Monday, December 29, 2025
21.0°F

FFA hosts tractor driving contest

GABRIEL DAVIS | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 2 years, 4 months AGO
by GABRIEL DAVIS
Gabriel Davis is a resident of Othello who enjoys the connections with his sources. Davis is a graduate of Northwest Nazarene University where he studied English and creative writing. During his free time, he enjoys reading, TV, movies and games – anything with a good story, though he has a preference for science fiction and crime. He covers the communities on the south end of Grant County and in Adams County. | August 19, 2023 1:07 PM

MOSES LAKE – The Future Farmers of America held a tractor driving contest Saturday at the Grant County Fair in the warm-up arena, where FFA members competed to show who had the most skill operating a tractor under pressure.

Former FFA member and tractor contest competitor Austin Kern was helping organize and manage the event.

"There's two main parts of the contest,” said Kern. “There's a written test, which is just…basic kind of all-around sort of questions about driving and tractors and ag mech kind of stuff. And then there's the actual driving part of the contest, which is the majority of the contest."

A series of cones made up a track on the dirt of the warm-up arena. Competitors maneuvered the tractor, with a trailer hitched to the back, around the cones in a predetermined path meant to demonstrate the competitor’s skill in controlling the tractor and trailer.

“Eventually you get out through all the cones, then you drive forward, and then you back into what's called the barn, which is the ending position,” said Kern. “So the goal is to do it under two minutes and thirty seconds, because every second you're over you lose a point and it's out of 200 points, I believe."

Kern, now a sophomore at Washington State University, said he competed in the contest his senior year of high school.

"It's a really hard contest because, in the first place, it’s actually really hard to just do it in two minutes because it's pretty challenging. You have to have a really good skill of backing up, because, I mean, the cones are only, you know, 20 feet apart. And it ain’t the easiest thing to back up, especially when you're under a time constraint,” said Kern.

This Grant County Fair contest was more of an informal or practice event, said Kern. The state tractor-driving event is usually held in the late fall, according to the Washington FFA website. “There's quite a few teams,” said Kern. “There’ll be about 20 teams competing for state tractor driving. So this one, we'll actually probably get quite a few kids. We'll probably get 40, 50 kids here to come practice.”

Kern said that Moses Lake placed second at last year’s state competition and that he hoped they would be going to state again this year.

“There's a lot of people, especially kids that grew up on the farm, that are really good at this contest. It's a very highly skilled contest. It's one of the more competitive ones in Washington state,” said Kern.

Ephrata FFA member Corbin Reeve came out to the Grant County Fair to compete for the second time.

“I competed last year. It was my first time ever driving a tractor, and it was pretty stressful, but I thought it was fun,” said Reeve. “So I decided I would do it again this year.”

Reeve said that he was at the event more for fun than the competitive side of the contest.

“I have driven tractors over the year since competing last year, but I still have never actually backed one up,” said Reeve. “One of the guys that was helping people was up there with me, helping with the backing up part, so I didn't jackknife the trailer.”

Reeve then explained what his favorite part of the event was.

“I think the best part is watching other people do it, because you get to point out and see what they're doing, and it's even funnier when they jackknife the trailer.”

Kern said that there would be another tractor-driving contest at the Othello Fair, which is scheduled for Sept. 13 to Sept. 16.

“It's a really good contest and…it's a really fun thing to do, and get kids involved and start learning about FFA and maybe get a little more into contests if they’re incoming freshman or maybe they weren't really into FFA and they were showing this year and want to maybe start doing some contests, it's a really good introduction for them,” said Kern.

Gabriel Davis may be reached at [email protected].

photo

GABRIEL DAVIS/COLUMBIA BASIN HERALD

FFA tractor driving contest competitor Paul Hart maneuvers through the cones outlining the path of the tractor driving course. Competitors have two minutes and 30 seconds to complete the course – every second after the par time costs competitors a point.

photo

GABRIEL DAVIS/COLUMBIA BASIN HERALD

Event organizer Austin Kern, left, and his father watch a competitor carefully during Saturday’s FFA tractor driving contest at the Grant County Fair.

ARTICLES BY GABRIEL DAVIS

Work-based learning lets students build their own futures
July 25, 2024 1 a.m.

Work-based learning lets students build their own futures

MOSES LAKE — Work-based learning provides education opportunities for the workforce to receive hands-on training and technical education and prepare themselves to enter various industries. Educators and workforce development professionals from Eastern Washington discussed some the training they offer and the benefits of their programs. Next Generation Zone, an affiliate of WorkSource based in Spokane, provides job training opportunities for youth and young adults ages 16 to 24. Program Coordinator Kate Martin said there are multiple benefits to the program. “One of them is a paid work experience, and that’s where we reach out to area employers who are willing to take a young person and train them,” she said. “This is a short-term learning experience, so it’s typically about 240 hours; sometimes it could be longer or shorter. We’re the actual employer; we cover all of their wages, taxes, the L&I, and the employer just agrees to give them the experience and train them in whatever field it is that they’re wanting to go into.”

Serving schools: ESD superintendents reflect on operations, priorities
July 10, 2024 1 a.m.

Serving schools: ESD superintendents reflect on operations, priorities

MOSES LAKE — Educational service districts are government-mandated agencies put in place to provide services to school districts across the state. ESD Superintendents discussed what they do and their priorities in operating their districts. ESD 105, led by Superintendent Kevin Chase, serves four counties, including Kittitas, Yakima and portions of Klickitat and Grant counties and provides support for 25 school districts – including Royal School District and Wahluke School District – and more than 66,000 students. “We help them collaborate with each other as well or collaborate with other partners,” Chase said. “(It’s) a lot of advocacy work, either regionally or across the state, or even federally, working on different issues that impact our education. And we provide very specialized services in certain situations in order to meet the needs of our students in our region and of our school districts.”

Columbia Basin Project making headway through Odessa Groundwater program
June 25, 2024 1 a.m.

Columbia Basin Project making headway through Odessa Groundwater program

CASHMERE — The Columbia Basin Project is making gradual progress toward completion with particularly significant accomplishments for the Odessa Groundwater Replacement Program in the last six months or so, according to Columbia Basin Development League Executive Director Sara Higgins. “When we’re dealing with a project of this size, advancement is kind of like watching paint dry, but yes, there have been (developments),” she said. “There are a lot of exciting things happening right now.” There are more than 300 miles of main canals, about 2,000 miles of lateral canals and 3,500 miles of drains and wasteways in the irrigation project, according to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation website. The CBDL advocates for the operation of those waterways and for the project to continue “build-out.”