![]() |
Calm before the judging - The judge's tables and books are ready to go! |
Today, I'll be at the Stafford County Fairgrounds for the 4-H foods judging. It will be like coming full circle.
In July 1994, a little pony-tailed, solemn-faced girl sat down for her first 4-H foods judging. For the record, Jill was never that solemn or silent in subsequent years. But neither she or I knew what we were doing. I look at the photo of the judge evaluating her microwave cake and think we should have left it at home. Yes, a microwave food product was a 4-H foods class at the time - believe it or not.
The building was hot, and the microwave cake was not her finest moment in the foods competition. But, honestly, I think that's what 4-H is all about anyway. It's all about learning and growth. (For the record, parents learn a whole bunch, too!)
By the time she was veteran 4-Her, she was teaching others, and she,
too, was leading foods meetings and also serving as a foods superintendent at the county fair.
![]() |
The old Quonset hut building on the Stafford County Fairgrounds |
I started Kim's County Line in 2010. In my July 14 post that year, I said I would be volunteering in the hot old building at the Stafford County Fairgrounds that day. Both my 4-Hers had already aged out. So I wrote about my "why" for still putting "sweat equity" into the county 4-H program. Here's some of what I wrote:
So why do I – or the multitude of other
volunteers – continue to show up year after year – some of us after our
4-Hers have left the nest? For me, the answer is easy. And I suspect it’s the same for most
people who volunteer at their county fair – whether it’s in Stafford,
Cloud, Harper, Rice, Finney, Haskell or any other fair in Kansas. It’s
because we believe in the 4-H program.
I have evidence of the 4-H programs’ power. I grew up as a Pratt County 4-Her. My husband continues to volunteer in Stafford County
where he was a 4-Her longer ago than he likes to admit. ... I think 4-H helped shape us into the people we are today - people who care about and work for their community.
Both our children benefited from 4-H – with everything from project
knowledge, leadership skills, goal setting and completion, record
keeping and social networking long before there was anything like
Facebook or Twitter. Our daughter’s career choice as a dietitian is
directly related to her long-time participation in the 4-H foods and
nutrition project. Our son’s choice as a college public relations major
came – in part – because of tours he took while a delegate at the 4-H
Global Conference in Kansas City.
I witnessed my children's growth from the time they were 7-year-old,
first-year 4-Hers to the time they were confident, committed 4-H
veterans.
Here we are 30 years later. And I'll be at the Stafford County Fairgrounds today. Though I wasn't the foods superintendent for 4-H foods Jill's first year, it wasn't long after that I became one of the department's superintendents and have been ever since.
I was at the fairgrounds yesterday afternoon, setting up the area for foods judging today. And hallelujah, this year the judging will be in the brand new, air-conditioned building. (In reality, if they hadn't moved judging for several years to the Church of Christ basement and the Stafford Recreation Commission, I'm not sure I would still be doing it. I need air-conditioning in my old age!)
The brand-spanking new facility is a wonderful addition to our county. But the reasons for doing the job are the same as back when we were in that stifling-hot old Quonset hut. It's all about the kids and the 4-H program.
Ironically, Sunday afternoon I was getting photos via text and offering suggestions for 4-H baking for the Shawnee County Fair. Last evening, I got photos of decorated cookies from Kinley, who's entering that category in her upcoming fair.
The pony-tailed little girl from 1994 has now taken on the role of 4-H mama. We'll be heading to Topeka for Kinley's and Brooke's 4-H fair next week. We are equal opportunity 4-H supporters.
Young people in 4-H are three times more likely to contribute to their communities than youth not participating in 4-H. 4-Hers all across the nation are empowered to take on the leading issues of their towns, counties and states and make a lasting difference. ... 4-H youth get the hands-on, real-world experience they need to become leaders and to make positive differences in their communities.
"The 4-H Study of Positive Youth Development"from Tufts University
Good luck to Stafford County 4-Hers this week ... and to other 4-Hers across the state who are sharing their hard work with the public this week. Come eat at the concession stand in air-conditioned comfort: