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They
come from Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska and Wyoming to compete in National
Western Stock Show's longest running program of practical beef cattle
management. In just over 70 years, the Catch-A-Calf Contest has awarded
nearly 3,000 steers to 4-H members hailing from the western United States.
The program began in 1935 when 10 boys caught 10 sponsored calves. The
contest quickly caught on, and the program grew to include 52 calves by
1942. Soon after World War II, the program settled at 40 calves per year,
which is where the number continues to stand today.
The program
is designed so successful catchers feed their calf out and return the
animal one year later as a market steer. The market animals are then judged
by pounds gained, improvement in quality, carcass quality and the member's
record book.
The 2008 Catch-A-Calf schedule includes the placing of the 2007 calves in the Stadium Arena on Jan. 12 at 4 p.m.
Catch-A-Calf contests in the Coliseum are held during the morning and matinee rodeo performances on Jan. 19, the matinee and evening performances on Jan. 20, and the matinee on Jan. 23.
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