Friday, June 25, 2010

Essex County 4-H invites you to their upcoming horse clinic: Ground Skills and Training and Farrier Work

Essex County 4-H is having a horse clinic on Wednesday, July 7.

From 10 AM to 12 PM, the farrier, Joseph D’Auria, will present.
Starting at 1 PM, Nicki Frechette and her assistant will be teaching ground skills and making your own simple training equipment. She will be bringing a pony to train.

There will be a bring-your-own-lunch break in between the 2 presentations.

Please RSVP by calling the CCE Essex County office: 962-4810.

Chattering Chipmunks April to June Club News

It’s been a busy few months for the Chipmunks.

March
In March we celebrated March Madness. Our favorite seamstress Sandi Behre, along with her friends from the quilting league, taught the members how to make library book bags and aprons. Yet again Sandy worked her magic and had the kindergartners with no sewing experience comfortably using a sewing machine by the end of the first meeting. Everyone learned how to make straight cuts on the fabric and to sew a straight line. Three dads helped one of the leaders teach woodworking. The Jrs made step stools- a project one of the dads had done when he was a 4Her back in 1977. For the first week, this group met at a members' house to use his Dad's woodworking shop as they learned to cut the wood with handsaws. Wayne S. proudly displayed his bench he made all those years ago. The following week, carpenter and father Roy B. taught the group to drive nails and use a screw driver properly. He lead the formal assembly of the stools.

Father Jim K. assisted each week, lending a hand to any kid who needed a little extra help. The Cloverbuds assembled tool boxes and learned to cut PVC pipe with a pipe cutter. The Cooking Group met with the other 4H leader. Week one Cloverbuds made nut bread and buttermilk, while the JR made vegetable soup. For Week 2, the class of three made fresh pasta and sauce. We only heard wonderful things about the pasta--- they ate it all before the rest of us could even ask for a taste!

April
The Jrs had their monthly business meeting and did a wonderful job running the meeting according to the Rules of Order. The group divided up into three committees and each committee reported. The Once a Month Service Committee planned short service projects for each month through Sept. The Fair Theme Committee decided on the theme of the bulletin board for fair- our participation in the Million Trees Service Project. The Adopt a Spot Committee decided to adopt the Trail Head for the proposed Saranac River Trail.

We selected the person we wanted to support for our Kiva service project. (Kiva is an international loan organization that makes low cost loans to industrious individuals throughout the world who would otherwise be unable to get a loan to improve their business or situation.) Everyone turned in their dollar they earned. Our group loaned $25 along with 26 other business partners to Aman of Lebanon. He is a 19 year old construction worker who lives with his family of 7 siblings.

For the 15th April meeting we collected trash along the roadway of Northern Avenue and New York Avenue as we walked from our meeting place to the City Works Department to have a safety briefing in preparation for planting trees in the City. We all learned to “Call Before You Dig.” The City thanked the members for all the garbage they collected. Each Jr was paired with a Cloverbud member for the trash collection. Various teams raced to see who could collect the most garbage. Two groups competed for the largest piece of garbage collected. One team of girls still remembers they collected 216 cigarette butts.

Service Coordinator Pascal reported the One Million Trees Service Project to be a tremendous learning experience for him. He really enjoyed working with City Hall, especially the Zoning and Town Planners office and seeing how the city government operates. He presented our proposed project to plant 15 trees in the city at the Plattsburgh City Council Meeting. He credits having to do 4H public presentations for making him comfortable speaking to the city council.

With the approval of the town and the safety briefing completed, the group met on 22 April to transplant our trees from our downtown winter nursery (a member's garden). Anne Lenox-Barlow spoke to us about pruning trees and tree care in the city. The members evaluated the trees in the backyard of the house for pruning opportunities. Then Master Gardener Diane P. and Anne helped us identify what trees survived the winter. We learned that 8 of the 24 trees had not survived- primarily the golden raintrees and the dogwoods. (The National Arbor Day Foundations map list Plattsburgh as a zone 5 whereas the USDA map lists us as a Zone 4.) Since our trees came with a guarantee, we ordered a new set. We walked to our first planting location to learn as a group how to best plant a tree. We planted 2 trees on Draper Avenue- Eastern Redbuds. We said good-by to Diane and headed to the Trail Head of the Saranac River to plant 9 trees. However as we considered the spacing of the trees as they grew, we realized we only had room for 5 trees. Quite a few large rocks were removed in the process. Then the Jrs dispersed to various points around the city, Clinton County, and Essex County to plant the tree they were assigned to monitor for the next year. 7 of the trees were sent to other communities: 3 to Mooers, 1 to Westport, 1 to Peru, 2 to Ausable/Jay. Extra trees from the trailhead were planted in other spots in the city. Next time you are at the Plattsburgh Public Library check out our small crabapple tree on the front strip between the sidewalk and Oak Street.

