2018 Entry Formsomerset County Beef Jackpot Show

Making the connections is what Abigail Knapp has been doing during her reign as the 2020 Somerset Canton Fair Queen.

2020 Somerset County Fair Queen Abigail Knapp

Competing for the fair queen title was a determination she said she fabricated for a lot of different reasons.

"Our farm is a small calibration meat product performance. The fair's job is to bring the consumer and the producer together," she said. "The fair queen's job is to be the salesperson for the off-white. It's a very important job to me because it's a very important role of the farmers' business."

She said Somerset Canton's fair is focused on agriculture.

"It'southward one of the largest livestock showroom fairs in the land," she said. "Somerset County can exist very proud. They never lose sight of the true purpose of the fair. It was 1 of five that actually happened last year."

Pandemic changes

She said the pandemic last yr may have been noticeable to the visitors with the lack of carnival rides and rodeo night cancellation. But for the exhibitors, it was business every bit usual.

"The kids work all twelvemonth for this one week," she said. "Their passion — you lot run into information technology in the evidence ring. They are intense. It'south astonishing."

Fair royalty

Abigail Knapp is the daughter of Michael and the late Deborah Knapp, Hooversville. She has three older brothers, Michael, Simon and Adam.

Abby's female parent, the former Debbie Shaffer, was the 1979 Somerset Canton Fair Queen. Abby said she has a lot of royal blood in her with by queens Susan Knapp, Lori Svonavec, Danielle Shaffer, Emily Maurer and Jillian Svonavec all being relatives.

"I take such a big family," she said. "My dad was of 10 kids and dad's mom was of 10 kids. When we get to the store, I have to accept the cart and become because dad is e'er seeing people he knows and stops to talk."

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She is employed at Knapptime Farm Operation and is a sales manager, which includes producing and marketing pork, beef and lamb products, organizing sales and piece of work team, formulating new sausage recipes, and analogous production schedule.

She graduated in 2020 from Shade-Primal Metropolis High School, where she was the National Honor Social club president, the varsity rifle team captain in which in she was the 2020 Pennsylvania State Loftier School Smallbore three-position Burglarize Reserve Champion. She was the Class of 2020 vice president, Environthon Club vice president, student council treasurer, and a fellow member of the Varsity Guild and Chess Order.

At present Abby is a sophomore chemical engineering major at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown, where she also is in Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) in which she will graduate as a second Lieutenant.

"Dad has his doctorate in chemical engineering so I have the background with information technology," she said. There are a lot of career options for her, and she decided to go into the Army for eight years.

"Information technology will teach me a lot of skills and leadership," she said.

4-H piece of work

In 4-H and fair piece of work, Abby is the 2017 Pennsylvania State 4-H .22 action Smallbore Rifle Champion, and the 2018 Pennsylvania State 4-H representative and competitor in the 4-H National Shooting Sports Championships. She was a state finalist in the Pennsylvania four-H State Horse Championships for eight years. She participated in the Somerset Canton Fair Leadline contest for 10 years and the Junior livestock show and sale for nine years.

Abby is A Cut Above 4-H Society secretary. She headed and organized the fair booth committee for 3 years. She was the Somerset County 4-H County Council treasurer from 2019-20. She received the junior and intermediate outstanding 4-Her awards, completed Level 5 of the 4-H Achievement Ladder and competed four-H projects in beef, swine, sheep, equine, cooking, volunteering, rifle shooting, horseback riding, painting, cooking and gardening.

Her family members were all in the 4-H County Council. Abby said 4-H is a great learning experience.

"Information technology is a good program. It'southward not just agronomics and animals," she said. "There is rocketry, gardening, robotics. In that location are a lot of options to see where you fit in. They can see other kids and run into what others are interested in."

Abigail in tiara and boots shows her entry into the market swine show.

She volunteers at Somerset Canton 4-H Rifle program, Our Lady Queen of Angels Cosmic Church, Berkey Church of the Brethren and Somerset County Mobile Food Banking company. She competed across the country and earned a slot to compete at the olympic training eye for the Jerome Sportsman's Junior Rifle Squad. She participated in the Rural Electric Cooperative Youth Tour.

She has shown beef, pigs and sheep at the county fair. Her favorite memories from the fair are the Leadline contest.

"Non only exercise y'all model an outfit, but there's the group competitions," she said.

For the state championship in four-H riflery, she said it was an experience she throughly enjoyed. They attended the championship in Thousand Isle, Nebraska.

"Information technology was a lot of fun. Information technology was groovy to go that far Westward," she said.

Abby said she's entered the Food Revue competition every year and once she selects the recipe, she has to make it three or four times before the competition to make certain information technology works out. Only then she has to eat her practise entries.

"I'm a dessert person," she laughed. "I'd like to know how yous get to be the person to judge these competitions. I went to the maple producers Sense of taste and Bout and got to see i lady making maple syrup into saccharide and she kept having me taste it. Information technology was interesting because we used to have a maple military camp. When I left I had a bag of maple sugar."

She is planning to practice a special program during this year's off-white. "The Royal Perspective on Agriculture" is gear up for 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Midweek in the Junior Activities Edifice. Local queens will be there to discuss what they correspond and something in agriculture in which they are involved.

State Off-white Queen Alternate

She is now enjoying traveling to the different fairs as the 2021 State Fair Queen Alternating. She said the state fair queen competition was dissimilar this twelvemonth because of the pandemic.

"Information technology was virtual this twelvemonth, just still nervus-wracking," she said.

They had judging on Zoom that was live-streamed.

"It was difficult. We got to encounter the other fair queens on Zoom which was harder to exercise, simply they had unlike things for us to practise," she said. "They had guest speakers requite Zoom presentations. There were former state fair queens and others who competed merely didn't win to requite a different perspective, make presentations about how this helped them out afterwards in life."

She'southward been traveling around to the different fairs and is finally meeting the other girls in person.

"I've been getting asked to travel to other fairs this year," she said. "I'1000 enjoying going to the fairs to meet the other queens in person."

Abby is looking forward to the off-white queen competition Aug. 22.

"It's going to exist a pretty expert contest for fair queen," she said. "The girls all carry themselves very well."

Her recommendation to the girls competing this year, "Enjoy the moment. Focus on the agriculture side of things. Keep grinning even if your cheeks injure."

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Source: https://www.dailyamerican.com/story/lifestyle/2021/08/20/somerset-county-fair-queen-abigail-knapp-makes-connections/5458177001/

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