I don’t know about other show types, but in this type of 4-H show in North Carolina we do not have the birds walk. There may be different rules in other states/organizations.
In this particular show circuit, it’s based solely on age, not experience. Cloverbuds are the youngest, followed juniors, intermediates, and then seniors. I can’t remember all of our age brackets right off the top, but Seniors are those ages 14-18.
If the judge asks you to “Show the head” and the youth is capable of putting the bird at that height, that’s the proper way to do it. If you have younger youth, or someone not able to hold the bird at that height, then keeping them standing on the table is fine.
Enjoyed the video! The hat rule is odd thought lol
Do you have to walk the bird? I saw some place do that?
I don’t know about other show types, but in this type of 4-H show in North Carolina we do not have the birds walk. There may be different rules in other states/organizations.
No 😂
Thanks, this is good to show my club
Glad it’s helpful!
What makes you qualifi for Jr. Class v.s more advanced?
In this particular show circuit, it’s based solely on age, not experience. Cloverbuds are the youngest, followed juniors, intermediates, and then seniors. I can’t remember all of our age brackets right off the top, but Seniors are those ages 14-18.
shame the outdoors audio turned out hard to hear, but the subtitles help with it!
We uploaded a new one with better audio! Here is the link: ruclips.net/video/QqI8BHeAg8k/видео.htmlsi=W8xCvxoqpVNx8B4a
@@ashleybrooks5210 i'll give that one a like and a view too!
Do you have to hold the chicken up to your face?
If the judge asks you to “Show the head” and the youth is capable of putting the bird at that height, that’s the proper way to do it. If you have younger youth, or someone not able to hold the bird at that height, then keeping them standing on the table is fine.
What types of chickens do they have?
The smaller red chicken is a Seabright and the larger white chicken is a Columbian Wyandotte