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The Spring Fair has arrived in Puyallup. Here's your guide to parking, tickets
The Spring Fair has arrived in Puyallup. Here's your guide to parking, tickets

Yahoo

time10-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

The Spring Fair has arrived in Puyallup. Here's your guide to parking, tickets

It's time to celebrate spring. The annual Washington State Spring Fair has arrived — and this year, it has some new surprises. Residents can go to the fair from Thursday, April 10 to Sunday April 13 and again from Thursday, April 17 to Sunday, April 20. The Thursday hours are 2 p.m. to 10 p.m., the Friday and Saturday hours are 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., and the Sunday hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. If you're buying tickets online, general admission on Thursdays and Fridays costs $13 for adults and $11 for children between 6 and 12 years old. On weekends, those tickets are $15 and $12 respectively. Children 5 years old and under are admitted for free, and on Thursdays, all children under the age of 18 get free admission. If you plan to buy tickets at the gate, adults can get in for $14 on weekdays and $17 on weekends. Children between 6 and 12 can get in for $12 on weekdays and $13 on weekends. 'Another way to save is if people come on opening day, they can get in for free from 2 to 4 p.m. by bringing a food donation,' fair spokesperson Stacy Van Horne told The News Tribune. General parking in the Gold, Blue, Red and Green lots is free on Thursdays and $15 on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. Guests can also splurge for reserved premium parking in Lot B (across from the Red Gate) which is $25 on Thursdays and $30 on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. Several projects are underway at the fairgrounds ahead of the 125th Washington State Fair this fall — including a renovation of the M Barn, a new rooftop bar and a new festival street along Ninth Avenue Southwest. Van Horne said that the construction projects for the State Fair won't impact the Spring Fair — but it will take a few extra minutes to walk from the Red Lot to the Red Gate. 'Ninth Avenue is closed right now,' Van Horne said. 'Red Gate will be open — all four of our gates are open — but the only access to Red Gate is off of Fourth. So, people can still park in the Red Lot, they just have to walk around and there will be lots of detour signs that the city is putting up.' Van Horne said one of the Spring Fair's new projects is a goat playground. There will be 12 to 15 goats, including two babies — known as 'kids.' 'That kind of celebrates spring, and that's what Spring Fair is about,' Van Horne said. 'There will actually be 'kids' on the playground! I've seen it, it's amazing — there's swings, there's teeter-totters, all kinds of things.' The goat playground is a free exhibit, Van Horne said. There is also a new restaurant called Miss C's Chicken Shack, where guests can get biscuits, fried chicken, chicken and waffles and more. Van Horne also brought up 'The Collection,' a new shop near the Gold Gate that honors the State Fair's 125th anniversary. Guests can buy clothing, candles and more — almost all of them emblazoned with the 'Do the Puyallup' slogan. 'It benefits our Washington State Fair Foundation, which benefits scholarships for students all over the state,' Van Horne said. 'You go in there, you want to shop, you can shop the nostalgia.' The best weekend to visit depends on what you want to do. The BBQ Playoffs are this weekend only. Roughly 35 teams will be competing for $25,000 in prize money — and guests will be able to taste all the flavors of spring. On the second weekend, The Fair is shedding light on its future. 'We actually have an exhibit called 'Building the Next 125 Years' and we will have big pieces of equipment and photo renderings and things like that,' Van Horne said. Guests will be able to get an in-depth look at the construction projects happening, Van Horne said. The event will also have a sand sculpture artist. Van Horne said that most exhibits will be available for both weekends, though there may be different animals on display or different exhibits in the grandstand. For more information, visit The Spring Fair will have rides, various restaurants and cute animals to meet. Guests can watch racing pigs or DockDogs, dogs that jump remarkable distances. '[The pigs] are so cute — they run around the track and they get fed at the end,' Van Horne said. 'DockDogs is another fun animal adventure, where dogs run around a dock and jump as far as they can or as high as they can. These dogs go far — some jump almost over 30 feet. That's done around the country and it's fun to see the champions out here.' The Dinosaur Exhibit is open for all ages, with tickets costing $8. Residents can also celebrate Easter with a Golden Egg Scavenger Hunt or take a ride on a Monster Truck (tickets are $10).

