Wednesday, May 14, 2025
51.0°F

Great people equal a great fair

Carol Shirk Knapp | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 6 years, 8 months AGO
by Carol Shirk Knapp
| August 22, 2018 1:00 AM

It’s fair season. Still visiting in Alaska as of this writing where there is no smoky air, but plenty of rain.

I joined some of our family living here on a soggy Sunday trip to the Kenai Peninsula Fair in the tiny community of Ninilchik — known for its halibut and salmon charter fishing. My husband Terry and I had grands attending elementary school in this town at one time. The classroom windows look straight across Cook Inlet to volcanic giants Mt Iliamna and Mt Redoubt. The students had a bit of a study distraction the year Redoubt erupted.

I had an extra stake in the fair. The oldest grand, Zak the Z-guy, was groundskeeper. He’d just finished helping put on the Salmonfest music festival held in the same location. Ninilchik swells from 900 to 9,000 in a kind of Woodstock (it used to be Salmonstock) repeat —with millennials instead of boomers camping out.

It wasn’t hard to find Zak, bushy red beard and all. Let’s just say you’d never get lost wandering the grounds. Not like Minnesota’s State Fair with its paved streets and street signs. I’m sorry but pavement belongs on the Interstate, not with the hogs and sheep.

I was shocked to discover deep fried Wisconsin cheese curds at this humble fair. I’m not a cheese fan myself, but I bought some for the grandgirls to try. That Midwest staple disappeared in a flash — proving some foods do hop the mountains in their quest to go viral. One thing I did try, which you won’t find just anywhere, is reindeer sausage in a bun. Delicious. Terry had to forego reindeer in our Thanksgiving stuffing once we left Alaska.

The Midway at the Kenai fair consisted of two rides. Yes, t-w-o. An empty ferris wheel dejectedly getting dripped on. And those swings that lift up and go around in a circle. It was plenty muddy underfoot. I don’t know if that’s why one rider dangled bare feet — or if the boy just didn’t wear shoes to the fair. Not necessarily an unusual occurrence in Alaska. It’s a land of come as you are.

The exhibit hall displayed a zucchini the size of a baseball bat. Vegetables love the state’s nonstop summer light. Even two months past solstice there’s a lot of get up and go at 10 p.m. Something else you won’t likely run into at our Bonner County Fair — startling to say the least — was a wolf head winter hat that looked real enough to leap off whoever might be wearing it.

The brave little Kenai Fair was altogether a satisfying experience. The three squealy racing pigs, the drenched couple dancing in the grass to the music of the country band, the gospel singers on the outdoor stage believing every word of the old songs.

It doesn’t take a production to make a great fair. It’s the people who show up.

MORE IMPORTED STORIES

No one ever forgets their time spent in Alaska
Bonner County Daily Bee | Updated 5 years, 8 months ago
Breathing in the gift of abundance
Bonner County Daily Bee | Updated 2 years, 9 months ago
Old friends are one of life's great riches
Bonner County Daily Bee | Updated 6 years, 8 months ago

ARTICLES BY CAROL SHIRK KNAPP

February 27, 2019 midnight

It's all in the details that helps a relationship thrive

Here’s how it came down the other morning. I was calling a local business with a request I was hoping would be approved. So I gave the details behind my reason for the request. My husband was in the room listening to my side of the conversation. I wasn’t even off the phone yet when I heard him muttering about me giving irrelevant information. One of those third party echo chambers.

April 24, 2019 1 a.m.

Those who destroy don't win in the end

Mosques, temples, and churches. What do they have in common in today’s world?

July 24, 2019 1 a.m.

The art of valuing what we see

Such a little word — “see” — yet so full of meaning. Take just the physical act of seeing. Eyes are second only to the brain in their complexity, composed of over two million working parts. Technically, we see with our brain and the eye acts like a camera taking in light and sending information for the brain to process — as much as 36,000 pieces of info in an hour. Over half our brain function concentrates on sight.