Tag: Whidbey Island Fairgrounds

  • Preparing for the Fair Days of Summer

    Preparing for the Fair Days of Summer

    BY PATRICK CRAIG
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    July 19, 2017

    As I stop in the middle of the street, my finger twitches over the turn signal lever. In a split second, I turn left into the parking lot because, for the first time in almost forever, I am a civilian, or worse, a rube, sucker, or perhaps one of the ruder, off-color terms some carnies have for those not conversant in the ways of the midway.

    Any other time, I would have turned right into the fairgrounds, just as I had most of the previous decades of my life, either as a newspaper reporter or a 4-H dad and volunteer who helped set up displays and held lunches and jackets for kids now far too sophisticated for mom-inspired demands like that.

    Today, it feels different. I’m not around to interview the two-headed pig or encourage gluttony by praising the guys in the rib-eating contest. I’m not even there to see if my kid won any ribbons. This moment at the fairgrounds in Langley feels very different, for seconds anyway, until I get a little dust on my shoes and begin feeling the deep-fried, sugar-coated nostalgic excitement that is the fair.

    The sign that welcomes visitors to the 4-H area at fair (Photo by Patrick Craig)

    This time, T-minus less-than-two-weeks from opening, is the ultimate backstage time. People, lots of them, including 4-H kids and leaders, parents, and exhibitors—most armed with food, paint, and cleaning supplies—are here to work, laugh, and enjoy each other’s company, as they paint and shine up the ol’ fairgrounds.

    It’s not glamorous work: Lyndee Weeks and Kyra Levit, both of Langley, sit between a small mountain of chicken food dishes, and a tub of soapy water. One washes and one wipes. Both chat to while away their chore time.

    The day is beginning to get warm, but not yet hot. The shade is pleasant, but so is the occasional splash of soapy water. Quickly, the girls fall into a rhythm of wash, wipe and stack.

    Lyndee Weeks and Kyra Levit clean chicken food dishes outside the small animal barn at the fairgrounds on Sunday. (Photo by Patrick Craig)

    Talk moves readily from the day, the fair, and most pressingly, the competition for prizes in the various animal, craft, and skill events that are a big part of every 4-H’ers fair. These girls compete in sheep, chickens, sewing, and photography.

    It’s the last category that still gets under Lyndee’s skin—she’d submitted a photo in the “Nature, Close-up, Animal” category.

    “A picture of an eyeball won,” she says with no little discontent in her voice. “They beat me with an EYEBALL!”

    There may not be parimutuel betting at the Island Fair, but competition is still keen.

    Whidbey Island’s fair history goes back more than 100 years when it was formed in 1912 by a private company. The fair was restructured and reincorporated as a Washington state nonprofit in 1923 and achieved nonprofit status with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service in 2002.

    Cassie Pfannenstiel, Elli Dubendorf, Laura Thompson, and Nicole Midkiff paint the dog building at the fairgrounds on Sunday. (Photo by Patrick Craig)

    The fair’s first property, a chicken farm, was bought for $33 in 1934. The next year, construction on the Pole Building began and was completed in 1937, with horse barns and exhibit rooms on the grounds being built through the early ‘60s. The grounds were deeded to Island County in 1962.

    For many in the area, 4-H membership becomes a multi-generational activity. The age range for membership runs from 5 to 19 and Washington 4-H programs are supported by the Washington State University Extension.

    Cassie Pfannenstiel, this year’s Whidbey 4-H’er of the Year, says she has enjoyed her club’s relationship with the university. “They’ve been very helpful and seem to always be willing to talk with you,” she says. Pfannenstiel became involved with 4-H as a little girl. “My Dad gave me a German shorthair pointer puppy. And even though he didn’t know much about 4-H, he said he heard they were pretty good with things like that.”

    Cassie Pfannenstiel and her prize-winning smooth collie Comet, who live in Oak Harbor, get ready to practice for their canine events at the Whidbey Island Fair in Langley. (Photo by Patrick Craig)

    That was 14 or 15 years ago, and since then, she’s won several awards with her dogs, traveled around the country to 4-H activities and programs, and serves as one of the 4-H reps at the county. The club’s canine program even enabled her to compete nationally in the youth division of the Eukanuba dog competitions with her current dog Comet.

    Pfannenstiel also became a prize-winning horsewoman after staying with skills she learned as a kid with The Pony Club. She continues to compete in dressage and other equestrian activities, mostly outside 4-H.

    She considers herself a farm kid. “Kind of, anyway, I did chores night and evening,” she says, glancing around the small farm where she lives with her family.

    That will soon change. Not long after the fair, Pfannenstiel will enroll at Montana State University in Bozeman and live away from home for the first time. She believes her 4-H activities—from public speaking to animal projects—representing the club in the city, county, and beyond, plus outside activities such as dressage, have helped her gain the skills and confidence that will serve her well through life.

    If you go

    This year’s fair runs from Thursday, July 20, to Sunday, July 23.

    • Gates open at 9:30 a.m. every day. They close at:
      • 10 p.m. on Thursday
      • 10:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday
      • 9 p.m. on Sunday
    • Barns close at:
      • 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday
      • 6:30 p.m. on Sunday
    • Tickets cost:
      • $9 daily and $25 for the season for adults 18 to 64
      • $5 daily and $15 for the season for military with ID, seniors 65 and older, and juniors 6 to 17.
      • Free for children 5 and under
    • To view the event and entertainment schedule, visit the fair’s website.

