Entries Tagged as 'Dew Days'

Dew Days Pictures Posted at Farmington411.com

Photograph Events has posted large sets of pictures taken at Dew Days. They range from the Miss and Little Miss Farmington Pageant through the Grande Parade.

Check the Farmington 411 web site for the Dew Days pictures.

Photograph Events is available to shoot your event. Just drop them a line through their web site.

Dew Days is a CEEFEG sponsored event.

Miss Farmington candidates in short supply

Michelle Leonard The Farmington Independent

The Miss Farmington committee is looking for a few (more) good young women.As of Tuesday, only five girls had registered to participate in the 2009 Miss Farmington competition, scheduled as part of the upcoming Dew Days celebration. With a $1,500 scholarship on the line, organizers of the coronation would like to see a few more candidates register.

The original deadline for the competition was April 3, Miss Farmington committee member Cindy Muller said. At the end of the day, though, only four candidates had registered, so the committee decided to extend the deadline to Friday, April 17. A fifth candidate registered Monday.

Girls between the age of 17-21 are eligible to participate. Miss candidates should live or attend school in the Farmington School District. Each candidate should have a business sponsor her.The cost to sponsor a Miss Farmington candidate is $125, but Muller said sponsorships come with quite a bit of “free publicity,” including having the business name printed with the candidate’s photo in the Farmington Independent prior to the coronation. In addition, the sponsors of the crowned royalty will be named when Miss Farmington and her court appear in parades in surrounding communities.

The Dew Days committee will give each business that sponsors a candidate a free spot in the Sunday Grand Parade. Each business that participates in the parade is ordinarily charged $100.

Coronation

The pageant will be June 18, 7 p.m., at the Farmington High School auditorium. Each candidate will perform in a group dance, participate in a fashion show, give a platform presentation and show off a talent routine. Additionally, they will be interviewed by judges the evening before the coronation.

The talent routines can be just about anything the candidate wishes to perform, Muller said.

“It can be reading a poem, doing a dance routine, playing an instrument, anything,” she said. “In the past, we’ve had a flag routine, singing, all kinds of things.”

Candidates will be asked to adopt an opinion on a platform of their choice, and be ready to share their opinion with the judges during the interviews and at the coronation. Each candidate may select whatever issue she wishes.

There is one thing the Miss Farmington pageant is not, though — a beauty contest. According to Muller, it is an event to encourage young ladies to become ambassadors for the Farmington area and represent Farmington in area parades and local events.

Miss Farmington will receive a $1,500 scholarship. The first and second princess will each receive a $500 scholarship, and Miss Congeniality will receive a $100 savings bond.

The Little Miss contest is already full, with 12 little girls registered and another 13 on a waiting list.

Applications to sponsor a Miss Farmington candidate are available at Farmington City Hall, Farmington High School and on the Dew Days web site, www.dewdays.com. All applications must be turned in to Muller at Farmington City Hall by 4:30 p.m. on Friday, April 17.

Tickets for the June 18 coronation will be $5, plus the cost of a $3 Dew Days button. Candidates will also be asked to sell buttons prior to the coronation.

See pictures from last year here

Second Easter Carnival offers more children’s games

by Kara Hildreth
Thisweek Newspapers

The second annual Easter Carnival indoor party  aims to have more games and fun planned for children who are encouraged to dress up for the event.

Organizers are ready to greet children in Easter bonnets and other fine duds from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, April 11, at Meadowview Elementary School in Farmington.

Last year, the first Easter Carnival was held to replace the longtime outdoor egg hunt.

More than 620 children played carnival games and had their photographs taken with the Easter Bunny, according to Maribeth Vanderbeck, chair of CEEF, Castle Rock-Empire-Eureka-Farmington Enhancement Group.

The event is sponsored by CEEF and the profits will help fund Farmington Dew Days.

Tickets are $2 for each child and adults are admitted for free. Each child gets a grab bag to fill with candy and toys.

Participants are welcome to bring food shelf items to be donated to the Farmington Food Shelf. Last year, more than 684 pounds of food were donated. Farmington Boy Scout Troop 119 will collect the food.

Carnival games will include bowling, spinning wheel, Tic Tac Toe and baseball pitch measured by a radar gun.

“We want to remind parents to bring their cameras because this is a great photo opportunity,” Vanderbeck said.

Participants should enter on the north-facing Community Education wing doors.

Kara Hildreth is at farmington.thisweek@ecm-inc.com.

New name, new venue planned for Farmington festival

Dew Days, formerly Rambling River Days, set for June 22-28 at the Dakota County Fairgrounds

by Andrew MillerDewDays-RRD2007-parade.jpg
Thisweek Newspapers

Goodbye to Rambling River Days. Hello again to Dew Days.

Rambling River Days, the annual summer celebration in the city of Farmington,  is undergoing a major overhaul this year – reverting back to its old name of Dew Days and moving out to the Dakota County Fairgrounds.

Residents can expect a different feel to this year’s festival, which runs June 22-28. With the move to the fairgrounds, event organizers are looking to create a sort of “mini Dakota County Fair,” said Maribeth Vanderbeck, Dew Days 2009 chair.

