84-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 13, 1995 On Being a Farm Wife (and other hazards) i Joyce Bupp With summer coming fast, lots of folks are planning ahead for their vacations. Vacations are generally plan ned around things we like to do even if it’s just nothing for a day or two. Visiting family and friends, sightseeing, outdoor acti vities, sporting, educational and cultural events all sound like great vacation plans. But I would never have guessed the numer one item at the top of a “things we like to do on vacation” statistical list I re cently ran across: dining out While we like to cat I can’t re member a vacation for which din ing out was the prime focus. But it did bring to mind some meals eat en out that became especially me morable. And I do mean meals eaten “out.” One particularly breathtaking evening of dining occurred in the beautiful mountains outside Sun Valley, Idaho, camping with our daughter and son-in-law. A parti cular treat for them had been sweet com, purchased from a roadside farm stand earlier in the day and steamed in the husk over an open campfire. It was the first sweet com they’d eaten in two years after leaving York County. While they reveled in its deli cious flavor, darkness fell and a gigantic, white moon crept up over the tall peak across a small stream. A truly wonderful me mory of dining “out” In a different part of Idaho, two years later, five of us in the ex tended family huddled around an other campfire. As a gray jay flew in to snatch bits of bread we toss ed, the sun poked through the tall pines growing at 8,000 feet to be gin thawing the ice frozen to our breakfast table that 28-degree, July morning. And, dining out by a rodring breakfast fire was a welcome al ternative after a night of freezing in our sleeping bags, in tents. Warmed by the fire, we discover ed that our stiff joints still worked. Dining out was a genuine high point of a recent weekend visit with friends who live 100 miles west of us. While there are several routes which can be taken to their mountain farm, on pretty days we favor making a portion of the jour ney on Route 30, where it climbs, sky high, over Tuscarora Moun tain. At the highway’s summit is a side trip to a perch on the moun tain’s sometimes jagged spine, on a rock outcropping called The Pul pit. Hawk watchers frequent this site and we’ve seen numerous birds of prey during our few stops, including a mature bald eagle which inspected us one breathtak ing afternoon. As has become custom for The Farmer and I on these occasional visits, time and weather allowing, we stopped at a nearby small mar ket for sandwiches for dining out at the peak. Toting those on the short hike to the peak, along with a pair of field glasses, we soon discovered there would be lots of company during our short stay. Parked wing-to-wing on the steep, grass-and-rock slope were 17 hang-gliders in cheery, neon colors. Clustered near the peak were their pilots and assorted as sistants, some pacing inpatiently, waiting for the stiff wind pouring over the peak to slow so they could get airborne. During our half-hour vigil with the gusty wind. The Farmer had to remove his hat to keep it from blowing off his head and down the mountain and the hang-glider pil- Two Fair Officials Receive Executive Certification LITTLE ROCK, Ark.—Two Lehigh Valley fair officials are designated as Certified. Fair Executives by the International Association of Fairs and Exposi tions. Bonnie Charles Brosious, marketing director of The Allen town Fair, and Beverly Gruber, who serves in various capacities with four Pennsylvania fairs including The Schnecksville Fair, were awarded the distinction at the association’s annual spring management conference hosted this year by The Arkansas State Fair. To qualify for certification, candidates must have demon strated extensive service to their individual fairs and the fair indus try. The association selects only 12 recipients from more than 3,200 North American fairs each year. Mardn H. Ritter, president of The Allentown Fair, was certified in 1987. Including Brosious and Gruber, there are now six Certi fied Fair Executives in Pennsyl vania. Brosious joined The Allentown Fair in 1982 as its public relations director. Over the years, she deve loped the fair’s first marketing department. As its director, she is currently responsible for fair prog ramming, buying talent, advertis ing, promotions and public, media and corporate sponsor relations. ots never got to hang out under their gossamer wings. Maybe next time. Looking back, those impromp tu, informal and inexpensive meals, out, are more special in our memories than the little fancy “dining out” we’ve ever done. We do enjoy dining. Out. Way out. IT / —H CLOSED SUNDAYS, NEW YEAR, fXPSrt EASTER MONDAY,ASCENSION DAY, WHIT MONDAY, OCT. 11, THANKSGIVING, fHllfllt CHRISTMAS A DECEMBER 26TH FISHER’S FURNITURE, INC. NEW AND USED FURNITURE USED COAL A WOOD HEATERS COUNTRY FURNITURE A ANTIQUES BUS. HRS. BOX 57 MON.-THURS. 8-5 1129 GEORGETOWN RO. FRI, 8-8, SAT. 8-12 BART, PA 17503 GOOD FOOD OUTLET STORES See Our Original Line Of Golden Barrel Products Plus All Kinds Of Beans, Candies, Dried Fruit, Snack Mixes, £tc. At Reduced Prices * BAKING MOLASSES * MAPLE SYRUP * BARBADOS MOLASSES * PANCAKE A WAFFLE * BLACKSTRAP SYRUPS MOLASSES ' * SORGHUM SYRUP ’ * CORN SYRUPS * LIQUID A DRY SUGAR * HIGH FRUCTOSE * PANCAKE A WAFFLE ' SYRUPS SYRUPS $ . _ * CANOLA OIL y • | A COCONUT OIL A CORN OIL | A COTTONSEED OIL * OLIVE OIL * PEANUT OIL A VEGETABLE OIL A SHOO-FLY PIE MIX Processor* Of Syrups, Molasses, Cooking Oils, Funnel Cake Mix, Pancake ft Waffle Mix ft Shoofly Pie Mix GOOD FOOD OUTLET Located At Good Food, Inc. W. Main St.. Box 160, Honey Brook, PA 19344 610-273-3776 1-800-327-4406 Located At L & S Sweeteners —• 388 E. Main St., Leola, PA 17540 717-656-3486 1-800-633-2676 - WE UPS DAILY - Bonnie C. Brosious Brosious is a frequent seminar leader at the international fair association’s national and district meetings and has been a three time judge of its annual communi cations awards. She has had an article about buying big-name talent published in the national touring magazine. Performance. Brosious serves as secretary of The Lehigh Valley Convention and Visitors Bureau and on the board of The Whitehall Township Chamber of Commerce. She resides in Whitehall with her hus band Carl and three children. Gruber is currently serving as promotion manager for the Key stone International Livestock Exposition in Harrisburg, compe titive exhibit manager for both the Pennsylvania Fair at Philadelphia Park and the Philadelphia County Fair and on the board of The Schnecksville Fair. Previously, she was on the board of the Ven ango County Fair in western Pen nsylvania for 18 years. Involved in agricultural fairs If your local flora doe* not hive it, SEND FOR FREE BROCHURE -MAZ. most of her life, Gruber has exhi bited, judged, volunteered and managed. She has visited nearly ISO North American fairs and does presentations on her study nationwide. In her fourth year on the board of the international fair associa tion, she is the representative for fairs in the northeastern United States and Canada. She also is on the board of the Pennsylvania State Association of County Fairs and had saved that organization as its secretary-treasurer from 1987-’93. Gruber is the secretary of the Lehigh County Farm Bureau, a board member of the Pennsylva nia Travel Council and the Penn sylvania Logo Sign Trust, a member of the Liberty Bell Chap ter of the D.A.R. and Seipstown Grange, and the chairman of Pennsylvania Ag Republicans. Gruber owns S.C.S. 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