Maricopa County Fair returns after two-year pandemic hiatus

  • Slug: BC-CNS County Fair Photo Story, 330 words.
  • 10 photos and captions below.
  • 1 video here, credit Madison Thomas/Cronkite News

By Monserrat Apud de la Fuente
Cronkite News

PHOENIX – The Maricopa County Fair was back in full swing Wednesday for the first time in two years because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I’ve been coming since I was a kid, and it looks like what I remember,” Stephanie Dowdell said as she perused art displays.

The fair, which runs through Sunday at the Arizona Exposition and State Fairgrounds, features a carnival, food and craft vendors, livestock competitions, live music and other entertainment, including a monster-truck show.

“I don’t think there are words to describe it,” said Karen Searle, executive director of the Maricopa County Fair. “It felt like we had been in a cage, and to not be able to bring the fair for the community and celebrate agriculture, education, culture, arts and fair food felt like it had been an eternity.”

The last Maricopa County Fair took place in 2019, leaving many vendors without that income for two years.

“We took it for granted for so long,” said lemonade stand owner Michelle Davis, who has been a vendor at the fair for 20 years. “We didn’t have any business for two years, so we are very happy to get back at it.”

Davis also said the fair looked pretty much the same as it did before the pandemic, but fairgoers seemed to be enjoying everything more.

The livestock barns, with six buildings full of animals, are a county fair staple. Children and teens ages 8 to 19, many of whom are in 4-H or FFA, raise animals, and some of them spend up to a year getting ready for the county fair. Chicken, goats and other animals compete in various livestock and showmanship events.

“I’m just excited for the kids to be back in the ring and showing. They work so hard,” said Amie Blackwell, whose daughters are in FFA and 4-H. “Everybody has come together and worked so hard to make this opening so much more special for the kids.”

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Fairgoers purchase food from vendors at the Maricopa County Fair on Thursday, April 7, 2022, in Phoenix. The fair reopened after two years of COVID-19 closures. (Photo by Monserrat Apud/Cronkite News)
Wyatt White, from the Arizona Model Railroading Society, shows Connor Anderson how a model train works at the Maricopa County Fair on Thursday, April 7, 2022, in Phoenix. (Photo by Monserrat Apud/Cronkite News)
Milo Salmon, 2, looks at pigs sleeping in a pen at the Maricopa County Fair on Thursday, April 7, 2022, in Phoenix. (Photo by Monserrat Apud/Cronkite News)
Amber Bridges, owner of Dragonfly Designz and a vendor at the Maricopa County Fair cuts an apple for an apple, chocolate and caramel plate on Thursday, April 7, 2022, in Phoenix. (Photo by Monserrat Apud/Cronkite News)
Logan Le removes one of his chickens from its cage at the Maricopa County Fair on Thursday, April 7, 2022, in Phoenix. (Photo by Monserrat Apud/Cronkite News)
Amie Blackwell helps her children get ready for a showmanship competition at the Maricopa County Fair on Thursday, April 7, 2022, in Phoenix. (Photo by Monserrat Apud/Cronkite News)
Madison Carter, who began showing animals during the two years the Maricopa County Fair was closed, grooms her goat for a showmanship competition on Thursday, April 7, 2022, in Phoenix. (Photo by Monserrat Apud/Cronkite News)
Children compete in a goat showmanship competition at the Maricopa County Fair on Thursday, April 7, 2022, in Phoenix. (Photo by Monserrat Apud/Cronkite News)
Isabelle Ramirez, center, leads her goat, Shira, after placing sixth in a Maricopa County Fair showmanship competition on Thursday, April 7, 2022, in Phoenix. (Photo by Monserrat Apud/Cronkite News)
A goat waits for the Maricopa County Fair showmanship competition at the Arizona Exposition and State Fairgrounds on Thursday, April 7, 2022, in Phoenix. (Photo by Monserrat Apud/Cronkite News)