Tuesday, October 26, 2010

The Truth About Good Luck Charms - Woman Poker Player Magazine


There is one thing that every poker player knows about and that’s luck—lucky cards, the luck of the draw, pure luck.   Why has luck been described as a Lady?  It could be derived from the ancient Goddess Fortuna who ruled fortune and chance. The Romans held great festivals in her honor; her temple was even called “Good Luck.”  Fortuna could only be placated by cards, counters and dice. It’s no surprise that she gave birth to a child named Gaming.

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The formal definition of luck is a chance happening of good or bad events. Some people don’t believe in luck and feel that it’s merely preparation meeting opportunity.   In poker, that’s probably truer than in life. Big wins from a newcomer can be explained away as beginner’s luck but the more advanced players know it takes more than catching good cards to keep them at the top of their game.  Still, some players admit having used lucky charms. World Poker Tour host Vince Van Patten is one who has beliefs about luck when it comes to poker.  He has said that if he loses in a particular shirt, he won’t wear it again.  He considers wearing jeans in a game unlucky since he’s never had any good luck at the poker table when he wore them.

Most people in show business succeed because they’re talented but they also believe in luck.  This is apparent in the number of celebrities that carried lucky charms during the games on Celebrity Poker Showdown.  Michael Ian Black kept tossing an autographed picture of magician David Copperfield into the pot.  The executive producer of the show, Andrew Newman, relates that others who relied on charms were Dule Hill, Kathy Najimy, Bryan Cranston, and Shannon Elizabeth.  Host Phil Gordon remembers someone bringing a pink elephant to the set and has seen pros put pictures of their wife or kids on the rail.  Phil himself doesn’t have a lucky charm. His personal feeling is that the harder he works the more luck he has.

Why do people hold to the notion that a lucky charm will help them win at poker?  It’s simple. They believe it will.  It helps them to be more confident. It helps them focus. It keeps them calm. They feel that there is some force outside of their own making things happen.  This gives them confidence in their play.  If a person sits down at the table and wins a mother lode of money and he happens to have his frog money clip  with him that night, the win might be attributed in part to that object.

The four leaf clover is one of the best known talismans in the West.  According to legend, Eve carried a four leaf clover from the Garden of Eden. The leaves are sometimes said to stand for faith, hope, love, and luck.. In 1620, Sir John Melton wrote: "If a man walking in the fields find any four-leaved grass he shall, in a small while after, find some good thing.”   The horseshoe, another common lucky charm, has a religious origin. Some say it is associated with St. Martin of Tours, aka San Martin Caballero, who traveled by horseback and had some good luck on the road. Others claim it comes from St. Dunstan, a blacksmith by trade, who nailed a horseshoe to the Devil's hoof.  The Devil was only allowed to go once he had promised never to enter a place where a horseshoe is over the door.

Why is a rabbit’s foot lucky?  The manner in which rabbits run gave birth to the superstition about rabbit's feet. Their unusual stride makes the back feet touch the ground ahead of their front feet,  so the back feet were considered especially lucky.  So the story goes.

Today, you can find your own good fortune on the internet. Catherine Yronwoode has assembled the Lucky W Amulet Archive which is an illustrated lucky charms and amulets.  Among those you’ll see there are good luck coins, rabbits’ feet, money spiders, hand washes, magnetic scotty dogs, all-seeing eyes and even the Powerful Hand of God.  They also have mojo bags used in hoo-doo, a cross between African American and American Indian root magic.  The poker mojo is filled with good luck ingredients:  a little pyrite or fools gold, an alligator foot, a badger tooth, cinnamon and mint.  Some of the formulas date back 200 years.  Check out the herbal formula that players use to wash their hands before a game.  A popular one is the Gambler’s Gold Lucky Seven Hand Wash, a special blend of seven herbs reputed to bring luck. You brew it up as a tea, then strain off the liquid and wash your hands in it before going to play. The herbs included in this mixture are Chamomile, Calendula, Coriopsis, Alfalfa, Irish Moss, Cinnamon Chips, and Allspice Berries—all of which are said to bring monetary good fortune or at least to drive away poverty. If you visit the website, they’ll prepare a lucky charm especially for you. www.luckymojo.com

