Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, August 03, 1985, Image 56

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    WEST CHESTER - The Chester
County 4-H Dairy Round-Up was
held at the Kimberton Fair
Grounds on Saturday, July 20.
Members from six county dairy 4-
H clubs participated in the show.
Judges for type were Donald
Seipt, dairy farmer from Easton,
and Dale Olver, Atlantic Breeders,
Lancaster. Judging showmanship
and fitting were Greg Solt, Nor
thampton County Extension Agent,
and Sue Kulp, assistant manager
of Ardrossan Farms in Villanova.
The senior champion showman
and fitter was Helen McCahon of
Downingtown, showing a senior 2-
year-old Jersey cow. The reserve
senior champion showman and
fitter was Dwight Stoltzfus of
Morgantown, showing a 4-year-old
Holstein cow.
yearling.
C (1 :): .yi,
Huzzard, reserve junior; Tiffany Yeager, junior; Troy Hen
dricks, first-year showman; and Karen Sanner, first-year
fitter.
Winners in Jersey competition were (from left): Troy Hendricks, reserve junior
champion; Duane Stoltzfus, holding Helen McCahan's junior champion yearling; Rodney
Griest, holding McCahan's reserve grand champion 5-year-old; Helen MaCahan, with
her grand champion 2-year-old; and Theresa Tkacuk, Chester County dairy princess.
Chester County 4-H'ers compete in daily round-up
Junior champion showman and
fitter honors went to Tiffany
Yeager of Spring City, showing a
Jersey intermediate yearling
heifer. The reserve junior
champion showman and fitter was
Lynn Huzzard of Spring City,
showing a Holstein senior yearling
heifer.
First-year fitter and reserve
first-year showman honors went to
Karen Sanner of Downingtown,
showing a Jersey junior calf. First
year showman and reserve first
year fitter honors went to Troy
Hendricks of Phoenixville,
showing a Jersey senior calf.
Dwight Stoltzfus’s 4-year-old
Holstein cow was awarded grand
champion in the Holstein type
competition. Bryan Hoopes of West
Grove, took reserve grand
champion Brown Swiss
Holstein champions included (from left): Jay Hicks, reserve junior champion; Helen
McCahan, junior champion; Bryan Hoopes, reserve grand champion; and Dwight
Stoltzfus, grand champion. McCahan was also selected senior champion showman and
fitter, while Stoltzfus earned the reserve senior showing and fitting honors.
champion honors with his 5-year
old cow. Dwight received senior
champion honors and Bryan
received reserve senior champion
honors.
Junior champion Holstein honors
went to Helen McCahon’s senior
calf, while reserve junior Holstein
honors went to Jay Hicks of West
Chester with his intermediate calf.
Frances Talley of West Chester,
took grand champion of the Brown
Swiss show with her Swiss junior
yearling.
Matthew Edwards of West
Grove, captured grand champion
Ayrshire honors with his senior 2-
year-old cow. Reserve grand
champion Ayrshire honors went to
an intermediate yearling heifer
owned by Melissa Edwards of West
Grove. Senior champion Ayrshire
honors went to Matt Edwards.
Junior champion of the Ayrshire
show was Melissa Edwards with
her intermediate yearling heifer.
Reserve junior champion was
awarded to Charles Young of West
Grove for his senior yearling
heifer.
The Guernsey show saw Troy
Four-H Guernsey champions were (from left): Noel Scheib,
reserve junior champion; Troy Hendricks, grand champion;
and Theresa Tkacuk, dairy princess, holding Noel Scheib’s
reserve grand champion dry cow.
Hendricks, of Phoenixville, cap
ture the grand champion honors,
with his junior yearling. Reserve
champion Guernsey honors went to
Noel Carol Scheib of Phoenixville,
with her dry 3-year-old cow.
Senior champion honors went to
Noel Scheib, and junior champion
honors went to Troy Hendricks.
Reserve junior champion was
awarded to Noel Scheib for her
junior yearling.
Helen McCahon swept the top
honors in the Jersey show, winning
grand champion with her senior 2-
year-old and capturing reserve
grand champion with her 5-year
old cow. Helen also was awarded
junior champion for Jersey junior
tidewater Maiybnd
COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Before
you invest in airplane tickets for
your summer vacation, consider
an adventure closer to home-
Tidewater Maryland.
From Chesapeake City to Smith
Island, Maryland’s 17 Tidewater
counties are filled with little
known attractions.
Historical sites of Tidewater
Maryland, a free map and guide to
these spots, is now available from
The University of Maryland
Cooperative Extension Service.
Nearly 200 points of interest are
featured-from the Calvert Marine
Museum on Solomon’s Island with
its exhibits of Chesapeake
yearling.
Troy Hendricks received reserve
junior champion for his senior calf.
Chester County Dairy Extension
Agent David Swartz noted that the
4-H Hound-Up and Show was the
culmination of a year’s project
work for each 4-H member. He
commented that the help and
cooperation of 4-H leaders, 4-H
parents and 4-H members make
membership in a 4-H dairy club
exciting, educational, and in
teresting.
Anyone desiring more in
formation on 4-H or 4-H dairy
programs should call the Chester
County Cooperative Extension
Service Office at 696-3500.
ideal vacation spot
schooners, skipjacks and bugeyes,
to the National Colonial Farm, a
restored tobacco plantation in
southern Prince George’s County.
Baltimore is represented by
Edgar Allen Poe’s longtime home
and burial place, Talbot County by
the historic Wye Mill, in operation
since the 18th century, and St.
Mary’s County by the Old Point
Lookout Lighthouse.
To obtain a free copy, send a self
addressed stamped envelope to:
Historical Sites of Tidewater
Maryland, Cooperative Extension
Service, Symons Hall-Room 3102,
University of Maryland, College
Park, MD 20742.