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The Rural Voice, 2006-01, Page 32Mix A PASSION FOR AGRICULTURE Jennifer Christie is onlg 22 but alreadg she's made a mark pitching for agriculture By Heather Crawford v Tara native Jennifer Christie's latest triumph was being crowned Ontario Queen of the Furrow at the 2005 IPM at Listowel. Jennifer Christie is the kind of dynamic personality that gives young people a good name. This past September the 22 -year- old Tara native was crowned Queen of the Furrow at the International Plowing Match in Listowel. Earlier in the year she was awarded one of four Ontario Dairy Youth Scholarships. She was also part of a team that placed first at the North 28 THE RURAL VOICE American Intercollegiate Dairy Challenge. Now in her final year at the University of Guelph, Christie feels a future in agriculture does not necessarily mean toiling under the hot sun and caring for crops. She'd like youth in rural areas to realize the various opportunities that involvement in agriculture can bring. Christie credits the lessons she o Plowmen's Associa .learned in 4-H for helping her realize the importance of agriculture and the many opportunities available to her. Her title as Ontario Queen of the Furrow will allow her to travel around Ontario next summer promoting the 2006 IPM in Peterborough to various other plowing matches and farm shows. She's passionate about the future of agriculture. "I think a lot of people don't realize all of the opportunities available with agriculture," she said. "Even kids who grew up in rural communities tend to think of agriculture as just farming but there's more to it than just farming." Christie is studying agriculture business specializing in marketing and hopes to own her own agricultural marketing business one day. She took part in the Canadian Agri -Marketing Association (CAMA) Student Chapter, which she says gave her a hands-on opportunity to learn about the actual process and work required to launch a new product into the marketplace. Christie has worked for ABS Global as a Market Support Coordinator where she helps with ° advertising and marketing projects for the firm. o With all of her involvement in agriculture, Christie isn't short of a career choices. She said she isn't sure yet which direction she will take after graduation and whether or not she will decide to work full -tine for ABS. A career in marketing is where she seems to be headed, however. "Marketing is my main area of interest," she said. Christie said her interest in agriculture began when she was too young to remember. "I grew up on a farm and my parents were both involved in 4-H," d