The Niagara County Fair, threatened by iffy weather Wednesday through Saturday, escaped with mostly fair weather this week and enjoyed good numbers at the gate.
The annual five-day affair, which maintains its hometown, wholesome atmosphere, closed Sunday with Lydia Shafer of Middleport, Matthew Sweeney of Appleton and Afton Grousse named 4-H Royalty.
“We think it went very, very well,” said Janet Schultz, the 4-H chairman of the board. “We think the numbers are going to be the same as the last couple of years with 20,000 to 25,000 paid admissions.”
Accounting will take about a month.
“The weather has been great,” Schultz said. “Actually, we had one day it poured for a few minutes and that was it. And, the first day it just rained a little bit. The clouds are nice a puffy in a blue sky. It’s been a great fair.”
The common response from merchants was, “pretty good.”
The 4-H Milk Bar was selling out of some of its dairy products by 3 p.m. on Sunday. “It’s been pretty good,” said Linda Conlin of Lockport, who has been volunteering at the fair since she was 9. “All the profits for the 4-H members go for their programs and projects.”
June Brent of Cheektowaga had a pretty good response making waterproofing connections for Everydry and it was “not bad” for North Tonawanda’s Jim Manth of Waild Construction who was selling Guttertopper.
It was Manth’s 10th year at the fair. “The people who run it are very friendly,” he said. “It’s very nice to work with these people.”
Gideon International gave away about 1,200 pocket-sized New Testaments. The Gideon Bible goes to 186 countries in 82 languages.
Jordan Donner, who celebrated her 11th birthday Sunday, made the backward flip look easy on the bungee jump. She takes dance classes and gymnastics. Her mother, Tina Baker of Barker was springing up and down but didn’t do the flip.
“It’s a lot harder than it looks,” she said. “I like it. I come every year. We see the horses first, than we do the rides. It’s a tradition.”
The fair has a way attracting folks from out of town. Dave and Jackie Plewinski of Akron brought Morgan, 4 and Carly, 2, on Saturday. The 4-year-old girl gleefully led the family into the dairy building.
“She’s so excited,” Dave said. “All day she’s been talking about coming to the fair. She wants to ride the pony, see the pigs and cows. ... It’s a little smaller than the Erie County Fair and it’s nicer for the kids.”
Al Dell’Aria of New Haven was a bit off-target at the National Guard football toss, but she laughed it off. Maddy Myers of Ransomville brought her friend who moved from Connecticut last year.
“It took a couple months to get used to. It’s really country up here,” said Al who is from a metro area outside New York City. “It’s like a down-scale of Connecticut fairs. It’s cool.”
Maddy, who has been riding horses for eight years, was in competition on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday with her quarter horse Miguel.
Frank and Lori Jurecki of Lewiston bought $15 day passes for Haden, 10, and Brooke, 9. It’s a bargain considering the $4 fee to ride the Wind Glide and the children wanted to do it more than once.
Children lay flat on their bellies and are strapped in. The Wind Glide from Midway Rides of Utica glides up and down and around.
“Star,” a pony with “glass eyes,” provides $5 real rides. For $10, children could ride on the paint horse, get a Polaroid picture and a hat.
“It’s fun to work with them,” said Sara Huttenmaier. “I have two horses of my own in Pendleton. Lots of paints have blue eyes. A lot of the time they’re called glass eyes. Usually a horse has brown eyes.”
Niagara County Federation of Conservation Clubs gave folks a chance to shoot and air rifles and $2 for 12 pops. The money goes to conservation club youth activities.
“A lot of them that are good, especially the first time shooters.” said Larry Koch of Appleton. “You can explain to them. They understand and they do what you tell them. They become pretty good shots.”
Meanwhile, 4-H children of Sanborn were wheeling homemade cherry and apple pies around the fairgrounds at $8 a whole pie and $2 a slice. Justin Daigler, 8, and Clayton Rowlands 8, helped with the cooking. They took the bowl, dumped the apples, mixed the pies together and put the crumb topping on.
Mom Helen Rowlands supervised and Cameron Rowlands, 6, helped with sales.