    Patrick Craig has written for newspapers for half a century. At the beginning of his career, he was a reporter in just about every department but business. For most of the past 50 years, though, he wrote reviews and columns about theater and television. He worked for a chain of daily newspapers and covered theaters in San Francisco, Ashland, New York, and Chicago.

    Read the other stories published this week

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  • OutCast Productions presents ‘Nickel and Dimed’ opening in Langley March 6

    OutCast Productions presents ‘Nickel and Dimed’ opening in Langley March 6

    March 4,2015

    Let’s face the facts: The cycle of poverty in America is shamefully bolstered by corporate managers, who value the market more than the average worker’s well-being.

    Peggy Gilmer, Judith Dankanics, Mona Newbauer and Julia Tewksbury portray the low-wage women workers of “Nickel and Dimed” on (not) getting by in America. / Photo by Jim Carroll of Shu Images
    Peggy Gilmer, Judith Dankanics, Mona Newbauer and Julia Tewksbury portray the low-wage women workers of “Nickel and Dimed” on (not) getting by in America.  (photo by Jim Carroll of Shu Images)

    Joan Holden’s play “Nickel and Dimed” is based on the sociological non-fiction, bestseller “Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting by in America” by Barbara Ehrenreich, about the author’s undercover odyssey into the world of a low-wage life. OutCast Productions opens the play at 7:30 p.m. Friday, March 6 at the Black Box Theater at the Whidbey Island Fairgrounds in Langley. The show runs through Saturday, March 21.

    Can a middle-aged, middle-class woman survive when she suddenly has to make beds all day in a hotel and live on $7 an hour? Maybe. But one $7-an-hour job won’t pay the rent. She’ll have to do back-to-back shifts, as a chambermaid and a waitress. Ehrenreich’s book about her discoveries in the hardscrabble life of underpaid women in America is vivid and witty, yet always deeply sobering, and Holden’s script brings that sobering reality to life.

     Julia Tewksbury as Barbara and Eric Anderson as Phillip rehearse Joan Holden’s play “Nickel and Dimed,” based on the nonfiction bestseller by Barbara Ehrenreich. / Photo by Jim Carroll of Shu Images
    Julia Tewksbury as Barbara and Eric Anderson as Phillip rehearse Joan Holden’s play “Nickel and Dimed,” based on the nonfiction bestseller by Barbara Ehrenreich. (photo by Jim Carroll of Shu Images)

    Director K. Sandy O’Brien maintains a comic lightness throughout, as the middle-aged Barbara stumbles around the country from one hard-knock job to another. Meanwhile, what is finally illuminated is the ultimate conclusion of Ehrenreich’s study: There is a dark shadow of oppression that continues to weigh heavily on the low-wage workforce of America.

    The cast includes Eric Andersen, Sean Brennan, Jim Carroll, Judith Dankanics, Patricia Duff, Peggy Gilmer, Doug Kolb, Hannah Mack, Mona Newbauer and Julia Tewksbury (as Barbara).

    Performances are at 7:30 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, March 6 to 21; at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 19; and at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 15. Doors open one half hour before show time.

    Tickets are $18 for adults and $14 for student/seniors.

    Tickets are available via Brown Paper Tickets here. You can also reserve tickets and pay at the door by cash or check by emailing us at ocp@whidbey.com.

    The Black Box Theater is located at  819 Camano Ave. in Langley. Find out more at www.outcastproductions.net.

  • Comedy anyone? — “Play On!” is at OutCast in Langley

    Comedy anyone? — “Play On!” is at OutCast in Langley

    Sept. 18, 2013

    OutCast Productions presents “Play On!” through Oct. 5 at the Black Box Theater in Langley, directed by K. Sandy O’Brien.

    O’Brien lends her mad directing skills to Rick Abbot’s behind-the-scenes comedy. Abbot emulates the great, door-slamming plays of high-low comedy (think “Noises Off”) and literally lifts the curtain and lays bare the hilarious inner workings of the ‘Last Chance Players.’ Here is the hilarious story of a theater group trying desperately to put on a play in spite of maddening interference from a haughty author who keeps revising the script.

    Outcast_Play_On_04 (333x500)
    Lars Larson and Marta Mulholland get into some serious hijinks in OutCast’s “Play On!” opening Friday, Sept. 20 through Oct. 5 at the Whidbey Island Fairgrounds Black Box Theater in Langley. (Doug Kolb photos)

    Act I is a rehearsal of the dreadful show, Act II is the near disastrous dress rehearsal, and the final act is the actual performance in which anything that can go wrong does. When the author decides to give a speech on the state of the modern theater during the curtain calls, the audience is treated to a madcap climax to a thoroughly hilarious romp. Even the sound effects reap their own share of laughter.

    The cast includes Lars Larson, Marta Mulholland, Rita Carrow, Warren Carrow, Rich Tamler, Ned Farley,  Jim Carroll,  Mona Newbauer, Judith Dankanics and Tony Caldwell.
    Performances are at 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; and 2 p.m. Sundays; through Saturday, Oct. 5.
    Tickets are $12 student/senior (62+) and $16 adults.  Tickets are on sale either through Brown Paper Tickets for credit card purchases, or by reserving tickets through our email address to be picked up and paid for at the door by cash or check at: ocp@whidbey.com.

    The Black Box Theater is located at the Whidbey Island Fairgrounds, 819 Camano Ave. in Langley.

    Visit OutCast Productions’ website for more info.

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    (Pictured at top, Mona Newbauer, Rita Carrow, Judith Dankanics and Marta Mulholland in “Play On!” at OutCast./Doug Kolb photo)