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We show OE Bantams. sebrights, and Wyandottes. the bantams are easier to deal with teh big birds take two days to fully dry and fluff back up. the Big cochins about 3 days and can be a real hassle but we have done well with them in the past. Is the county fair the only show you intend to go to or do you have other goals as well?
Here's my deal. I'm a displaced farm gal. When my boys were growing up, we showed alot of cattle for lots of years. My middle son dabbled in showing some of his chickens at our county show, but that's not a "real" show. lol When my youngest was in FFA, they started the broiler show at the Tulsa State Fair and some cattle friends of ours from TX told us if we wanted to pay for our cattle, to show chickens... so we did. My son won the broiler show twice before he graduated and until recently held the record for highest pen of broilers. He took lots of ribbing from his friends and got called "chicken boy" alot. They even got him a chicken crossing sign for his bedroom door, but he's the one that got to laugh all the way to the bank.
I realize showing broilers is a whole different world than showing breeding chickens, but I just wanted to share the story.
Anyway, to get back to the subject.... I plan on helping my granddaughters show, be it chickens, cattle or anything else they want to show. The oldest is too young to be in 4-H yet, but she loves her chickens and I figure if we're going to have chickens, they just as well be good ones. She could start her own flock and by the time she's in 4-H she could kick some butt with chickens she raised herself. This year I only have my eye on the county show, but I plan on helping her go all the way to the state shows in the future. I'll be honest, I have LOTS to learn about being competative in the chicken world. So far I can pick the 3 biggest breasted birds and give them a bath the night before the show, lol. I do understand the importance of selective breeding and not everything you raise belongs in the breeding pen, so that's a start I guess.
So I guess that's my goals in a great big ole nutshell. (More like a campershell) lol
I'd like to ask if certain breeds of chickens are more likely to win overall champions than others? I know in the cattle world it's certainly that way, and I've heard it can be that way in the dog show world... so what's the winningest breeds?