Each July,
the 4-H fair in Williamsport, Indiana, occupied my family’s fullest attention.
For months leading up to the event, we had prepared by training young pigs and
cows in how to walk and pose like runway models. For our gardening exhibits, we
had grown cabbages larger than our heads. We had made crafts, and we had
snapped photographs. Using tweezers, we had even painstakingly selected the
largest wheat grains from a bushel of wheat to exhibit—as if all our wheat were
that free from chaff and imperfections. As we were enrolled in so many
projects, we had tasks to fulfill nearly every day. Finally, when the week of
the fair rolled around, we were not only ready but also excited to collect
ribbons for our achievements. (Be sure to read my blog about our Holstein cow
named Buttercup: http://heartlandbooks.blogspot.com/2014/11/my-friend-buttercup.html.)
Buttercup at the Warren County (Indiana) Fair |
We hoped
for sweepstakes rosettes, and we received them in such projects as entomology,
but we usually had to settle for purple champion ribbons, blue first place
ribbons, or red second place ribbons for our livestock.
Wearing
My Scrooge McDuck Hat
(Which
I Still Have)
While
Getting Buttercup Ready
For
the 4-H Judging
|
For me, the
most enjoyable of the many enjoyable facets of the fair was the social
interaction. By the time that I was in high school, I was working in the Junior
Leaders building whenever my township was called upon to provide the crew.
Picture a white-painted, square structure in the center of the slightly rolling
grounds. Off to the north were rows of brand-spanking-new tractors and farm
implements. To the northwest were the rides, lit with colored bulbs at night.
To the south stood the cafeteria, and to the east stretched the coliseum filled
with animals. We Junior Leaders sold ice cream in cups and cones and soft
drinks in various sizes. Our hands tingled from holding the cold scoops to
scrape ice cream into “dips,” or servings. We set the icy soft drinks on the
counters, which were formed by dropping them down on hinges from three sides of the building.
Whenever judging in the show ring ended, we were swamped with business.
Fairgoers strolled from the coliseum to our location and lined up around
the counters. We flew from the ice cream freezers to the soft drink dispensers
to the napkin holders. … and we quickly calculated amounts and made change.
While we were at it, we did not forget to have fun. An abundance of jovial
banter went back and forth while we worked.
The
Way I Remember the Farm
In
We Do It Together
Vol.
2, No. 7
Part
3 for April 19, 1959
|
Throughout
the years that I participated in the 4-H fair, I derived tremendous
satisfaction from the evening when it was my township’s turn to run the
cafeteria. From the time I became old enough to carry a rubber dishpan full
of plates and silverware, I kept busy bussing tables. The pace was fast, for
the cafeteria did a lot of business, especially during the evening meal—and
Adams Township had the dinner on Wednesday evening, which was one of the
busiest dinners of them all!
My father
and his good friend Don Akers stood shucking sweet corn just outside the back
door of the large building on those hot summer nights while I strode briskly
from table to table, collecting the dishes, knives, forks, and spoons to carry
to the line of volunteers washing the dishes in back. Most of the farm families
thought of pleasant things to say to me as I quickly cleaned the tables. I had
to listen carefully, as the hum of voices was loud and steady within the
spacious cafeteria building with every seat taken at every table.
Only when
the hour was late did the lines of patrons diminish, enabling us to slow our
pace. Around midnight, my father had finished his clean-up tasks, and we went
home, tired but as happy as people can be who have literally served their
neighbors.
No comments:
Post a Comment