May
On May 13th we meet Ranger Rick D. at the Chateauguay Woodlands (near Lyon Mountain) to learn about managed forests. (Yes, he really is Ranger Rick!) We learned he is working his “dream job”. He showed us two different parts of “his” forest and told us the history of the forest. We learned it was once part of a charcoal making operation and has experienced numerous fires. He talked to us about how he chooses sections to be logged. It was a great field trip. Members had time to collect specimens for their leaf/tree books. Professional photographer Kathy Marant joined us and helped the members working on a photography tree book with their pictures.

On the 20th of May learned about the parts of a tree. We “played a game” where we built a tree from the inside out using the members and the parents. Each “part” of the tree had a chant. Our president was the heartwood. He chanted “I support.” Each layer of the tree was a different age group, ending up with our youngest Cloverbuds as the bark, chanting “I protect.” We played a forestry resource game where we learned how trees compete for resources in the forest. In the words of one of the Kindergartens, “It wasn't fair.” We also played a game that has become a favorite over the last several meetings: forestry resources and the invasive Norwegian Maple.
(This game as NOT fair at all! The Norwegian Maple gets most of the resources in an area of the forest.) We all got a chance to work on making a three dimensional paper mache tree for our fair display.

Our monthly service project for May was completed over a number of days.We collected three gas grills though donations from Craigslist. We cleaned, disassembled and painted them in yellow, blue and green Rustoleum. Finally we planted vegetables in them for the residents of the Val Haven Nursing home. Some of the members painted small flower pots and planted herbs in them. The pots were set in the wire baskets of one of the grills. We planted tomatoes, marigolds, cucumbers, zucchini, radishes, lettuce and green onions.

June
For June, our meetings focused on forestry learning and getting ready for fair. We decided to build a three dimensional paper mache tree for our group display. We started the last meeting in May, but had to rebuild due to unfortunate circumstances. Each meeting some of the Jrs added a little more. We played the invasive tree game both meetings upon request.

For the 10 June meeting we had our monthly business meeting. The Jrs had lots of fun motioning and seconding items. Our Service Coordinator shared that our loan to the gentleman in Lebanon through the Kiva project had already earned some interest. The group agreed we would leave all our money in Kiva until the loan repayment was complete next year and use the money plus all the interest to make another loan to another person.

Cloverbuds made birthday cards for the Val Haven Nursing home in Peru in lieu of attending the business portion of the meeting. They learned how to use old cards and stamps to make scenes on their cards. Then everyone came together to review the parts of the tree and learn more about how/why forests are logged though a logging game. The Jrs planned what the bulletin board will look like.

The 17 June meting was “dentistry”--we did roots and crowns of the tree. After playing the invasive species game, we learned about how roots grow and the types of roots. We all measured the crown of a tree outside to see how many square feet ti covered. (Thanks to the older JR members for doing the math.)

Our monthly service project was put on hold as the town put barriers up along the Saranac River Trail head so they can begin construction. We could not not plant our flower gardens around our trees. We were asked to wait until next year. On the positive side our baby trees are all protected by an industrial sized fence. The club members voted to just use the extra time to collect items for the Adirondack Humane Society service project in July.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Smart Financial Planning Strategies for Horse Professionals

Smart Financial Planning Strategies for Horse Professionals – Recession Recovery is the First Step

On July 5, 2010, Equestrian Professional will begin a three-part seminar series on financial planning for horse professionals. This series will focus on what horse professionals can do to create a secure financial outlook for their businesses and their own financial future.

The recession has had a widespread effect on the equine industry -

The Problems -
Sales barns and breeders are supporting unsold inventory or are selling horses below cost. Show barns have reduced the number of shows they attend, are competing closer to home, and/or are bringing fewer customers on the road. Trainers and professional riders are implementing new strategies to attract and retain clients: i.e. leases and syndicates have gained popularity. Additionally, some trainers are moving into new markets, like selling online training programs. Boarding stables are dealing with more past due accounts and abandoned horses than ever before. Rescues are over burdened with unwanted horses and their donors are tapped out.

