ORGANISERS of the Bathurst Merino Association junior sheep judging are putting a lot of effort into this year’s competition to be held at the Bathurst Ram Expo on Bathurst Showground from 10am to noon on Saturday, August 19.
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Entrants are eligible if they fit the age template of six to 17 years and this event will serve as a genuine starting point for entry into larger competitions such as the Dubbo Ram Sale junior judging.
Spokesman Steve Jessett tells me that industry figures Ben Patrick, Chris Croker, Michael Lowe and John Dwyer will discuss sheep and wool industry matters with all of the entrants and this forum should be a great learning experience for keen aspirants.
A total of $200 will be awarded to winners in junior and senior sections.
Entry details are available from Steve Jessett on 0429 529 955
Think carefully
THE list of candidates for the Bathurst Regional Council election is starting to take a real shape and several debating points are already finding focus.
My idea of a strong local council is probably a bit different to others, but at the forefront of a strategic approach must be that the mayor and council are to oversee a business with many staff, a large budget and responsibility to maintain and improve the many facilities that a fast growing city needs and demands.
It’s probably the duty of each elector to think hard about each member of each ticket before we actually allocate our vote.
Our vote virtually gives the use of our bankcard to a councillor for the next 36 months. Voting decisions are of utmost importance for every one of us.
Familiar faces
LAST week’s Western Advocate article on the anniversary celebrations at the Eglinton Hall carried photos of members of long-time Eglinton families and readers appreciated the story.
Naomi Smith (Peacock), Ian Freeman, Ted and Betty Rheinberger and Wal Stocks are a few names that I saw and their families go back to a quiet little village to the north of Bathurst.
Many of us know where Phil Hanrahan, Jack Lew and Bert Kellahan lived as we knew their families and played sport with them.
Eglinton is now on the way to becoming home to lots of new residents.
Numbers game
A REPORT of yardings at Wagga Saleyards for the just-ended financial year makes important reading.
There were 168,135 cattle sold for an overall average of $1262 per head and 1,658,608 sheep and lambs sold for an average of $130.53 per head.
Wagga Wagga City Council spent $3 million on upgrading the yard’s cattle facilities that will lift cattle yarding capacity from 2700 to 5500 head.
Wagga is well-established as the largest sheep and lamb market in the southern hemisphere.
Specific skins
CALLOWIE Poll Merino Stud, Bordertown, South Australia showed the reserve champion fleece in the Australian Fleece competition at the recent Bendigo Sheep Show.
The fleece came from a scanned-in-lamb three-year-old ewe, shorn at eight months, 20.1 micron, 93 millimetres, and which had not long weaned a lamb.
The stud owners report that the fleece value was $57.46, equating to $1.85 of wool grown each week.
Breeders know that Merino sheep that have been line bred for a specific skin type can certainly produce these wool results and that heavier, thick skins generally cannot.
Taking a punt
BOOK readers who enjoy a few tales of mischief will probably enjoy Max Presnell’s just released Good Losers Die Broke.
In an early chapter he comments on the famed Doncaster Hotel, near Royal Randwick.
He writes: “To some, the public bar was a cesspool of tipsters, urgers, bludgers, pickpockets, SP bookies, down at heel trainers and alcoholic strappers, generally the salt of the turf.”
RRP is $33 and I’m sure that our very own Books Plus will locate a copy for you.
Diary dates
- Thursday, August 10: Farming Field Day at Belgravia.
- Friday, August 11: Sheep in Focus forum at Orange RSL.
- Saturday, August 19: Bathurst Merino Association Ram Expo and working dog auction at Bathurst Showground.
- Saturday, August 26: Burraga Sheep Show.
Laugh lines
JESS and her hubby had bouncing triplet boys. Her aged aunt congratulated the parents and added: “What a rare blessing for you both, my dear.” Jess told her that the doctors at the hospital said that triplets happen just once in almost two million times. “Good lord, Jessie, how did you find time to do your housework?” aunt queried.
***
YOUNG Mrs Feiney was asleep with her hubby and was enjoying a vivid dream. “I hear footsteps. It’s my husband, go quickly,” she mumbled. Mr Fieney woke with a start and leapt out the window.
***
“Life is full of such sorrow, sometimes I think it better not to be born at all,” she said. “But how many people do you meet in a lifetime who were that lucky?”