Technology has changed for fair-goers. After Zachary Winker, 4, finished his riding adventure, his mom took a picture with the phone and sent it by e-mail. “It’s nice,” Tina Winker said. “It’s more for my son. He likes the rides and games. They need more rides for younger kids.”
Grandmother Candice Bouley, who motored around the grounds on a electric scooter, said, “I wish they had more arts and crafts and the prices were a little lower in the games for my grandson. He loves all that stuff.”
Schultz said, “We have ideas for more family activities for the fair. If they can bear with us, they’re going to see a growing fair in the next couple years.”
Schultz thanked the fair-goers for their patience Friday night when there was had free admission. “The traffic was a little jammed up for an hour or so and we got that mess taken care of. They’ve been patient with our new traffic flow. It seems to be working. There are a few glitches, we admit to that, but we think we can fix that for next year.”
Local News
COUNTY FAIR: Event closes on pretty good note
- Local News
-
-
Mild winter? S'no kidding!
Towns are stockpiling salt and saving on plowing, wear and tear on machinery and overtime costs thanks to the winter of 2012 that wasn’t — so far.
Somerset Supervisor Dan Engert joked that as soon as it becomes a story, the winter will arrive and blow the budgets down.
Highway workers, who could be called at anytime on any day to clear the roads, have been cleared to indoor maintenance jobs and have been able to get outside to get a jump on other projects.
The so-far mild winter has created a mixed bag for City of Lockport streets and parks workers. When there’s no snow to plow, crews have been out trimming trees, fixing storm receivers and maintaining heavy equipment. These are all chores that usually don’t get done in winter, according to Norman Allen, director of engineering and public works. -
Town to aid in Wegmans pursuit
Maybe they should call it We Really Want Wegmans.
The group of local supporters who are hoping to attract a Wegmans supermarket to the Lockport area have received some additional support from the Lockport Town Board. At a meeting Wednesday night, town officials were presented a petition from the We Want Wegmans campaign with 8,000 signatures.
Given to the board by We Want Wegmans chairperson Charlene Bower, Supervisor Marc R. Smith said the petition was twice the size of a phone book. -
Reform agenda touted
Empire State Development Corporation executive Sam Hoyt visited Lockport on Wednesday to tout Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s state budget and government reform plans.
Changing the way the state does business will bring fiscal relief to counties, cities and towns, eventually, Hoyt suggested.
It’s too bad the reforms won’t kick in before municipalities like the City of Lockport begin confronting fiscal crises, Mayor Michael Tucker said in response. -
Tucker: 'Best days lie ahead'
The City of Lockport government is smaller than it was 18 months ago but is in a stronger financial place, Mayor Michael W. Tucker said in his annual State of the City address.
-
Trio of new classes proposed for Newfane
Newfane High School could have three new business courses in the fall, one of which would center on video game design.
-
Municipalities take wait-and-see approach on SPCA funding
The City and Town of Lockport are each withholding payments to the Niagara SPCA, while other Eastern Niagara County towns are taking a wait-and-see approach.
-
Rocky II
Friends of Deputy Craig Beiter of the Niagara County Sheriff’s Department plan a benefit on Feb. 26 to raise money to buy and train a new dog for the K-9 Unit.
Beiter’s German shepherd, Deputy Rocky, was killed while on duty in December, and the sheriff’s department is close to getting a replacement. -
Basket Factory closes
The Basket Factory has gone out of business.
The owners, Julie Thompson Riegle and Dawn Thompson, made the difficult decision last Monday and put the sign on the door Tuesday. -
No snow is no problem
Unseasonably warm weather didn’t keep Roy-Hart Winterfest from being a fun day for the families who came out to Roy-Hart Elementary School on Saturday.
More than 500 people attended the third annual festivities, which Gasport Lions Club officials said was a big increase from last year. The halls of Roy-Hart Elementary were filled with vendors, programs and movement as excited children rushed from one activity to another. -
Shovel-ready park has perks
At first glance, the big, orange road sign announcing vacant property on Lockport Road as a “shovel ready certified” building site seems a bit gratuitous.
To companies looking for new places to launch a business, it’s not. The sign in their eyes is a welcome mat, for in three words a community pronounced itself ready, willing and able to make a deal quickly. - More Local News Headlines
-










