Tag Archives: Nevada County Fairgrounds

Nevada County Fairgrounds Foundation Makes Donation to Fairgrounds

 

Ed Scofield, President of the Nevada County Fairgrounds Foundation, presents a $30,000 check to Fairgrounds CEO Sandy Woods.  With the elimination of state funding to the Fairgrounds, the Foundation plays an increasingly critical role in supporting the Fairgrounds, especially with infrastructure projects.
Ed Scofield, President of the Nevada County Fairgrounds Foundation, presents a $30,000 check to Fairgrounds CEO Sandy Woods. With the elimination of state funding to the Fairgrounds, the Foundation plays an increasingly critical role in supporting the Fairgrounds, especially with infrastructure projects.

By Wendy Oaks
Foundation makes donation to Fairgrounds to help repair damages caused during recent storms

Thanks to a successful fundraising year, the Nevada County Fairgrounds Foundation recently made a donation of $30,000 to the Nevada County Fairgrounds to help pay for underground electrical repairs and two transformer replacements, which became necessary after the recent snow and rain storms. In addition to the transformers, the repairs will include new electrical wiring for providing primary power to a majority of the buildings on the Fairgrounds, including the RV Park, Tall Pines Nursery and the Main Street Building – all of which are used year-round by the Fairgrounds and the community.

“We are so thankful to our Foundation for providing the funds to complete this unanticipated, but necessary, repair to the Fairgrounds infrastructure,” said Sandy Woods, CEO of the Nevada County Fairgrounds. “While these types of unforeseen repairs can be costly, they serve to improve our Fairgrounds and prepare the grounds for continued community use. With the elimination of state funding, the Foundation plays an increasingly critical role in supporting the Fairgrounds and ensuring the Fairgrounds’ continued success.”

The Nevada County Fairgrounds Foundation was established in 2005 to fulfill its mission of supporting and improving the community’s Fairgrounds. In addition to the recent donation to the Fairgrounds for capital improvements, the Foundation helped fund the building of the Whitney Pavilion that is used by the livestock community during the Fair, and also purchased additional property adjacent to the Fairgrounds on McCourtney Road.

For more information about the Fairgrounds Foundation, or to become a Foundation member, contact the Fairgrounds office at 273-6217 or visit the Foundation’s website at http://NevadaCountyFair.com/Foundation.

 

Wendy Oaks
Publicist, Nevada County Fairgrounds
(530) 273-6217

wsoaks@gmail.com

 

 

Nevada Fair Coming August 10-14

Mark your calendar for the event voted as “Nevada County’s Best Event” for 11 years in a row – the 2011 Nevada County Fair, August 10 – 14, at the Nevada County Fairgrounds in beautiful Grass Valley.

“Gold! Rush to the Fair” is this year’s theme and we have five days of excitement and fun planned for Fair-goers of all ages.  The Nevada County Fair is the perfect opportunity to enjoy live entertainment, delicious food, carnival rides, animals, and exhibits – in a community-friendly environment and at affordable family prices!

Live entertainment will be available every day at five different stages throughout the Fairgrounds. There’s carnival rides and games, barns full of livestock, thousands of community exhibits, special contests, an Idol Competition, nightly arena events, daily demonstrations, gold panning, and food contests.  As always, Treat Street will be serving an array of delicious food and drinks – corn dogs, pasties, tacos, corn on the cob, beer, tempura zucchini, nachos, hamburgers, funnel cakes and caramel corn – just to name a few!

Long-time crowd pleasing events will soar into the Fair’s arena Wednesday through Sunday, presenting thrills ranging from a rodeo to Monster Trucks to the Demolition Derby.

The Ag Mechanics Auction will be held on Friday of the Fair, and the Junior Livestock Auction will be held on Sunday, August 14.

For those interested in entering competitions and projects for judging, the Fair’s Competition Handbook will be available June 1. At that time, all of the categories, as well as online entry information, will be listed on the Fair’s web site at www.NevadaCountyFair.com.

Gates open each day at 10 am, and close each evening at 11 pm. Admission this year will be $9 for adults, $6 for seniors (65 and older), $4 for children 6 to 12, and free to children five years old and younger.  Additionally, active and retired military, with ID, will receive free admission.

At one of the most affordable fairs in California, take advantage of discounts and pre-sales on tickets, which begin June 1. At that time, there will be discounts on daily admission and carnival ride tickets, and the popular “Be A Kid Again” promotion, with $4 admission tickets for Thursday, will be available. Additionally, Kids Day will once again be held on Thursday from 10 am to 5 pm and during that time all children 12 years and under are admitted for free.

