Miles & Mountains

From 4-H To FFA w/ Jaxi

Nick Episode 263

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0:00 | 29:59

A fifteen-year-old stock show competitor opens up about life in FFA, why she chose pigs over sports, and how caring for animals builds real discipline. She shares the feed plans, show prep, and family support that keep her moving toward a future in nursing.

• moving from 4‑H to FFA and finding a better fit
• what FFA teaches about livestock, routine, and responsibility
• choosing pigs, training methods, and daily handling
• feeding strategies, target weights, and show prep for OYE
• weekly care, pen cleaning, grooming, and teamwork with her sister
• honest talk about butchering, costs, and hard choices
• future goals in healthcare inspired by her grandmother.


Shoutout to :

Jaxi Long 

The Long Family 

FFA 


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Raising Awareness:

Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW)

Mental Health 





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Wi‑Fi Woes And Warm Welcome

SPEAKER_00

Jackie Long, how are you?

SPEAKER_01

I'm good. How are you?

SPEAKER_00

I'm doing good. I'm doing good. Thank you for being on. Thank you for being patient. Things that we cannot control. That entails Wi-Fi. Yesterday we were supposed to meet guys and we couldn't get on. It was quite embarrassing. Nothing like a grown man trying to get Wi-Fi going, not just for this podcast, but for the family. And then come to find out when the outage happened, it blew my modem. So I had to go Sunday during the football games with other people who whose modems blew and get a new modem. So yeah, thankfully they were open because if not, I would have gone all day without Wi-Fi and had to entertain the kids somehow. I don't know. Old school ways. But anyways, enough of that. Jaxy, thank you for being on and being patient. I'm glad you're on. It's been a while. It's been a while. It's been in the making for what? I mean, you contacted me. But yeah, it's been a couple months, but no, no, no. Let's start from the beginning. Because I had your brother on, right? Yes, sir. That was 2023. That was it was published August 3rd, 2023. You're youngin'. I was a little younger. Your brother was definitely young, but now he's you know doing his thing. We'll we'll talk about that. But 2023, I remember you you became my I think my youngest fan outside of my family. And I was like, who is this? She is a rock star, she wants to be on, she wants to share. You wanted to share your pigs.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, I did.

SPEAKER_00

I'm all like, before we even start talking, you got to have permission, right? Yes, sir. And you got it, yes, sir. And then you and we got so much permission that you told mom how that outage is making me look almost amateur-ish. Just joking, but yeah, I would have. So you got mom's permission. How's mom?

SPEAKER_01

Mom is really good. She's living life, just got a new car and everything. She's doing great.

SPEAKER_00

All right. Nice. Nothing, not nothing like a new car. So, what did what did she get?

SPEAKER_01

Well, she got a 2020 seat 2026 Jeep compass.

SPEAKER_00

Wow, go with the the new the new do it with the newest thing she can have. Now, the compass isn't nice, it's not box-like like it used to be.

SPEAKER_01

It's really nice, it's got five seats and a big old backup camera. Knowing that lady, she'll hit some curves.

SPEAKER_00

That's funny. That's funny. Now, is that is that car to go see your brother?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I don't see your brother. Yeah, he moved away. Jeff don't live in where's he at? Is he he he lives in Guthrie now? Where Guthrie, Oklahoma.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, and all he's doing is riding, huh?

SPEAKER_01

No, he works and builds houses and buildings for a living now.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, he did he end up going to college or have a little bit of college or no?

SPEAKER_01

Heck no, he did not go to college.

SPEAKER_00

Hey, college radio is the best thing, and a lot of kids that didn't like high school they enjoy the college because they end up doing the college radio and then you know, learning a trade or two or four, you know, doing ag studies, that kind of thing. But is he is he killing it? Is he killing the circuit down there?

SPEAKER_01

He's killing it.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, okay. Does he take you along, or do you beg him to take you along?

SPEAKER_01

I don't really go along with him. He's he's living his life, and we talk here and there, but it's about it.

SPEAKER_00

Gotcha, gotcha. Okay, well, get this Jeb's episode published August 3rd, 2023. Right? It was episode 173. This episode is kind of close. It's gonna be 263. Is that okay? Yeah, you sure? All right, all right, all right. Hey, that that's it's pretty not bad, though. Not bad. Surprised I haven't put out more episodes, but you know, life happens and life does happen. Yeah, so but here we are. Here we are. You're finally on. It's been a few months, been a couple years because you wanted to share your pigs when you started getting pigs, correct?