The Reactions -
Many horse business owners have dipped into their retirements and savings (or maxed out their credit) in order to weather the recession. Others have made significant (and successful) changes to their businesses, but are finding that they must now adjust their business model in order to make these changes more profitable. Still others are in a state of uncertainty – the recession may have presented them with an opportunity- for example, to purchase discounted real estate or invest in a special horse. However, they find themselves reluctant to make a commitment in the current economic climate.

Whether a business has taken a direct hit or only been marginally effected - the recession has created a tumultuous business climate and currently, most horse businesses are either financially unstable or in some stage of economic recovery.

The Solutions -
In order to properly address these needs, Equestrian Professional’s Smart Financial Planning Strategies for Horse Professionals will take a three-pronged approach. The first seminar we will address financial recovery and stability. The speaker will be successful farm manager, Pam Saul of Breslin & Young financial planners. The second seminar in the series will focus on asset and earnings protection. The speaker will be equine insurance expert, Reed Schroeder, who will cover insurance options for horse professionals. The third and final seminar in the series will focus on building for the future - financial planning and prosperity. The speaker will be investment manger, Marc Reisman, who will discuss retirement planning and investment options for horse professionals.

If you are in the horse business, you can’t afford to miss this seminar series. Equestrian Professional’s seminars can be attended online via webcast or via your phone. The lecture portion is free to all horse professionals but you must register to attend.*

You can learn more about these events and register for the first seminar in the series – “Smart Financial Planning for Horse Professionals – Part 1 Recession Recovery - Stabilizing Your Horse Business” by going to www.EquestrianProfessional.com/public/708.cfm

*Equestrian Professional members also have access to the seminar replay, special seminar hand outs and the members only Insider Tips and Live Q&A session immediately following each event where they can interact directly with the speakers. We encourage all serious horse business owners to learn more about becoming a member.

About Equestrian Professional.com
Equestrian Professional.com provides horse business education, resources and support to horse professionals around the globe. The site offers a wide array of programs, tools and information to help horse trainers, riding instructors, breeders, stable operators and professional riders run profitable businesses and build successful equestrian careers.

For more information please contact Elisabeth McMillan at 931 652 7215 or lizzy@equestrianprofessional.com

SET 4-H Club

TO: All Interested Youth/Families
FROM: Mary P. Breyette


On Saturday, July 10th, at the 4-H Office in Westport, we will be holding our first county 4-H S.E.T. (Science, Engineering and Technology) Club organizational meeting. The meeting will run from 10:00 a.m. until Noon.

We are encouraging any current member or interested in becoming a member to attend this meeting. Essex County’s S.E.T. Team has just returned from participating in M.I.T.’s Eureka Fest in Boston and has exciting new opportunities for all who are interested.

Matt Cauthorn will be leading this new adventure and is looking for adults who would also like to support this opportunity. Questions or would like more information please contact Mary at the 4-H Office or via mba32@cornell.edu

CCE Volunteer Forum


Class Addition to the County Fair Horse Show: Bleeding Heart Barrel Race

With the addition of the Bleeding Heart Barrel Race to the New York State Fair 4-H Horse Show class list, we will also be offering the race in our county fair gymkhana this year as a state fair qualifier. However, it is not on the entry form. If you would like to sign up for this, please write it in on your form. There will be three classes with this race:
  • Bleeding Heart, Junior
  • Bleeding Heart, Senior
  • Bleeding Heart, Pony

Fair Horticulture: It’s Not Too Early for a Top Five List of Ways to Get Ready!

Editor's Note: This note is written for those getting ready for State Fair, but is also helpful for us getting ready for County Fair.

Plates of beautiful vegetables. Lovingly displayed pressed flower pictures. Smiling, proud young people who know how to grow! Hey, we must be talking about the Great New York State Fair.

Even as the temperatures hover below freezing, our seeds are ordered, and we’re already thinking about gardening! Now is a great time to prepare for the Fair. Here are some things to keep in mind as you get ready for the gardening season, and ultimately, for that great experience of encouraging youth to show others the fruits of their labor. Here we offer a Top Five List in an effort to promote good communication between youth and evaluators, and to ensure that the State Fair experience is a capstone of pride in growing, not a disappointment or frustration.

