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The Rural Voice, 2000-12, Page 22,\ When a 4-H'exhibitor finally gets in the ring at. the Queen's Guineas, it's the culmination of a year's work. At 5:30 on a Saturday morning in downtown Toronto, many 1 -year-olds are just returning from a night of partying. But at 5:30 a.m. Sandra Alton of Lucknow and the other few Huron County young people in the 4-H Queen's Guineas beef calf competition can be found at the Royal Winter Fair preparing their calves. Winning the competition can mean, according to Alton, fetching up to $50 a pound for a calf. Since Alton's childhood, she has been coming to the Royal Winter Fair, and at 21 is showing a calf for the sixth time. The night before the competition the Huron County group set up a display until 12:00 a.m. where the cows stay. That means at most these 4 -Hers are running on five and a half 'hours of sleep. Before the competition starts at 8:00 a.m., the cows are fed some hay and water and groomed. A precise makeover is given to each calf. Three people work on a calf. Its hair is sprayed with a light mist, to make it look more shiny. Then all the hair is combed upwards, so that when the judges look at the calf it looks like velvet. Hair spray is Cattle get the beauty -parlour treatment before the show begins with a careful clip (right) and a blow dry (far right). 18 THE RURAL VOICE Doing it up Royally For 4-H beef club members, the highest goal is winning the Queen's Guineas. Preparing for the big show requires not only hard work, but art Story and photos by Mark Nonkes