SPEAKER_01

Yes, sir.

SPEAKER_00

All right, when did you start getting pigs?

SPEAKER_01

My seventh grade year. I started showing my seventh grade year, so two years ago.

Discovering FFA And Leaving 4‑H

SPEAKER_00

Yes, and you were proud, you were louder and prouder, like I could share my pigs. Let me share my pigs with you guys. So here you are. So pigs, you're part of FFA. Were you part of FFA in seventh grade?

SPEAKER_01

I was a part of 4H in seventh grade. I wasn't in my I wasn't in my FFA program yet.

SPEAKER_00

FFA's high school, correct?

SPEAKER_01

FFA at my school starts in eighth grade year. You get to go be in an FFA class.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, which one's better? 4H or FFA? Just asking.

SPEAKER_01

FFA all the way.

SPEAKER_00

Why why is that?

SPEAKER_01

I can't stand the color green. I cannot stand the color green. Just because of color, man, you're a typical it's just like when I put that 4-H Hutch jacket on and went and started showing pigs. I look like a little boy. If you seen me and Jeb beside each other in a 4-H thing, we'd look just alike. We are identical all the way.

SPEAKER_00

But FFA is blue, correct?

SPEAKER_01

Blue and gold.

SPEAKER_00

And you you rather rock blue and gold than green? Yes, all the way, because it's also my school colors, so uh gosh, no variation whatsoever. All right, okay. All right, so FFA. All right, you know, it's it's weird. I was you know, daughters does uh they do FFA and everything else, and I was reading about FFA. Did you know they don't call it Future Farmers of America anymore? It's just FFA. Did you know that?

SPEAKER_01

No, I didn't know that. I had no clue about that.

SPEAKER_00

Do you know?

SPEAKER_01

No, I did not know that. I've always thought it was future farmers of America of America or logical culture.

SPEAKER_00

No, it's it's called the national FFA now. Weird, huh?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_00

You'd think they would say future farmers of America, but yeah, no, it's F the National FFA. It's crazy. It's I wonder why they took those the you know the actual name out, huh? But me too, yeah, interesting. So FFA. Do you find it helpful for young kids like yourself getting in the the farm life or hinder?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, it helps you a lot. It helps you, it it teaches you a lot in life, and how much cattle and pork and how much it helps you, and how much it like develops your life, and how much it put how much it puts in your life.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, and it it's helped you a bit.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, it's helped a lot.

SPEAKER_00

Or a lot.

SPEAKER_01

It helped it helped me just understand. Because before I started for before I started FFA, I didn't know much about like the cattle and swine industry, and then my ag teacher started helping me, and it kind of just dang you you need cattle and pork in your life. You wouldn't be alive if you didn't have it.

SPEAKER_00

Right, okay, all right. Now, do you plan on being a farmer when you get older?

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely not. No, I don't see that at all.

SPEAKER_00

No, all right. So, so we'll we'll we'll get back to that. We'll well let's let's let's dive into that. Why why why not be a farmer? You're in FFA, you're learning all this stuff. I mean, you're putting a lot of time and money on your pigs, right? But oh yeah, why not get it a lot? Why not let learn all that and then get a farm yourself?

SPEAKER_01

I just feel like that's just it's too much.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. What do you plan on doing?

SPEAKER_01

I plan on going to school to become either ultrasound tech or a traveling nurse.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, you go, girl, you go. All right. So FFA, let's let's bring it back. What does FFA mean to you? Besides the cattle and pork in your life, what the what does it mean to you?

SPEAKER_01

It's just passion. Chase your dreams, it makes you chase your dreams. If you want to show livestock, or if you want to judge cattle, or if you want to judge animals, do it because it will help you, and it it gives you something to do. It don't really yeah, it gives you something to do.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, it's giving now is a lot to do as a 15-year-old girl like yourself, right? I have a 14-year-old and I have 18, you know, and then uh a seven going on eight, almost 28. Uh does it give you something to do?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it gives you a lot to do, it keeps you busy.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, but you don't want to take it further in the future.

SPEAKER_01

No, once my senior year is over, I'm done with it.

SPEAKER_00

Done, mom, mom's sticking to it too. Mom's like, I got you.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, mom's like, this is a lot of money to do, it's a lot of money.

