meta All-American Dairy Show Best Bred and Owned Cow and Owner Will Win Use of Eby Trailer for a Year :: The Bullvine - The Dairy Information You Want To Know When You Need It

All-American Dairy Show Best Bred and Owned Cow and Owner Will Win Use of Eby Trailer for a Year


The owner of the Supreme Champion Best Bred and Owned Female of the 2015 All-American Dairy Show will travel home pulling a new Eby aluminum stock trailer. Named during the show’s Supreme Champion Pageant September 17, the winner will earn use of the trailer for one year.

The pageant is the finale of the All-American, which runs September 12-17 at the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex and Expo Center in Harrisburg.

“This trailer will not only honor a top-notch cow and her owners, but serve as a rolling advertisement for the prestige that comes with winning the All-American,” said Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding. “My congratulations to past winners of the best bred and owned female. I look forward to seeing what breeders bring for competition at the 2015 show.”

The gooseneck trailer is 24 feet long, 8 feet wide and 6-and-a-half feet high, and will carry special logos noting its prized cargo.

“It was a great honor to have our Jersey cow chosen as Supreme Champion Bred & Owned Female at the 2014 All-American,” said Ernest Kueffer of Boonsboro, Md., owner of 2014 best bred and owned female Elliots Cosmo Action. “To receive use of a top-of-the-line Eby trailer for 12 months is quite an award!

“The All-American sets the standard in our industry with the awards that they offer. Their dedicated staff solicits sponsorship from generous companies and farms that are committed to the success of the show. We look forward to participating in the All-American each year,” he said.

Eby Trailers is sponsoring the prize for its third year. M. H. Eby Inc., headquartered in Blue Ball, Lancaster County, Pa., features additional sales and service locations in Indiana, Iowa, Ohio and South Dakota.

The All-American Dairy Show features 22 shows in six days in addition to the nation’s only all-dairy antiques show. Last year’s show featured nearly 2,800 animals and more than 1,300 exhibitors from across the nation.

 


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