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- Newsgroups: alt.peeves
- Path: sparky!uunet!eco.twg.com!twg.com!news
- From: nolan@twg.com (Nolan Hinshaw)
- Subject: Quaint customs (was Solipsism and Don. Or "How Don made ...)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.223912.731@twg.com>
- Lines: 54
- Sender: news@twg.com (USENET News System)
- Reply-To: nolan@twg.com
- Organization: National Association of Organizations
- References: <NF2ks*K+0@prolix.apana.org.au> <C15ACB.ABM@news.iastate.edu> <xaIks*d01@prolix.apana.org.au> <C18rnp.4sK@news.iastate.edu>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 22:39:12 GMT
-
-
- In article <C18rnp.4sK@news.iastate.edu>, z1dan@exnet.iastate.edu (Dan Sorenson -- Cereal Killer) writes:
- [dan and dac are still at it - it goes into the wastebasket]
- This brings to mind a hick tradition, the County Fair.
- You know, contests, exhibitions, carnivals, and the like.
- Little old ladies entering their apple pies and
- embroidery into the contests, and spending the next ten
- years bragging about that blue ribbon (or bitching about
- how Thelma Lou must have blown the judge beforehand).
- Kids walking lambs, bunnies, or calves around a ring
- while some guy with a beer gut and his truck's license
- plate on his belt watches. In the evenings, there's the
- tractor pulls, the horse team pulls, the demolition
- derby, and the rodeo. All in all, fun to watch but a
- waste of time to prepare for.
-
- Ah, yes, we have 'em in Cally Sunifornia, what with this state being heavily
- into agriculture - fruits-n-nutz and all that. I grew up in the Sacramento
- area when the surroundings were still rural. Me Da had a feed store about 20
- miles northeast of downtown in a little unincorporated village called
- Carmichael. Every year we'd field a booth at both the Sacramento County fair
- and the State fair and exhibit the latest in haberdashery and utility. Both
- meself and me sister'd get to participate, demonstrating various and sundry
- goodies. For us it was always a lot of work to prepare but enough fun to make
- up for the stress. Sacramento's County fair isn't so rural any more, though
- (ObPeeve), but other counties like Yolo still put on a traditional fair.
-
- San Francisco's county fair, OTOH, has:
-
- The Fog Calling Contest
- The Waitering Contest
- The Parking Place Finding Contest
- The Urban Scarecrow Contest
-
- and sundry other ultra-urban activities. Of all the fairs in the state that
- I've attended, San Francisco's has the best food!
-
- One traditional game is the "Catch the Greased Pig"
- contest. You take a pig, roughly 50lbs or so of
- four-hoof drive traction, and coat him with grease. I
- don't know if it's Crisco or ninety-weight, but it's
- grease. Then you turn him loose in a yard and have fifty
- kids try to catch him.
-
- There's a ranch a bit south of San Jose, Coyote Ranch, that hosts group
- picnics now, as the ranchin' bidniz is kinda flat 'round hereabouts lately.
- The main event of picnic day is the pig scramble. The owner calls all the
- youngsters on the grounds over to a corral near the entrance to the ranch.
- Then he releases some piglets into the corral and lets his dawg work 'em,
- herding 'em into a pen at the end of the corral. When the canine skills
- exhibition is over he lines the kinder up at one end of the corral, releases
- the swinelets, and lets the kids at 'em. The goal is to TOUCH all the pigs,
- not to GRAB 'em. It's a definite !peeve.
-
-