Photo from 7/21/2016 issue of Whitman County Gazette
(a.k.a. Colfax Gazette) of Colfax, Wash.
Thursday, July 21, 2016
Friday, July 15, 2016
March 30, 2017, will be historic for Comets Track Club of Pullman
That is the first day of Spring 2017.
The Comets were created in Spring 1977.
Thus, the Comets will be celebrating their 40th season of track & field.
Saturday, July 2, 2016
SUE HINZ: The art of spinning sugar for smiles
Story by Moscow Pullman Daily News. Photos from 2008 by PULLMAN :: Cup of the Palouse
By Josh Babcock, Moscow Pullman Daily
News Saturday, July 2, 2016
Sue Hinz prepares cotton candy
during Pullman’s Independence Day celebration in 2013. Hinz has prepared cotton
candy at the event for more than 25 years.
A sticky Sue Hinz has been taking
pink, blue and purple showers after Pullman's Fourth of July Celebration for as
long as she can remember.
For about 30 years Hinz has been
mastering the art of spinning cotton candy at the city's Independence Day celebration,
and when each day is done she's usually covered in bits of colorful cotton
candy cobwebs.
"Imagine the shower: It's a
little blue, a little pink, and putting those colors together makes it a little
purple," Hinz said. "Your hair is just sticky. My arms are sticky.
All clothes go right to the laundry basket."
If it wasn't for her sticky July
Fourths, the celebration might go without the cherry and blue raspberry cotton
candy clouds that span the park year after year, as she was the first to make
and sell cotton candy at the event in the mid-1980s.
That many years ago there was
nowhere around here children could get cotton candy, she said.
"And it's still that way,"
Hinz said. "There's nothing cooler than handing that cone to a little boy
or girl; sometimes it's bigger than their head."
She said it's those smiles from
children and the chance to serve her community that bring her back every year.
Hinz said at first she was renting
the cotton candy machines for the event, until one day their owners gave them
to her.
Since then those same cotton candy
machines have made the trip to Sunnyside Park every July 4 to spit out what
Hinz calls some of the largest cotton candy cones on the Palouse.
Hinz said an average year will
require 60 to 80 pounds of sugar to meet the demand. (She keeps a five-pound
backup supply in her car, just in case.)
"I can't keep a backup of a
machine, but I keep tools," she said.
But Hinz couldn't do it alone.
Since she started spinning the
sugary fluff and selling the stuff, she's received help from Pullman Parks and
Recreation, past students of hers from the University of Idaho and other
community members, plus, primarily, her family, including Rick Wayenberg, Hinz'
brother; Mike Hinz, her husband; and John Hinz, her older son.
She said the family knows to never
plan anything else for the holiday.
"They know what I want to do on
the Fourth," she said.
Gross profits from the barbecue at
the park, the cotton candy sales and most everything else sold go to fund the
current year's celebration.
Hinz said the goal is to raise at
least $1,000 from the $2 cotton candy cones, which will be sold 3-10 p.m.
Despite her experience, Hinz is
still looking for an edge. She said her husband rolls his eyes when she goes up
to the carnies at the Latah and Whitman county fairs.
Hinz said, "I'm just wondering
what little tricks they have."
If there's not a line and children
are tall enough, she'll let them spin their own cotton candy, but she made it
clear a good-looking spin can take some concentration.
Besides a steady hand and a watchful
eye, you need the right weather.
Hinz said wind can sweep cotton
candy right out of the machine and send strands dancing through the park, but
even though breezes are forecast this year, it's not going to stop her. It
never has before.
She has no plans to pass her torch
to anyone in the foreseeable future.
Hinz said, "Everybody has a
cotton candy flavor in their hearts. Only a few of us love to make it."
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