Kiddie tractor pull pulls out all the stops for young farmers

[July 30, 2025]  Tuesday morning at 8 a.m., crowds of children gathered under the roof of the KC Pavilion at the Logan County Fair.

Children competed for medals, trophies, and fair food prizes by pedaling a tractor that had a trailer attached to it with weights in the back. Whoever could pedal it fastest and the furthest would win the competition.

Three different categories were in place to keep the competition fair among the kids participating. The groups were divided into lightweight, middleweight, and heavyweight with the competition starting with the smallest of the group first.

Being the first one to start is always hard, and some of the younger children were more timid when approaching the tractor. However, competitor Arainna Myers hit the ground running from where she was seated in waiting. She jumped onto the tractor from her sprint and before anyone could say a word to her about how to pedal it she was pushing to the end of the race. She won first place in her division.

Elliot Bruns was the winner of the middleweight category then followed Craig Hayes, who ran a close race against his competitors.

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All first-place winners were awarded trophies for their effort, and second and third-place winners won medals. However, everyone was a winner and was given a t-shirt, handed out by a child family member of one of the helpers at the event, Sam Opperman.

Opperman, as well as President Reagen Tibbs, explained the details of the Logan County Farm Bureau Young Leaders group.

They shared that the organization has been around for around 40 years now and performs about 7-8 tractor pulls per year. Tibbs stated that this is an organization that “Supports anything we can in the community.”.

As well as performing tractor pulls, it was stated that they would set up tours for high school children in F.F.A. The organization lets students from Olympia, Mt. Pulaski, Lincoln, and Hartsburg join the tours. These tours have included a variety of different facilities such as a wind farm in Hopedale, Bloomington Meats, and Precision Planting in Tremont.

Not only do high schoolers get tours of local agriculture areas, but the Logan County Farm Bureau Young Leaders organization also raises money for scholarships for the students. This is done through an annual golf tournament that the organization puts on around every 4th of July weekend.

The Logan County Bureau Young Leaders is not just for children, however. This organization is a group for anyone between the ages of 18 to 25 interested in agriculture. Meetings are on the second Thursday of every month at 6:30 p.m. at the Logan County Farm Bureau office.

[Sophia Larimore]
 

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