So, what’s the truth about lucky charms?  Keep using one if it works for you but don’t go on emotional tilt if you run into a losing streak.  Poker, like life, has its ups and downs.  Belief is the key. If you believe something works, it probably will but don’t stop trying to improve your game no matter what you may believe.  The bottom line is that luck is only part of the story. Poker is still very much a game of skill.eom

 

This article was originally published in Woman Poker Player print publication.


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Today's Top 10: Superstitions - Delaware County Daily Times

By Mary Ann Fiebert, Community Journalist

The Top 10 Superstitions:

1. Triskaidekaphobia is the fear of the number 13, specifically Friday the 13. Also, 13 guests coming to dinner is thought to be a bad omen. Otis elevators estimates that 85% of elevators have no floor named 13.

2. Black Cat crossing your path from right to left is a bad omen. But from left to right, the cat is granting favorable times for you.

3. Breaking a Mirror is supposed to bring 7 years bad luck. To counter act this curse it is believed you can throw salt over your shoulder or immediately turn around three times counter clockwise. I’d throw the salt only because I have heard bad luck comes in 3’s.

4. Crossing your fingers is more a hoping something happens in a good way. “Let’s cross our fingers and hope for the best”. “Don’t cross your fingers”, means don’t have too high an expectation because it might not happen.

5. Knock on Wood to keep bad luck away. I’ve done it after I have made a statement about something that happened that was just too good to be true.

6. Walking Under a Ladder. An open ladder or a ladder leaning against a building is a triangle and considered a symbol of life. A ladder leaning against a wall creates a triangle. So walking through any triangular shape is considered tempting your fate. The triangle may also symbolize the Holy Trinity. You should also be aware of things falling from above.

7. Spilling of salt being bad luck has been around a long time throwing salt over your left shoulder should act as a shield from the bar luck. Originally salt was felt to be an expensive commodity and it was frown upon to waste it.

8. Four Leaf Clover are a rare breed of the common three-leaf cloverAccording to tradition, such leaves bring good luck to their finders, especially if found accidentally. According to legend, each leaf represents something: the first is for hope, the second is for faith, the third is for love, and the fourth is for luck.

9. Burning a candle inside a jack-o-lantern on Halloween keeps the evil spirits away.

10. Spiders. If you happen to see a spider on Halloween then the spirit of a loved one is watching out for you.

Sports fans and players are known to harbor superstitions. Our baseball season In Philadelphia was very exciting and provided an opportunity for people to come together and cheer them on. It simply was not our time and luckily we still have teams in town to root for.

Go Eagles, Go Sixers, Go Flyers and Thank You Philadelphia Phillies.

Mary Ann Fiebert is married and has two kids. She is not a perfect person but is female so it's as close as you can get. lol. Look for her Top 10 List every day on delcotimes.com.

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  • Thursday, October 14, 2010

    Frog-hunting youth finds five-legged rarity - Jackson County Chronicle


    Published - Wednesday, October 13, 2010

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    Frog-hunting youth finds five-legged rarity

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    by Matthew Perenchio | Executive Editor

    .
    Eight-year-old Jaden Sacia enjoys catching frogs. Sometimes the Melrose Township youth uses a net, but he also uses his hands to add to the challenge of the chase.

    Sacia often hunts frogs with his brother. Normally they’ll just catch and release them, and sometimes they keep them for a while. One time they even had to see what frog legs tasted like.

    But Sacia’s frog-hunting legacy so far comes down to a catch about four weeks ago. He was with his cousin at the family’s cabin in Franklin Township when a slippery frog gave him a little work. After taking the frog home, he noticed it had five legs.

