Come to the Fair again! Bigger and even more fun in 2009!

Posted on August 1, 2009

6


2009 Antrim County Fair
Fairgrounds: Craven Park, Bellaire
August 6-8
(plus the Cowboy Worship Service on Sunday morning)

Last year I wrote about the Fair, and I see that people are hunting that post down now, looking for information. Time to do a new one. Here’s what I said in 2008 that is still true:

The Antrim County Fair is the real deal. There will be a horse show. There will be llama judging, swine judging, and cavies judging. There will be decorated cakes and prizewinning pickles and jams. There will be crocheted and knitted and glued and bespangled items of clothing and home decor. There will be paintings and photographs and digital scrapbooks. You will be amazed and delighted. If you are a Modern Consumer, you will learn something about where your food comes from, and something about the people who grow it for you. If you’re a grower, I don’t need to tell you about the fair. But you will probably learn something, too. See you there.

The 2009 version of the Fair Book is not ready yet, so you’ll have to wait a minute for that. But I can give you the schedule, because Gloria Campbell over at the MSU Extension Service was kind enough to forward the file to me: Antrim County Fair 2009 Schedule of Events (flyer)

There is a lot of new stuff this year, and you can read all about it in the Antrim Review next Thursday, but by the time you get the paper and read it, it’ll be too late to trot over there for the Antrim County Horse Show (8:30 am Thursday, August 6) so I recommend you put that on your calendar now.  You wouldn’t want to miss the Talent Contest on Thursday evening, Dan Hall’s songwriting workshop for kids or the Buyers BBQ Cabrito Dinner on Friday, or the Dog Show and the Farm Olympics and the Horse Pull and Michael Lee Seiler’s performance on Saturday, either.  And you would not want to miss lunch any day.

This is not the State Fair.  No ferris wheel, no barns full of guys selling Amazing Kitchen Implements and vibrating lounge chairs.  This is not even a big County Fair.  This is a little County Fair—like I said before, the real deal.  This is about kids and what they’ve learned in 4-H, and about families working together, and about people who want to pass their wisdom and skills on to another generation. If you bid on some food on the hoof at the 4-H Livestock Auction, you won’t be bidding against corporations. You have a good chance of winning the bid, and when you do, you will walk over to the kid who raised the animal and make arrangements for its slaughter and butchering. Because this fair is above all about realism. I don’t see how you can go wrong.

I took snapshots of my favorite things last year.  Here are a few of them. Come and make your own memories in 2009!