Wyoming
Fair Week Is Super Bowl For Wyoming’s 4-H Champions
GILLETTE — Betty was not enjoying the extra attention. The 15-month-old Black Angus heifer gave a baleful glance over her shoulder at 9-year-old Timber Elkins as she scrubbed dried manure off Betty’s back legs.
Timber squinted in concentration in the early morning sun as Betty mooed in resignation. It was showtime, and Timber and Betty were about to compete for the Supreme Cow contest at the Campbell County Fair.
The scrubbing will be followed by a rinse and blow-out to get Betty gussied up for the judges.
As Timber unrolled the hose to give Betty a rinse, her younger sisters Reagan, 7, and 8-year-old Morgan were busy helping their mom, Acacia, and stepdad, Shawn Acord, with other chores.
There was no shortage to go around as the family unpacked feed and water troughs and laid down straw in the temporary stalls where the cows and steers would spend spending the next week competing in a series of contests and exhibitions.
Betty’s primary job that morning apart from looking good was to be pregnant.
Based on the low-slung girth of her belly, Timber wasn’t concerned. In fact, an ultrasound later showed that Betty may be having twins with a judge declaring her “short and fat.”
After the preg check, Timber will show Betty in front of judges who will gauge both Timber’s skills in the ring leading her as well as Timber’s general knowledge about the heifer and the agriculture industry.
She’s ready with her notebook documenting Betty’s vitals as well as the age and weight at which she was bred and the cost of grain to feed her. The largest costs are the veterinarian fees for breeding, vaccines and other health expenses. At just over $2,710, the price of caring for Betty is double her value of $1,320.
If you ask Timber, medical costs are the most important issue impacting the ag industry today and preventing against diseases and ailments such as pink eye, which can spread through a herd in days.
Chores And More Chores
Such is the life of a Wyoming kid raising a 4-H animal for a county fair. The culmination of all that work and sacrifice comes at judging and at the annual livestock sale.
At the Campbell County Fair, the stalls around the girls were equally busy with other 4-H’ers and competitors unloading their animals and unpacking gear. There’s not much standing around for this group, who despite the early 7 a.m. hour, are perky and good-natured as they go about the chores which for them is just another day.
When their mother, Acacia Acord, saw the girls standing idle, she reminded them to go ask their dad, Shawn, if he needs help unloading the trailer and stocking gear. They run, not walk, to see how they can help.
This is Timber’s second year showing a steer and her first in the two-year Supreme Cow breeding contest. Next year, she’ll return with Betty and her calf, or calves, to further test her skills.
Morgan competed for the first time this year in the steer contests, but Reagan has another two years to wait until she can officially enter the ring. This year, she’ll compete in the peewee steer event for a ribbon and bragging rights.
Reality Bites
Betty was sandwiched between steers Billy and Sir Chrome-a-lot, who are all tied nose-in to the stall. The three bovines at this point are like pets; large, refrigerator-sized pets. All have agreeable dispositions and allow the girls to wash and brush them out without too much argument.
Only Betty will return home with the family, but the two steers were destined to be auctioned off at the Youth Livestock Sale, the last day of fair, which in Campbell County was last Sunday.
The sisters don’t want to think about that part quite yet and instead focus on the task at hand.
What’s not evident in the easy way the girls handle the massive 1,300-plus-pound steers is the hard work it’s taken to get them to this point.
Timber started working with Betty in November, which meant daily feedings and washings, as well as learning to lead her by halter. She started working with Chrome a month prior after he was weaned from his mother.
Morgan, meanwhile, started training Billy, a bum calf, from birth when she bottle-fed him.
Apart from daily feeds and baths, the sisters have to train the steers to be by leash.
This was no easy task, said Morgan, who one day was dragged by Billy through the corral.
“I had rocks in my pants,” she said with a big, toothy grin.
Reagan, though still too young to officially compete, also helped train by tapping the steers on the backside with a show stick, which is a long stick with a dull hook on the end that works simultaneously as a tapper and a back scratcher to keep them relaxed before the judges.
Often, this means the girls stay busy right up till bedtime, which they all take in stride as just part of ranching life.
Biggest Event Of The Year
The Campbell County Fair has a rich legacy in northeastern Wyoming, dating back more than 100 years.