Know how to show. Part of the process of exhibiting your best at a state level is to know how to display produce properly. Check out Vegetable Fare, it?s excellent! http://www.hort.cornell.edu/gbl/toolshed/vegfare.pdf Do be sure to double check the specific requirements offered in this publication against the state fair book for the numbers, they may be different. For example, at State Fair, youth do not need to show 10 peas; we ask for just 5.

Be class-y! There is nothing that frustrates an evaluator more than to have to down grade a child?s fabulous garden project, simply because he or she displayed it in the incorrect class. Work with young people to make sure that they are placing their work in the right category. For example, an arrangement is not a bouquet - an arrangement is a floral design. Simply read through all the descriptions in the Fair book to make sure everyone is on track.

Fill out the card properly. Gotta sign those EIS cards! When you as an educator sign those cards, you verify that exhibit is complete and has met all entry/exhibit requirements. Tops and bottoms, front and back, all that exhibitor information ought to be accurate. Again, it's a heart break to lose a placement simply because a variety isn’t listed, or if a name and address is missing. Last year we took the time to encourage this in horticulture, and what a difference! Thank you for your attentiveness to this!

Keep it cool. This is when we get clothing envy! Whereas cloth might withstand the temperatures of a hot mini-van, your lovingly grown cucumbers, and beautifully arranged floral displays simply cannot. Pack to withstand the journey (since it’s always hot for the Fair, you can count on it!) We suggest coolers, and packing around the projects so that they won?t get battered in transit.

Get wild and crazy. We appreciate the value of hard work, and are grateful for an attractively arranged plate of vegetables that a child has grown for the first time, don’t get misunderstand us. But feel free to play with horticulture this year! Claudia Hitt, the horticulture superintendent says, I just love the pressed flower pictures, the dried flower plaques and I would really like to see more! Marcia Eames-Sheavly, the youth program leader for Cornell Garden-Based Learning, is hoping to see lots of veggie art, as well as some cool living sculpture projects entered in the open class, photo essays would be terrific for those projects you cannot bring along to Fair. Help us breathe life into horticulture in the youth building! Some counties offer unique special projects such as garden record books. Our special challenge to youth who use the same garden for multiple record books will be to cultivate your own little patch of garden - show us in images how your approach is special, and all your own, a little bit different from your siblings.

Let’s work together to ensure a positive and rewarding experience for everyone this year. Evaluators are willing to work with young people--in fact, they welcome the chance to talk with them.

From Claudia Hitt, Horticulture Program Educator CCE of Cortland County

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Gulf Coast Birds Need Your Help

A Message from the Cornell Lab’s Conservation Science Director, Ken Rosenberg

Dear friend,

The oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has affected everyone who cares about birds and nature.
We appreciate the many calls and messages we have received from people expressing concern and the desire to help. In this update, I’ll share what our team is seeing along Louisiana’s coast--and explain the enormous need for monitoring and recovery. You can help by reporting your sightings to eBird or by donating now to support our conservation work.

Let’s Make Sure That Birds Surviving the Oil Today Will Have a Future Tomorrow
The image of the pelican in oil at left was taken by Ben Clock, a member of our video crew documenting the oil’s effects on wildlife. (If you can’t see the image, click here for the web version.) Our crew alerted rescuers who captured the pelican for rehabilitation.
Sadly, this pelican is just the most visible indicator of an entire ecosystem under siege. As committed groups work to save the lives of individual birds along the Louisiana coast, the Cornell Lab is focused on mobilizing birders and providing key scientific data and expertise to ensure that bird populations get the help they need to recover--now and into the future.

Birders Aid Recovery by Reporting Their Sightings
In the face of large-scale disaster, one of the first keys to recovery is the ability to quickly assess damage and prioritize efforts. The Cornell Lab and Audubon have mobilized birders in all the Gulf Coast states to report their sightings to eBird. Since May 4, volunteers have submitted more than 175,000 observations--key data that can be compared with past years to understand the oil’s impact on birds and pinpoint locations for immediate and long-term recovery. Please contribute your sightings to www.ebird.org.

Cornell Lab’s High-Tech Monitoring: A Critical Need for Ocean’s Wildlife
Unlike birds, which thousands of people monitor every day, no baseline data exist to help scientists assess the oil’s impact on the Gulf’s largest animals--whales. This week, the Cornell Lab’s bioacoustics team is deploying autonomous underwater recorders in the Gulf to record the sounds of sperm whales, Bryde’s whales, other marine mammals, and fish. These data will provide key information about how marine life is responding in areas affected and unaffected by oil--the first step in taking action to help.

