Date: Fri 25-Aug-1995
Date: Fri 25-Aug-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: AMYD
Quick Words:
Bridgewater-Fair-August-
Full Text:
The Bridgewater Fair: August's Main Event
Robert Smith of Brookfield branded wooden rounds Sunday.
Dumbo was not allowed to do much before his steer competition. Being white, it
was important to stay clean.
Alana Necio of Roxbury rode the merry-go-round like she was an old pro. But,
her mother, Debbie Necio stood close by the 13-month-old, just in case.
Three-year-olds (from the left) Max Spitzer and Jenny Vogel pet four-year-old
Rose Bud, a Jersey cow.
Janet Wittmann of New Milford took the cake in the baking contests. She
received three blue ribbons and one second place.
B Y A MY D'O RIO
Farm animals are so rarely primped and styled, it is worth going to the annual
Bridgewater fair just to see them don jackets and get their tails coiffed.
It is also worth the trip just to see what a blue-ribbon squash looks like,
and to hear the antique engines pop and chug like they were out-of-shape
runners on a hill.
From hand-crafted, birds-eye maple tables to the beauty pageant for the finely
feathered, the Bridgewater Country Fair last weekend drew hordes of people
eager to immerse themselves in country life.
Straw hats could easily be bought for $4.50, and lots of men wore overalls. If
one was particularly inspired, there was always square dancing.
Many of the children pet cows (usually Rose Bud, a docile Jersey) and were
able to feed hay to Chubs and Bill, two small Austrian horses brought to the
fair by Bridgewater resident Frank Colburn.
Quilts and Peruvian sweaters were being sold, as well as handmade dolls and
"Lucky 7" t-shirts with Mickey Mantle's name on them.
For those who preferred a plastic mount to a real one, there was the
merry-go-round and other amusement park rides.
And, certainly, there was plenty of food. From pastrami on a roll to barbecued
chicken, people who were hungry had plenty of choices. Fried dough was
particularly popular. Workers estimated selling around 2,600 pounds of it, and
said they expected to sell another 1,000 pounds before the fair closed Sunday.
Three-year-old Chelsea Dewan and two-year-old Devon Dewan were not interested
in food. They were busy with their new toys. Each went home with each with a
new stuffed animal thanks to their mother's skill at the carnival games.
The Bridgewater fair was well attended this year. It seems people are still
competitive when it comes to cake baking, canning, sewing, sheering and
farming. And, it seems people are still amused by sheep dog demonstrations,
high diving racing pigs and ox drawing.
Who wouldn't be?