    “I tried to grab it and it got away, and then I tried again and put my hand down and got it,” Sacia said. “I didn’t notice it at first ... but then I saw it had five legs.”

    He said his initial reaction to the discovery was “That’s sweet.”

    The small frog has an extra leg that’s attached to its back left leg. Other than having a difficult time turning over if it’s on its back, the frog doesn’t seem to be affected by the extra limb.

    Jaden is the son of Paul and Dana Sacia, and both said Jaden was thrilled about his discovery.

    “He was pretty excited,” Paul said. “He was hollering, ‘Come see what I found.’”

    The Mindoro Elementary third-grader even took the frog to school for show and tell. Jaden said some classmates found the frog gross but some friends thought it was neat.

    Jaden doesn’t have a favorite number, but he recently has had peculiar luck in finding five-themed oddities in nature. Over the summer, he found a five-leaf clover in the field near his house.

    Jaden lost the clover after placing it near his bike, but oddly enough a friend found another five-leaf clover and gave it to him.

    Jaden has kept the frog in a glass aquarium and has been feeding it flies, but he intends to eventually release it back into the wild. He never gave the frog a name and said he’s content going out and trying to catch more frogs.

    “I’m just going to let it go,” he said.

    But the tale of the five-legged frog won’t soon be forgotten.

    “That’s all he’s been talking about,” Dana said. “He’s been excited and telling everyone about it.”

    .
    Related Stories: [relatedheadlines]
    -->

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  • Wednesday, October 13, 2010

    Celebrities reveal their good luck charms

    Do you find someone in your life
    almost constantly exerting a positive influence on you, one that brings you good fortune and joy?Well, that person could be your good luck charm, your personal angel who uplifts you from the dreariness of life.

    Says businesswoman and naturopath Rita Dhody: “I believe that a person who brings positivity into my life, something that raises my spirits and consciousness is the greatest good luck charm.

    My spiritual mentor, Swami Muktananda, remains my favourite good luck charm of all. I’m imbibing life through the raised consciousness I experience by practicing his teachings. It’s like having opened myself up to a continous multi-dimensional experience.”
    Says gallerist Pravina Mecklai,

    “My husband Jamal is my good luck charm in every sense of the word. My life has become complete in every way after I met him. It’s shown its effects in what I am, into what my professional life has evolved into, and in what our family is today.”

    Model and actor Rashmi Nigam concurs with Rita’s experience of positivity, only that she finds it in the conversations she has with her best friend.

    “Some people bring out the best in you and my friend Zarina is like that. We’re so much in sync with each other, maybe it’s because we’ve had similar experiences in life. Whenever I call her up, I find myself uplifted. She makes me see the positive side of things and helps me find the solution to my problems. Between us there is total acceptance without an attempt to hide our real selves and very importantly we’re not judging each other all the time.”

    Designer Falguni Peacock too believes that it is a member in her family who is her good luck charm. “I feel my daughter has proved to be lucky for us.After she was born our business expanded, work grew and we gained more recognition as professionals.It’s true that your luck changes when some people come into your life. While I also feel that it’s a question of the right time that brings luck, the birth of my daughter has definitely brought with it a new day for us.”

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  • Baltimore's best 50 bars, 31-50 - Baltimore Sun

    Baltimore's best 50 bars, 31-50

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    Fall always seems to usher in big changes on Baltimore's bar scene. New watering holes open and some old favorites close. It's a good time of year to take stock of Charm City's colorful nightlife -- from neighborhood dives to ritzy lounges. This week, we're counting down the city's 50 best bars; 10 each day Monday through Friday. Remember to check back all week for more of Baltimore's best bars. Bottoms up!

    List compiled by Erik Maza and Sam Sessa of Midnight Sun and Richard Gorelick of Dining@Large.