Making Sure the Birds Are Heard
The Cornell Lab team is documenting the oil spill’s effect on birds for the public, scientists, and policy makers. Our video crew recorded the scene at Grand Terre on June 5, after oil got past booms, and at Barataria Bay on June 8 as oil seeped into the marshes. They have found 14 species with oiled plumage, including egrets, spoonbills, stilts, terns, gulls, and sanderlings. None were as heavily oiled as the pelican shown earlier in this message, but even smaller amounts of oil can be life-threatening since clean feathers are essential for insulation, waterproofing, and flight.

The Oil is Still Flowing, But Recovery Must Begin Now. Please Help.
The success of recovery from the oil spill depends on our nation’s ability to anticipate and assess the damage, prioritize clean-up efforts, and implement long-term recovery. Gathering information about the effect of oil on animals is crucial to each of these steps. Please join us in making a positive difference by reporting your sightings to eBird or by making a donation to support our work. Thank you for your help.

Sincerely,
Kenneth V. Rosenberg
Director, Conservation Science

Your support of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology helps us solve critical problems facing birds and other wildlife by using the best science and technology--and by inspiring people of all ages and backgrounds to care about and protect the planet.

Beef Clinic

Franklin County is having a beef clinic Saturday July 10th, 2010 from 1 PM-4PM. This will be hosted by the Steven O'Connor family. He works for PAPAS Dairy and grazes animals there for the summer. This will be a clipping and showing clinic. They will provide animals. Register by calling the Franklin County office by July 6th: 483-7403.

USA Science Festival Kavli Video Contest

National 4-H Council is partnering with the USA Science & Engineering Festival, a national celebration of innovation in science held in Washington D.C. on October 23rd and 24th . The event is the country’s first national science festival and promises to be the ultimate multi-cultural, multi-generational and multi-disciplinary celebration of the sciences in the United States. The culmination of the Festival is a two-day Expo that will provide more than 500 science & engineering organizations from all over the United States the opportunity to present hands-on, fun science activities to inspire the next generation of scientists and engineers.
Through this partnership, National 4-H Council has been alerted to a great opportunity for 4-H’ers to showcase the innovative 4-H Science work taking place across the nation. The Kavli Science Video Contest is looking for young people around the country to create and submit videos that answer the question "Why is science cool?"

Winning submissions will be creative, surprising, and “contagious” in terms of spreading youth enthusiasm about science to others. Videos might explore a specific scientific concept, demonstrate the wonders of nature, provide a glimpse into the future, show what scientific discovery has done for us in the past or simply explain why you think science is cool.

We are encouraging the entire 4-H system especially those that participated in the Films on video- SET in Urban Communities Kickoff and The Filmmaking Work Group to submit videos.
Who Can Enter – Individual students or groups from K-12 schools, home school networks, after-school programs, science clubs or any other organization the student is representing for the purpose of the Kavli Science Video Contest. All prize monies must go to an educational institution rather than an individual student.

Types of Videos Eligible - Videos should explain Why Science is Cool and may explore a scientific concept, provide a glimpse into the future or show us what scientific discovery has done for us in the past, or whatever else the inspires the entrant. USA Science & Engineering Festival videos must be 30-90 seconds in length, educational and suitable for general public screening.

Selection of Winners - Winning videos will be chosen by a distinguished panel of judges that includes Brian Schwartz, founder of Science & the Arts at the City University of New York Graduate Center and Sheri Potter, a founder of the Coalition on Public Understanding of Science (COPUS).

Deadlines and Prizes – The contest is open now and all entries must be submitted before midnight on July 15, 2010. First prize is $1,000 plus a $500 electronics gift certificate or HD Camcorder (valued up to $500) and a travel stipend to travel to Washington DC for the Expo. Second prize is $500, plus a $250 electronics gift certificate, third prize is $250, plus a $125 electronics gift certificate. The People’s Choice Award prize is $250.

Following in the footsteps of American Idol, America can vote on a People’s Choice Kavli Science Video Award through SciVee, a Web 2.0 site which helps scientists share their work with the general public.

