The Opperman family
The Dave and Stephanie Opperman family are a long-time fair family.
Their children Jenna, Kathryn, Megan, and Sam Opperman, all
participated in 4-H when they were younger.
Megan and Sam Opperman are still working with the fair by helping
with various events.
Sam and Megan (left)
during the 2015 poultry show.
Twenty-year-old Megan Opperman often participated in the home and
family show with baking, arts, and crops. She used to do tractor
pulls and show rabbits when she was younger
Megan assists with the dairy and culinary shows.
She is now co-superintendent for the Cake Classic. She said, "I do
background work for it like finding judges and making sure it runs
smoothly." She is also assisting with the pie contest this year.
Serving on the Jr. Livestock Committee, she is busy throughout fair
week. She passes out the ribbons, keeps track of the scores and what
judges say, makes sure records are correct, and helps with
questions.
Comfortable anywhere from kitchens to barns, she was on the scene
Tuesday helping dad who was superintendent of the Goat Competition.
About showing livestock, she said that you have to train the
livestock to walk correctly because they are judged on how they walk
and carry themselves, and those trained the most tend to cooperate
better and be handled better.
Megan said it takes a lot of communication to keep everything
running smoothly, and takes leadership and hard work.
Megan said the fair gives her a good sense of community and she
enjoys working with all the areas she is involved with.
Megan is also involved with her dad David Opperman in the Poultry.
He is there when poultry is being judged and he is a superintendent
for Junior Livestock.
David has been working with the livestock shows for over 20 years.
His father was a superintendent of Junior Livestock for many years,
so the fair has long been a family affair.
The 2016 Goat show
closed out, Steve Johnson offers his appreciation to David Opperman
(right) for another good show.
Sam Opperman used to show a lot of projects and still helps with Jr.
Livestock, walking the animals, getting the animals where they are
supposed to be, and helps pass out ribbons.
Stephanie Opperman is a support person for the family helping them
where needed during fair week.
It has been the whole family working together to make sure
departments are running right. All have put in a lot of hard work
and dedication.
The Schempp kids from Atlanta
Darin and Cindy Schempp's kids Molly and Cavit are very active in
4-H and in their community, Atlanta.
4-H has been a family tradition, since Cindy (Johnson) Schempp grew
up in 4-H showing mostly Beef animals.
The Schempp kids and
their cousin (sitting) who also works on the farm and shows, were
dressed in red shirts for the goat competition.
Cindy said, "Molly started [participating in the fair] seven years
ago showing in goats, cooking, visual arts, sewing, crops, vet
science are a few of the 25 projects that she started with. This
year, she has narrowed it to 15."
Cindy said, "Cavit has shown for five years with mostly the same
amount of projects, and also includes welding and shooting sports."
Both have received blue ribbon awards in the Logan County 4-H Food,
Nutrition & Health Show. In past years, Molly was the state fair
delegate for the Health category, and Cavit was a state fair
alternate in the foods category. They have also received top ratings
for their visual arts projects.
Molly and Cavit have both participated in all the scrambles as well.
Cindy said, "We work all year on projects as 4-H is a subject in our
lineup of subjects for home school, and work on the projects three
to five days per week by learning, researching, and practicing the
techniques."
Cindy said, "We LOVE fair week and Scrambles night is so exciting!
While catching goats and steers are our favorite memories of fair
events, it is the friendships that we cherish and carry with us from
year to year."
The Aylesworth kids - Mount Pulaski
The Randy and Kelly Aylesworth family of Mount Pulaski has been
competing in the fair for many years. Kamryn and Dixon Aylesworth
are both part of the FFA and 4-H in Mount Pulaski.
Kamryn in a
beautiful walk/trot at the Open Show competition on Thursday.
Kamryn, who graduated from Mount Pulaski High School this year, has
won top prizes for horse and dog showmanship, foods and sewing, and
visual arts. Kamryn has spent a lot of time working with horses,
competing in horse shows during the year, and winning many ribbons.
Dixon has won visual arts awards for wood and sculpture.
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Their cousins Dustin, Chase, Lukas, and Clay Aylesworth have also
shown livestock over the years, so the cousins have competed against
one another at times.
The Carter family
The Ed and Carlene Carter family has been involved in 4-H for 16
years and participated in various open judging categories for 15
years. All five children, Elizabeth, Tim, David, James and Miriam
have entered projects in several categories over the years.
The children have participated in 4-H in arts, woodworking,
vegetables, flowers, sewing. At least one of two also participate in
the open textiles. Carlene said, "We started in 4-H because I was in
4-H as a teenager and enjoyed it, and as homeschoolers, it gave the
kids an opportunity to learn new skills and exhibit their work.
