Thursday, September 1, 2011

When the student is ready, the teacher arrives.

The 166th Dutchess County Fair is in the history books and we’ll never forget this one! We survived an earthquake on opening day, monsoon like rains during the Kellie Pickler concert, AND Hurricane Irene. I am far too much of an optimist to remember this fair for the unfortunate aspects that influenced it so negatively. Even as I deal with my sadness, I have to remember it for the wonderful parts. It was a great fair!

I love the quote, “When the student is ready, the teacher arrives.” This fair taught me so much. It reinforced that the fair is so wholesome, so good, so important to everyone who works here, everyone who comes to enjoy it. There is a reason fairs have been part of our social fabric for 200 years. It taught me the importance of seeking input and counsel in making important and difficult decisions. It taught me to put things in perspective. No-one was killed or seriously injured, everyone got off the fairgrounds safely, no physical damage was done to the fairgrounds.

Most of all, however, it taught me that this fair has a personality, almost a human quality. After making the decision to close the fair completely on Friday night, I heard from any number of people that while it was the right decision, it made them sad. You say that at a wake, not when an event is cancelled. That is unless you love it and enjoy it and value it and know how significant the event is in your life. Not unless you work hard, give your body and soul to the effort because you believe in it and want to be a part of it.

We will recover from this. We are already working on the 167th Dutchess County Fair which will run next summer from August 21st through the 26th. On our infield today stands our wonderful Sand Castle built to completion before our early closing. It stands as a monument to our endurance, our faith in the value and importance of this fair in the grand scheme of things. Neither wind nor rain, earth quake or hurricane could destroy it. It was built to stand the elements. I assure you, the Dutchess County Fair is built of the same stuff.

Friday, August 19, 2011

We love what we do

We’re really having some fun now! Our food and commercial vendors are pouring onto the fairgrounds. There are already carnival rides in the air. The entire “show” will arrive from Gaithersburg, MD on Sunday. Farmers are preparing their places in the barns on livestock hill. They will bring in the livestock on Sunday. Tons of sand are piled on the infield waiting to be compressed before the carvers assemble to create another wonderful sand castle. It just gets busier and busier and the fun and excitement build each day now.

The average person who will visit the 166th Dutchess County Fair next week (Aug. 23 – 28) does not get to see all of this. They see only the finished product. For those of us in the business, the final preparations are almost as exciting as the fair itself. Despite gas prices and the troubling economic conditions, I believe we will have a record year if the weatherman cooperates. The county fair is an opportunity for us to leave worries and woes behind for a few hours. Our invitation to our guests is to just have you come and play. Come and learn about the value and importance of agriculture. Come and let your children and/or the child inside you enjoy some wholesome family entertainment. We have worked hard getting ready. We love what we do. We hope you will love your day at the fair.

Monday, August 8, 2011

A Little Something for Everyone!

I visited three of our sister fairs in New York State last week and once again am reminded why I love county fairs and am absolutely convinced that they are important for many reasons. The fact that we have been producing fairs for 200 years speaks to their importance. They have become part of our social fabric. It is the place where farm families socialized when farmers comprised the majority of our population. Fairs gave farmers the opportunity to select the best of their livestock, the finest products grown in their fields, and the nicest handmade articles and delicacies of the rural kitchen that mom could ready for the fair. The exhibitors and the exhibits still form the essence of our county fairs today. Our entries closed this week and our staff in that department worked tirelessly processing the THOUSANDS of entries.

Of course, a county fair is many things. So, while our exhibitors are getting their entries ready, families all over the Hudson Valley and beyond are starting to make their plans to join us from August 23rd through the 28th in Rhinebeck, NY. Our advance sale ticket numbers are soaring because the public is getting the message that now is the time to buy tickets at the lowest prices. Just visit dutchessfair.com and save on admissions, concert tickets, rides and food.

From the hundreds of farm, exotic and Rain Forest animals to all of the entertaining free shows and attractions, from the museums, arts and crafts, hundreds of food concessionaires and commercial vendors, from the most spectacular carnival on the East Coast to big name grandstand entertainment, the 166th Dutchess County Fair will once again offer something for everyone. We hope you are planning on coming to see for yourself!

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Come and Play for a Day!


We’re really having some fun on the Dutchess County Fairgrounds now! In just three weeks, we will be in full operation. I love this part of fair production. After months and months of pre-event planning, you actually start to see the fairgrounds change, daily. The big tents go up. This weekend, we had our warm up to the fair with a major Holstein show. Finishing touches are made to our beautiful gardens. Everywhere you look; people are rushing around to put the final pieces of the puzzle together for our August 23rd opening.

The county fair runs to the depth of my being. This past Sunday, I returned home to Boonville, NY and visited the county fair where it all began for me. We take the fair for granted because it has been part of our lives for most of our lives. After spending two days recently in New York City at Farmer’s Markets, I know not everyone does. As a matter of fact, there are many, many people who do not even know what a county fair is all about. Universally, however, in hundreds of one on one conversations with our friends in the city, there was great interest and enthusiasm when I explained what a county fair is all about.

