Eugene festivals give fair choices Dy Tim Neff Emerald Associate l (liter There's a fair for just aiiout everyone thin sum mer in Eugene. Depending on their personal tastes, fairgoers can chuck out a vaudeville performance ut the Or egon Country Fair, drop in on a hockey 'oumi muni at the Lane County Fair, or watch a parade nt the Eugene Celebration. But whatever draws |>eople to Eugrme-areu fes tlvuls this summer, they're sure to get their fill ol food tmoths, live music and other familiar fair .it tractions, The Oregon Country Fair, whit It runs July 10-12, packages traditional fair elements with a Wootlstock atmosphere. This 23-year old event offers 250 craft Ixmlhs 50 outdoor restaurants and 10 mush stages in a wooded setting 13 miles west of Eugene near Vonnta At the heart of the fuir Is the Community VII lage and Energy park. The Community Village is the site of the demonstrations, workshops anti music by 20 peace, justice, education and com munlcallons-orlented non-profit organizations in the Energy Park, fairgoers ran see alternative on ergy displays, hear music or lake a solar shower Tito Country Fair offers more than 100 musical performances by u witie variety of artists Fills year's roster includes appearances by the Cfa/.y B‘s, Musungo. Dead Klngers and the Kon Eloytl Band. As ulwuys, vaudovillo performers will turn oul en masse for the throo-day fair Fairgoers can lakt in wat:ky. off-lwlanoo performancos by Dr. Atom ic's Medicine Show, UMO, Annanimus and Kadai Angnls. Admission is S7 Fritlay, S10 Saturday unti Sf Sunday at the gate. The fuir is wheelchair-accessi ble and sign interpreters are available Fret round-trip buses leave regularly from Eugene. The Lane Country Fair. Aug 1H-23, weighs in as Oregon's largest county fair. Located on VVesi 13th Avenue, the six-day event features agricul lurul displays, live music, food booths anti it:* skating shows. The theme of this year's fuir is "Barn Appetit,' a questionable pun that alludes to the event's ag rlculturul focus. A livestock building will houst barnyard animals of every Ilk, including minis lure horses, drnft horses, pygmy goats, sheep cows anti bunnies. The fair will also lake full advantage of Iht Lane County Ice Arena Performances are sched uled by several top-notch Ice skaters, including 1992 Olympic medalists Paul Wylio, Isabellt Brasseur and Lloyd l-Uslor. F«i|Mo> Th» Oregon Country Fair (top) and the Eugene Cel ebration (above) an lust two ot aavanl local laatF vale that add color to Lana County summers The third annual Lane County l air Invitational Hockey Tournament begin* Thursday. Aug 20. with the championship game scheduled Sunday afternoon An outdoor stage will play host to a wide varie ty of performances l>eginning each day at 11 a m Live music and dancing is featured each night from 6-10:30. The Expo Hall will have model railroaders, an antique car show and an artisan's studio where artists cun lx? watched while they work on their crafts. The Exhibit Hall will house hundreds of con sumer booths More booths, the midway and more than 60 food pavilions take up the outside grounds. Admission for adults 16 and over is S5 eac h day. Students ages 10-15 get in for S3. The fair is free for children under 10. Dus transportation is fret! to the fair. The Eugene Celebration, which runs Sept IB-20, ushers out the summer with a citywide slate of activities Tho ovont turns the downtown area into a maze of art displays, music stages, open-air Iwzaars. athletic events and food booths. Event organizers have given this year's celebra Turn to FAIRS. Pago 8 Fourth in USA means time to chill By Mike Freeman Emerald Contributor So hero we nre In Eugene for the summer — anil for some of us. even beyond those summer months School Is out. Summer school is In It's hotter than hell (with that slight chnnce of rain), and the day of patriotic expres sion and forest fires is upon us For a relatively small city, Eugene certainly has all kinds of fun stuff for Lane County residents to do as they on joy their Americanism and Henry's Always the time to run. July 4 brings on the annual "Dutto to Butte" 10k run. Actually, the course of the run has changed In the past few years, so now It's not really "Butte to Butte." The ram begins at ft a m sharp at 11th Avenue and I’narl Street and con tinues in a more circular (and urban) path, finishing at Eighth Avenue and Oak St root For what the nation's first commer cial tlibort orchard (nils ns an "old fashioned" summer. Ikirrls Ranch in Springfield will hold nn ice cream so cial from noon la four p in You i an bring u picnic, listen to the fiddlin' of the "The Best Bets" and the five-piece brass band "Der Bohemian Brass" and enjoy scoops of Baskin Robbins tie cream. General admission Is S5, seniors get in for $:» SO and kids for a mere two bucks. Maude Kearns Art Gallery sponsors Its annual"Art in the Vineyard" at Al ton Baker Park. This event brings to gether artists from around the state to display their crafts. Patrons can listen to jazz. blues and country music amid 20 or so food booths anil taste wine from participating merchants The event is the art center's annual fundraiser and a donation of S2 is re quested As for fireworks, they've been banned until July •», but aren't the real ly fun ones the ones professionals do anyway? Sparklers just don't cut it anymore. Autzen Stadium will have a fantastic display beginning nl about 9:30 p in flip gates will open nt fi and admission is $5 a carload As always, no glass or alcoholic beverages a re permitted For inorn oxploslv« untorlalnmonl. fireworks will follow Ihn Salurdav evening Eugene Emerald's bnsohall game at Civic Stadium So, it's the country's birthday, and in a time when it seems as If America is shrouded in a rlimati of bleak situa tions and had attitudes, take time this weekend to chill. Yes. we're in Eugene not exactly the vortex of activity, but it's not exact ly the armpit either There are lots of fun activities around town and oppor tunities to enjoy time with friends and family Perhaps the most important thing we can rememlxT this weekend as we take a gander up at the skv (and hope that nothing lands in the south hills) Is that things can really only get Iwllei from here Summer in Oregon means hitting the outdoors By Tammy Batey Emerald Associate Editor Ah, tho joys of summer. A chance to kick buck, relax and souk up some rays Many students, however, may have trouble fitting some fun in the sun into their busy schedules what with juggling summer school and summer jobs. But there is hope for harried stu dents. A number of fun outdoor activities rain lie fit into even the busiest of schedules The University's Outdoor Pro gram gives students the chance to participate in outdoor activities, whether they have only a day or a whole month, said Dan Geiger, as sistant coordinator. The Outdoor Program has three weekly one-day trips: mountain biking on Tuesdays at 9:30 a m., wind surfing every Thursday at 12:30 p m. and rafting trips Fri days at 9 a m Other rafting trips last anywhere from throe days to throe weeks and take place all summer long The Outdoor Program gives stu dents a wide range of options this summer for ways to have fun in the sun, Geiger said However, if you ran t find exactly what you wunt on the trip board, a solution is within reach, he said "Anybody can come in and ini tiate a trip," he said "In fact, that's how our program runs. It's as easy as that — inviting other people to go with you on your trip.” Students don't have to shell out a fortune to participate in a trip through the Outdoor Program, Geiger said. Mountain biking costs as little as S3 and one-day rafting costs about $7. Tho longer tho trip, the more students generally get from the ex perience, Geiger said. "It’s h release from the weekly routine — study, eat, go to school — and gives you a sense of adven ture," Geiger said "To others, it's spiritual. It’s a way of overcoming risks and fears. "It’s the expedition-typo trips that make an impact," ho said. "The trip to the Queen Charlotte Islands (a throe-week sailing trip that loaves Eugene August 2B) is the trip of a lifetime. It ran change someone’s life.” The Outdtxir Program can also he used as a resource ranter for campers who may want Informa tion about fire hazards and camp grounds, Geiger said. When the sun heats up, water always offers a refreshing dose of relief. But for those who aren't in the mood to get wot, canoeing and kayaking are fun alternatives to swimming The EMU Waterworks Canoe Company, hotter known as the Ca noe House, rents out canoes and kayaks from an hour to a week end, said Linda Burdwoll, a canoe attendant at the Canoe House, which is located right by the Eu gene Millrace at 1395 Franklin ftlvd. "It's nice to go around in a ca noe with your friends," Burdwoll said. "It's fun to figure out how to get around in a canoe.” Thorn is plenty of wildlife to see along the two-and-a-half-mile-long Millrace, Burdwoll said, adding that ducks, goose and nutria are among the Millrace's most com mon inhabitants. ('.anon and kayak rentals cost S3.65 an hour per boat and S14 a day, Burdwoll said. People who take the boats off tho Millrace -- jgj must pay a S30 refundable depos it. Students may cringe at tho thought, hut one of the coolest things to do this summer involves learning a new skill. However, the skills students can learn through the hugone Parks and Recreation Department don't include tho qua dratic formula or tho way to ask for directions to the bathroom in Spanish. Instead, the park department gives people a chance to learn how to mountain hike, windsurf or a number of other grout activi ties to do when the sun is out, said Carrie Matsuschito, park depart* Turn to OUTDOORS. Page 9 Ftapnou Wit" tportt lika fitting my of ttf atmounding rivirt (top) or a van ca noalng In tha UHIraca (abova) an popular waya to cool down during tha torrid daya ot aumtnar. Local vintners give residents something to wine about By Jacqueline Woge Emerald Reporter With mild winters, rugged slopes and summer sun. Wustnrn Oregon is a prime region for growing wine. Recognizing this potential, wine afDcinnados are planting vineyards and curing wines throughout the greater Wlllumotte Valley, including Lane County. Traditionally, where there is wine, there are also wine apprecia tion festivals. Honoring this sacred tradition. Lane County vintners sponsor numerous celebrations throughout the year. As a fine time for