Two women poke their heads through a cutout of a flower and a pig.
Leah Lowe (upper left), Wasco County 4-H Program Coordinator, and Brandi Vance.
Photo credit: Susan Coleman

Hello, this is Brandi Vance, OSU Extension intern in Wasco County. The second half of my internship was filled with preparations for fair time. What does this mean you might ask? Lots of caffeine and long days. This happened to be my favorite time, organizing all the awards, making sure our barn superintendents had what they needed as well as making sure the kids were entered correctly for their fair classes. This may sound like a lot, but I had the best team that I was assisting. My supervisor, Leah Lowe, Wasco County’s 4-H program coordinator, made sure I knew exactly where to go and what to do all while handling all her duties.

Finally, we got to fair week. The best and maybe most crazy time of year. We moved all our office supplies we would need for the week to the fairgrounds (which is actually 45 minutes away from our normal office) and proceeded to organize. Next, we had horse fair which is actually held a few days before the main fair takes place. We had a great judge who taught the kids so much during their shows. We managed to do everything from showmanship to western games all in one day. Then we ended the night with a skill-a-thon I designed and awards as well as a Mongolian barbeque one of the leaders made. After a small break, we checked in all our static exhibits. We had kids coming in all day with artwork, photography, even some sewing and cooking. We had a great turn out this year!

A long row of 4-H champion belt buckles.
Wasco County 2023 Grand Champion and Reserve Grand Champion Belt Buckles.
Photo credit: Brandi Vance

The next day it was time to get everyone settled into the fairgrounds – as settled as you can get in 106-degree weather – and have an exhibitor meeting. Every 4-H’er and leader/volunteer got a shirt, and the kids even got a bucket for the fair thanks to many great sponsors. We played minute-to-win-it games that featured one kid with a bag covered in shaving cream on their head while the other partner threw peanuts to try and get them to stick. The team with the most peanuts stuck wins. We played games at each of our night meetings to give the kids and volunteers a chance to relax after a long day of fair festivities. Not to mention the swag that the kids with good sportsmanship got each evening. The following days were filled with early mornings, market classes and even showmanship classes. The kids did absolutely phenomenal and won lots of awards and made so many improvements.

Then it happened, my last day. I ended up getting a thank you card from a member of one of our local clubs. I had so much fun and learned more than I imagined I would during the duration of my internship in Wasco County. The kids, the Extension staff, the parents/volunteers/leaders made it the best experience and I am missing it already. I already have plans to go help at fair next year!

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Leave a reply

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong> 

required