Friday 7 November 2014

Why buy a calf for your kid?



Why buy a calf for your kid? 

                “Remember, the calves eat breakfast before you do, Andrew.” Those eight words were cemented in my brain as I walked to eat my Cheerios each morning on the family farm, and still resonate today. I didn't realize it at the time, but I was learning hard work, tenacity, persistence, and time management as I walked outside in the -10 degree January weather to feed my heifers and steers,  before I ate my Cheerios and boarded the bus for school. Grandma even once said to my mother over a holiday, “You need to tie a rope around his waist in an effort not to lose him in this snowstorm!” The lessons I learned during my 10 years at the end of a lead rope are still the lessons I use today as a working professional. It didn't matter how the day was going, good or bad, morning or night, the livestock depended on me for their meal twice a day, whether I felt like the young girl below, or young boy having a bad day. 


In the fast paced world we live in that hardly allows time for a big mac and fries, it seems that dinnertime has become a “6’o clock scramble” instead of a time to talk about the day and learn more about each other. It’s a proven fact that having dinner as a family reduces the chances of kids becoming involved in risky behaviors and ultimately increases performance academically, while cultivating better relationships with parents. If your child has a calf, it’s a wonderful family bonding activity for all siblings and parents involved in its care, in addition to the family time you may already enjoy. 
    
             As a 4-H’er and young stockman, children also learn the importance of financial responsibility. You see, you must be able to profitably raise your calf, or you may not be able to purchase a calf again next year, which means you'll be out of business. A tough lesson to learn at a young age, but one that can be easily avoided with good management and oversight from a supportive parent. 4-H requires you to keep records of your cost of feed, transportation, and also equipment needed to show your calf. This develops fiscal responsibility at an early age that is a transferrable skill that can be carried throughout life, regardless of occupation.

                “Patience is a virtue”, and it’s something we all wish we had more of at times. However, when raising a calf, you’re working with an domesticated animal. You care for the calf and work with it daily to ensure they’re it's behaved for it's big day at the exposition. For those of you that haven’t shown a calf before, envision the Westminster dog show, except with cattle. Now, it’s not that fancy, but leading the calves around the ring is what occurs, just like the dog show. Reaching this big day doesn't just happen, it takes days, months and even a year in most cases to get that calf to the ring. Dedication, and most of all patience, is exhibited at its highest level, again at a young age. 
              
                 As we all well know, life and death is another crucial component of life for all of us. When raising male calves (steers), the child is raising a terminal animal. This means at the end of the year, the child is going to have to say goodbye to the animal and it will be sold to be processed into meat. As a past 4-H’er I can tell you this wasn't easy as a young child, but something I came to appreciate. The lesson to be learned is that all things come to an end in life, your contributions are greater than yourself,  and you are impacting the world and making it a better place. 

How so? Well in the case of raising a beef animal, the calf is going to end up in the global food chain, and even perhaps feeding a family in another country (like this young man below).




Finally, in a world where production agriculture is pressured constantly by the ever-increasing divide between rural and urban, the care that’s given by children and their parents to calves on their acreage or farm is quite similar to the care that’s given to a poodle on the 33rd story of an apartment in Manhattan. Farmers and ranchers care for their animals and their well-being is at top of mind.
  
                So, where can one go to seek such opportunities to enable and develop the minds of youth? 

               There are many other things any young child can do such as volunteer in their community, join a sports team, and assist with projects around the house. These valuable opportunities teach communication skills, responsibility, and the necessity of listening to superiors. The key to these opportunities is support and encouragement, a young person must be driven to areas to perform these activities, or they may need financial assistance to make them happen, and the support of parents and siblings is greatly appreciated. 

               Furthermore, joining a global youth organization such as 4-H is a great step. As stated on the 4-H youth development website www.4-h.org , “4-H grows confident, capable and caring kids with the life skills to thrive in today's world and succeed in their boldest dreams for tomorrow.” 

So, why buy a calf for your kid? 



           Thank you to all of the family members who helped make this blog post happen over the course of 18 years! 




Top Agricultural Quotes



Top Agricultural Quotes 



“Good farming, clear thinking, right living”- Henry A. Wallace

“Agriculture is our wisest pursuit, because it will in the end contribute most to real wealth, good morals, and happiness.”-Thomas Jefferson


“I had rather be on my farm than be emperor of the world.”- George Washington


I've always believed that if you envision something that hasn't been, that can be, and bring it into being, that is a tremendously worthwhile thing to do.” - Henry A. Wallace


"Agriculture not only gives riches to a nation, but the only riches she can call her own"- Samuel Johnson 

“Farming looks easy when your plow is a pencil and you’re a thousand miles from a cornfield- Dwight D. Eisenhower

“The farmer is the only man in our economy who buys everything at retail, sells everything at wholesale, and pays the freight both ways”- John F. Kennedy

“A farmer has to be an optimist or he wouldn't still be a farmer”- Will Rodgers

“I know of no pursuit in which more real and important services can be rendered to any country than by improving its agriculture, its breed of useful animals, and other branches of a husbandman’s cares”- George Washington

“Agriculture is the most healthful, most useful, and most noble employment of man”- George Washington

“My grandfather used to say that once in your life you need a doctor, a lawyer, a policeman and a preacher but every day, three times a day, you need a farmer.” - Brenda Schoepp