2025-2026

Cash Honeycutt, 2025-26 VP
Dec 16 2025

No Matter What

Cash Honeycutt, 2025-26 VP

Every year in the United States one of the biggest sporting events in the world happens. The legendary horse race known as the Kentucky Derby, which is the first leg of the American Triple Crown, a highly coveted award that few have ever won. Many legendary horses have won this race and have been celebrated all over the world. Legends such as Secretariat, War Admiral, Seattle Slew, and the recent legend American Pharoah. What do these horses have in common? Aside from being legendary triple crown winners, these horses have the look of a champion. The champions are large, sleek, beautiful, the champions have that look and often those who don’t have it aren’t champions. 

 

However, every once in a while lightning strikes. A little colt was born. He was everything but a champion. His father had earned over a million dollars as a race horse, however he did little to impress anyone when he was born. He was small, skinny, and simply put, ugly. He was sold almost immediately without a second thought for the price of $9,500 which in the racehorse world is rock bottom. 

 

Two cowboys from New Mexico bought him. They believed in the little colt despite everyone telling them they had no chance. Eventually he made it as an alternate to the Kentucky Derby. Already outperforming what anyone expected. He arrived in a truck and trailer driven all the way from New Mexico with two men in cowboy hats. Every other horse was flown in, all the other owners wore fancy suits, but not his. Then another horse pulled out of the race allowing Mine That Bird to enter the race, as a 50-1 underdog —the second longest shot to ever run in the Kentucky Derby. When the gates opened he sat last as expected, as the field came around the last turn he sat around the 10th position. But all of a sudden his jockey saw a gap in the horses and he exploded through it. Mine That Bird won the Derby by 6 ¾ lengths, the longest margin of victory in 60 years. Mine That Bird now enjoys retirement in New Mexico after earning over $2.2 Million dollars racing. 

 

While every indication showed him and his owners that he wouldn’t belong, he proved that he belonged no matter what. At times you might feel like you don’t belong or people might try to tell you that you don’t belong. Maybe you didn’t grow up on a farm, maybe your parents weren’t in FFA or even know what FFA is. But I encourage you to remember that here you will always belong no matter what. 

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Sophia Geppart, 2025-26 VP
Dec 16 2025

The Storm is Essential

Sophia Geppart, 2025-26 VP

For as long as I can remember, winter has always been my favorite season. A time of joy, laughter, and fellowship fill the air as we reconnect with loved ones during the holiday season. Everyone looks forward to the end of the year and celebrating memories made. The anticipation was worth the wait and families cherish the time spent together. As time passes, the joy of the holiday season falls and we are left with the gloomy section of winter: the ice and the cold. This part of the season is why it’s my favorite. 

Even though the weather may be gloomy, this is when some of the most important events happen. When the ice and snow hit our fields, an essential process is taking place. As this precipitation melts, it provides much needed water to refuel and prepare the fields for the upcoming growing season. Without this gloomy weather, our fields will slow down the growing process. 

There will be times in our lives when we are stuck in the gloomy part of the season. We may get caught up in the nastiness of a hard class, trouble between friends, or an unforeseen circumstance. This is our growing season. By weathering the ice and snow of our lives, we come out stronger. These challenges make us who we are and help us grow. If we understand how essential this storm is, we will better appreciate the growth on the other side. Missouri FFA, don’t forget that the storm is essential.

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Harlee Beck, 2025-26 VP
Dec 13 2025

The Farmer Behind The Blue Jacket

Harlee Beck, 2025-26 VP

Duck season always brings me back to one moment that shaped more of who I am than I realized at the time. I was young—small enough that the equipment felt twice my size, and inexperienced enough that the idea of actually hitting a duck felt impossible. The morning was cold and still, the kind of stillness that makes every sound sharper. The ducks had settled perfectly into the decoys, and I stood there frozen between excitement and fear.

 

My grandpa came up beside me, steady and sure, like he always was. He gently rested his hands over mine and helped me hold the equipment just right. “Breathe,” he whispered, “You’ve got it.” That was all. No pressure. No long instructions. Just quiet guidance from someone who believed in me long before I believed in myself.

 

When the sound echoed and that duck dropped, everything changed. It wasn’t just about hunting—it was about stepping into a moment I wasn’t sure I was ready for, and realizing that the people who love you can turn fear into courage with just a little support.

 

I didn’t know it then, but that moment on the water was the beginning of understanding what it means to be “the farmer behind the blue jacket.”

 

Because whether you grow up on a family farm or in a subdivision, whether you’ve bottle-fed calves or only seen them from the highway, the blue jacket isn’t always about where you come from—it’s about who you’re becoming.

 

It’s about soaking up the people around you: the grandparents who teach you patience, the advisors who see potential before you do, the teammates who walk alongside you, and the friends who feel like home. It’s in those everyday voices, stories, and small moments of encouragement that your purpose quietly takes shape.

