Fair beginnings
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Young Chang
From inside a Grande Wheel gondola at its highest point on Thursday,
the Orange County Fair looked the right festive color, the right shape
and the right amount of clutter.
Food vendors formed a boulevard of eats, and goats and their neighbors
grazed on hay piles in the Centennial Farm community.
The only thing missing? You.
“I just enjoy the energy that is created when the fair guests get
here,” said Becky Bailey-Findley, general manager of the 109th annual
fair. “That energy is part of my summer tradition of the fair being a lot
of fun and this reunion feeling for the county.”
Bailey-Findley, who’s been with the fair for 26 years, said she’s
watched families return every July with kids who have grown a bit taller
and whose risk-taking levels have boosted from the calmest pony rides to
the wildest roller coasters.
With the fair opening today, organizers expect crowds to line up by
8:30 a.m. and for more than 200 fairgoers to spill through the gates when
10 a.m. strikes. Performer Chubby Checker will twist and shout the
procession in with his repertoire of groove-able classics.
This year’s features include 59 carnival rides; countless food booths;
miniatures and collections exhibits; performances by such stars as Chubby
Checker, En Vogue and Billy Ray Cyrus; action at the Demolition Derby;
and a whole lot of citrus-themed exhibits and events.
While some characters have remained constants throughout past decades,
including Ori Tucker Pony Rides and Orange Julius, the fair has also
grown through the years.
In the early ‘70s, this county tradition ran for just 10 days. Today,
the fair is a 17-day event drawing in more than 800,000 people, with
attractions that are bigger and faster while the traditional mainstays
offer a taste of the old.
“But I think the one constant is that the fair is a fun adventure
every summer,” Bailey-Findley said.
In the collections exhibit, everyone has a story to tell, said Joan
Hamill, director of exhibits. From Elvis memorabilia, postcards of
presidents, English Victorian writing desks and, of course, salt and
pepper shakers, the plots run a gamut of times and places.
“It gives people in our generation a peek to the past,” said Ruby Lau,
director of public affairs for the fair.
As do the rides. There are the usual mirror houses and roller
coasters, but also European visitors, such as the Euro Slide and La
Grande Wheel, a replica of the Millennium Wheel in Paris.
The sweets run from traditional root beer floats to more innovative
cheesecakes on sticks. Foods include things that dribble (huge messy
portions of barbecue beef) to things that crunch (bags of Tasti Chips).
“Food is a very important part of the fair,” Lau laughed.
Especially for tradition’s sake.
“The fair gives a feeling that it’s summertime fun,” Bailey-Findley
said. “It’s like a backyard picnic with lemonade, and we have wonderful
stories of when the fairgrounds might have been a first date for others
who got married.”
FAIR TEASES
Chubby twists. Chubby shouts. He even has a few surprising things to
say. See Datebook, Page 2.
For more from the fair, including today’s schedule, see Pages 4 and 5.
Pilot news assistant Bryce Alderton offers a different version of the
fair. See Page 3.
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