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2016 LOGAN COUNTY FAIR

LINCOLN DAILY NEWS July 29 - August 6, 2016

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By Nila Smith

F

or many people the idea

of spending a week at the

Logan County Fair equates to

food, fun, great shows, and a

time to hang out with friends.

Those are important aspects

of what is considered by many

as the most important week of

the summer in Logan County.

4-H and Fair,

lessons to live by

Throughout the week, walking

the Midway, one will see families

munching on fair food, or standing in

line for the grandstand show. There

will be teenagers, hanging together

as a group, snapping selfies they will

tag “me and my buds at the fair.”

There will be old farmers gathered

around the antique tractors talking

about the “good ol’ days.”

In the exhibit barns, there will be

kids proudly pointing out their blue

ribbons to grandma and grandpa,

an award they won as a result of

participating in a 4-H judging.

In the livestock barns, parents stand

on the sidelines, anxiously waiting

and trying to hear what the judges

say to their children about the animal

they are showing. For those who are

unfamiliar with the processes, some

of the sights can appear strange or

downright comical. Watching a kid

try to put a bunny on its back, or

seeing a judge looking at the hinny

of a chicken, just seems strange.

Watching a 100-pound youngster

manhandling a 1,000-pound steer

with nothing but a rope and a stick, pulling, poking and prodding

until the animal somewhat willingly walks in a circle before a

judge, may seem pointless. Equally comical can be the chaos of

kids chasing hogs around an arena, trying to get them to take their

noses out of a fence corner, or walk at a reasonable pace past a

judge, may seem like an exercise in futility.

Though these things may seem pointless, for the 4-H youngster, his

or her parents and the judges, this brings to an end a long period of

work and study by the kids. Preparing for the fair is not something

the kids do a week before hand. For many, it involves months and

months of preparation. When they stand before the judge, with

their art, their vegetables, their dogs or cats, or their cattle; they are

there to find out how well they have done in the months prior, and

what they can do better in the future.

For example, last year during the vegetable judging, the judge

asked a youngster when he had dug his potatoes for his entry.

FILE PHOTO