Call for mistrial, information about Boswell's ex-boyfriends come out in court
Call for mistrial, information about Boswell's ex-boyfriends come out in court

Yahoo

time08-02-2025

  • Yahoo

Call for mistrial, information about Boswell's ex-boyfriends come out in court

SULLIVAN COUNTY, Tenn. (WJHL) — Jurors learned several new details about the men who had been in Megan Boswell's life during the third day of her murder trial. Boswell faces 19 charges, including first-degree murder and two counts of felony murder, in the death of her baby daughter Evelyn Boswell, whose remains were found on March 6, 2020 after an AMBER Alert. Father of ex, former alleged father of Evelyn testify in Boswell trial News Channel 11 streamed the court proceedings and provided in-depth descriptions of each testimony. Court resumed with testimonies from friends of Boswell's, an employee of a hotel that she stayed at in 2019 and 2020, her foster mother and a woman who babysat Evelyn for Boswell on some occasions. The mother of one of Boswell's ex-boyfriends, a man named Caleb she dated in the spring of 2019, also took the stand. Erica Stacy became emotional when handling evidence that included a shirt and blanket she had made for Evelyn. Complete Coverage of the Megan Boswell Trial Stacy's testimony resulted in a challenge by Boswell's defense team after prosecutors showed the jury text messages between Stacy and Boswell. One of the messages contained an error, which prompted attorneys to approach Judge Jim Goodwin. The jury was excused while Goodwin and the attorneys discussed it. Before the jury returned, Boswell's defense attorney, Gene Scott, said he had been under the assumption that prosecutors were using screenshots of text conversations. Instead, the district attorney's office said while some evidence did include actual screenshots, other parts of conversations had been extracted and placed into an easier-to-read format for the jury. Scott called for a mistrial because of the error, but Goodwin decided against it. Goodwin did warn the prosecution against further errors and chose to inform the jury about the nature of the evidence. He instructed them not to consider the flawed message as evidence. After that matter was settled, Stacy completed her testimony. Following Stacy, prosecutors called Randy Wood, the father of Boswell's ex-boyfriend Hunter Wood, to the stand. Randy Wood recalled hiring Boswell and noted that despite her having a child, she told him she could work as many hours as needed at his Blountville restaurant, Hunter T's Chicken Shack. He told the court about how she and his son began to spend time together and how she spent a few nights at his home. Randy Wood was adamant, however, that he never saw Evelyn, nor was she ever at his home. When questions turned to his son, Randy Wood informed jurors that Hunter Wood was in a mental health facility in Marion, Virginia in a state that would not allow him to participate in the court proceedings. He said Hunter Wood would not make sense when he talked and at times did not recognize his family. Deputy District Attorney William Harper asked when Hunter Wood's mental health began deteriorating. 'When he got accused of being a baby killer,' Randy Wood answered. While cross-examining Randy Wood, Scott asked about any violent tendencies his son may experience, which the father said he did not know about. Scott also posed questions about Hunter Wood's condition and diagnosis, as well as if he ever talked about people stealing his thoughts. Randy Wood said he was not familiar with anything of the sort. Scott also asked if Hunter Wood ever mentioned aluminum foil or talked about Boswell or Evelyn. Randy Wood said he did not. After the court learned about the state of Hunter Wood, Ethan Perry was called as a witness. Perry was at one time believed to be the biological father of Evelyn; however, it was revealed on Friday that he found out he was not. Perry was another ex-boyfriend of Boswell's. The two met in high school and dated for years, even for some time after graduation when Perry enlisted in the U.S. Army. After his training and assignment to Fort Polk in Louisiana, Perry described their relationship as unhealthy. Perry told the court that after Boswell informed him she was pregnant in spring 2018, he was skeptical it was his child. In his testimony, Perry described a time in 2019, after Evelyn's birth, when Boswell and the child came and visited him unexpectedly in El Paso, Texas while he was on assignment with his unit. Boswell and Evelyn stayed with Perry for a few days, and Perry said that was the only time he ever saw Evelyn. He claimed to still doubt Evelyn was his child. When Evelyn was reported missing, Perry stated he was contacted by the Tennessee Department of Children's Services and was investigated by the Army as well. He insisted that Evelyn had never been to the fort in Louisiana, nor had he seen her except for the El Paso visit. Perry confirmed that through a DNA submission, he learned he was not Evelyn's father. Perry's grandfather, whom he lived with, also testified and said Boswell had not been to his property since she and Perry were in high school and that Evelyn had never been there. The final witness called was Michelle Gilliam, a lieutenant with the Sullivan County Sheriff's Office who was a detective at the time Evelyn was considered missing. She was part of the investigation into Evelyn's disappearance and was on-scene the night Evelyn's remains were recovered at Tommy Boswell's property in Blountville. Gilliam commented on a February 2020 interview she had with Boswell after the DCS report was filed, and that interview was played for jurors. In it, Boswell claims she left Evelyn with Perry and had not seen her child since Christmas 2019. Gilliam encourages Boswell be honest with investigators and tells her point-blank she does not think things are adding up. After the video was shown, prosecutors began providing Gilliam with dozens of photos, which she identified as being the shed on Tommy Boswell's property where investigators found several baby items, many of which were stained or dirty, scattered about. Scott had few questions for Gilliam, and court ended for the day. The trial will continue Saturday at 10:30 a.m. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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