Rules and a submission form can be found at:
http://www.usasciencefestival.org/2010festival/contests/kavli-science-video-contest

4-H Day of Service

Dear 4-H Friends,

On behalf of the Florida 4-H State Council, and Sean Russell, Florida 4-H State Council President, I invite you to join Florida 4-H youth in a nation-wide 4-H Day of Service, Wednesday, July 28th. Information about the 4-H Day of Service is available online at http://www.florida4h.org/youth/youth_service.shtml. This multi-state 4-H Day of Service is a part of the “A New Century of Citizenship” State Service Project--a call to action for 4-H members to start service projects that tie into the elements of the 4-H Pledge – Head, Heart, Hands, and Health. On the webpage you will find the participant resource guide, which gives participants project ideas, as well as information on how to report back their efforts in the project. You can also find flyers and promotional resources to spread the word about the 4-H Day of Service.

Participants may also connect to the day of service by RSVPing to the Facebook event. Search “A New Century of Citizenship – 4-H Day of Service” when logging into an account. From this page, they can network with other participants, promote the event, and receive exciting project news and updates!

Please share this information with 4-H staff, volunteers, and youth across the country. This youth initiative, 4-H Day of Service, exemplifies what youth learn in the 4-H program.

Marilyn and Sean

Poultry Show at Fair Update: Pollorum Testing

A reminder that all poultry (not waterfowl) MUST be tested before being brought to fair if they are over 4 months and do not have a current pullorum certificate.

In the past the state did some testing at the night chickens arrived. HOWEVER this year the state agent has to be at another county fair and will not be there. (This is a RECENT CHANGE.) So all the birds must be tested ahead of time. There are 5 opportunities before our fair. One is this Friday. Two are right before our fair starts. You could make a field trip to the Canton Learning Farm and make it an educational opportunity for your family- they have lots to do there.

If you would like to bring a bird to the Fair that has NOT yet been tested, please go to one of the clinics listed below:
6/18/10 Essex County Fairgrounds, Westport, CCE Building, 5-7pm
7/6/10 Canton CCE Farm, 10am-12pm
7/13/10 St Lawrence County Fairgrounds, Gouverneur, 2-6pm
7/16/10 Essex County Fairgrounds, Westport, 10am-12pm-also Poultry Showmanship Clinic-call 4-H for time on showmanship part
7/17/10 Franklin County Fairgrounds, Malone, 4-H Bldg, 2-4pm-also Poultry Showmanship Clinic-call 4-H for time on showmanship part

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Creative Critters June News

The Creative Critters held their monthly meeting on Friday, June 4th.

Alexander opened our meeting.
Jacob lead us through the pledges.
Allie lead us through a 4H song.
In Samantha's absence, Carrie took attendance.

~Birthday cards were made for the residents of Evergreen Valley Nursing Home.
~Paperwork to accompany our current unit was distributed for use at a later date.
~Fair paperwork was collect from those members who had it finished. Reminder, it is due by 7/1, NO EXCEPTIONS.
~Jacob lead the members through a game of Simon Says.
~Tanner volunteered to lead an activity at our July meeting. Hannah for the August meeting and Allie for the September meeting.

Outings:
~Hannah suggested that we take an outing to Rulf's Orchard to pick berries. All present in agreement.
~Tanner's family has grapes on their property and would like to host a club outing in September to harvest and make jelly with the grapes.

Activities/Projects:
~Each member helped make oven fries by using a mandolin, with help, to cut the potatoes into the shape of french fries.
~Each member made a cup of homemade lemonade.
~Members were divided into groups of 2 and everyone had to work with someone they have never worked with before. We did the experiment “A Juicy Squeeze”. Please remember to document your results.
~Each member brought a 2 liter bottle to the meeting and we made a “Garden in a Bottle” project.

Community Service:
~We will be painting the 4H Dairy Bar on Sunday, June 6th from 9am - ?. Each member is asked to bring a few dollars to contribute to the ordering of pizza for lunch.
-A vote was taken to reimburse Carrie for the paint supplies for this community service. All present were in favor of doing so. The cost for the paint supplies was approximately $50.

Community Service Update:
The Creative Critters painted the 4-H Dairy Bar on Sunday, June 6th. It was a great day to do so as it rained very hard! We had a great time giving the Dairy Bar a fresh coat of paint and a fresh look. The kids did a wonderful job painting. They also had some free time in between the paint drying to do some bonding. We even enjoyed pizza for lunch! The parents were also a huge help. Thank you to the parents that braved getting up on the ladders to paint the top of the Dairy Bar!

