MADISON, WIS. – Joan
Seidel of Fleetwood, Pa., was presented the 33rd Klussendorf-MacKenzie
Award during World Dairy Expo® 2024, in memory of Duncan MacKenzie,
the 1961 Klussendorf winner. While this year’s Klussendorf-MacKenzie award
winner has an impressive dairy résumé, it is most important to note that Seidel
exemplifies the standards that made Duncan MacKenzie the forbearer of this
award.
Elite Dairy,
Lylehaven, Ruann, Pappys, Cormdale, Snyder's Homestead, Brigeen Farms,
Woodmansee Holsteins, Tumbleweed, Green Meadows, Friendship Farm, and Pintail
Point are among the farms that this year’s 33rd Duncan MacKenzie
winner has worked for as she spends nearly 300 days on the road preparing
cattle for shows, sales, and classifications.
Joan Seidel’s story
began on her family dairy farm in Avon, N.Y. when she began showing dairy
cattle at age nine. As she honed her skills, she went on to win numerous
All-New York and Junior All-New York Awards. As she transitioned from Junior
Holstein activities, the 2024 Duncan MacKenzie winner hit the road as an adult
working for Bennett Farms and Ruann Dairy. During those early days, she learned
from great mentors, including John Bennett and Lewis Porter.
With that experience
under her belt, Joan, along with her husband, Doug, formed the Camelot Cattle
Company where they ran a showstring together. Clients and their cattle
benefitted from the excellent care Joan provided and eventually those animals
won numerous All-American nominations. During these days, the Camelot Cattle
Company was known for winning multiple Herdsmanship Awards at World Dairy Expo.
With character being
an important qualification for the Duncan MacKenzie award, Joan Seidel's
personal attributes are many as this year’s award nominators were quick to
point out that she gives freely of her time and skills to educate and mentor
young people on proper care and presentation of their cattle. When peers speak
about Joan, she is recognized by people for the outstanding work ethic and the
attention to detail that she brings to each task.
The humility that she
also brings to work is also undeniable; meaning there is no task too big or
small for Joan. She never complains and is an effective team member helping in
whatever task needs to be completed, whether picking up manure or fitting the
cows before they go to the ring. People ultimately trust Joan with their prized
animals, and she treats them all with the same respect, whether it is the local
4-H project or an All-American.
Above all, Joan brings
forth strength, character and an undeniable passion for the dairy industry.
Those are among the many reasons that Joan Seidel of Fleetwood, Pa., was the
fifth woman to win the Duncan MacKenzie Award in the past 33 years.