Acacia, who grew up on a ranch in Campbell County, attended herself as a young girl and teen. Back then, however, her family dropped her off to spend the week sleeping in the animal stalls with other kids.
Today, it’s much different with most families camped out in air-conditioned travel trailers and RVs.
For many in the ag industry, the fair is the biggest event of the year.
It’s not just an opportunity to showcase their animals and skills, but also a rare chance for these normally busy families to get together to socialize and spend time with other ranchers and producers.
It makes for a long, exhausting week for parents, but the social aspect and camaraderie is a big part of fair and one of the founding tenets of 4-H, where youth support and mentor one another.
As if on cue, Robert Trigg walked past the girls leading his cow to the barn to get weighed and preg tested.
Robert, who is also neighbor to the Accords, is fair royalty in the Supreme Cow world and someone the girls look up to. He gave them an encouraging nod and wave as Timber untied Betty and tugged her into line.

Showtime
The girls are tired.
It’s a Saturday, the last day of fair, and they’ve racked up a handful of first-, second- and third-place awards for showing their ponies, cows and steers as well as a handful of art projects.
“This week feels like an entire month,” Timber said with a yawn.
But this is the big day and they’re just getting started. Today, they’re showmanship skills are on display in the beef show where they’ll show their mettle.
Unlike other competitions where the size and shape of an animal dictates the win, showmanship is all about the presenter.
Timber and Morgan said they’re ready to go. Not only are they dressed to the nines in fancy turquoise and plaid cowgirl shirts and big ribbons in their long hair to match their sparkly cowboy boots, but they’ve been practicing for months.
Regan was up first in the peewee cow contest.
Of the roughly dozen competitors, she was the only one who takes her animal — Sir Chrome-a-lot — into the ring without an accompanying adult. She doesn’t hesitate as she deftly led the steer around the ring in formation, stopping to ham for the judges with a big grin.
For her efforts, she’s awarded a ribbon in any color of her choosing, but when she reached for pink, older sister Morgan encouraged her to grab a first-place blue.
“You always want to go for the blue,” Morgan told her.
Meanwhile, Timber and Morgan are busy putting on the final touches to their steers, which involved spraying them with cans of “cow mouse” and blow drying and brushing it into formation.
Helping them is their older sister, 21-year-old Emily Acord, Shawn’s daughter from his first marriage, who guided them through the task, reminding them to brush the hair in the opposite direction to make it fluffier and smoother.
It’s when they are out in the ring competing against other youth where their skills shined and all the hours they put in training came into focus. Apart from the hulking size of the steers at more than 1,300 pounds, the girls were by far the smallest competitors among the dozen or so others.
While some steers tugged at their young handlers and didn’t stand still for the judges, both Timber and Morgan had no trouble keeping Billy and Chrome in line. Their skills were such that the judge commended them, ultimately awarding Morgan both first place and Grand Champion Junior Showman.
“It was only my first time,” Morgan said as she led Billy out of the ring and picked up her two ribbons.
Timber, meanwhile, earned third place in junior showmanship despite having one of the laziest steers the judge had ever seen.

Saying Goodbye
That day, the girls reveled in the limelight of their wins with the knowledge that the next day they would be saying goodbye to their beloved steers.
Prior to the livestock sale, the girls had both lined up a buyer, the First National Bank of Gillette. To earn the sale, both girls had to go door to door to several businesses accompanied by their mother to introduce themselves and make a case for the purchase.
That’s part of the process, too, of learning to be a rancher, Acacia said, just like parting with the steers that have become more like pets.
Last year, it was hard for Acacia and Shawn to see the girls bid their tearful goodbyes as they hugged the steers and cried into their hides. Their tears continued on the drive home, but ended when they promptly passed out from exhaustion from the long week.
This year, Timber took it much better than Morgan because it was her second year, Acacia said.
That’s part of ranching life, and both will be back next year.
Jen Kocher can be reached at jen@cowboystatedaily.com.
Wyoming
University Of Wyoming Budget Spared (For Now), Biz Council Reined In
If the Wyoming House and Senate approve its budget changes, then the chambers’ Joint Conference Committee will have helped the University of Wyoming dodge a $40 million cut, while also limiting the Wyoming Business Council to one year’s funding instead of the standard two.