Submitted by Carrie, Club Leader

Tangled Reins News Report April and May 2010

April
In April, some of the Tangled Reins 4H club members went to a dressage clinic at Sue Chagnon’s barn. Also, the club had two hands-on riding meetings. At the riding meetings we did group riding to get ready for horse camp, and also learned about grooming for shows. When we weren’t riding, we worked on crafts with horseshoes. We made either wind chimes or picture frames out of old horse shoes. Thank you to Rick Banker and Heather Huchro for giving us some of their old used shoes for these projects.

May
In May, all club members went to Horse Camp. It was a lot of fun! At camp there were minis, ponies, and horses. The weather was great and we learned a lot from our instructors. There was also a Standardbred clinic that was very interesting because Kathy Kokes shows us what a pace is (a pace is when the horse’s legs on the same side move together).

Now, we are all getting ready for the Clinton County Fair!

Your News Reporter,
Courtney

Free Summer Program: 4-H Summer Scientists

Want to be a summer scientist? Cornell Cooperative Extension Clinton County 4-H is offering a free summer program to Clinton County elementary and middle school youth. This program is open to all youth—you don’t have to be a 4-H club member to participate!

Choose Your Own Adventure
You choose which program you’d like to join. Parents and family members are invited to participate along with their children!

Saranac Rockets Away
Want to learn about how things fly? Build gliders, planes, rockets and more as you explore the science of aerospace! This program is designed for youth in grades 3 through 6. Held at the Saranac Town Hall Wednesdays in August (8/4, 8/11, 8/18, 8/25) from 10 AM to 12 PM.

Eco Explorers
Go green! Learn about the many natural wonders we are surrounded by and how your choices can keep our earth healthy. Take a hike in the great outdoors! Held at the Ted K. Center Wednesdays in August (8/4, 8/11, 8/18, 8/25) from 1 to 3 PM.

Ellenburg Rockets Away
Want to learn about how things fly? Build gliders, planes, rockets and more as you explore the science of aerospace! This program is designed for youth in grades 6 through 8. Held at Northern Adirondack Central School the first week in August (8/2, 8/3, 8/5, 8/6) from 10 AM to 12 PM.

How to Sign Up
Contact the CCE Office (561-7450 or ask37@cornell.edu) before July 26 for your registration form or download one from our website. Registration is required and is first-come, first-served for the first 20 youth at each location.

This program is funded in part by the NYS Office of Children and Family Services

Tri County Poultry and Rabbit Clinic


Thursday, June 3, 2010

Incubation and Embryology Training

Who: For Educators, School Teachers, Volunteer Leaders

When: November 8-9, 2010
Where: Morrison Hall, Cornell University

What: Main Topics
  • Health and Nutrition of Parent Stock affecting Hatchability
  • Incubators and Incubation
  • Observing Embryo Development
  • Sources of fertile eggs for I&E projects
  • Hatching management: temperature, Humidity, turning and candling eggs
  • Trouble Shooting and Field Experience : Questions and Answers.
  • And more

    More details to come!

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Commissioner Hooker Recognizes June as Dairy Month

Month of Recognition and Celebration of New York’s 5,400 Family Dairy Farms
Throughout the month of June, New York State Agriculture Commissioner Patrick Hooker will be honoring dairy farmers as June is Dairy Month in New York State. With 5,400 dairy farms producing over 12 billion pounds of milk annually, New York is the nation’s third largest dairy state.

“June Dairy Month was originally celebrated to help stabilize the demand for milk and dairy products during the spring months of peak milk production,” the Commissioner said. “Today, we simply honor our dairy farmers and the dairy processors for the safe, wholesome products they produce.”

“Dairy farmers are good people that are committed to living off the land and to producing a healthy and wholesome product,” the Commissioner said. “They not only care about the end product, but the animals that produce it, as well as the land they work and the workers they employ.”

“Dairy processors contribute greatly to our communities as well, creating jobs, manufacturing milk into a variety of dairy products and ensuring we have a safe, affordable and abundant supply readily available. Together, dairy farmers and processors impact the lives of so many, and therefore I ask you to join me this month in pouring a tall glass of cold milk and honor our hard working dairy farmers for all that they do.”

