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Junior Livestock Sale brings in $170K

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Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2015 7:35 PM
Keesee Motors bought the Reserve Grand Champion beef from Cassidy Leonard for $5,700. The highest winning bid of the sale.
Town and Country Furniture bought the Grand Champion beef from Cassie Finley for $5,000.
Four Corners Community Bank bought the Grand Champion Bred and Fed sheep from Levi Oliver for $2,300.
Southwest AG bought the Grand Champion goat from Keandra Elliot for $2,200.
Main Street Co-op bought the Grand Champion poultry from Cutter Higgins for $900.
Four Corners Materials bought the Grand Champion market rabbit from Alyssa Busing for $1,500.
Stolz Equipment bought the Reserve Grand Champion market foul from Ashley Jeter for $600.
Oasis of Cortez bought the Reserve Grand Champion Bred-Fed sheep from Brenn Jeter for $2100.
Cortez Orthodontics bought the Reserve Grand Champion Market Swine from Chantell Ford for $2,800.
Dolores State Bank bought the Reserve Grand Champion Bred and Fed swine from Reid Littlefield for $2,300.
Skanska bought the Grand Champion sheep from Tierney Wilson for $1,900.
Town and Country bought the Grand Champion market swine from Chase Rose for $2600.
Southwest Health System bought Reserve Grand Champion rabbits from Mathew Cane for $1,700.

This year's Junior Livestock Sale, which featured 107 animals raised by local 4-H members, brought in a grand total of $170,450 at the Aug. 1 event at the Montezuma County Fair.

The Saturday afternoon sale included rabbits, goats, poultry, steers, lambs, and swine.

The 2015 Grand Champion and Reserve Grand Champion animals brought in a total of $35,100 alone.

The highest winning bid of the sale went to Keesee Motors for Cassidy Leonard's Reserve Grand Champion steer, for a total of $5,700.

The number of 4-H kids and animals selling this year was up from last year, but last year's total was much higher, said 4-H Program Coordinator Tonya Yates. The 2014 Junior Livestock Sale netted $200,800.

This year's sale was also well attended, as the grandstands were completely full for most of the three-hour event.

"It fluctuates, sometimes it's higher, sometimes its lower, it's just different every year," said Yates on this year's grand total.

Despite the slump in the grand total, Yates said she and the Montezuma County 4-H program were extremely grateful for the business and community support the program received at the sale, and year-round.

"They support us extremely well and it's appreciated. Without it we could not have a successful 4-H Program."

Proceeds from the sales go to largely to the 4-H member selling, aside from 6 percent taken out of the price for animal-related expenditures.

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