The Joint Conference Committee adopted numerous changes to the state’s two-year budget draft, but didn’t formally advance the document to the House and Senate chambers. The committee meets again Monday and may do so at that time.
Then, the House and Senate can vote on whether to adopt that draft by a simple majority.
First, UW
Starting in January, the Joint Appropriations Committee majority had sought to deny around $20 million in exception requests the University of Wyoming made, while imposing a $40 million cut to the university’s block grant.
That’s about 10% of the state’s grant to UW but a lesser proportion of the school’s overall operating budget.
The Senate sought to restore the $60 million.
The House sought to keep the denials and cuts, ultimately settling on a bargain to cut $20 million, and hinge UW’s retention of the remaining $20 million on its finding and reporting $5 million in savings.
The Joint Conference Committee the House and Senate sent into a Friday meeting to negotiate those two stances chose to fund UW “fully,” Senate Majority Floor Leader Tara Nethercott, R-Cheyenne, told Cowboy State Daily in the state Capitol after the meeting.
But, $10 million of UW’s $40 million block grant won’t reach it until the school charts a “road map” of how it could save $5 million, and reports that to the Joint Appropriations Committee, she added.
“A healthy exercise, I think, for them to participate in, while the Legislature still allows them to receive full grant funding,” Nethercott said.
“I’m hopeful people feel confident the University is fully funded,” she continued, as it’s “on the brink of receiving a new president, having the resources he or she may need to continue to steer the leadership of the University, our state’s flagship school into the future.”
Hours earlier in a press conference, House Speaker Chip Neiman, R-Hulett, said the Legislature has been clear that UW should avoid “diversity, equity, and inclusion” or DEI programming, and that it’s the position of the House majority that the school should tailor its programming to Wyoming’s true business needs – so UW graduates will stay in the state.
Within an earlier draft of the budget sat a footnote blocking money for Wyoming Public Media — a publicly funded media and radio entity funded through UW’s budget.
That footnote is gone from the JCC’s draft, said Nethercott.
Wyoming Business Council
The Wyoming Business Council is set to receive roughly $14 million, confined to one year, for its internal operations, said Nethercott.
“Both chambers have decided to only fund the operations,” Nethercott said, “not all the grant programs.”
She said that’s to compel the Legislature to revisit the concerns it has with the agency, then return in the 2027 legislative session with a vision for its future.
The Business Ready Communities program is “eliminated,” she said.
JCC member Rep. Ken Pendergraft, R-Sheridan, elaborated further.
Of the appropriation, $12 million is from the state’s checking account, plus the state is authorizing WBC to use $157,787 in federal funds and nearly $1 million from other sources.
“We’re going to take it up as an interim topic in appropriations (committee) and how to rebuild it and make it work the way we think it should work,” said Pendergraft. But the JCC opted to fund the Small Business Development Center for two years, along with Economic Diversification Division for Manufacturing Works, and the Wyoming Women’s Business Center, Pendergraft noted, pointing to that language on his draft budget sheet.
Pendergraft made headlines last year by saying he wanted to eliminate the Wyoming Business Council altogether.
But Nethercott told the Senate earlier this month, legislators have complained of that agency her entire nine-year tenure.
She attributed this to what she called communications shortfalls that may not be intentional. She cosponsored a now-stalled bill this year that had sought to adopt a task force to evaluate WBC.
The Wyoming Business Council’s functions range from less controversial, like helping communities build infrastructure, to more controversial, like awarding tax-funded grants to certain businesses on a competitive application process.
Wyoming Public Television
Wyoming Public Television, which is not the same as Wyoming Public Media, is slated to receive the $3 million it lost when Congress defunded the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Nethercott said.
It will also receive its usual $3 million from Wyoming.
The entity will not receive another $3 million it had sought to upgrade its emergency-alert towers, said Nethercott, “because we received information from them… they have another source to pay for the replacement and maintenance of the towers.”
Like the Wyoming Business Council, the Wyoming Public TV’s functions range from less controversial to more controversial.
The entity operates, maintains and staffs emergency alert towers throughout Wyoming.
Wyoming Public TV also produces entertainment and informational movies. Its state grants run through the community colleges’ budget.
State Employees
Nethercott noted that the JCC advanced to both chambers an agreement to pay $111 million from the state’s checking account to give state employees raises.