    No. 50 -- Waterstone This is the scrappy old lesbian bar Coconuts, converted last year into Waterstone -- a pretty tavern for the under-served western edge of Mount Vernon. Time will tell whether it can succeed without a clearly defined personality. -- Richard Gorelick


    No. 49 -- Brannan's Pub The green sign out front has a four-leaf clover on it, but the Irishness ends at the door. At last check, Brannan's didn't even have Guinness on tap. It did, however, have one of the neighborhoods most colorful scenes. Brannan's is an earnest dive, serving draft beer in frozen plastic mugs. It's a little too well-lit, and the decor leaves a lot to the imagination, but Brannan's has killer karaoke and quite the cast of regulars. -- Sam Sessa

    No. 48 -- Joe Squared Joe Squared is known for its big, square, delicious pizzas. But the reason it's on this list is because it offers live music daily, for free. And on Tuesdays, it offers a relentless break-dance party. A better slogan might be: come for the pizza, stay for the free band. This Station North mainstay is just down the street from Windup Space and Club Charles, and might be the tastiest place to grab your first bite of the night. -- Erik Maza

    No. 47 -- Holy Frijoles Exhibit A in the "Depends on Who's Working There" argument. This Hampden hangout, a six-year old annex to the popular Mexican restaurant, can deliver pleasure or a punishment. Holy Frijoles regulars have it all figured out. -- Richard Gorelick

    No. 46 -- Midtown Yacht Club Smooth sailing at this gregarious neighborhood bar -- peanuts on the floor, a meat-lovers Sunday brunch, sports on TV, Thursday night karaoke and a classic pub grub menu. Hard to believe, but back in the early '80s, the "yacht club" name wasn't ironic. -- Richard Gorelick

    No. 45 -- Henninger's When is a bar a bar, and not just a restaurant amenity? It is hard to be sure. There are 20-year regulars at Henninger's, the fiercely idiosyncratic Upper Fells Point bar, who have never stepped foot in the dining rooms. -- Richard Gorelick

    No. 44 -- Grand Central Grand Central deserves praise for how well the multi-level, double-wide Mount Vernon mainstay thrives as an entertainment complex. Major assets include outdoor seating, the nifty discotheque, and Sappho's, a posh second-story Lesbian space. In its 20th year, the original bar space still packs in crowds resistant to high prices and the world's worst music. -- Richard Gorelick

    No. 43 -- Walt's Inn A couple short blocks from Canton Square, Walt's Inn can be a low key watering hole or a wild and crazy karaoke zone. It all depends on the night. The staff and regulars are inviting, and on Friday and Saturday nights, Walt's gets wall-to-wall stuffed with tipsy revelers.

    No. 42 -- Turp's There are other sports bars in the neighborhood -- Midtown Yacht Club, for starters -- but Turp's is the place to go to on game days. It's the Mother's of Mount Vernon. A lot of it is location, but the other big draw is John Turpin, for whom the bar is named, and who just recently quit. Many came for the game, stayed for the repartee with Turp. That familiar face is sometimes all that makes a neighborhood bar. When he left, old customers poured in with the same question: "Is Turp around? I wanted to do one last shot with him." -- Erik Maza

    No. 41 -- The Get Down Sound Garden owner Bryan Burkert (pictured) gambled big when he turned the dark Fells Point music hall Fletchers into the even darker lounge The Get Down. Clever interior lighting and stunning design combine to make The Get Down the best new club to open here in the past several years. -- Sam Sessa

    No. 40 -- Metropolitan Coffeehouse and Wine Bar While Metropolitan's sloppy, inattentive service can cripple a good night out, we keep coming back for this South Baltimore bar's wide-reaching beer and wine list. Like many Baltimore bars, Metropolitan has lots of wood and brick, and like many good Baltimore bars, the lighting is artfully dim. Abuse us, Metropolitan. We'll still be seeing you this weekend. -- Sam Sessa

    No. 39 -- Capt. Larry's What's not to love about a bar whose logo is a saucy mermaid holding a pitchfork? Larry's is one of those neighborhood bars that's filthy with character. Get there early, though, if you want seats, because it can get crawling with regulars on any given day of the week. Drinks are cheap, especially during Sunday specials. And be warned: It may be 2010, but Larry's still doesn't take credit cards. -- Erik Maza