Consumers can easily support New York dairy farmers by purchasing dairy products, such as milk, butter, cheese, ice cream and yogurt. Milk and dairy products offered for sale in retail stores are typically from local farms and dairy processors. However, consumers can be sure they are buying a New York processed product by looking for the New York State code, usually found on the top of the milk carton, or on the side or bottom of other products.

The State dairy processing code will usually follow a suggested use-by date and is made up of two parts – a two digit state code and a three or more digit plant code. For example: a milk container stamped with JUN-18-10 21:43 36-563 means the suggested use by date is June 18, 2010; 21:43 stands for the time at which the product was processed and the last numbers tell us it was processed in New York (36) at plant #563.

Dairy is the State’s largest agricultural sector, contributing significantly to the State’s economy by generating $1.7 billion in 2009 at the farmgate, roughly half of the State’s total agricultural receipts, and providing some of the highest economic multipliers in the State.
According to Cornell University, for every new job created on a dairy farm, an additional 1.24 jobs are created in the community, and for every dollar of output, an additional $.83 is generated. Dairy processing provides an additional 4.72 jobs for every job created in a plant, the highest multiplier in the State, and generates an additional $1.26 to the community for every dollar of product sold.

Approximately one-third of the State’s milk production is used for fluid consumption. The remainder of the State’s milk is used for processed dairy products. Last year, New York produced 716 million pounds of cheese, 171 million pounds of cottage cheese, 15 million pounds of butter, 225 million pounds of yogurt and 37 million gallons of ice cream.

New York ranks third in the nation for cheese production with mozzarella and cheddar being the most popular varieties. The State leads the nation in the production of cottage cheese, which accounts for a quarter of the national production.

The average dairy farm in New York State is family owned and consists of 113 cows, producing an average of 20,071 pounds of milk per cow per year. The top three leading dairy counties in the State are Wyoming, St. Lawrence and Cayuga.

2010 Statewide Cornell Cooperative Extension Volunteer Forum

This forum is for all CCE staff, volunteers, and teens (13+).

Conference Schedule
Friday, November 19, 2010
4:00– 6:30 pm: Check-in (dinner on your own)
7:00 pm: Welcome
4-H Showcase including 4-H Puppeteer Players Show, Make & Take Projects, Poster Session, Community Service, Mannequin Modeling, 4-H Public Presentations

Saturday, November 20, 2010
7:15 am: Continental Breakfast
8:00-8:30 am: Check-in
8:30 am: Workshops Begin. Morning and afternoon workshop sessions with 15 focus selections, including:
  • 4-H Club Management
  • Meaningful Fundraising & Community Service
  • Public Presentations
  • Science & Technology—Rockets & Wind Power
  • Choose Health in your Club
  • Working with Youth with Behavioral and Emotional Needs
  • Master Gardener and Horticulture Projects
  • and more...
12:30 pm: Luncheon Buffet & Volunteer Recognition
Featuring Keynote Speaker Eduardo González, Jr., Cornell Cooperative Extension Diversity Specialist
3:30 pm: Closing Session
4:00 pm: Adjournment


Program Fee (includes breakfast, breaks, luncheon, and workshops)
Friday - Saturday: $65*
Saturday Only: $50
(*Hotel reservations (845-338-0400) can be made at the 4-H rate of $89 per room)

Location
Holiday Inn, Kingston, NY
(located right off the NYS Thruway)

CONFERENCE SPONSORS: Cornell Cooperative Extension Southeast District 4-H Youth Development , NYS 4-H Foundation, Cornell University, and Monsanto

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

National 4-H Youth Science Day: Clean Water. Bright Future.

On October 6, 2010, millions of young people across the nation will become scientists during the third annual 4-H National Youth Science Day. In this year's experiment, 4-H2O, youth will learn about carbon dioxide and discover how we as a nation can reduce our environmental impact.

Through the 2010 experiment and subsequent discussions, participants will learn the key characteristics used to observe water quality and measure their own impact through the calculation of their carbon footprint. Want to learn more? Check out their website: https://www.4-h.org/NYSD/index.php

2010 4-H Northeast Regional Volunteer Forum

An Ocean of Possibilities Awaits You!

Delaware 4-H is proud and honored to host the 2010 4-H NERVF Forum, Nov. 4-7 - an incredible weekend of fellowship, education, enthusiasm and encouragement! We can't wait to meet our 4-H friends from the Northeast region! See you in November!

For more information, visit their blog: http://nervf2010.blogspot.com/