Starkville Daily News

Dixie Round-up generates scholarshi­p money for 4-H’ers

- By NATHAN GREGORY

JACKSON, Miss. – Since the age of 7, Smith County 4-H'er Chase Boone has been showing mostly Simmental cattle in the Dixie National Junior Round-up each year.

He is now a high school senior who will soon be moving on to college but not before a final appearance in one of his favorite livestock show events. He ended up exhibiting two supreme champion livestock -- the supreme beef female and the supreme beef bull -- and was named one of six premier exhibitors.

It was a successful send-off, if not a bitterswee­t one.

“I'm going to miss being actively involved in the show ring and being on the end of a halter leading into the ring,” Boone said. “It's going to be a transition period because I've done it for so long and so many times.”

Champion animals are featured in the Round-up's final event: the Dixie National Sale of 4-H’er Chase Boone of Smith County 4-H and Raleigh FFA holds three plaques representi­ng each of the scholarshi­ps he received as an exhibitor at the 54th Annual Dixie National Junior Round-up at the Mississipp­i Trade Mart Feb. 9, 2023. (Photo by MSU Extension Service/kevin Hudson) Junior Champions. Held Feb. 9 at the Mississipp­i Trade Mart, the sale featured a record 48 champion market animals, including eight steers, 16 hogs, 10 lambs, 12 goats, and for the first time, two hair sheep. The shows featured 1,257 4-H and FFA members showing 2,153 animals.

The Sale of Junior Champions

Promotion Committee awarded 25 $1,500 scholarshi­ps to exhibitors who are high school seniors but did not qualify an animal in the sale, six $2,000 scholarshi­ps to premier exhibitors and eight $1,500 scholarshi­ps to owners of supreme champion livestock. In total, the committee awarded $61,500 in scholarshi­ps.

For his efforts, Boone took home two scholarshi­ps worth $1,500 apiece and a $2,000 scholarshi­p for being a premier exhibitor.

MSU Extension 4-H livestock specialist Dean Jousan said the 54th edition of the sale was another massive success.

“The 2023 sale generated $456,285 that many of the exhibitors will direct toward their college funds or for purchase of a new project animal for the next show season,” Jousan said, “and each of them earned every penny. None of these youth started with a champion market animal. They put in a year's worth of care, training and practice with their animals to advance to this event.”

Boone is one of the exhibitors whose future aspiration­s are closer to reality with the help of the scholarshi­ps he won. He plans to attend Jones College next fall and has narrowed down his university destinatio­ns to two, including MSU. He wants to pursue a career in agricultur­al business as a loan officer for a land bank.

For now, he holds many fond memories of his livestock-showing days.

“I enjoy the friendship­s that can be made at every level, whether it's a local jackpot show, Dixie Nationals or a national show,” Boone said.“i've built connection­s to people who led me down the right path to a promising future.”

The sale began in 1970 to encourage young people to pursue livestock projects. Since then, it has generated nearly $9 million through livestock sales and awarded $1.1 million in scholarshi­ps to Mississipp­i students.

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