 

This year as a state officer, I’ve learned that agriculture isn’t defined by acres or animals. It’s defined by people. By hearts willing to serve. By minds eager to learn. By students who may never set foot on a farm but still choose to be advocates, leaders, innovators, and caretakers of our world’s most important industry. The next generation of agriculturalists isn’t limited to one kind of background—it’s built by those who are willing to grow where they’re planted.

 

I’ve also learned that purpose doesn’t usually arrive all at once. It settles in slowly, like a sunrise spreading across a field. Sometimes it comes during a long drive home, sometimes during a workshop, sometimes during a small conversation with a member who reminds you why you said yes to this journey. And sometimes, it comes from memories of the people who shaped you—memories you hold tighter as the years go on.

 

So soak up the moments. Soak up the laughter around kitchen tables, the long nights in ag rooms, the mentors who correct you gently, and the teammates who push you higher. Soak up the love that surrounds you now, because one day those moments will be treasures tucked into your heart.

 

Behind every blue jacket is a story. A purpose. A foundation. A quiet shaping from the people who walked with you.

 

That’s the farmer behind the blue jacket.
And that’s who you’re becoming.

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Gage Swindler, 2025-26 VP
Nov 25 2025

Slow Down and Take It In

Gage Swindler, 2025-26 VP

If any of you are like me, you pride yourself by setting goals and putting in the work to achieve them. We all have our own goals and way of achieving them. Whether that’s graduating high school, getting good grades, making it to state on a contest team, or winning ballgames. It is important that we set goals for ourselves so we can push to become better and more successful.

 Sometimes, however, we get so focused on the end results that we don’t take time to appreciate and soak in what is happening in the moment. Now that I have graduated from high school and started college, I realize how special those little moments are along the way. From long days in the classroom to exhausting practices on the ballfield, it’s easy to fly right through the moments, taking them all for granted, while we chase after our goals. 

Keep chasing your goals with everything you have. These four years of high school will be some of the most memorable years of your life. Just remember to slow down and take it in because it will fly by before you know it.

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Ryatt Haggerman, 2025-26 Secretary
Nov 06 2025

The Best Time to Plant an Apple Tree

Ryatt Haggerman, 2025-26 Secretary

Well, I hate to say it, but I think my high school days are well and truly behind me. As I write this blog post, I just finished my last official FFA contest. All those long nights studying, practicing and crying over contest season, my time has finally come to an end. As I look back on my experiences, I can’t help but wish I had done more with my time. All the different contests, events, and experiences I missed all because I was too scared to take the chance. I could have done so much more; I could have met people and made memories that would last a lifetime, but I didn’t. My time in high school has come and gone, and there is no going back. 

 

Maybe you’ve felt the same way I’m feeling right now – like you could have done more, but now the chance is gone. It’s in moments like these, though, that I think about a quote I once heard, “The best time to plant an apple tree was 20 years ago, but the second-best time is today.” For all of us, it is easy to look back at that opportunity you missed or the chance you didn’t take and say you should have done more. The hard part is to look at what you can do today. To use the time you have right now is the most difficult thing to do. 

 

We all should have planted our apple trees when we had the chance. Let’s do the one thing we can do and choose to plant our apple trees right now. 

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Annie Neely, 2025-26 VP
Nov 06 2025

Look to the Light

Annie Neely, 2025-26 VP

Some of my most vivid childhood memories came when my brothers and I would binge-watch Disney movies during our days off from school. I was a Disney fan and adored the Toy Story trilogy. My favorite character was Buzz Lightyear, and I loved the iconic line, “To infinity and beyond!” that he would say in key moments, reflecting his belief in being a real space ranger. But during the first movie, when he fell off the bed of Andy, his owner, Buzz realized that he was not a space ranger but actually a toy. This realization hit him hard, and he suddenly thought that he had lost his purpose. In his disappointment, however, he was able to see his situation in a new light and started to build a new relationship with Woody and Andy’s other toys.

 

In FFA and in our own lives, we probably don’t convince ourselves that we are space rangers, but we do expect that our lives will unfold in a certain way. Sometimes they do, like when we win an FFA contest or get the officer position that we really wanted. But, as Buzz learned, there are also times when we might fail or face something that we don’t want to hear. Buzz didn’t want to accept that he wasn’t a toy. We might not want to realize something hard either. 

 

Missouri FFA members, through our highs and lows, we always need to remember that there is light at the end of the tunnel. I like to think that Buzz’s ‘light at the end of the tunnel’ moment was when he became friends with Woody. Woody helped Buzz joke about his experience, while helping him grow. Always look for the light. 

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Lindsay McDonald, 2025-26 VP
Oct 13 2025

Stressed or Blessed

Lindsay McDonald, 2025-26 VP

Ever since I joined FFA, there is one word I can use to describe my life: busy. It seemed as though there was always some new event or contest I could do, and I was not about to pass up an opportunity to do something with FFA. I will never regret any of the opportunities I’ve taken advantage of in FFA, but I will say it left me feeling overwhelmed at times, like I was struggling to keep my head above water. 

 

I would often miss class for trips and though I did a good job of keeping up with my schoolwork and communicating with my teachers, sometimes deadlines are still deadlines. Since beginning college, I’ve had the opportunity to get involved in so many new things, and with that comes finding a healthy balance. Oftentimes I have to prioritize things, which sometimes means missing out on one thing because another was higher on my list. 