    No. 38 -- Vino Rosina A relative newcomer to the Baltimore scene, the upscale wine bar Vino Rosina is a no-brainer for Harbor East. The square bar is key for conversation, and the big glass vats of infused vodkas are, to borrow a phrase from a local pie-maker, dangerously delicious. But let's not forget the comprehensive wine list or the helpful wait staff. Though Vino Rosina has only been open a few months, it's off to the right start. -- Sam Sessa

    No. 37 -- Harry's American Bar It is not true that this legendary, storied, working-class Canton bar, the former American Joe's, has been operated for years by the a coalition of The Newspaper Guild Local 32035 and the Hopkins Writing Seminars as creative source material. It's just not. -- Richard Gorelick

    No. 36 -- Dionysus Baltimore doesn't have enough basement bars, which is part of the reason Dionysus sticks out. The Mount Vernon bar also has a capable beer list and a new third-floor performance space, which push it a notch above many of the neighborhood's other watering holes.

    No. 35 -- Charles Village Pub Best known as the setting for countless Homewood student coming-of-age stories, the CVP always worked best as Charles Village's de facto neighborhood bar. It has had contenders, but none of them has lasted for long. -- Richard Gorelick

    No. 34 -- J. Patrick's J. Patrick's is that rare Irish bar that doesn't scream "LOOK AT ME! I'M AN IRISH BAR!" It just is one, and that's enough. Tucked away down in Locust Point. J. Patrick's has authentic Irish music every week, and a sizable crowd of loyal regulars who come for the camaraderie and stay for the suds. -- Sam Sessa

    No. 33 -- Ale Mary's Ale Mary's is a lot like its owner, Mary Rivers: brassy, no-nonsense, and very Fells Point. Come here at midnight and you'll feel like you're in your big sister's dining room downing some good beer. Part of it is Rivers herself, welcoming despite the put-on attitude. But the other half is the decoration. Rivers has outfitted the diner-like bar with recycled religious artifacts -- ancient lockers from a torn-down Masonic temple; crucifixes and hymnals from a long-gone church. But all the religious imagery on the wall has been donated by the customers themselves. And the black-and-white Sacred Hearts are even more personal. They're from Rivers' grandmother's home in Highlandtown. -- Erik Maza

    No. 32 -- Leon's There's some respect that should be paid to Leon's. For starters, it's among the oldest gay bars in the city, if not the oldest. Except young gay men aren't known for respecting their pioneering elders. In fact, at most gay bars, the two crowds stay as far away from each other as Ted Haggard and his wife. But at Leon's, there's so little room between its circular bar and the walls, there's no choice for seniors and twinks to bump into each other. Sometimes they'll clash over the differences between Donna Summer and Lady Gaga, but sometimes, just sometimes, they get over their generational divide and get to know each other. In that sense of community, it's unlike just about any other gay bar in town. Drinks are also dirt cheap, especially on Sundays, when $3 buys two Coors. -- Erik Maza

    No. 31 -- MaGerks Like most of Federal Hill, MaGerks attracts a "sporty" crowd. Upstairs is commonly referred to as meat-head central; it's a great anthropology lesson. The weekend crowds are about the same as nearby Mother's, but younger. Miller Lights -- drink of choice for the popped collar crowd -- are only $1.50 during weekday happy hour. -- Erik Maza

    Copyright © 2010, The Baltimore Sun

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  • Monday, October 11, 2010

    Good luck charms proves its worth

    San Francisco Bay Area youth celebrate October's national 4H month ...

    Have you seen 4H lately?

    October is National 4-H Month, and Alameda County would like to invite you to come see what America's # 1 youth group is all about. The fundamental 4-H ideal of practical, “learn by doing” experiences encourage youth to experiment, innovate and think independently.