The Nevada County Fairgrounds is located at 11228 McCourtney Road in Grass Valley, 50 miles northeast of Sacramento, off Highway 49. For directions, event details or general information, visit www.NevadaCountyFair.com or call the Fair Office at (530) 273-6217. You can follow the Fairgrounds on Facebook at “Nevada County Fairgrounds.”

Source:
Wendy Oaks
Publicist Nevada County Fair

 

For all your real estate needs, call or write:
John J. O’Dell
Real Estate Broker
(530) 263-1091
Email John at jodell@nevadacounty.com

Nevada County Fairgrounds Foundation to Host Crab Cioppino Feed

Photo Courtesy of Chezpim

Join the Nevada County Fairgrounds Foundation at its first annual Crab Cioppino Feed on Saturday, March 26 at 6 pm at Ponderosa Hall at the Nevada County Fairgrounds.

For the event, Chef Arnie Romanello will create and serve his special 100-year-old recipe for all to enjoy. Dinner includes antipasto, all-you-can-eat Cioppino, salad, garlic bread and dessert. A no-host bar will also be available.

Tickets are $35 per person, and are available by visiting the Nevada County Fairgrounds office or calling the Fair Office at (530) 273-6217, calling a Foundation Board member at
(530) 271-3844, or by downloading an order form at www.NevadaCountyFair.com/Foundaton.

Proceeds from the event will benefit the Nevada County Fairgrounds Foundations and its mission of supporting and improving the community’s Fairgrounds.

For more information, visit www.NevadaCountyFair.com or call the (530) 273-6217.

 

Source: Wendy Oaks
Publicist, Nevada County Fairgrounds
(530) 273-6217

wsoaks@gmail.com

 

Website: www.NevadaCountyFair.com
Facebook: Nevada County Fairgrounds

Nevada County Fair                          August 10 – 14, 2011
Draft Horse Classic                            September 22 – 25, 2011
Halloween at the Fairgrounds      October 29, 2011
Country Christmas Faire                  November 25 – 27, 2011

For all your real estate needs call or write:

John J. O’Dell
Real Estate Broker
O’Dell Realty
(530) 263-1091
Email John at jodell@nevadacounty.com

DRE# 00669941

 

Nevada County Fairgrounds Receives Award of Achievement

The Nevada County Fairgrounds was recently recognized by the California Heritage Council (CHC) with an Award of Achievement and Recognition for historic preservation.

The Fairgrounds, established in 1938, was recognized for its natural beauty, expansive green lawns, hundreds of tall pine trees, and for the many community events that attract people from all over the country to historic Nevada County. Community events cited in the nomination letter include the Nevada County Fair, the Draft Horse Classic, Music in the Mountains, the Blue Grass Festival, and the Celtic Festival.

“The values represented by these events, presented in this extraordinary setting, are among the best heritage assets in Northern California,” said John Hodges, Board Chair of the California Heritage Council.

The Fairgrounds was nominated for the award by Dr. Susan Walima, a resident of Grass Valley and a Board member of the California Heritage Council. Walima has been active in the CHC for almost two decades.

“I nominated the Nevada County Fairgrounds because of its foothills beauty, the magnificent trees, the small town sense of historic community, and for all the incredible events that take place at the Fairgrounds,” said Walima. “I’ve successfully nominated three prior award sites and buildings, and I wanted this year to honor the Nevada County Fairgrounds.”

Sandy Woods, Fairgrounds CEO, and Ed Scofield, Nevada County Supervisor and Fairgrounds Foundation President, will accept the award on behalf of the Fairgrounds at the Council’s Annual Award Ceremony on June 30 at the Saint Francis Yacht Club in San Francisco.

The California Heritage Council, the oldest historic preservation organization in California, is dedicated to preserving and honoring those places and buildings that have given quality and distinction to the cultural life of California.

The Nevada County Fairgrounds is located in Grass Valley, 50 miles northeast of Sacramento, off Highway 49.  For directions, event details or general information, visit www.NevadaCountyFair.com or call (530) 273-6217

Amphitheatre Design by Elizabeth Dunn, Landscape Architect

Mountain Theatre at Mt. Tamalpais
Mountain Theatre at Mt. Tamalpais

One of the current projects in the office requires an amphitheater.  In Roman times, an amphitheater was considered two theaters facing each other with a stage in the middle.  The Roman Coliseum is a good example of this.  Today it simply means an outdoor theater with a stage and places to sit and a place for vendors to provide food and drink.  With this initial knowledge, I went looking for design elements of amphitheaters.

I searched the web and found some great photos.  One of the best was the Scott Outdoor Amphitheater at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania.  It was designed by Thomas W. Sears, a landscape architect, and built in 1942.  Then, I went to the library and found the 4th edition of ‘The Oxford Companion to the Theatre.’ This book lists several definitions about the theater.  Under the acoustics heading, several physical elements that enhance sound distribution were explained.  This reading brought me back to the internet where I found an article about the outdoor theater in Epidaurus, Greece.  Live Science.   Finally, I reviewed the outdoor venues I have visited and what made them enjoyable.

