Tractor Daze and Touch-a-Truck are planned Saturday, July 12, at the National Agricultural Hall of Fame, 126th and State, Bonner Springs.
The event also will include a swap meet and mud run.
Ag Fest will run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. Ag Fest includes milking demonstrations, farming demonstrations, a petting zoo, soil tunnel trailer, blacksmith, living history and more. Food vendors will be available.
Visitors also may enjoy a tractor show, swap meet, garden tractor pull, trucks of all shapes and sizes, working antique construction equipment, kiddie pedal pull, ride a miniature train, Shriner’s clowns and fire wagon, and hay wagon.
The kiddie pedal pull will be at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m.; parade of power at noon; garden tractor pull at 1 p.m., tractor games at 2 p.m. and mud run at 4 p.m.
There also will be kids’ identification offered.
The swap meet is scheduled from noon to 6 p.m. July 11 and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 12.
Admission, not including the mud run, is $6 for adults, $4 for youth 4 to 14 years old, and free for children under 4. Admission with the mud run is $10 for adults and $5 for youth.
The hosts of the event are the Wyandotte County Farm Bureau, Greater Kansas City 2 Cylinder Club and Antique Caterpillar Club.
Good luck is promised by kissing the Blarney Stone at Ireland’s Blarney Castle, nearly 600 years old. by Alan Hoskins
From the Ring of Kerry and the Blarney Castle to Beatlemania and the home of golf at St. Andrews, Kansas City Kansas Community College will take travelers on a historic trip through Ireland, England and Scotland next spring.
Entitled “Rural Landscapes of Ireland and Britain,” it’s a 16-day adventure beginning May 22, 2015, and includes an optional 3-day extension in London. It’s the first KCKCC trip to the British Isles in more than 10 years and is open to all interested persons. Travelers will spend six days in Ireland and four each in Scotland and England plus the three-day London extension. Travelers may also want to take the opportunity to travel themselves up to Northern Ireland. The atlantic bar portrush is certainly not to be missed.
Highlights of the Ireland agenda, which will begin in Shannon, will include the spectacular scenery of the Ring of Kerry and Dingle Peninsula, exploration of such charming areas as County Cork, Killarney and Kilkenny, the Blarney Castle and a tour of Dublin. One of England’s most mysterious landmarks, the origin and purpose of 5,000-year-old Stonehenge is still unknown.
A ferry will take travelers across the Irish Sea to Wales and the landmark Conwy Castle before crossing into England and the largest Roman amphitheater in England, the magnificent Pennines known as “the backbone of England” and an optional excursion to Liverpool to explore the world of the Beatles. Bagpipes, ancient castles, scenic highlands and the home of golf make Scotland one of the world’s favorite countries to visit.
Loch Lomond, whose beauty was commemorated by Sir Walter Scott; the Eilean Donan Castle and Isle of Skye and the site of the notorious 1692 massacre of the MacDonald clan are among the stops in the Scottish Highlands before finishing in Edinburgh, one of Europe’s most striking cities. After a tour of Edinburgh and the Edinburgh Castle, travelers will have the option of going to St. Andrews where golf was founded centuries ago.
The extension to London will include a sightseeing tour of Big Ben, Downing Street and Buckingham Palace and excursions to Windsor Castle, Stonehenge and Oxford.
The cost of the trip is $4,529 (double occupancy) and includes round-trip airfare from Kansas City, daily breakfast buffets, eight three-course dinners with wine or beer, lodging in hand-picked hotels, private deluxe motor coach and tour director. A $100 discount is available to new travelers signing up before July 31. The three-day London extension is $569 and single accommodations are available.
Brochures and full itineraries are available either by mail or email by contacting Alan Hoskins at [email protected] or 913-288-7158. A deposit of $300 will guarantee space and no price increase. “While this trip is still nine months off, it will fill up quickly so early reservations are recommended,” Hoskins said.