day of the Grant County Fair.
“I was just, like, kind of (nervous),” Liam said.
When an animal gets loose in the ring the only thing to do is to go after it, and Segura Jones did. He took a couple deep breaths, he said, and herded it into a corner.
Like swine classes but unlike cattle classes, lamb competitors take their animals into the ring without a lead. An exhibitor with a grouchy lamb is allowed to use a lead, but Liam didn’t need it. He got the lamb back into line.
The first day of livestock classes is when competitors learn how the work they’ve done over the spring and summer is going to pay off. Makayla Lustig, a Future Farmers of America competitor from Moses Lake High School, said success starts early.
"They’re mainly looking for how big your lamb is,” she said. “Just the overall build of your lamb.”
As a result it’s important to choose an animal with a good skeletal frame — straight back with a wide chest and hips, she said.
Elijah Brown, who’s also in the MLHS FFA, said the judges want an animal that is neither too lean nor too fat.
“You need a good balance in between,” Brown said.
He was giving his lamb a final bath before entering the show ring, assisted by his cousin and fellow Moses Lake FFA member Andres Bustillos. His lamb took offense to waiting while the two answered questions and made its feelings known.
“I know, Delilah,” Brown said, giving it a pat on the head.
They’re the latest in a long line of family competitors in the lamb class; Bustillos followed his oldest sister, who got other family members interested, including Brown’s sister.
“There were about eight of us that were (competing),” Bustillos said.
Brown, however, didn’t really get interested until his ag class at MLHS. His teachers suggested getting into animal competition.
“We had room in our backyard, so I (said), ‘Yeah, let’s do lamb,’” he said.
Once a competitor picks a lamb, Lustig said, it’s all about diet and exercise.
“You have to feed it right,” said Grady Stewart, Royal City, a member of the Liberty Livestock 4-H club.
Stewart too was giving his lamb one final bath before entering the show ring. He paid special attention to the lower leg, where the hair is allowed to grow a little longer.
“You’re supposed to fluff it out, make it look better,” he explained. “It makes the legs look bigger.”
Wednesday is livestock fitting and showing competition, where participants are tested on their skill in keeping their animal under control while in the show ring. The fair runs through Saturday.
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