Search

Features News

Young gardeners contain their creativity

Previous Next
Previous Page
Share
Print
Email



The first thing that stands out about the 2008 Central States Fair children’s floral arrangement category is the profusion of entries. Horticulture superintendents Tammy Glover and NanCee Maynard were pleased with the 21 entries in the children’s division and the 493 overall entries that filled the exhibit shelves at the horticulture building.

“It’s easy to see that we’ve had good rain this year,” Glover said.

Considering the amount of rain and hail that the gardens endured earlier this summer, it’s wonderful, Maynard said of the entries.

“Everybody is in such a good mood and the kid entries are up. … The quality and quantity was amazing,” Maynard said.

The rain and somewhat cooler summer has helped produce bountiful mixes of flowers in a rainbow of colors, sizes and blooms. The arrangements that resulted were pretty nifty, too.

A simple lunch bucket overflowing with school supplies, an apple and just the right amount of sunny yellow sunflowers caught the judges’ attention in the children’s floral arrangement category.

For Colton Erk of Rapid City, it was enough to win the best of show award.

One of the judges said the young gardeners had done an excellent job: “It’s nice to see kids participating in horticulture. And this (the lunch bucket arrangement) is fantastic.”

In the children’s arrangements, judges awarded 11 blue ribbons, seven red ribbons, two white and one  participation ribbon.

“I think they’re getting better, and we’ve had our share of boys enter, too,” Glover said.

The arrangements were divided into categories for children ages 5-8 years, 9-12 and 13-17. They could enter in “Color Me Fun,” “On Safari,” “At the Rally” or “Back to School.” Winners of these divisions received a gardener’s bucket packed with tools and supplies, plus a $55 gift certificate supplied by Bear Country USA.

Glover described the majority of children entering as being first-time contestants at the fair. Home-schooled children as well as 4-H members entered the contest, Glover said.

“The kids were so excited bringing these entries here,” said Cathy Robeson, a helper in the horticulture building.

She knew some of the contestants, and said they enjoyed working with flowers and figuring out a theme for their entries. She pointed out that the older children gravitated toward “At the Rally,” while the younger set liked “Back to School” and “Color Me Fun.”

All agreed that it took a lot of work to get the arrangements ready. The children have to read the directions, follow the guidelines and then they do the arrangements, Glover said.

“I’m thrilled with the participation, and these kids have done an excellent job,” she said.

Children’s fair winners

The 2008 Central State Fair awarded its bucket prizes to:

Ciglen Wheeler, Rapid City, ages 5 to 12, best of flowers or house plants.

Quirt Rice, New Underwood, ages 5 to 12, best vegetable.

Colton Erk, Rapid City, ages 9 to 12, best children’s floral arrangement.

They competed with 46 other contestants and all but seven earned ribbons.

 Contact Jomay Steen at 394-8418 or jomay.steen@rapidcityjournal.com.

Rapid Reply

Send us your Rapid Reply

(optional)
   
The preceeding are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the views of the Rapid City Journal or Lee Enterprises.

The opinions above are from readers of rapidcityjournal.com and in no way represent the views of the Rapid City Journal or Lee Enterprises.

Rapidcityjournal.com provides this community forum for readers to exchange ideas and opinions on the news of the day. Passionate views, pointed criticism and critical thinking are welcome. Name-calling, crude language and personal abuse are not welcome. Moderators will monitor comments with an eye toward maintaining a high level of civility in this forum. Our comment policy explains the rules of the road for registered commenters.

If you don't see your comment, perhaps...

  • you called someone an idiot, a racist, a dope, a moron, etc. Please, no name-calling or profanity (or veiled profanity -- #$%^&*).
  • you rambled, failed to stay on topic or exhibited troll-like behavior intended to hijack the discussion at hand.
  • YOU SHOUTED YOUR COMMENT IN ALL CAPS. This is hard to read and annoys readers.
  • you named a business or identified a business in a way good or bad. Contact the business directly with your customer service concerns or your praise – they’ll likely appreciate your feedback.
  • you believe the newspaper's coverage is unfair. It would be better to write Jerry Steinley at jerry.steinley@rapidcityjournal.com or call him at 394-8427. This is a forum for community discussion, not for media criticism. We'd rather address your concerns directly.
  • you included an e-mail address or phone number, pretended to be someone you aren't or offered a comment that makes no sense.
  • you accused someone of a crime or assigned guilt or punishment to someone suspected of a crime.
  • your comment is in really poor taste.

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Colton Erk's "Back to School" flower arrangement featured a lunch bucket overflowing with school supplies, an apple and sunflowers. Photo by Kristina Barker, Journal staff

Top Jobs

Featured Dealers

Newspaper Ads

RCJ Extras

Advertisement