SPEAKER_00

It is, it is so just just to give up. That's why like that's why I'm asking you this question. Just to give it up. You spent so much money, and just voila, done.

SPEAKER_01

I think I'm just your hands off. My kids might show pigs, but that's about it.

SPEAKER_00

But that's not that that's until you're 40. Don't don't don't get kids or that. Yeah, mom's like, thank you, thank you, Nick. Thank you for telling her that. No kids until 40. Okay. Why FFA?

SPEAKER_01

You say why FFA?

SPEAKER_00

Why FFA? Yeah, why FFA now? Since you already have the mindset that you're gonna quit, right? After senior year. Why FFA? Why stay in FFA?

SPEAKER_01

It gives me something to do. I don't like playing sports.

SPEAKER_00

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

I don't like playing.

SPEAKER_00

Jeb did, right?

Why Choose Pigs And Not Sports

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, Jeb was a sports player. He did a lot of sports.

SPEAKER_00

And why why not sports? You're a girly girl, right? But it sounds like you know, you can you can handle your own. You can play basketball, right? Softball.

SPEAKER_01

I don't know. I just never was really into sports. I did it until I was in like the sixth grade, and then I quit once I hit high school.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. From what grade? Because before this, you told me how how uh middle school is and then high school. Can you tell me? So are listeners.

SPEAKER_01

Our elementary is pre-K through third grade, our middle school is fourth through sixth, and our high school is seventh through twelfth.

SPEAKER_00

That's a true rural rural area.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Right? Yes, yes, yes. Hey, I could couldn't imagine. I mean, it it's it'll be fun. It'd be fun. You probably have to travel everywhere, right? For for sports and stuff, yeah. That's uh that's that's that's the downer. That would that would make me quit, I think, just because all that traveling. No, I'm I'm good, I'm good. So could you do show pigs, right? Could you show pigs without being part of FFA?

SPEAKER_01

You have to be a part of something, either 4-H or FFA to show pigs.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, but you couldn't go on your own and show yourself.

SPEAKER_01

No, you gotta you can show without an ag teacher. So if you're homeschooled and your parents are good at doing that, and you don't need help by an ag teacher, you can join 4-H and you can show through homeschooling. But me, I show through FFA, and if you're in FFA, you gotta be in school to show with an ag teacher.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, okay. Would you say not only is it something to do, but do you feel like FFA brings discipline and knowledge in your life in that world?

SPEAKER_01

Oh yeah, yeah, most definitely.

SPEAKER_00

Would you say would you say it's helpful?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, it is.

unknown

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, okay. Do you know the creed?

SPEAKER_01

No.

SPEAKER_00

I had to ask. I had this because that's one of the first things that they uh they make the the kids do here at the school. So I had to ask the if you need a creed.

SPEAKER_01

I've had to to say it, but I had to study it by paragraph. Like one paragraph I'll say to my ag teacher, and the next week I'll say the other paragraph, but I don't remember F you get an F.

SPEAKER_00

No, I'm gonna so you did you you got by, you did what you had to do, and you're you know sticking to it. Yeah, okay. All right, all right. Just had to ask if you knew the creed. All right, now let's get to animals. Pigs, pigs, you could do you could have done chickens, you could have done ducks, you could have done bunnies. We got a couple bunnies at the house, right? Yeah, I mean, you can do cows, but pigs, the sloppiest, most intelligent animals you could ever pick. You pick those.

Show Season Timeline And OYE

SPEAKER_01

I didn't pigs. It's just like they're actually once you get a hang of it, they're actually really easy and they're really, really smart animals. But the yeah, intelligent very they're very intelligent, but it's just like as much work as I have to put into them. I just like putting in the work. I like breaking my animals, I like teaching them how to walk. I like just I like doing that. And I picked pigs because of a girl that used to go to my school and she graduated. Her name is Shay Stamball. Shout out to her, she helped me a lot through my first year. I started because of her. Her and her mom talked me into showing pigs my seventh grade year, and it was her senior year that year, and I've stuck with it ever since.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, all right, and you're sticking to it up until senior year. Uh up until after all right, until graduation. Yeah, okay. Yeah. Okay. Now take us through the year, all right? Because I know you I know you don't, you know, you you don't breed them. You you you you get them at a certain time of the year, correct? Like fall? When do you get them? Take us through that.

