4-H kids across the Upper Peninsula compete in Regional Horse
Bowl
By Tia Platteborze, 12; Lorissa
Juntti, 11; Sydney Dorow, 10, and Mariel Morton, 9.
Over 100 kids gave
up a recent Saturday to go to the Forest Park High School in
Crystal Falls to be drilled, question after
question. The questions weren’t on algebra or history,
instead they were about something the kids love--Horses.
During the recent Upper Peninsula Regional Horse Bowl, which
is run by the Michigan State University Extension, the young
horse enthusiasts, all 4-H members from across the Upper Peninsula
and Northeastern Wisconsin, were asked questions about riding,
horse care, horse diseases and horse anatomy.
Participant Katie Lindow, sixteen, of Florence, Wisconsin, who
competed for the Dickinson County team, says she had a great
time, while at the same time learning a lot.
“
I get a better knowledge of horse-related activities, diseases,
and anything to do with horses, I get to spend time with some
amazing friends, and I get to meet new people,” she said.
It was the first year Rebecca Vollrath, seventeen, of Houghton
competed in the Horse Bowl but she left enthusiastic about the
event.
“
I think it’s a good idea because it lets students get together
and learn more about horses in kind of a fun, competitive way,” she
said.
During the competition, the kids squared off both individually
and as part of a team. In the middle of a classroom there were
two tables for the teams, and facing them was one long table
for the judges. Each team member had their fingers ready to push
a buzzer if they knew the answer. Some risked pushing the button
before the question was finished. That strategy had mixed results.
According to Linda Beyer of Wallace, who is the Menominee County
coach and is also on the State Programming Committee for Horse
Bowl, the event is set up like a quiz show.
“
You have a team with four players and they play against another
team with four players,” she said. “It’s patterned
after College Bowl. Each contestant gets to answer an individual
question and then they compete against the opposite team.”
Some examples of questions included: Which grooming tool is used
to trim the long hairs from a horse’s tail or mane? The
answer was clippers. Name three parasites that affect horses?
Some possible answers would be stomach worms, pin worms or tape
worms. Give one example of legume hay. Some correct answers would
be alfalfa, clover.
The competitors took the Horse Bowl very seriously because they
were competing in something that they loved and on a subject
that they enjoyed very much. They practiced long and hard for
the big event and practiced both individually and as a team.
Cassidy Calderwood, eleven, of Marquette obviously practiced
a lot.
“
Study, study, study, study, study since November,” she
said
Lindow was also ready and prepared.
“
We practiced, as a group, every week for two months and at school
I had my friends practice with me,” she said.
Despite all the studying, Calderwood explained that the judges
had some tricks to make the questions more difficult.
“
The most difficult thing is probably going in that room and being
asked questions that have been flipped around from the things
that you have actually studied,” she said. “It’s
just a nerve-racking thing because sometimes when you’re
answering individual questions there is so much pressure on you
that you’re just, like, ‘Oh my gosh, I don’t
know what to do!’”
The kids came from all around the region, including communities
such as Mass City, Houghton, Norway, Sault Ste.Marie, Florence,
Wisconsin and many others. There were teams from seven county
4-H programs including Chippewa County, Dickinson County, Gogebic
County, Houghton County, Marquette County, Menominee County and
Ontonagon County.
When the dust cleared at the end of the day, the Menominee County
Team swept the Senior Regular Division with the team award and
the top four individual awards. In the Senior Novice Division
the Gogebic County Team finished at the top of the team standings
and had the top three individuals. In the Junior Regular Division,
the Marquette County “A” Team won the team competition
and team member Emily Bertucci of Ishpeming won the individual
award. Lastly, in the Junior Novice Division, the Gogebic County
Team took the top spot, plus four out of five top individual
spots.
Marquette County Coach Cathy Waller said the contestants give
up a lot of time to compete but really seem to enjoy it.
“
They have a lot of fun hanging out with each other on a weekly
basis to practice,” she said. “They never get tired
of learning about horses. All these kids ride.”
Most of the kids have future dreams connected to horses. Calderwood
said she hopes to become a veterinarian, specifically a large
animal vet, which means she would deal with horses, cattle and
sheep. Vollrath also wants to be a veterinarian and she said
she hopes to do chiropraction and acupuncture on horses as well.
Likewise, Lindow either wants to become a large animal vet, specializing
in equine medicine, or a trainer who handles the stunt horses
for the movies.
One of the few boys at the competition, Eric Kocher, fourteen,
of Mass City, has some different dreams involving horses.
“
When I’m older I want to live on a ranch somewhere out
west,” he said.