Frontenac County Plowing Match
by Julie Druker

Up close with Clydesdales Noah and Bob at the
Frontenac County Rural Show and Plowing Match. L to r: Courtney and
Lloyd Orser and Spencer and Mark Richards.
Aiming for straightness, coverage and uniformity of furrows, Kim
Hadwen of Belleville competed at the Frontenac County Rural Show and
Plowing Match at the Orser’s farm on August 29 near Sydenham with
his team of Belgians, Pete and Jake, on his sulky plow. Competitors
in excess of 115 points can qualify for the International Plowing
Match to be held in New Liskeard this year.
Plowing for Kim (photo right) is not just a hobby. He runs a Black Angus beef
farm in Belleville and has started running his farm the old-fashioned
way. He explained, “I’m going back to plowing this way. This
spring I actually hooked up 8 horses and did all my spring seeding
and planting this way. I’m doing it to save fuel and get back to
the way it used to be.” He’s been working his team for just over
a year and judging by furrows it looks as though he might indeed get
those 115 points.
117th Parham Fair
by Julie Druker

The horse pull, Firday night at theParham Fair
Saturday was every fair board member’s
worst nightmare. It poured rain all day and the weather could not
have been much worse. Attendance was down at the Parham Fair.
Fortunately Friday night had been dry for the Horse Pull and Ambush
concert, and the grounds would be packed for the demolition derby on
the next day.
But on Saturday the energy level wasn’t
that high, but all of that changed when the greased pig contest
started. Contestants were split into groups of 6-8 kids, and they
first greased up their hands and then set off chasing six piglets,
the object being to be the first to grab a pig by the hind legs and
drag it into one of two winning circle rings.
Photo right: at the
Parham on Saturday contestants aged 7-12 years of age had to grease
up their hands and raced to catch a pig by the hind legs and drag it
to one of two winners’ circles. Ribbons were given out to all
contestants. The event attracted and large and enthusiastic crowd
The crowds ate it up and the kids
seemed to have a gas - the pigs, it seemed, not so much, although
their loudest squeals came not during the chase but when they were
initially taken from their trailers and put into the ring.
Although there has been some
controversy over the greased pig contest, (see letters, Sept. 3/09) it
appeared that no pig was hurt in the event.
It certainly was not the first rainy
Saturday in the history of these two events, which go back to 1884
and 1882, and it won’t be the last.
Fierce competion at Maberly Fair
by Jeff Green

Heat 1 in the "Anything Goes" category, gets off to a clean start.
In racing circles, people talk about
winning by a nose, but in the rarefied work of Zucchini racing, there
are times when the nose needs to be lopped off instead.
That’s what one of the contestants
did at last weekend’s Maberly Fair to get the weight of his
zucchini vehicle below the 2 lb. limit, and it worked; his nose-less
zucchini hit the finish line first.
In the anything goes category, the
simple design of young Max Bumstead (photo left) won the day over some pretty
fancy opposition, including an 6-cylinder job, a zucchini with giant
pink wheels and feathers, and a zucchini vehicle that used vinyl
records for wheels.
All in all, the first ever Zucchini
races at the Maberly Fair, even though they were held in the pouring
rain, were exactly the kind of event anyone could have hoped for.
Each competitor certainly dreamed of glory and of the lucrative cash
prizes ($10 for 1st, $6 for 2nd, and $3 for 3rd), but there was a
general feeling of mayhem and a touch of the absurd to the races that
carried them through qualifying heats, the semis and the finals in
each category.
Wheeled zucchinis zipping down a track
is really a sight to behold, and while there may have been no
redeeming value to this event, no compelling reason for it to be
held, it provided an excellent excuse to have a really good time.
It also gave the Zucchini, the poor
cousin to the cucumber, a chance to take centre stage.
Dedication of the Maberly Fair
Exhibit
Hall
by Julie Druker
Present for the Bill
Kennett memorial plaque and dedication ceremony at Maberly Fair on
Saturday (l to r) Paul Pospisil, Dennis Pratt, Bill’s wife Valerie
Kennett, Rosetta McInnes, Carl Ferguson and Bill’s daughter, Brenda
Friends, family and fans of the late
Bill Kennett of Maberly gathered at the entrance to the main exhibit
hall at the Maberly fairgrounds on Saturday for a dedication
ceremony, which named the hall the Bill Kennett Building in his
honour.
The large steel building, the most
valuable property of the Agricultural Society, was constructed in the
early 1990s with funds raised and hours of work put in by numerous
community volunteers. According to Paul Pospisil, past president of
the Maberly Agricultural Society, who made the dedication, the
“building represents a community spirit of generosity and
volunteerism.”
Bill Kennett and his wife Valerie moved
to Maberly in 1986 and soon after Bill joined the Agricultural
Society as a director working on the financial, insurance and legal
aspects of the books as well as preparing an emergency plan. He
served as president in 2002 and 2003 and also became the organizer of
the fair’s Light Horse Show just so that the event would not be
lost. He was also the driving force behind the construction of Diagon
Alley, the building that shelters arts and craft displays during the
fair.
Bill's most important contribution to
the fair was the Thursday morning work parties in which he organized
teams of volunteers to carry out the numerous jobs involved in
putting on a fair and which inspired local pride in the Maberly fair
grounds and its buildings.
President of the Agricultural Society
Rosetta McInnes made the formal dedication and unveiled the plaque
which will permanently hang as a lasting tribute to Bill Kennett and
to the pride and dedication that he brought to community through his
work with the Maberly Fair and the Agricultural Society.
After the plaque was unveiled, Bill’s
wife Valerie spoke of how the fair site is an important place for her
and her family. She thanked Carl Ferguson, who initiated the project,
and Dennis Pratt, who carved the plaque.

Emily
Morin of Kemptville and Nova S.S., her quarter horse mare, entered a
number of events in the light horse class at the maberly fair and camme
away with a number of prizes, including first place in the English
Pleasure Riding event.