SPEAKER_01

We get them in the end of October, beginning of November, sometimes middle of November, and we get them as like a couple weeks to a month old, and we raise them from that time on until the county fair.

SPEAKER_00

When is your county fair?

SPEAKER_01

I show there's this thing in Oklahoma that's called OYE. It's Oklahoma Youth Expo Center, and you show them there, and it's Oklahoma's biggest show, and I show them there, and then after that, they're feeder pigs or you sell them to be bred.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. Okay. And all right, so when you when you right before you sell them, how difficult is it to sell them or figure out what they're gonna do with them? How difficult is that for you?

Feeding Plans, Training, And Care

SPEAKER_01

It's it's real difficult because I've raised them since they were a little bitty pig. But sometimes you just put it into the thing like it's giving my family food. If I butcher them, it's giving my family food. It's going putting food in my it's putting food in my freezer. And if I do sell them to bee bread, then I usually get first pick of the litter out of her. Okay.

SPEAKER_00

All right. Now put things in perspective. When you get them, how how what what's the poundage? What how how big are they? Like through pounds? Would they be like a hundred pounds? They're like what 80.

SPEAKER_01

Some of them are really big and some of them are really, really little. My okay, my Berkshire guilt that I got this year, she was super super little, and she was like 55 pounds when I got her. She's now she's huge.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, what is she now? What is she now? Because you're you're gonna show her this coming up county, right?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, she's county fair. Okay, she's 10. Last time I weighed her, she was like 105, 107.

SPEAKER_00

She's getting 50 something. What are you feeding her?

SPEAKER_01

She's a big girl. She's getting a lot of protein right now.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, okay. Well, look, explain. Like, what's the daily food? Because they eat daily, right? Yeah. She gets so I mean everything.

SPEAKER_01

She gets two and a half pounds of BB18, which are pellets, and they have a lot, a lot of protein in them. And she gets a full cup of Miller Oats.

SPEAKER_00

Miller Oats. Okay. A lot of carbs. A lot of carbs.

SPEAKER_01

I got a cross, I got a crossbed, I got a dark crossbred guilt, and she gets two pounds of Sunglow 16, which is a powder. And she gets a full cup of Miller Oats. She's a big that one. She's a big girl.

SPEAKER_00

No, no, they also get scraps, right? They get every now and then.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I give a scraps. When they're little, they get marshmallows to train them how to walk. When they do good, they get a treat like marshmallows. But once they start learning, they don't really get scraps until they're about to get butchered.

SPEAKER_00

Gotcha. Gotcha. Because I know later on, and they I mean, you they get stealth bread. I mean, they eat nasty old bread a lot. I know that. And any slop around the kitchen and farm or whatever.

SPEAKER_01

So yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Ugh. Okay. So you don't get the nasty parts yet. You're not in it to raise them full to get big and fat. And all right, all right. And and and nasty like. Okay. That explains it. Because I was gonna ask you, I was like, what's the nastiest thing you had to feed them? Because they eat some nasty stuff.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I don't they're on a strict diet, they're on a really, really strict diet right now.

SPEAKER_00

Sounds like it. Protein and carbs.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Best thing, best thing for us, right? Yeah. Okay. All right. Got all that. What's the best part of having these pigs?

SPEAKER_01

Working them. I love working them. I love tanning them. I love just doing hair and hide. I love walking them.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

The Hard Parts And Weekly Routine

SPEAKER_01

They're just it's just a great, it's a great thing.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, they could they they got quite the personality, correct?

SPEAKER_01

They do. They got a big personality.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, they talk back to you. I mean, there's there's ways. It's almost like you know, a dog kind of thing, but it's a pig, and they they they they talk back, they back to you, you know. Sorry to do that, guys. But I mean, they do, don't they? They talk back, they got attitude.

SPEAKER_01

They do, they're they're on their yeah, all right.

SPEAKER_00

What's you what's what's the least favorite thing about having pigs?

SPEAKER_01

Cleaning their pins and washing them.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, but how how often do you have to clean the pig or the pins and wash them?

SPEAKER_01

I clean, I clean pins and wash them every week.

SPEAKER_00

Every week. So do you designate a day, or is it like, okay, I'll get to it tomorrow. Every my wifi's down, so I'm gonna get it now.

SPEAKER_01

Every Thursday, every single Thursday, I clean and wash pins.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, and you're pretty pretty good at it.