Those raises would bring them to 2024 market values for their work, she noted.
Because that money is coming from the state’s checking account, or “general fund,” and not its severance tax pool as the House had envisioned, then $111 million won’t impact the $105 million investment another still-viable bill seeking to build an “energy dominance fund” envisions.
That bill, sponsored by Senate President Bo Biteman, R-Ranchester, seeks to lend to large energy-sector projects.
Biteman told Cowboy State Daily in an interview days before the session convened that its purpose is to counteract “green” compacts investors have adopted, and which have bottlenecked energy projects.
Wyoming’s executive branch is currently suing BlackRock and other investors on that same assertion.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.
Wyoming
Casper veteran David Giralt joins race for Wyoming U.S. House seat
Wyoming
Rivalries and Playoff Positioning Highlight Week 11 Wyoming Girls Basketball Slate
It’s Week 11 in the 2026 Wyoming prep girls’ basketball season. That means it’s the end of the regular season. 3A and 4A schools have their final game or games to determine seeding before the regional tournament, or if a team is locked into a position, one last chance to fine-tune before the postseason. Games are spread across four days.
WYOPREPS WEEK 11 GIRLS BASKETBALL SCHEDULE 2026
Every game on the slate is a conference matchup. Several rivalry contests are part of this week’s schedule, such as East against Central, Cody at Powell, Lyman hosting Mountain View, and Rock Springs at Green River, just to name a few. Here is the Week 11 schedule of varsity games WyoPreps has. All schedules are subject to change. If you see a game missing, please email david@wyopreps.com.
CLASS 4A
Final Score: Laramie 68 Cheyenne South 27 (conference game)
CLASS 3A
Final Score: Lyman 40 Mountain View 26 (conference game)
CLASS 4A
Final Score: Evanston 41 Riverton 39 (conference game)
Final Score: Natrona County 42 Kelly Walsh 38 (conference game) – Peach Basket Classic
Final Score: #4 Thunder Basin 64 Campbell County 32 (conference game)
CLASS 3A
Final Score: #1 Cody 77 Worland 33 (conference game) – 5 different Fillies with a 3, and Hays led the way with 34 points.
Final Score: #2 Lander 49 Lyman 34 (conference game)
Final Score: #4 Wheatland 51 Douglas 40 (conference game)
Final Score: #5 Powell 48 Lovell 42 (conference game)
Final Score: Burns 56 Torrington 43 (conference game)
Final Score: Glenrock 78 Newcastle 30 (conference game)
Read More Girls Basketball News from WyoPreps
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 2-25-26
WyoPreps Girls Basketball Standings 2-23-26
WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 10 Scores 2026
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 2-18-26
WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 9 Scores 2026
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 2-11-26
WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 8 Scores 2026
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 2-4-26
WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 7 Scores 2026
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 1-28-26
Nominate A Basketball Player for the WyoPreps Athlete of the Week Honor
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 1-21-26
WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 5 Scores 2026
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Polls 1-14-26
WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 4 Scores 2025-26
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WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 3 Scores 2025-26
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Rankings 12-24-25
WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 2 Scores 2025-26
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Basketball Rankings 12-17-25
WyoPreps Girls Basketball Week 1 Scores 2025-26
CLASS 4A
Rock Springs at #2 Green River, 5:30 p.m. (conference game)
#4 Thunder Basin at #5 Sheridan, 5:30 p.m. (conference game)
#1 Cheyenne East at #3 Cheyenne Central, 6 p.m. (conference game)
Jackson at Star Valley, 6 p.m. (conference game)
CLASS 3A
#3 Pinedale at Mountain View, 4 p.m. (conference game)
#1 Cody at #5 Powell, 5:30 p.m. (conference game)
Buffalo at Glenrock, 5:30 p.m. (conference game)
CLASS 3A
Newcastle at Buffalo, 12:30 p.m. (conference game)
Glenrock at Rawlins, 3 p.m. (conference game)
Torrington at #4 Wheatland, 5:30 p.m. (conference game)
Wyoming Boys 4A Swimming & Diving State Championships 2026
4A Boys State Swim Meet for 2026 in Cheyenne
Gallery Credit: David Settle, WyoPreps.com
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