The most fascinating item I found was that the outdoor theater in Epidaurus, Greece, which was built about 4 B.C., is one of the best theatres for sound distribution.  Recently they have determined that it is not just because of the semicircular seating or the incline angle of the seats, it also has to do with the material of the seats.  They were built with limestone.  Turns out the limestone absorbs low frequencies like the whispers of the crowd and reflects the higher frequencies of the performers’ voices. If the performers have some low frequencies here and there in their speech, ‘The Oxford Companion’ explains the human mind has the ability to fill in these lower sounds and understand the dialogue.

A few other physical elements to enhance sound include a backdrop, a ceiling and a lowered front floor.  The backdrop stops the sound from leaving out the back of the stage.  The ceiling over the stage keeps the sound from going up into the sky.  A solid floor in front of and a bit below the stage bounces the falling sound back into the audience.  In an indoor theater, it is known that a smooth wall will bounce around sound from the performers and the audience members over and over.  This will amplify and echo the sounds and disrupt the listener’s experience.  These indoor walls need an absorptive quality.  Many times you will see tapestries or ornate wood carvings on the walls and ceilings.  These elements capture the sound and keep them from becoming an echo.  If the elements are too absorptive, the sound will be muffled to the extreme and again lessen the listener’s experience.  

Today there are speakers to help with the sound distribution.  They come in all sizes and range of frequencies.  Depending on the size of the audience, an experienced sound engineer / sound technician will set up a speaker or multitude of them.   They will be set right at the stage and/or spread throughout the audience.  Either way, the sound engineer has the ability to test the set up and adjust them for any echo or feedback that screeches through.

A good example of the use of speakers is in the lawn seats at Ravinia.  This outdoor venue just outside Chicago, IL is a popular spot.  The Chicago Symphony and other performers play through out the summer.  There is permanent seating around the stage that is arranged in an arc and built with a slight incline.  This is the pavilion and it has a roof, but the sides are open.  The sound is distributed throughout the seating area and into the surrounding lawn area with the use of speakers.  The lawn area allows for less expensive seating.  However, several of the people with pavilion tickets come early, sit in the lawn with their picnic and then enter the pavilion at their leisure.  The ticket holders for the lawn come as soon as the gates are open, stake claim to their spot with blankets and tie balloons or banners so others in their party can find them.  After their meal, the audience in the lawn quiets, stretches out on their blanket and watches the stars brighten as the music lingers in the air. 

Here in Grass Valley, the Nevada County Fairgrounds has a large lawn area where the audience sets up their own chairs in front of the temporary stage.  I have not been there early enough to see this happen but they must have a chair alignment police to make such a nice arrangement.  I have been told that if the owners of the chairs are not watching the current performance, one can go sit in the chairs until the owner returns.  I have not tried this.  Nor do I think I would be comfortable trying it unless I knew the person who owned the chair.  I would also prefer to lie on a blanket and watch the tips of the trees sway in the summer breeze and find formations in the clouds as the music dances by my ears.

The design required for our project will be completed in phases, with a current budget allowing for a small stage and lawn seating. Future phases, and a generous donor, would allow the design elements of the great outdoor theatres to be incorporated into this space.  This would include designs for permanent seating, set on an incline and built with stone (with cushions for modern comfort).  In addition to the historic elements, an open area is a required design element.  This will allow the audience to spread out on a blanket, enjoy good company and relax while watching the sky and as the music floats by their ears. 

Elizabeth Dunn is a licensed Landscape Architect. She spends the majority of her work days in the studio of Rebecca Cofffman Landscape Architects in Nevada City, CA

Enter Your Exhibits in The Harvest Fair at The Draft Horse Classic

draft horse

It’s free and all exhibitors will receive free tickets to a Draft Horse Classic performance

Entries are now being accepted for the Harvest Fair, September 24 – 27, at the Nevada County Fairgrounds. The deadline for Nevada County residents to turn in entry forms to enter exhibits is 5 pm on Friday, September 18. It’s free to enter, and all exhibitors will receive free tickets to the Thursday evening performance of the Draft Horse Classic.

Entry forms are now being accepted at the Fair Office and on-line for more than 100 different categories, including fruits and vegetables, cobblers, harvest pies, scarecrows, dried flowers, jams, honey, cut flowers, produce characters, and birdhouses. There’s even a garden photo contest. So many fun categories to choose from!