    4-H programs are offered through school-based, after-school and camp settings and within community clubs. 4-H youth across the nation are leading efforts to solve problems in their communities and make a difference for their futures. Along with strong focus on leadership skills and community awareness, individual 4H clubs offer projects for the kids to participate in and at the end of the 4H season, they participate in their county fair.

    4H Projects may include but aren't limited to:

    • Beginning 4H
    • Cooking
    • Cake Decorating
    • Community Service
    • Dog Showing
    • Wildlife Project
    • Dairy Goat
    • Dirt Biking
    • Shooting
    • Sheep
    • Swine
    • Vet Science
    • Woodworking
    • Sewing
    • Scrapbooking
    • Photography
    • Rabbit
    • Poultry
    • Cavy (Guinea Pig)
    • Horse

    This list is merely an example of what the 4H club can offer Bay Area youth ages 6-18. The projects are only limited by the leaders within each club.

    What is 4H?

    4-H is a community of six million young people across America learning leadership, citizenship, and life skills. National 4-H Council is the private sector, non-profit partner of National 4-H Headquarters (USDA). The 4-H programs are implemented by the 106 Land Grant Universities and the Cooperative Extension System through their 3,100 local Extension offices across the country.

    The 4-H Study of Positive Youth Development, a longitudinal study conducted by the Institute for Applied Research in Youth Development at Tufts University, shows youth engaged with 4-H are:

    • Nearly two times more likely to get better grades in school;
    • Nearly two times more likely to plan to go to college;
    • 41 percent less likely to engage in risky behaviors
    • 25 percent more likely to positively contribute to their families and communities.

    If you'd like to get more information about the 4H Club, please contact your county's cooperative extension office. If you're in the Pleasanton/Danville/San Ramon area and would like to visit a Tassajara Valley 4H community meeting, please call Laura Vaughn at (925) 683-3114.

    For more information on the 4H Youth program visit 4-h.org.

    For more of Chris' gardening articles go to Vegetable Gardener.com or visit her website at A Suburban Farmer.com. Chris' book The Complete Idiot's Guide to Composting is now in bookstores and The Complete Idiot's Guide to Heirloom Vegetables will be available in December 2010.

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    4H achievements celebrated

    It was the occasion of the annual 4H banquet for members of the Richmond/Stittsville 4H Club and the Ashton 4H Club. Seated at the head table were David Brown, president of the Richmond/Stittsville 4H Club; Rosalyn Grusnick, vice-president of the... Full Article at YourOttawaRegion.com

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    Sunday, October 10, 2010

    4 Leaf Clover - Sketchfu

    Perkins 4-H'ers 'Sharing the Warmth' - Perkins Journal

    Perkins 4-H'ers 'Sharing the Warmth'

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    Perkins 4-H'ers 'Sharing the Warmth'


    By Cindy Sheets
    Contributing Writer

    Perkins 4-H’ers Saturday morning collected 63 pounds of aluminum cans and 16 coats during a community service project.

    The effort is part of annual 4-H Month activities.

    Club members asked friends, family and passersby to stop by Main Street in front of Perkins City Hall to make a donation of a coat, jacket or blanket for a county-wide “Share the Warmth” project. The items will be given to the Clothes Closet store in Perkins.

    Anyone who missed last Saturday’s drop-off day is welcome to donate their “Warmth” item to any 4-H club member. Items will be accepted through the end of the year.

    The club Saturday also accepted donations of aluminum cans, which they redeem for funds that are donated to the Perkins Animal Shelter.

    Perkins 4-H will continue to collect cans through spring for the animal shelter project.

    If you’d like to have coats, jackets, blankets, or aluminum cans picked up, please contact Becky Carroll at (405) 880-0566.

    National 4-H Month recognizes this organization that for more than 100 years has been instrumental in helping develop youth interests and leadership ability. The famous fourleaf clover logo stands for “Head, Heart, Health, and Hands.”

