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    Editorial: Leaping social fences helps build community – Traverse City Record Eagle - August 7, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Good fences make good neighbors or so the old saying goes. And its true, to a point. A moderate amount of privacy is a valuable commodity.

    But giving up some degree of personal privacy to work closely with neighbors can break down social fences and allow us to learn about our community.

    A group of volunteers organized through Mancelonas Pathway Community Church this week leaped over social fences to lend their construction skills to neighbors. Several teams of three or four volunteers each participants in the Hands and Feet Camp tackled a variety of projects during the course of three days.

    They just kind of threw us in, said volunteer Hannah Riffell. When people think of mission work, they think you have to go to Africa. But you can find mission work right in your own backyard.

    Any communitys collective backyard is made up of all local residents backyards and front yards. Privacy is valuable, but so is the willingness to notice neighbors in distress and perhaps lend them a hand.

    Strong communities rely on citizen involvement and on neighborly concern. That concern can be exercised in council meetings or in volunteer work. Participation in the community requires some breach in the wall of privacy. A cohesive community cannot truly exist without communication and cooperation.

    The Hands and Feet Camp in Mancelona started with someone noticing that neighbors could use a little assistance. That, in itself, was a bit of an invasion of privacy but in a good way.

    Everyone values privacy. It can feel awkward if neighbors are having a formal garden party and you want to catch some rays in your unfenced backyard. But, like everything in life, the quest for privacy can go too far.

    Fences so tall they block the sun make it impossible to enjoy your own backyard. Social fences so sturdy that they prevent interaction with neighbors make it difficult to make friends and influence people. Not all fences are made from wood. Some are constructed of an uncaring attitude.

    The practice of ignoring neighbors can turn us into a community of hermits, a collection of individuals who share a physical location but little else.

    Paying attention to people who live down the street, particularly those who are elderly or challenged, can help us understand our community and our place in it. Responding to those residents needs by doing something replacing a worn wheelchair ramp, mowing a lawn or painting a house builds a stronger community.

    The issue

    n Neighbors helping neighbors

    Our view

    n Work given freely results in a more cohesive community

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    Editorial: Leaping social fences helps build community - Traverse City Record Eagle

    Corey Dillon wishes to mend fences with Bengals – USA TODAY - July 12, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Corey Dillon breaks loose on a 37-yard gain in the third quarter, leaving Denver safety Billy Jenkins in the truf behind him. Dillon set an NFL single-game rushing record with 278 yards.(Photo: Patrick Reddy/The Enquirer)

    Corey Dillon made a career of leaving wreckage in his wake.

    He left the Denver Broncos bruised and embarrassed during his 22-carry, 278-yard, then-NFL record rushing day in 2000. A string of opponents suffered his tenacious running style racking up six consecutive 1,100-yard seasons for the Bengals from 1997-2002.

    Yet, Dillons notorious claim hed rather flip burgers than return to the team in 2000 and stating he wanted out in 2003 left scars on Bengals management before eventually being dealt to New England.

    Hed win a Super Bowl during his greatest season with the Patriots in 2004 and career numbers should place him in more Hall of Fame conversations.

    Still, the path to his ultimate moment in the league was tattered thanks to a rocky means to his Cincinnati end.

    Dillon, 42, can see that now. Hes never made contact with the Bengals nor vice versa about a return to Paul Brown Stadium or opportunity to mend fences.

    Until now.

    As one of the top 50 players in Bengals history the team reached out to invite him back to be honored during a game, as is the case with 49 others. For him, the opportunity presents an ideal opportunity to repair the most significant carnage left behind during his career.

    I am a grown man, I can admit when Im wrong, Dillon said. I did some stuff that was not cool, OK? Not cool at all. But, hey, at the end of the day I got the end result that I wanted. That was to play on a stage and actually winning a Super Bowl. Do I wish it would have been with them? Absolutely. Absolutely. It didnt work out that way. I dont have no ill will toward nobody there.

    For anyone expecting a grudge, you wont find one at Dillons home in Los Angeles. All youll find is a man content in his anonymity and only concerned with finally breaking 80 on the golf course he plays nearly every day.

    Hes been retired from the NFL for 10 years now. As in-your-face as Dillon was as a player, he took the opposite approach after football.

    Dillon hasnt talked about his polarizing career in Cincinnati. In fact, outside of being tracked down by a tenacious TMZ reporter, even a Google search yields few signs of his whereabouts the last decade. But in speaking with The Enquirer last week for the Bengals Beat Podcast, he felt ready to be heard yet again. Only this time, the mature Dillon played the role of peacemaker rather than bully.

