Market sale set, donations taken after fires halt county fair

Kate McCloskey, WSU Spokane County 4-H program coordinator, delivers a load of farm feed and hay for fire-affected families in Okanogan County (Photo by Ann Fagerlie/WSU Extension).
Kate McCloskey, WSU Spokane County 4-H program coordinator, delivers a load of farm feed and hay for fire-affected families in Okanogan County (Photo by Ann Fagerlie/WSU Extension).

In her two decades as a 4-H leader in Ferry County, Kari Neal has never seen a fire season like this.

Even in 1988, with the White Mountain fire raging on nearby Sherman Pass, the Ferry County Fair went on as usual.

“The kids had sooty ash falling on their animals, which were all clean for fitting and showing,” she remembered. “We just went with it.”

This year is different. Faced with the threat of the North Star Fire, a wildfire that has burned more than 200,000 acres and threatens thousands of homes, Ferry County Commissioners on August 25 canceled the 72nd annual Ferry County Fair.

‘Surrounded by fires’

With parts of Ferry County under evacuation notice, residents in threatened areas must be ready to roll out at any time. Holding a fair just wasn’t safe, said Trevor Lane, director of WSU Extension for Ferry County (http://ext100.wsu.edu/ferry/).

“It doesn’t make sense to bring people into a county where we’re telling people to leave,” Lane said. “We are completely surrounded by fires.”

Twenty miles to the east, the Kettle and Colville complexes have charred 73,000 acres. To the west, the Okanogan and Tunk Block complexes have burned more than a quarter-million acres in the largest wildfire ever seen in state history. Statewide, dozens of blazes have consumed more than a thousand square miles of timberland, grassland, pasture and residential areas.

The Ferry County fairgrounds, which would have welcomed 4-H and FFA youth and their animals on September 4, served as temporary shelters for displaced livestock before high winds forced a total evacuation.

A Colville Reservation 4-H club member handles her market steer during last year’s Ferry County Fair. The fair was canceled this year due to evacuations and safety concerns in the fire-surrounded county (Photo by Linda McLean/WSU Extension).
A Colville Reservation 4-H club member handles her market steer during last year’s Ferry County Fair. The fair was canceled this year due to evacuations and safety concerns in the fire-surrounded county (Photo by Linda McLean/WSU Extension).

Investment and reward

The loss of a fair could a big impact on 4-H youth. Children and teens have spent the past year raising animals for market. Fair judging and sales are a culmination and a reward for youths raising cattle, pigs, sheep and goats, with greater effort meriting larger rewards.

“There’s a lot of money invested in these animals,” said Ann Fagerlie, WSU Extension director for neighboring Okanogan County (http://county.wsu.edu/okanogan/Pages/default.aspx/), where their 68th annual fair is slated to run Sept. 10 to 13.

“Kids who do a better job have animals that gain weight and flourish better than those who don’t,” Neal said. Those animals advance in judging and get a prime place at the weekend stock sale. “The lesson is that you get out of a project what you put into it.

“Kids could take a financial loss if the animals are sold for just the meat-packing price, and don’t have the support of individuals and businesses who normally come out to support the kids and the ribbons they’ve earned” by buying the animals for meat, she added.

Market sale planned

To counteract that loss, Ferry County Extension officials organized a 4-H Market Sale for Ferry County and Colville Reservation 4-H members, to be held 5 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 5, at the Northeast Washington Fair Grounds in Colville.

It takes place the same day that 4-H youth would have held their own sale. Lane encourages business owners, organizations and 4-H supporters to attend and ensure youth get a fair price for their animals.

Learn more at https://www.facebook.com/wsu.ferrycounty.

“We’re doing it because time is of the essence,” Lane said. “These kids may not have the resources to continue to support these animals.”

The sale is also a morale booster, providing “a sense of normalcy,” said Lane, in a very stressful season.

Linda McLean, director of Colville Reservation Extension 4-H programs, and Marilyn Signor, office assistant, wear masks to protect themselves from smoky air in Nespelem (Photo courtesy Colville Reservation Extension).
Linda McLean, director of Colville Reservation Extension 4-H programs, and Marilyn Signor, office assistant, wear masks to protect themselves from smoky air in Nespelem (Photo courtesy Colville Reservation Extension).

Other 4-H programs canceled

4-H members may be able to attend other fairs outside the area, but time is short, distance is a challenge, and the fires continue to burn.

“It’s hard to shift gears, because so many of our families have parents who are involved with the firefighting efforts,” Neal said.

While Extension staff managed to hold some pre-fair activities before the emergency, including a fashion show and performing arts judging, other outreach events, including a tractor-driving competition and food preservation classes, were called off.

“With people displaced from their homes, focusing on the safety of reservation residents is the most important role for us right now,” said Linda McLean, director of 4-H programs at WSU Colville Reservation Extension (http://native.wsu.edu/tribal-liaison/news/april2013/colville.html).

With roads closed, some livestock owners are unable to get to their cattle on rangeland, or bring them salt or water. Efforts are underway throughout Ferry and Okanogan counties to provide feed and forage for livestock whose owners who had pastures, haystacks and supplies burn.

“Many people have lost animals, lost everything they were going to put into the fair,” said Lanie Johns, Clerk of the Board for Okanogan County.

Smoke from wildfires made for unhealthy air quality and low visibility last week on the Colville Reservation in Ferry County (Photo by Linda McLean/WSU Extension).
Smoke from wildfires made for unhealthy air quality and low visibility last week on the Colville Reservation in Ferry County (Photo by Linda McLean/WSU Extension).

State 4-H taking donations

The Washington State 4-H Foundation is taking donations to support 4-H clubs and families affected by wildfires.

Contributions pay for members’ loss of club supplies, project materials, or livestock projects. An application is being designed and will be available online soon for the families and clubs to submit a request for contributed funds.

Learn more at http://www.4h.wsu.edu/foundation.

4-H leader Brenda Nee’s son is happy to keep his market goat.

“What he will miss is the fair itself and being able to be a kid,” Nee said.

“Lives of people and animals matter,” she said. “My son isn’t in 4-H for the money. He enjoys going to fair and raising his animals.

“I’ve made this into a life lesson that things don’t always go as planned,” Nee said.

Contacts

Trevor Lane, WSU Ferry County Extension, 509-775-5225, trevor.lane@wsu.edu
Linda McLean, WSU Colville Reservation Extension, 509- 634-2305,ljmclean@wsu.edu
Ann Fagerlie, WSU Okanogan County Extension, 509-422-7245, afagerlie@wsu.edu