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TENNESSEE 4-H IDEAS

VOLUME 04 - Issue 21
May 28, 2004


IN THIS ISSUE

2004 Roundup Service Project
4HCCS Literature Order
Did You Get Your Electric Camp Bus Schedule?
Electric Camp News Release
Rhea County 4-H’ers Enhance Ag Center Through Grants
State 4-H Dairy Quiz Bowl June 2
State 4-H Forestry And Wildlife Judging June 17
State Finalists Named For Roundup
State Livestock/Meats Judging Contests Set For June 1
Tennessee 4-H Roundup Web Site Updated
Volunteer Recognition Nomination Deadline Approaches


UPCOMING EVENTS

June 1
State 4-H Livestock/Meats Judging Contests - Murfreesboro

June 2
June Dairy Month Kick-Off Luncheon - Nashville

June 5-11
Citizenship-Washington Focus - Chevy Chase, MD

June 7-11
State 4-H Wildlife Conference - Greeneville

June 15-18
Junior High 4-H Academic Conference - Knoxville

June 17
State 4-H Forestry/Wildlife Judging Contest - Crossville

June 17-19
State Performing Arts Troupe Workshop - Murfreesboro

June 22-26
State 4-H Horse Championships - Shelbyville

June 29-July 2
4-H Electric Camp - Knoxville

July 6-9
State Target S.M.A.R.T. Campboree - Columbia

July 12-16
Tennessee Junior Livestock Expo (Beef Events) - Nashville

July 19-23
State 4-H Roundup - Knoxville

July 23-25
Young Farmer Conference - Columbia

July 26-30
Tennessee Junior Livestock Expo (Sheep Events) - Cookeville

July 28-August 1
Southern Regional 4-H Horse Events - Monroe, LA



Tennessee 4-H Home Page: www.utextension.utk.edu/4H/
Online version of Ideas: www.utextension.utk.edu/4H/ideas04/
Ideas index: www.utextension.utk.edu/4H/ideas04/04-index.htm


2004 ROUNDUP SERVICE PROJECT

When people turn 18, they are faced with a world of opportunities and choices. Most young adults have a family to help them through this time of transition. But what if you didn’t have a family?

At age 18, children in foster care have two choices. They can leave the system and go out on their own, or they can continue to receive assistance as they make the transition into adulthood.

The UT Independent Living Program, the Transitional Living Program, and the Department of Children’s Services strive to assist youth as they transition to independence.

Youth who choose to stay in voluntary services to follow their educational path use independent living services.

Transitional living services are for those young people who choose to leave custody and enter the workforce.

Whatever choice they make, these youth are without permanent or supportive families, and they are in need of assistance.

The young men, young women, and single parents enrolled in TLP are moving into dorms and apartments and need all the things that you would need to start a home.

The State 4-H Council selected youth in transition as the service project for 2004 Roundup. As a Roundup delegate or leader, you can help make the transition easier for these young people who are starting life on their own.

State Council encourages all delegates, leaders, and staff to participate in the project by collecting and donating the following items:

* suitcases, duffle bags, backpacks
* bed linens, pillows, blankets
* brooms, mops, dustpans
* cleaning supplies, detergent, fabric softener
* cookbooks with quick and easy meals
* dishes, glasses, eating utensils
* kitchen towels and potholders
* kitchen utensils (no sharp knives, please)
* pots, pans, crockpots
* small kitchen appliances (such as toasters)
* laundry bags/baskets
* trashcans and trashbags
* alarm clocks
* baby clothes and supplies

Bring your donations to the Tail Gate Party on Monday, July 19.

Lori Jean Mantooth
Extension Assistant, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

4HCCS LITERATURE ORDERS

If you missed the deadline for ordering 4HCCS literature and still would like to place an order, we are offering a one time opportunity. You will receive a 35% discount off the catalog price if you place your order through the state 4-H office by June 15.

Send an email to tlcole@utk.edu listing the following information:

County:
Contact Person:
Item (Name of literature):
Stock #:
Quantity Needed:

You can find a listing of the available literature along with prices at www.utextension.utk.edu/4H/ideas04/4-H_online_order.pdf. (Keep in mind that the prices listed do not include your 35% discount.)

Orders will be shipped in late August and you will be invoiced at that time.

Alice Ann Moore
Assistant Director, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

DID YOU GET YOUR ELECTRIC CAMP BUS SCHEDULE?

The 4-H Electric Camp bus schedules were emailed on May 22 to those counties having delegates. If you have delegates attending these events and failed to receive a schedule, please let us know.

Steve Sutton
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ELECTRIC CAMP NEWS RELEASE

For a news release recognizing your delegates attending State 4-H Electric Camp, June 29-July 2, go to the Web Packet provided by UTIA Marketing and Communications at www.agriculture.utk.edu/webPacket/. This is a fill-in-the blank article suitable for use in your local newspaper. You might personalize it with a photo of your delegate(s).

Steve Sutton
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

RHEA COUNTY 4-H’ERS ENHANCE AG CENTER THROUGH GRANTS

The Rhea County Agricultural and Natural Resource Complex has expanded with the help of youth and adult volunteers over the last year. Earlier this year, Rhea County 4-H received an $1,800.00 Youth in Action Grant that was funded by Met life foundation. Grant monies went toward the development of four additional picnic tables and a gazebo. The gazebo is located near the future pond and will soon have a pier where students can walk out and enjoy the pond. The gazebo was utilized at the “Celebrate the Earth” event. Celebrate the Earth was funded by a $1,000.00 Water Quality Grant. Approximately 700 4th and 5th grade youth were invited to the Ag Center to learn about water quality.

During the last year 4-H members and volunteers have devoted over 500 hours of their time to develop 10 picnic tables, a 30 X 60 open pavilion, a quarter mile nature trail, an acre of pine trees, a variety of large trees and are now in the final stages of completing the gazebo.

The county had purchased 16 acres of land and has allowed us to develop the property. The hope for the future is to have a fairgrounds on this property. County Mayor Billy Ray Patton states, “We are committed to supporting this project to completion. I’m really excited about the work done at the Agricultural and Natural Resource Complex. I believe once this project is completed it will benefit many Rhea County citizens.” By the end of 2004 the pond should be finished, an arbor built and restroom facilities completed. The next big project is to build a livestock barn.

Rhea County 4-H has received over $8,000.00 in grants over the last year. 4-Hers have enhanced many life skills, including communication and decision making. “Building the gazebo has been hard work, but in the end all of our hard work will pay off because all of Rhea County will be able to use the facility,” said Alisha Jones, Rhea County 4-H member.

Anna Johnson
Extension Agent, Rhea County
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

STATE 4-H DAIRY QUIZ BOWL JUNE 2

The State 4-H Dairy Quiz Bowl competition is scheduled for Wednesday, June 2 in Nashville. Senior teams should report to the Central District office auditorium at the Ellington Agriculture Center at 8:30 a.m. All others should report by 9:00 a.m. Awards will be presented at the June Dairy Month Kick Off luncheon.

Teams registering for the event include:

Junior High
Coffee County
Marshall County (3 teams)
Tipton County

Senior
Coffee County
Hamblen County
Marshall County
McMinn County
Tipton County

The winning team will represent Tennessee at the North American Invitational 4-H Dairy Quiz Bowl in Louisville, Kentucky this November. State sponsor for the event is Dairy Farmers of America.

Steve Sutton
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

STATE 4-H FORESTRY AND WILDLIFE JUDGING JUNE 17

June 17 is the date for the state 4-H forestry and wildlife judging contests at the Cumberland County Fairgrounds in Crossville. District-winning teams will be competing for the honor of representing Tennessee at the national events. The event climax with an awards banquet at 6:00 p.m. Teams participating include:

Forestry Judging
Decatur County
Henry County
Hardeman County
Dickson County
Coffee County
Meigs County
Carter County (3 teams)

Wildlife Judging
Hardeman County (2 teams)
McNairy County
Lincoln County
Robertson County
Sumner County
Coffee County (2 teams)
Putnam County
Hawkins County
Loudon County
Sevier County

Steve Sutton
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

STATE FINALISTS NAMED FOR ROUNDUP

Congratulations to all counties who have finalists selected for state competition at 4-H Roundup. The lists have been sent to the district offices. Please let us know immediately if one of your state finalists will not be able to attend Roundup. Record scores will be sent to each county following Roundup.

Steve Sutton
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

STATE LIVESTOCK/MEATS JUDGING CONTESTS SET FOR JUNE 1

The state 4-H livestock and meats judging contests have been set for Tuesday, June 1 at Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro. Each district is eligible to send three teams to each event. Those qualifying include:

Livestock Judging
Hardin County
Obion County
Bedford County (2 teams)
Wilson County
Cannon County
Coffee County
Smith County
Jefferson County
Knox County
McMinn County

Meats Judging
Crockett County
Hardeman County (2 teams)
Humphreys County (2 teams)
Coffee County
Warren County
Carter County
Hancock County

Registration will be at 10:00 a.m CDT with the contests getting underway at 11:00 p.m. There will be awards banquet at 4:30 p.m. CDT.

Steve Sutton
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

TENNESSEE 4-H ROUNDUP WEB SITE UPDATED

We now have the Web site updated for the 2004 Tennessee 4-H Roundup. The URL is www.utextension.utk.edu/4H/roundup/. The site is designed to acquaint 4-H members and volunteer leaders with Roundup and those events associated with it.

Here is what is included on the site: general information, tentative program, council members, elections, project competition, All Star exhibits, service project, Vol State and photo highlights from 2003. You can also download a promotional brochure from the site.

Steve Sutton
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

VOLUNTEER RECOGNITION NOMINATION DEADLINE APPROACHES

Last year alone nearly 14,000 volunteers assisted in the delivery of 4-H programming in Tennessee. We all know that volunteers are crucial in the delivery of our programs…so why not say “THANKS!” The State Adult Leader Recognition and the W.M. and Ruth Hale Master 4-H Family Recognition forms are due to the state 4-H office on June 15, 2004. Check with your district office for the district deadline.

To obtain a copy of the State Adult Leader Recognition nomination form visit www.utextension.utk.edu/4H/forms/ldrecogn.pdf. To obtain a copy of the Hale Master 4-H Family nomination form visit www.utextension.utk.edu/4H/forms/masterfamily.pdf.

Patrick Hamilton
Extension Assistant, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK

The purpose of life is a life of purpose.
~ Robert Byrne

 

 

 



 

 

 

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