Showing posts with label 4-H. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 4-H. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Portraits from the Junior Livestock Show

By: Garet Livermore, Vice President for Education
One of the most important traditions of The Farmers’ Museum is its annual Junior Livestock Show. Established by Stephen C. Clark Jr. in 1947, the Junior Show has brought children from throughout Central New York to show their sheep, dairy goats, swine, dairy cattle and beef cattle to Cooperstown to participate in one of the largest events of its kind in the Northeast. The show is run cooperatively by the museum with the Cooperative Extension staff of the following counties:

• Otsego
• Delaware
• Schoharie
• Fulton/Montgomery
• Herkimer
• Oneida
• Madison
• Chenango

Through the more than sixty years of the show, much has changed in farming and the economy of our region. In Oneida County alone, there were more than 4,000 farms at the show’s inception and scarcely 1,000 today. But the Junior Show has remained a constant for farm families and 4-H members each summer. Because of rising interest in food and agriculture, the show remains healthy and continues to attract about 300 children and about 700 animals as participants. Many of whom are children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren of exhibitors from years gone by. Many families find themselves drawn into the world of the show and after starting off as exhibitors, they become involved in starting and maintaining 4-H groups in their communities or even helping to organize the show itself.

The focus of The Farmers’ Museum Junior Livestock Show is the kids and their animals. The children spend countless hours in the months leading up to the show preparing themselves and their animals for the event. Many of the participants use the Cooperstown show as preparation for nationally recognized events like the New York State Fair and the All-American Dairy Show in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
This year, to document the relationship between the children and their animals, museum staff worked with photographer Richard Walker to create a series of portraits in a makeshift studio at the show grounds. The photographs illustrate the pride and hard work that goes into the show and the bond between exhibitor and their animal partners in the event. Here are a few of samples of Richard’s work on this project.

For more images in this series, click here.

All photographs by Richard Walker.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Seeds, Seeds, Seeds!

By: Gwen Miner, Supervisor of Domestic Arts
Heirloom Seeds have been occupying some part of all my work days for the last twelve weeks, from ordering them to packaging them to now actually planting them in the hot frames.

For those of you who read my previous post in February, you will wonder if I found a seed variety that I was looking for. The answer is yes: thanks to the internet and our seed supplier, I was able to purchase the elusive Boston Marrow Squash seed. It was pricey, but it will be worth it when we harvest and finally get to cook some. Boston Marrow is a winter squash that matures in 90-100 days, weighing between 10 to 20 pounds and if kept cool and dry it will last until the following spring. The squash has been prized historically for its rich deep orange flesh with a fine texture. The Boston Marrow Squash has two hundred years of documented history. The following are two of the common stories regarding the origin of the squash. The first one is that the seed was probably brought from South America by an American sea captain in the early 19th century. The other is that it originated in upstate New York and was seed that the Native Americans gave to the European Settlers. Either way, it was introduced in 1831 to the public from Salem, Massachusetts as the Boston or “Autumnal” Marrow Squash.

For the past 6 weeks we have been packing seeds to sell in Todd’s General Store here at the museum and for the 4-H Heirloom Seed Project that we have sponsored for the past twenty plus years. We buy the seed in bulk and then pack them in envelopes that are printed in the Middlefield Printing Office using a design that is found on early hand-folded Shaker seed packets.
We offer for sale 36 different Heirloom Vegetable varieties, 8 different Herbs and 14 different Heirloom Flowers. If you are interested in purchasing seeds, stop in the store or email Josh at j.harley[at]nysha.org.
In addition to packing we just finished setting up two hot frames. At the Lippitt Farmhouse my co-worker Patrick MacGregor and I set up the frame last week and I planted it with our tomatoes, cabbage and melons on Tuesday, April 13.
In addition to that hot frame, Patrick built a new and improved one that we installed in the work yard at Bump Tavern to start five different varieties of Heirloom Tomatoes in peat pots for our annual Heritage Plant Sale on Memorial Day weekend.
We are beginning to plow up the field garden and beginning to work up the kitchen garden to ready them for planting. We will be planting some potatoes in the next couple of weeks, but will be waiting until the middle to last of May to plant seeds of most of the varieties of heirloom vegetable varieties that we grow. Hopefully, we will have a good growing season this year.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Looking for Seeds

By: Gwen Miner, Supervisor of Domestic Arts
Like many of you who garden, I can’t wait for the new seed catalogs to arrive. I love looking through them and finding the old familiar and favorite varieties, but also looking for new varieties. I especially like the colorful pictures and the old graphics that some of the catalogs use. It is a good day when I can locate the seeds for a variety that I once grew, but have been unable to get the seed of for some time. Such was the case yesterday when I located sources for seed for two vegetable varieties that I have not been able to find for several years. Thank you to the powers of the internet. Today I find out if they actually have the seed in stock.

You might wonder why I have not been able to locate certain seed stock. Well, that is because for our gardens here at the museum and for the Heirloom Seed Project I need heirloom varieties of seed that were grown preferably prior to 1850 in this area of New York. Weather, pests and disease affect the availability of seed stock from year to year, especially heirloom varieties.

We (museum staff) first started growing heirloom varieties back in the early 1980s when The Heirloom Vegetable Garden, a Cornell Cooperative Extension Information Bulletin, was published. We began growing, harvesting and cooking the vegetables that folks would have in the 19th century.



At the same time I put together the 4-H Heirloom Seed Project in conjunction with our Otsego County 4-H office. The goals were simple: to get kids growing heirloom varieties and gaining some knowledge regarding their importance and to have a vegetable exhibition component for our annual Harvest Festival held in September. That program has grown to include The Three Sisters Garden, Cloverbud Pumpkin and Sunflower, Heirloom Herb Garden and the Heirloom Flower Garden. This year we are planning to open an adult component.

For the last couple of weeks I have been perusing the seed catalogs, making out orders and sourcing out seeds. Patrick MacGregor, Meg Preston and I have also been revising and refreshing the exhibition catalog, a major project as it will have a new format, new graphics to go along with the offering of new varieties.

Check back to see how I make out actually acquiring those elusive seeds and on plans for the gardens here at the museum

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