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Livable Community Fair celebrates five years
By Dana Webster
KP News
The
Livable Community Fair returns to the Key Peninsula on
Saturday, May 12. It will be held at the Civic Center,
where it began in 2002 as an open house for nonprofits.
Bookings and applications are being processed by the new
Safe Streets Community Mobilizer Mike Babauta. The fair
is a joint production of Safe Streets, the Civic Center,
Pierce County and other sponsors. Babauta’s job is to
receive all the applications and collect the fees. He
says it is helping him get acquainted.
“I was
new to Safe Streets in December. With the fair, I’m
immersing myself in the community — it’s rather nice,”
he says.

Marty Marcus and his reptile friends are popular
guests
at KP events, including at the livable fair.
KP News archive photo |

Critters from the Reptile Round-Up were
popular
with
kids at last year’s Livable Community Fair.
Photo by Hugh McMillan |
The
Livable Fair committee expects over 45 booth
participants from nonprofit and civic service
associations. There will be indoor and outdoor exhibits
and food available from the Civic Center kitchen.
Visitors will learn about the available services for Key
Pen residents, enjoy a stage full of entertainment,
browse a flower and garden sale, climb around on fire
equipment, and be climbed on by critters in the Reptile
Round-Up exhibits.
The
Lakebay Fuchsia Society sponsors the outside flower and
garden show and sale.
Master
Gardener representatives, commercial growers and show
judges will be on site to answer questions and offer
advice. According to club member Sharon Miller, there
are “thousands of fuchsias in the world and several
hundreds of hardies thrive in the northwest.” At the
sale there will be baskets, uprights, hardies and
trailer fuchsias with such varieties as Orange drop, Red
shadow, Crinkly bottom, Alaska, and Pink marshmallow.
The sale will also offer selected annuals, some
specialty annuals for baskets and cedar planter boxes.
The Lakebay Fuchsia Society is the sponsor of the Civic
Center’s Puget Sound compatible garden. The garden’s
paths will be open, as always, for strolling.
The Key
Pen Historical Society will also keep the Key Pen museum
open for the occasion.
The
Reptile Round-Up will be familiar to many of the kids on
the Key Peninsula. In fact, tens of thousands of
youngsters have learned about the herpetological wonders
of reptiles and amphibians from the Reptile Round-Up
sponsors, Marty Marcus and Ann Waldo. Their traveling
menagerie first went on the road after Marcus retired
from teaching science in Los Altos, Calif. They reduced
their collection of critters down to around 40 members
in order to move to the Peninsula in 1983.
One star
in the reptile show will be a ball python. She was
hatched from an egg in the sponsors’ home. Her name is
Julie. She is 19 years old and very accustomed to being
handled. According to Waldo, petting Julie is “a
revelation for a lot of kids and their parents.”
“Parents
are more likely to be wary — more set in their ways,”
she says.
Marcus
and Waldo enjoy introducing people to the wonders of the
reptile and amphibian worlds. The experience contributes
to an appreciation for pet care needs and environmental
awareness.
Along
with Julie, visitors to the exhibit will meet a
26-year-old desert tortoise named Munchkin who loves to
wander and explore. Tillie the Blue Tongued Skink, Tighe,
Dayo, Bandera, Angel and T.W. will also be there. T.W.
is an amelanistic king snake. Amelanistic gives you a
clue about his color and there is a shocking mystery
behind his initials.
Mark your
spring time calendars. The Key Peninsula Livable
Community Fair is Saturday, May 12, from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. at the Civic Center in Vaughn.
For booth
applications contact Mike Banauta at Safe Streets at
884-7899. For other information contact the Civic Center
at 884-3456.
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