 

Needless to say, there’s always a lot going on in my life, and I know I’m not the only one. Sometimes, it leaves me feeling stressed. But when I start to feel stressed, I think at what an amazing privilege it is to be stressed. I have opportunities set right in front of me not everyone else in the world has. And for that, I feel grateful. I’m blessed to stay busy, I’m blessed to build communities that care about me, and I’m blessed to have the good health to do it all. Sometimes we get so caught up in the blur of everyday life that we spend too much time stressing and forget to make time to focus on our blessings. 

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Noah Grosse, 2025-26 VP
Oct 13 2025

Persist

Noah Grosse, 2025-26 VP

On our first day back from winter break, Mrs. Toler, the fifth-grade teacher, announced each student was to find a “2025 Word”. This word should be one students could focus on to better themselves throughout 2025. I volunteered as an A+ student in the 5th grade classroom every day of my senior year and helped the students or did tasks for Mrs. Toler. As I assisted the fifth graders in finding words they felt would be best for them, I decided to do the same.

The word I chose was persist.

At the time, I hoped this word would help keep me focused while making some of the hard decisions every senior faces: what college I would attend, what I would major in, how I would find the time to fill scholarship applications and how I would remain involved in my FFA chapter. I added my 2025 word to my notes app where I would stumble across it periodically and be reminded to continue with my persistence.

Halfway through 2025, I found myself preparing a keynote speech for Week 2 of FFA Camp. I realized my persistence had helped solidify those difficult decisions I was facing back in January, while helping me become a better version of myself in order to serve Missouri FFA.

As we move closer to the end of 2025, I am still trying to keep my word in mind. I hope to stay persistent in my classwork, studying and keeping up with my friends. I encourage you to create a 2026 word to place in a spot where you will have a subtle reminder of what you want to focus on throughout the year ahead. 

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Kolton Stolba, 2025-26 VP
Oct 13 2025

The City Behind You

Kolton Stolba, 2025-26 VP

As a sports fan, I love to think of one of my favorite moments in sports history. June 11, 1997 – Game 5 of the NBA Finals where the Chicago Bulls were facing the Utah Jazz. That morning, Michael Jordan wakes up barely able to stand, sick with nausea and exhaustion. Despite his pain, Jordan knows how much his team needs him, so he decides to play. He steps onto the court with the flu and proceeds to drop 38 points, hitting a clutch 3-pointer in the last 30 seconds to seal the win. The Bulls take a 3–2 series lead and go on to win the championship. This game went on to be known as “The Flu Game.”

 

Ray Allen described it by saying, “That’s the greatest performance ever because he had no business even being out there.” I now realize Jordan wasn’t playing for himself. He was playing for Chicago. He understood the name “Jordan” on the back of his jersey was smaller than the Bulls logo on the front.

 

In one of my favorite songs, Macklemore’s “Can’t Hold Us”, he says, “My city’s right behind me, if I fall, they got me.” That’s exactly what Jordan embodied, and it’s what we all should embody, too. Our case looks a little different, though. On our FFA jackets, our names are on the front, but what’s on the back is so much bigger. When we wear that jacket, we represent our chapter, our state and ultimately the entirety of FFA.

 

Jordan’s flu game is remembered not just for the stats, but for what it meant. The same is true for us. Whether it’s FFA, school, sports or life, we should always remember that the name on the back is bigger than the name on the front.

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Harlee Beck, 2025-26 VP
Sep 17 2025

Loosen the Grip

Harlee Beck, 2025-26 VP

We can’t always control everything in our lives. I’ll be honest—that’s hard for me. Like most people, I like to plan out my schedule, my goals and even the outcomes of my efforts. But the truth is, holding on too tightly doesn’t always lead to the best results.

 

So often, we spend our time stressing over problems and worrying about tomorrow. In doing that, we can forget to enjoy the little moments that make today special. The funny conversations with friends, a sunset after a long day or even just laughing at ourselves when things don’t go as planned. Those moments can pass us by if we’re too focused on what might happen next.

 

Starting college has been one of the biggest reminders of this for me. With new schedules, classes and responsibilities, I’ve realized just how many things are outside of my control. At first, I found myself trying to juggle it all perfectly—newsflash, it didn’t work. What I did learn, though, is that stressing over what I can’t change doesn’t solve the problem. In fact, it just steals the joy right out of the present moment.

 

Instead, I’ve been working on focusing on what I can control: my attitude, my effort and how I choose to spend each day. When I do that, I find more peace in the present and more appreciation for the journey I’m on.

 

If you’re anything like me, you probably want things to always go according to plan. But maybe the best growth comes when we let go a little, trust the process and learn to enjoy the ride. Life has a way of working itself out, sometimes even better than we could have planned.

 

So here’s my challenge for you (and for myself, too): take a deep breath, loosen your grip on the things you can’t control and look for the little joys today has to offer. You might just find that the unplanned moments become your favorite memories.

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