SPEAKER_01

I guess I don't I don't even do it. I wash pigs, and my sister cleans my pins. Big shout out to my older sister, Destiny, because if it wasn't for her, their pins would not get cleaned.

Butchering, Selling, And Honest Trade‑Offs

SPEAKER_00

Gotcha. So so sister puts an extra oomph on the cleanse and says, you know what? My little my little sister doesn't do a good job, so let me big sissy get involved and clean them pristine. Yeah, well, you you know what that tells me? You need to get with it. Let's go, Jaxie. Let's go. Okay, so at the fair or the expo, yeah, their last pig. The last pig. How how much did it sell for?

SPEAKER_01

I don't I have not sold my pigs once yet. I've all I've butchered them. I've butchered one of my pigs.

SPEAKER_00

All right. When you butcher them, what do you mostly use them for? Bacon or all the buttons?

SPEAKER_01

Usually use them for pork chops. Their pork chops are really good.

SPEAKER_00

You love pork chops. All right, okay. Now, do you bread them? Like, do you bread the pork chops or just eat them plain, just meat kind of thing?

SPEAKER_01

Eat them plain, put some seasoning on them and eat them plain, put them on the grill.

SPEAKER_00

Pork chops. Okay, so just a pork chop eating kind of gal. All right, I get the bacon, the the back strap, too. All right, okay. I got you, I got you. All right, we talked about everything. FFA, pig, right? You talked about after high school, you're no longer gonna do this, you're not gonna go to farming, you're gonna go radiologist or traveling nurse, right? What got you into those two fields? Just thinking of the fields.

SPEAKER_01

My grandma. My grandma is a grandma was a nurse. My grandma is an RN.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, okay. Shout out to grandma.

SPEAKER_01

She's a hardworking lady. That's that's one work. She still works, she works night shifts. She stays up day and night, day and night, and goes to work.

SPEAKER_00

You're gonna say something. She does what now?

Future Goals In Nursing And Gratitude

SPEAKER_01

She goes to work at nighttime, takes about a four-hour nap, gets up, and goes right back to work. That's that's my nano. She's been doing it for I can't even do that. She's been doing it for a long time.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, and you want to do that in honor of her.

SPEAKER_01

I wanna I wanna follow my grandma's footsteps and do what she does and what she loves.

SPEAKER_00

Shout out to grandma. I tell you what, those four-hour naps or sleeps won't cut it. Not in this household. I don't even know this household, so shout out to grandma.

SPEAKER_01

I don't know how she does it.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, but you want to do it, so hey, more power to you.

SPEAKER_01

I do want to do it.

SPEAKER_00

All right, what school do you want to go to?

SPEAKER_01

I ain't really looked into that yet.

SPEAKER_00

No, no, I haven't you're you're a freshman. There's still time to get get hungry, figure things out, you know, whether nurse like grandma or radiologist, you know, just be your own person. You're gonna stay stay in the state of Oklahoma or you gonna move up or around?

SPEAKER_01

I I think I'm gonna move on, get out of this state for a little bit.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, I'm pretty sure you'll be back though.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, I probably will.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. What's your favorite town in in Oklahoma?

SPEAKER_01

I don't really know. I don't got a favorite.

SPEAKER_00

No, you don't. Okay. Alright. All right. So, did we say everything? Do you want to add anything?

SPEAKER_01

I want to give a shout out to a couple of people.

SPEAKER_00

Let's go, Jackson. Go.

SPEAKER_01

I want to give a shout out to my stepdad, my mom, and all my siblings, especially my older sister Destiny and Jeb. I want to shout out Jeb for being there for me through my hardest times and through my best times. He's always been there no matter what.

unknown

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

All right, I'm gonna shout you out, Jacksie, for hanging out. And and and you know, being my youngest fan outside of my family, right? And and always checking in with me, always talking, you know. First I was like, is she serious? But then you are, and you know, three years almost three years later, you know, we're still talking and we're sharing pigs, talking about your brother, talking about family, you know. So I'm gonna shout you out, Jaxie. And I appreciate you being a loyal listener and a fan. Not because I interviewed your brother, but I mean, I only interviewed your brother once, and you've been a fan of mine for a while. So yeah, shout you out, you know. And so I I I hope we we continue, you know, being fans of each other and anything you need and want, especially later on, references and everything else, hit me up. All right. I will. All right, Jaxie, till next time.

SPEAKER_01

Till next time,