Carlene said, "In 4-H at the fair the kids have competed in visual
arts, floriculture, poultry, cats, dogs, goats, woodworking,
vegetables, photography, and many other miscellaneous Department W
projects. They've also competed in cooking, flowers, vegetables,
sewing, a lot of art and photography, and junior livestock in the
open judging."
Between the five of them they have tried a large cross-section of
projects and all eventually settled into what they enjoyed most. All
the kids really enjoy the art category.
The kids have learned a lot of skills showing off their fair
projects, especially in getting something completed, and getting it
prepared to its best advantage. Even when they were little, they got
a kick out of being able to see their art works displayed in the art
building, and it was even better if there was a ribbon hanging on
it.
Ed mostly has done photography, and once baked a winning cake.
Carlene said, "I enjoy the textiles such as embroidery, quilting,
clothing, some floriculture, and a lot of dairy and culinary,
especially canning and pies."
Carlene said, "I love the sewing categories, but the dairy &
culinary judging is a lot of fun and interesting to watch. You learn
a lot about technique and what judges are looking for and what is an
ideal example of that product, depending on how talkative the judge
is. The textiles judges are really good about writing comments on
tags so that you know the areas you need to improve, or what you did
well. I've personally learned a lot that way."
Carlene said, "We're also big fans of the Cake Classic. Everyone
but Tim have participated in it at least once, it's very
challenging, especially when it's hot, and unpredictable, and I love
the fact that it is a fundraiser for 4-H. Elizabeth, David, and I
have each won it once over the years."
Carlene said, "Elizabeth and I helped with the sewing judging one
year, putting things back on hangers, etc. Elizabeth and Miriam
helped the former 4-H visual arts superintendent for several years
hanging pictures and putting things in cases. David took pictures of
4-H livestock judging for the Courier for several years."
The Carters have actually dialed back what they are showing quite a
bit this year, as the kids are all adults now and busy with jobs,
but most are still showing a few things. Carlene said, "This is
Miriam's last year in 4-H, so our family will officially be out of
the '4-H business' next year, [which] is a slightly bittersweet
change. I won't know what to do with myself the week before the fair
without someone to remind to "get working on those 4-H projects!"
Miriam Carter with her winning
gladiola in 2015
Carlene said the family will probably still continue to show in open
judging, at least to some degree.
The Crider family
Ian and Darlene Crider and their children Rebekah, Hannah and Daniel
have also been participating in the fair for 16 years and started
competing in open judging contests soon after. Darlene is Carlene
Carter's twin sister and the two have often found themselves
competing against one another. The Crider kids often compete against
their Carter cousins, too. Darlene said they are a competitive lot.
Darlene said, " We usually participate in the culinary contests,
floriculture, textiles, photography and fine arts." She said they
work on some projects over the winter, like fine arts and textiles,
but "80% of the projects are started within a month of the fair. We
just get heads down working hard and try to see how much we can
accomplish. And turns out we can accomplish a lot when we have a
deadline!"
Darlene said, some "projects can be done in a couple of hours, [and]
some will take several days. We will usually be working on several
at once; so one can work on that drawing, while the glue dries on
that project, while you have bread rising, or canning jars in the
pot. Just a way of using time efficiently."
Darlene said it "makes for a couple of intense weeks, but is very
gratifying. I think it's really good for the kids (and myself) to
see what we can actually accomplish, what we are truly capable of
when we work hard." She said it wouldn't be summer without the Logan
County Fair.
Daniel, the youngest Crider, attended his first fair judging when he
was only 2 1/2 weeks old. Darlene said, "That was a difficult year
for me, but I used the time while I was pregnant, and couldn't do a
whole lot else, to sew and ended up submitting over 30 sewing
projects."
Darlene said, "I also love that our skills have improved so much
over the years because of the fair. Having to be careful in
preparation for judging gets you in the habit of being careful at
home and you end up being a better cook, seamstress or whatever. The
judging (though sometimes tough to hear) is very instructive and
constructive, helps us see areas of improvement we didn't see
before, makes us do that extra 10% to make the product better."
Darlene has many positive memories of the fair. She said watching
the culinary judging with the kids is always fun, and the 4-H
scrambles [are] lots of fun to watch.
Some of her best memories have been when the kids have succeeded
beyond their expectations. Darlene said "there is nothing more
exciting than to see them get a plaque or ribbon for a project on
which they worked really hard.
Daniel's favorite memory was getting selected for state fair judging
for his Geology and Entomology projects for 4-H; they represented
the most work for him. He ended up taking his Entomology project to
state.
Hannah's favorite memory was from her early days. Darlene said,
"Hannah was about 8, and she did a flower arrangement that got best
of show for Jr. floral arrangements. Big R sponsored the category
and donated all kinds of wonderful gardening implements, which was
very exciting for an 8-year-old. But the best part was that she got
to beat her older sister!"
For these families, competing at the fair has become a long time
family tradition.
[Angela Reiners] |