    They say time heals wounds, Dillon said. I played seven years hard for the Bengals. Im a part of their history. They are a part of mine. I dont dwell on the past. What happened in the past is done. If I had a magic wand to go undo some stuff I would, but I cant. But that doesnt mean we cant move forward and have a better relationship. Thats how I look at it. I appreciate it for them giving me a call and inviting me back. That means a lot.

    Bengals' running back Coey Dillon, 28, waves to the fans as he leaves Cinergy Field for the last time following the Bengals' win over the Cleveland Browns. Cincinnati Enquirer photo by Gary Landers.(Photo: Gary Landers/The Enquirer)

    Dillons more than part of their history, hes at the forefront of their record books. His 246 rushing yards as a rookie against the Tenessee Oilers then set the NFL mark for most rushing yards in a game by a rookie. Four players topped the mark since led by Adrian Peterson in 2007, but Dillon still holds the top three individual rushing games in team history. His 278 against Denver tops the chart followed by 246 against Houston and 216 against Arizona in 2000.

    He also owns the club record for career attempts (1,865), yards (8,061) and 100-yard games (28). He ranks 20th all-time in rushing yards (11,241), between Hall of Famers John Riggins and O.J. Simpson.

    What makes Dillons records more impressive was during the six-year run in which he carried the load prior to Rudi Johnson taking over in 2003, heres a list of quarterbacks handing him the ball: Boomer Esiason (his final season in the NFL), Neil ODonnell, Scott Mitchell, Akili Smith, Gus Frerotte, Jon Kitna, Paul Justin.

    On the day of Dillons greatest game and against one of the best defenses in football at the time, Smith and Mitchell combined to go 2 for 14 for 34 yards through the air.

    Two. Fourteen. Thirty-four.

    Dillons effort now ranks fourth all-time behind Peterson (30-296), Jamal Lewis (30-295) and Jerome Harrison (34-286). None of those three can boast the 12.6 yards per rush of that miraculous day at PBS.

    Cincinnati Bengals running back Corey Dillon (28) holds up the ball after scoring on a two-yard run in 1999.(Photo: David Kohl/The Enquirer)

    I take my record the way I broke it over theirs any day, Dillon said. Thats 22 carries. They took more carries, played worse defenses than I did and I stack my day up against theirs any day. They can have the record. Thats fine. The way I did it, Ill take that over all of them.

    Dillons cleats, jersey and pants from the game went to the Hall of Fame and the Bengals gave him a plaque recognizing his effort.

    Thats where a telling revelation in this tale emerges 17 years later. Dillon rolled up a career-high 1,635 yards and 12 touchdowns en route to powering the Patriots to the Super Bowl XXXIX title. By far his most dominant season. He says his championship ring has only been taken out two or three times since and lives in the darkness of a safe somewhere.

    The plaque from the Bengals, however, hangs prominently in his Los Angeles home.

    I clean that thing off every other day, Dillon said. Thats one of my favorite items that I have. It never gets old to me. Every time I go into my man cave and I look at it, it brings back that memory.

    Thats why the invitation to return as part of the Bengals 50 best players program means so much to Dillon. He looks back understanding the error in the ways of his youth and preferring to remember what went right in Cincinnati rather than what went wrong.

    Perhaps time does heal all wounds. And for Dillon, its time.

    Whether you like me or not, the fact is Im one of their top 50 players, Dillon said. I would love to come back and have everything smooth, nice and peachy. Absolutely. Thats a dream. Come back and everybody is understanding and we let bygones be bygones. Ive been done with it. Im over it. Its been too long. I havent played in 10 years. Worrying about something that happened in 2003 is not on my list to deal with. Trust me.

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    Corey Dillon wishes to mend fences with Bengals - USA TODAY

    Fences may keep others out, but they keep us in, too – Albuquerque Journal - July 12, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

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    Why take down a fence? Because, as farmers and ranchers understand better than most, economies are fluid: much of the barbed wire that once served to keep out livestock grows obsolete in an era when cash crops, not cattle, rule. Fences may feel permanent, but economies and cultures exist in perpetual flux. And in a volatile global economy ruled by volatile leaders, the fences we erect today to protect our assets are sometimes those that limit our potential tomorrow.

    I grew up on a seventh-generation farm where Robert Frosts line good fences make good neighbors enjoyed the weight of papal decree. And yet, even for dont-fence-me-in types like me, Trumps $1.6 million budget for a brick-and-mortar wall along Americas southern border demands a common-sense reply.