The festival’s new digs will allow for a host of new events: motocross time trials, a scaled-back version of the county fair’s midway carnival, and booths for civic groups to hold fundraisers and local vendors to promote their goods and services.

PHOTO: Dew Days, the annual summer celebration in the city of Farmington, moves to the Dakota County Fairgrounds this year and boasts a host of new events. Old favorites such as the parade, Miss Farmington Pageant and Flavors of Farmington food expo are slated to return to this year’s event. File photo

The move from Schmitz-Maki Ice Arena, the hub of last year’s festival, out to the fairgrounds “just made sense,” Vanderbeck said. “We were trying to make a piece of land into a fairground. Now we have a fairground.”

Favorite events from past years – such as the Kiss the Pig contest, bed races, Flavors of Farmington food expo and the Miss Farmington Pageant – are slated to return to this year’s festival. Dance-pop cover-band Boogie Wonderland and country-western outfit Jug have already been booked to perform.

DewDays-RRD2005-band.jpgOther activities are still in the works: Organizers are looking to hold a volleyball tournament, paintball, and book other music acts.

Some of the changes to the festival were prompted by negative reactions to last year’s Rambling River Days celebration, said Dolly Newberg, the festival’s entertainment chair.

“We had huge attendance, but people were a little upset because we moved it to the ice arena from downtown,” she said. “It didn’t go over as well as we had hoped.”

There were also complaints from fest-goers about the $3 cost of buttons at Rambling River Days 2008. The festival “has always been a button event,” Newberg said, but last year fencing was added to demarcate the areas button-holders were allowed in.

DewDays-RRD2007parade-2.jpg“It’s amazing that the $3 button was the difference for some people to come in or not,” she said.

The switch back to the name Dew Days was a no-brainer, Newberg said.

Originally called Mountain Dew Days – the city at one time had the highest per capita consumption of the highly caffeinated soda pop in the country – the festival’s name was eventually shortened to just Dew Days.

In 2005, the festival became Rambling River Days as a nod to one of the city’s natural resources – the Vermillion River. But Farmington residents just didn’t seem to cotton to the new name.

“Even through that change, people still called it Dew Days,”  Newberg said. “Dew Days was short, simple, and everybody knows it as that.”

DewDays-RRD2008-unicyclists.jpg“When people say (the name of the festival) they say Dew Days,” Vanderbeck added. “The name Rambling River Days does not roll off the tongue.”

Pepsi, which makes Mountain Dew, at one time sponsored the festival, but this played no part in the name changes, Newberg said.

“This has nothing to do with any company or corporation,” she said.

Buttons will again be $3 this year; button-holders get admission to Dew Days and free parking at the fairgrounds. Some activities, like the motocross time trials and the music events, will have an additional fee.

The $3 buttons help cover the cost of Dew Days and, if there’s any profit, other events put on by CEEF, the nonprofit Castle Rock-Empire-Eureka-Farmington Enhancement Group. CEEF also hosts a community expo in January, the Halloween Walk and Support the Troops Haunted House in the fall, a community Christmas celebration and an Easter carnival.

Vanderbeck, who’s also  executive director of CEEF, underscored that Dew Days is not funded by the city of Farmington. The button fees and admission fees to other Dew Days events are what cover festival costs, she said.

“We don’t use taxpayer money for it,” she said. CEEF “is a bunch of people who want to make this work. If we make any money off Dew Days, that goes into the next event.”

Volunteers are needed to help plan and run Dew Days 2009. For information or to volunteer,  visit www.ceefeg.org and click on “Contact.”

A Web site for Dew Days 2009 is under construction and should be up and running in coming weeks at www.dewdays.com .

Andrew Miller is at av.thisweek@ecm-inc.com.

People can select Dew Days button design winner

The Dakota Valley Arts Council and C.E.E.F.E.G have organized a poll that will determine the 2009 Dew Days Button.

Readers of ThisWeek may select their favorite design for Dew Days, which runs June 22-28, by voting online at www.ThisweekLive.com.

In 2008, student Alexis Johnson created the winning button design for last year’s Rambling River Days, Farmington’s annual community festival that returns to its previously-used Dew Days name in 2009.

People will be able to vote on four designs entered in last year’s contest to determine this year’s winner.

Each of the four designers will receive $5 and the People’s Choice winner will win $50 at at award ceremony during Dew Days, according to Beverly Preece, president of the Dakota Valley Arts Council.

Voting on the web site will help ensure that one vote per person is counted.

City’s summer celebration returns to Dew Days’ name

This year the annual city celebration, Farmington Rambling River Days will return to its original name, Dew Days (sans Mountain).   Events for all ages will be held from June 22nd to 28th at the Dakota County Fairgrounds.

Dew Days volunteers are working to provide a spectacular update to a long and beloved summer celebration. This year, Dew Days will include many new events and old favorites such as headliner bands, the Flavors of Farmington, with wine and beer tasting, a beer garden, a carnival, bed races, senior events and more.

More volunteers are needed so please contact CEEFEG to get involved!

Look for more information at www.dewdays.com.

Dew Days 2009

Dew Days 2009