If there is a more wonderfully wholesome family event on earth, you would have to take me there and show it to me. For the celebration of life itself in the variety of offerings, for the opportunity the fair gives us to showcase agriculture and help promote our local family farms, for the entertainment value, for the opportunity to come and play for a day, leaving all of the cares and worries of the world behind, there is just no place like the county fair. It is our hope that thousands in the area have marked their calendars for a visit to the Dutchess County Fair, August 23rd through the 28th.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

What really is a "Country Fair"?


Having grown up directly across the street from a wonderful county fair, it is amazing to me that there are many in our society who don’t know the first thing about a county fair. Case in point, last week I was talking to a sales executive in New York City. I was telling her of our need to educate the public in the Metro area about county fairs. They have wonderful street festivals but, they really don’t know what a county fair is all about. The young woman informed me that she had been to a county fair so she knew what a county fair was. When questioned further about what county fair she had visited (because I have been to hundreds of them), her reply came quickly, “Oh, I went to a Renaissance Festival once.”

Many events use the name “fair”. There are book fairs and science fairs and street fairs. But, if the event does not showcase agriculture and feature competition in various categories of animal showmanship, domestic and fine arts exhibits, it is not a county fair. Last year at the Dutchess County Fair, we had 1700 individual exhibitors bring to the fair over 10,000 individual entries. Now, that’s a county fair. And I don’t expect anything less this year.

We are in the midst of the celebration of 200 years of agricultural fairs in America, as we know them. Our fair here is the largest six day county fair in the state and probably east of the Mississippi. It is recognized by industry insiders, those who travel to and make their livings at fairs, as one of the bestin the country.

I love the quote, “When the student is ready, the teacher arrives.” As a former Social Studies teacher, I would like to invite especially those who do not know about the wonders of the county fair to mark their calendars for Aug. 23 through 28 and come to Rhinebeck, NY for the Dutchess County Fair. The teacher is waiting!

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Fairgrounds Announces Bixby's "Dare to be Dazzled" Tour


On a sunny day or beautiful night, there is really no place on earth were I would rather be than on a fairgrounds. On a rainy day, that same fairgrounds is the last place I want to be. I was faced with just those realities this past weekend during the 4th of July Great American Celebration on the Dutchess Co. Fairgrounds. Saturday night’s rain did not dampen the enthusiasm of the drivers in the Demolition Derby but, it certainly kept our attendance low and generally gave all of us the blahs!

Contrast that with Monday night and our 4th of July Hudson Valley Philharmonic Concert with fireworks. With stars in the sky and just the slightest slivery moon overhead, we felt magic in the air! Literally thousands came; men, women and children. We celebrated our freedom, had fun, and savored the wonderful music and brilliant fireworks display.

With the enthusiasm of kids on Christmas morning, or remembering the excitement of blowing out the candles on our birthday cake at a very young age, we now totally turn our attention to the 166th Dutchess County Fair. It will take place on this same fairgrounds from August 23rd through the 28th. This year, I think I want to call it “The Year of the Child”. We are emphasizing that children under 12 come to the fair free of charge. So, we are using our pre-fair brochure to do a better job of explaining to kids who might not know anything about a county fair, exactly what we are all about.

We are using our friend, Bixby who will return to the fair with his Rainforest Experience to conduct the “Dare to Be Dazzled” tour. In our pre-fair brochure, he will walk children through all of the magic, the fun, the animals, the rides, games, and food, the gardens, the museums and everything else that defines us as a wonderful county fair.

Whether you have kids or are just a kid at heart, set the dates aside, Aug. 23 – 28. Rhinebeck, NY is the place to be. Come and “dare to be dazzled” at the 166th Dutchess Co. Fair.

Friday, June 17, 2011

2011 Spring Crafts at Rhinebeck Show


If your weekend plans are still a bit unsettled, you may wish to consider joining us on the beautiful Dutchess County Fairgrounds for Crafts at Rhinebeck. For 35 years, this “Juried” show has attracted hundreds of artists from all over the country.

Before I got involved with the DC Fairgrounds, I didn’t even know what “juried” meant. It means you must make everything you display and sell by hand. Your one of a kind handmade items must be of sufficient quality, uniqueness and distinction to be voted into the show by a jury of fellow artists. While the jury system may exclude some, it welcomes in all the best artists who tour and sell their art at shows like Crafts at Rhinebeck. You can come here and purchase museum quality art for a lot of money. To me, it would be priceless art. But, I assure you that you can also come here and find some very beautiful items, great gifts for family and friends AT VERY AFFORDABLE PRICES. I have family and friends that visit this show almost every year and they go home with bags of unique gifts. And none of us are wealthy people! The show runs Friday night (June 17th) from 6 to 8 pm, Saturday, (June 18th) from 10 to 6 and Sunday, (June 19th) from 10 to 5.

Admission is just $7.00, children under 12 are free and there are special activities for the children. Parking is also free. If you attend Friday night, you will be treated to a wine and cheese reception and your $7.00 ticket will be good for a return visit on Saturday or Sunday. Sunday is Fathers Day and there will be a free glass of wine or beer for dad with a coupon from our Crafts at Rhinebeck print ads or by visiting our website, craftsatrhinebeck.com. Hope to see you here!