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The Rural Voice, 1996-06, Page 28Seven for the show The Hallahan family and their prize herd have spent a lot of time in the show ring in the last few years By Keith Roulston For a cow, Bcssic has a lot of ham in her. Bcssic's a prize-winning cow at Lazy Meadows Farm, run by Jim and Lorraine Hallahan and their family near Blyth. Bessie's had her share of the limelight in ways that arc. usual for good-looking Holstein cows as well as in more unusual ways. A full page ad for Lazy Meadows in last September's Ilolstein Journal stood out from the usual advertisements of cows being posed as if in a show ring. Bcssic and the Hallahan clan were shown instead on the set of the Blyth Festival play Ile Won't Come in From the Barn. Bcssic, being dry when the play was to run in 1994, had been loaned to the theatre as one of the cows in Aylmer Clarke's bam. After all, Bcssic was already a veteran of the stage. When the Festival staged a "community play" called Many Ilands in 1993, Bcssic 24 THE RURAL VOICE had been part of the cast of the play performed in the local rutabaga factory. "She loved it," says Jim of Bessie's life on the stage. But Bessie was about to top herself when He Won't Come In From the Barn was brought back by popular demand for the late summer run in 1995. As the curtain neared during one matinee performance of the play, it became obvious that Bessie had gone into labour (she delivers a calf, faithfully, each September). When the show was over, the theatre crew called in the veterinarian and the Hallahan family and, right there on stage, Bessie gave birth to a bull calf. The evening performance had to be delayed until Bessie and her son could be removed from the stage barn to the home barn. Bessie's exhibitionist instincts may come from her many visits to For Jim, Lorraine and Patrick Hallahan, showing cattle is advertising and costs money. the show ring. The Hallahans are among a small group of dairy farmers who show their cattle at shows across the province and into the U.S. Rather than feeling stressed from all the travelling, Bessie is so comfortable she immediately lies down after being loaded into a trailer for hauling to a show, says Patrick, the eldest of the three Hallahan sons (they have two older daughters). While some cows are finicky about accepting feed and water they're not used to at a show, explains Lorraine, Bessie gladly consumes it all. Bessie won't be attending many shows now. She's getting too old. After all, her history in the show ring dates way back to 1990 when she was Junior Champion of the Huron County Show, first in the summer yearling class at the Western Ontario Championship Show, All -Indiana Summer Yearling, first in the Kentucky show, and second in both the Tennessee show and the North American Louisville Show. But her daughters have inherited the same disposition and love of the show ring that Bessie has, the Hallahans say. They've gone on to