    Perkins 4-H leader Becky Carroll said the club will continue special activities all month, including helping at the Oct. Spaghetti Supper and providing lots of cookies for Perkins-Tryon teachers on Teacher Appreciation Day this week.

    This is part of the October 7, 2010 online edition of The Journal.

    Have an opinion on this matter? We'd like to hear from you. Click here.

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    4-H groups to celebrate Cloverfest - Santa Maria Times

    A giant pumpkin contest has been added to Saturday’s 4-H Fall Cloverfest at Monte and Pat Roberts’ Flag is Up Farm in Buellton to help support the Santa Barbara County 4-H Club Council.

    “We thought it would be a great way to generate some money for the council as well as add to Cloverfest,” said 4-H leader Mary Jackson of the Four Leaf Clover Foundation.

    “I can’t wait to see all the different pumpkins, and I have heard rumors of people bringing in ones that weigh more than 700 pounds,” she added. 

    Anyone who has raised a giant pumpkin this summer can register it as late as Saturday morning in either the youth or open division. For entry forms and official contest rules, log onto www.4LCF.org.

    The county’s individual 4-H clubs will be represented at Cloverfest with booths, and games, activities and a barbecue are also planned, Jackson said.

    The weigh-off for the pumpkins will begin at noon Saturday, Oct. 9.

    The public is also welcome to come and watch or enjoy the entertainment until 4 p.m.

    The Four Leaf Clover Foundation was started to help raise money for the many 4-H clubs throughout Santa Barbara County. Within the Santa Ynez Valley alone, there are Buellton, Lucky Clover, Santa Ynez and Valley 4-H clubs.

    Even after the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors agreed to save the local 4-H Program by approving additional funding for the UC Cooperative Extension in August, the 4-H Club Council still needed to raise money to help support the program’s staff, Jackson said.

    The foundation raised the $12,500 it needed by a Sept. 30 deadline, which was then matched by the Henry Mayo Newhall Foundation. Meeting that goal also qualified the 4-H Foundation to take advantage of similar grants from the Newhall Foundation and the Edwin and Jeanne Woods Foundation.

    The 4-H program is one of many services that Extension provides, such as support for growers through research into specialty crops and pest eradication, food stamp and general nutrition programs to fight diabetes and obesity, and advice and education for local gardeners and the public.

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    4-Her's compete for top honors at Cloverfest - Lompoc Record

    4-Her’s compete for top honors at Cloverfest

    4-Her’s compete for top honors at Cloverfest

    Posted: Saturday, October 9, 2010 10:31 pm | (0) Comments

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    Aiden Fox, 3, who lives in Lompoc, accepts a ribbon for winning second place in the youth pumpkin division of a pumpkin growing contest Saturday at Cloverfest. The event, an annual fundraiser for Santa Barbara County 4-H clubs, was held this year at Flag is Up Farm near Solvang. Fox's pumpkin weighed in at 118 pounds. //Mark Brown/Staff

    Adult and child growers of giant pumpkins competed for top honors at 4-H Fall Cloverfest on Saturday at Flag Is Up Farms in Solvang. Above, Aiden Fox, 3, who lives in Lompoc, accepts a ribbon for winning second place in the youth pumpkin division of a pumpkin growing contest. The Four Leaf Clover Foundation sponsored the contest for gigantic orange orbs to raise funds for camperships to Santa Barbara County 4-H Camp Wahoo! as well as college scholarships for 4-H youths. Along with the giant pumpkin contest, Cloverfest also included a wide assortment of carnival game booths operated by the county’s 15 individual 4-H Clubs  to raise funds for expenses. Proceeds from a barbecue  are going to support activities of the Santa Barbara County 4-H Club Council.

    Copyright 2010 Lompoc Record. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Posted in Local on Saturday, October 9, 2010 10:31 pm | Tags:

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    Wednesday, October 6, 2010

    Four Leaf Clover Pictures Images, Pics, Wallpapers, Photos

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  • Good Luck Gift Ideas - four leaf clover good luck gift idea for you and your Bff gift.
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