get-togethers, picnicking and general relaxation, summer sees a number of fine gath erings. One of the larger festivals of the season, the 9th annual Art and the Vineyard, a benefit for the nonprofit Maude Korns Art Center, takes place July .1.4 and S at Alton Baker Park beneath the Ferry Street Bridge. The festival has everything from an artist's marketplace, a sculpture park, a children's hands-on art are na. food vendors, an art-for-your garden display, an opportunity for amateur artists to team up with pro fessionals. an artist’s pavilion of dis play-only works, and of course, wine-tasting, at $.25 or $.50 per taste* The roster of participating all-Ore gon vineyards and wineries in cludes: Amity, Airlie, Hinman, Houston. Oregon Cellars, Serendip ity, Spring Hill, Willamette Valley, Honeywood und Secret House. While booth fees, etc. support the festival itself, the suggested dona tion. $2 for individuals and $5 for families, directly supports a large percent of the art ranter's budget, in cluding exhibitions and classes. Throe weekends later, on Satur day, July 25, Hinman Vineyards hosts the Summertime Celebration, a coming out party for its newest re leases. This year's debutantes are the 1991 white riosling, Ocwurztraminer anci the vinoyard's first pinol gris Located at 27012 Briggs Hill Rd., Hinman's will offer case discounts, food tasting, places to picnic, music, and a chance to visit with wlnomak nr, Joe Dobbs, who will be giving tastes of the vineyard’s newer red wines. Admission is free. August 1, from 1 to 10 p.m , Se cret House Vineyard will dance to the Hamhocks. a local hand and to Lloyd Jonos Struggle, a blues/jazz band from Portland Tho Keystone Cafe, Lovln Oven, Porter’s Woodsmoko Bar-b-que, and L & L Mobile Foods will bo selling food. Kids can bob for apples, dunk as-yel-unnamed targets, cornshuck race, bat pinatas and watch clowns and magic. A percentage of all wine bottles sold, the dunk tank, and the $5 cov er charge benefits YVomenspaco, a local Women's sholter. Socret Houso Vineyards sits 2.4 miles west of Venota on Highway 126, just past the Oregon Country Fairgrounds. For more Information, contact 935-3774. The second August event, Wlnotasia, lakes place August 8 at Hinman Vineyards. Ambrosia, Hil ton. Oregon Electric Station, Valloy River Inn, Jazz Station Cafe, Red Lion, Willie'* on 7th Street, and fclu phoria Chocolate will provido up scale eating. Entertainment includes Don Latarski. the Suzuki Strings and Cor ridor School Jugglers. Tickets, which include food and wine tasting for $35 per person, ben efit the mld-Orogon chapter tho Children's Mirudo Network, a na tional organization that aids new borns through IB year-olds receiving hospital care. Sacred Heart Hospital, the region's children s care centor, hopes to raise $10,000 from this event. Turn to VINEYARDS, Page 8 Rbptato Eugana’a Cone ft* In th* Park* atria* la $ rotating way to wtiila away your avaninga. Music lovers should flip over local tunes on tap By Mindy Nix Emerald Contributor With tho recent heat wave, many people arn finding themselves braving the ele ments. inarching for fun and entertainment. Music and dance arn often a part of it, but tickets are usuully expen sive and not all music and danco is for everyone. However, this summor in Eugene, there is something for everyone and much of It is free. Eugene Concerts in tho Parks will begin July 8 and run through August 19. The concerts are free, outdoors and offer great entertainment from rock to reggae, blues to bluegrass, folk to cijun, acoustic to gospel. The concerts will bo at Westmoreland Park (1545 West 22nd Ave.) Wednesdays 8-8 p.m. July 8-29; Amazon Park (2700 Hllyard St.) Thurs days 8-8 p.m. July 9 - Aug. 13; Washburn Park (Agato Street at East 19th) Sundays 8-7 p.m.. July 12 - Aug. 18; and Petersen Park (870 Bomtzen Road) Wednesdays 6-8 p.m., Aug. 5-10. Eugene Concerts In the Parks have been an annual event for about 20 years. De pending on the weathor and the area of town, audience size ranges from 150 to 2,000 people. The informal park at mosphere allows people to get up and dance or Just loan back nnil listen to local musi cians. Ixith amateur ami pro fessional. Dance band Art Crooveaux opens the series with vneal harmonies, saxophone and guitar solos and a solid backboat Wednesday. July H at Westmoreland I’urk. They combine elements of rock, Jh/.z, fusion, soul and KHli They'll (day tunes by Chaka Kahn, Marvin Cayo, Soul II Soul. Joan Armllrudlng and David Sanborn, us well as thoir own inspiring originals. LI'I Lynne and the Smokin' Solos will heat up the night with rhythm and bluos, Thursday. July 19 from 8-B p.m. at Amazon Park. Li’l Lynno moves audiences with her animated voice while long-time veteran of the Eu gene music scene Phil Wag ner (Suburban Slim) blends and highlights tho music on his guitar. Together they’re known for their dynamic vo cals. showmanship, and friendly rapport with audi ences, backed up by tho Smokin' Solos. They’ve played at the WOW Hall. Har po’s Dluenote Cafe as well as the Rose City Blues pnstival In Portland. For tho classical music lover, tho Emerald Chamber Players and special guest art ists will entertain Sunday pic nickers with woodwind quln Turn to MUSIC. Page 9