There’s also a special division for youth and teens, which includes categories like decoupage, Halloween masks, painted pumpkins, poetry, table settings, and wreaths.
Exhibitors must either submit paper entry forms at the Fair office or enter online at www.NevadaCountyFair.com. There is no entry fee for those who enter an exhibit in the Harvest Fair, and exhibitors have the opportunity to win a ribbon and a little bit of cash.

Complete descriptions of all Harvest Fair divisions and categories are available online at Nevada County Fair Website, at the Fair’s Office on McCourtney Road, or by calling the Fairgrounds Office at (530) 273-6217.

The Draft Horse Classic and Harvest Fair runs September 24 – 27 at the Nevada County Fairgrounds. There are six performances featuring the magnificent Draft Horses – Thursday and Friday at 6:30 pm, Saturday at 10 am and 6:30 pm, and Sunday at 10 am and 4 pm.

In addition to the Draft Horse performances, the Harvest Fair is bustling with activities during the four-day event. Live entertainment, Art at the Classic, Treat Street goodies, a Dutch oven cook-off, a clogging jamboree, a lumberjack show, a live shoeing competition, special exhibits, and visits to the barns and breed pavilion make for a family fun day at the Harvest Fair.

For Draft Horse performance tickets or information about entering a Harvest Fair exhibit, call the Fair Office at (530) 273-6217.

Famous Classic Draft Horses Coming to Nevada County

draft-horses-fair

Majestic Draft Horse performances, breath-taking competitions, seeing a Draft Horse “up-close,” a clogging jamboree, and a world class lumberjack show are all part of the festivities at the 23rd annual Draft Horse Classic and Harvest Fair, September 24 – 27, at the Nevada County Fairgrounds in Grass Valley.

Tickets for this must-see annual event are on sale now. Purchase your tickets early and save! If you purchase your performance tickets before the Draft Horse Classic begins, you will receive $3 off the ticket price you’d pay on the day of the event. There are six performances featuring the magnificent Draft Horses – Thursday and Friday at 6:30 pm, Saturday at 10 am & 6:30 pm, and Sunday at 10 am & 4 pm. Tickets can be purchased by calling, faxing or visiting the Fair Office by Wednesday, September 23, at 5 pm.

Although there is a charge for the Draft Horse performances in the arena, admission to the Fairgrounds is free so all can enjoy the many activities of the Harvest Fair. The grounds are alive with western music, Harvest Fair agricultural competitions, world-class lumberjacks performing for the crowds, a live shoeing competition, crowds enjoying Treat Street goodies, and a world-class art show. Plus, you don’t want to miss the opportunity to visit the barns and meet the famous Draft Horses up-close.

On Saturday, enjoy the Fall-like weather underneath the tall pine trees for “A Taste of the Gold Country,” featuring food from an abundance of local restaurants and wineries.

For tickets and information, call the Grass Valley Downtown Association at (530) 272-8315, or visit Historic Grass Valley

For Draft Horse performance tickets, purchase them before Wednesday, September 23, and tickets are $18 for general seating and $21 for reserved seating. After September 23, performance tickets are $21 for general seating and $24 for reserved seating.

The Fair’s Office is located on McCourtney Road in Grass Valley, just 50 miles northeast of Sacramento. The phone number is (530) 273-6217 and the FAX number is (530) 273-1146. Visit Nevada County Fair for more information.

Nevada County Fair Community Partnerships a Success

Food-Bank-photo-(2009)

Beautiful weather, a successful canned food drive, more than $400,000 raised for Nevada County youth, several charity benefits, and an increase in overall attendance made the 2009 Nevada County Fair – “A Hare’s Magical A-Fair” – a huge success. Below are some fun Fair facts.

At Sunday’s canned food drive, 1,240 pounds of food were collected for the Food Bank   of   Nevada County. This is enough to feed 550 – 600 families. 
  Continue reading Nevada County Fair Community Partnerships a Success

Woodturning at the Nevada County Fair

Woodturning-photo

Join the Gold Country Woodturners each day at the Nevada County Fair for hands-on demonstrations on woodturning and using a lathe.

Each day, from noon – 8 pm, under the tent outside the Northern Mines Building, skilled woodturners will provide hands-on woodturning demonstrations to adults and children. Using a lathe and a grinder, these experts will be making tops, tool handles, magic wands, and small wooden boxes for the audience. The group will begin at 9 am on Friday, the Day for People with Disabilities.
Continue reading Woodturning at the Nevada County Fair

Cap City BMX Stunt Team to Perform at Nevada County Fair

BMX-Backflip

The Cap City BMX Stunt Team and two of its world-renowned riders, Mike Saavedra and Pete Brandt, will be performing at this year’s Nevada County Fair. Both riders are known world-wide for their high-energy biking skills and their ability to perform amazing feats and tricks on a bicycle.
Continue reading Cap City BMX Stunt Team to Perform at Nevada County Fair