A special day at the fair
- Share via
Danette Goulet
FAIRGROUNDS - Psst. Hey, want a tip?
Take it from Kelsey Gomez, 12: The two slides at the Kiddie Carnival
are not interchangeable.
“That is a kiddie ride,” she said with a scoff and nod toward the
multicolored Goliath Slide with the Chipmunks on the side. “If you want
the good bumps, you have to go on the Super Slide.”
That is just what she and her classmates did -- again and again and
again.
“On that last bump you go in the air,” said Kelsey’s classmate,
Jacqueline Sahlin, 11.
The girls are students in a special-needs summer school class at
Kaiser Elementary School in Costa Mesa and were two of nearly 6,000
people with special needs invited Tuesday for their own morning at the
Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa.
The Friends of the Fair was a 2 1/2-hour window, before the
fairgrounds opened to the public at noon, when hundreds of schools,
hospitals and organizations serving physically or mentally challenged
individuals were invited to enjoy the rides, games, animals and treats of
the kiddie carnival and park.
“I thought it was fun -- really, really fun,” Jacqueline said with
emphasis.
In their time at the fair, Kaiser students had gone on every ride,
they said.
“The mirrors were cool, the Crazy Bus, the Dragon -- I screamed on
that one though,” Kelsey said. “But just for the fun of it.”
Others were a bit more selective in what they chose to ride, but had a
blast nonetheless.
“What was your favorite ride?” Becky Weaver signed to a couple of her
students from Taft Elementary School, which is a school in Santa Ana for
the deaf and hearing-impaired.
“That was -- the slide,” Jason Loaiza, 6, signed back while jumping up
and down.
Even with select rides closed for safety reasons, such as the bumper
cars, there were more than enough rides for everyone, and special shows
to boot.
“We have special entertainment for them, in fact all the entertainment
between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m. are disabled themselves,” said Ginny Smith,
who is in charge of community entertainment and special events at the
fair. “High Hopes, local signers and Dancing With Insight, which is blind
people doing ballroom dance.”
Besides the 7,400 groups that the fair staff invited, they also get
calls from families and individuals wishing to attend the special day.
“People call for information about a month ahead and are preregistered
and sent a free pass and sticker to show vendors and ride operators,”
Smith explained.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.