    In over 20 years of fence-building from Iowa to New Mexico, Ive learned that fences come with a built-in paradox. While they make it difficult to get in, they make it proportionally difficult to get out. On Western ranches, Ive put up hundreds of feet of fence in ruggedly beautiful country. And with each post sunk, Ive experienced a sinking feeling at the logic of willingly sacrificing the long view for the myopic and often mythic protections of a wall.

    Consider, too, this inconvenient truth: fences require perpetual maintenance. Like the fraught decision to apply a first coat of paint to a home, the building of a fence commits the fencer, or in this case the fencing nation, to years of upkeep. Shouldnt risk-adverse, dont-tread-on-me types like me those of us predisposed to the fencers mentality in the first place be naturally wary of the no-horizon clause and no easy out commitment of a national wall? Even the urbanite putting up store-bought fence panel from a big box store knows the frustration at having to go around where once they exited freely at their own convenience. Its a straight-up paradox: in fencing others out, we often unwittingly box ourselves in.

    Dont get me wrong, years of fence-building and mending have shown me that walls do serve a purpose, though they are far from the cure-all our current fencer-in-chief would have us believe. Used strategically and with care, they sometimes solve persistent problems between neighbors locked in territorial disputes or culture wars.

    In the end, however, we should be cautious where our impulse to cordon off is concerned. We should weigh carefully our own motives, the alleged benefits and, most urgently, the literal and figurative cost of building walls the angels of our better natures might soon tear down.

    Zachary Michael Jack is the author of many books on rural and agrarian culture, most recently Wish You Were Here: Love and Longing in an American Heartland (2017).

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    Fences may keep others out, but they keep us in, too - Albuquerque Journal

    Fences, maidens, barns brought before Perrysburg planning and zoning – Sentinel-Tribune - July 12, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    PERRYSBURG The division of planning and zoning gave several recommendations for renovations and additions during a series of meetings on Monday.

    During the Architectural Review Committee meeting, the board reviewed a signage package for Fort Meigs Family Chiropractic. Mark Easterling, zoning inspector, remarked that he found the requested signage to be within requirements. The board unanimously approved the recommendations and a motion for the package was moved forward.

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    Fences, maidens, barns brought before Perrysburg planning and zoning - Sentinel-Tribune

    WSDOT: Need more time to replace snow fences along State Route 241 – Yakima Herald-Republic - July 12, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    YAKIMA, Wash. -- Snow fences along a Lower Valley highway are not going to be replaced any time soon.

    State Department of Transportation officials were hoping to replace the State Route 241 fences that were destroyed in a range fire last year in time for this winter. But the work is being delayed so engineers can examine the area and determine the best way to proceed, said WSDOT spokeswoman Summer Derrey.

    The fences were used to reduce the amount of snow blowing on to the road, a popular connector route for Lower Valley residents heading to the Hanford nuclear reservation and other points in eastern Washington.

    This winter, the road was closed for the equivalent of nine days from mid-December to early February as a result of blowing snow.

    Derrey said among the concerns are finding a cost-effective material that could survive wildfires like the one that destroyed the original fencing.

    "Creating a wooden structure would be pointless, because it would burn," Derrey said.

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    WSDOT: Need more time to replace snow fences along State Route 241 - Yakima Herald-Republic

    Hax: To mend fences, improve yourself – StarTribune.com – Minneapolis Star Tribune - July 12, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Dear Carolyn: My fiancs sister and I have a strained relationship. I see her only at Thanksgiving, Christmas and occasional family events. She does not acknowledge me upon entering a room, her home, or my home. She heads straight to one of her family members without a word even when I acknowledge her. As the event progresses, she may engage me in a conversation, but only about her job, her vacation, her husband, etc. Never a question about me.

    I believe this stems from her jealousy of my son and his accomplishments, as her son had the same opportunities, but did not put in the same effort as mine did.

    I am not sure how to handle this and every time I see her she infuriates me.

    Carolyn says: So your best explanation is your own awesomeness, basically.

    Its rare that my sympathies change so abruptly over the course of a short letter. Paragraph 1, Im feeling your pain; seven words into Paragraph 2 Im on Team Sister and googling whiplash symptoms.

    To each his own, of course, but if I had to pick one common denominator to human likability, Id choose this: humility, manifest as willingness to look inward for fault when something goes awry.

    The alternative is to be the finger-pointer, the one who finds someone or something else to blame for her misfortune, thereby asserting by implication her own purity or righteousness. Those are the off-putting ways of a know-it-all.

    This is not to say your fiancs sister is blameless; her ignoring you is bush-league stuff. She doesnt have to like you, but civility demands that she at least throw a hi-how-are-you your way. This lapse could hint at other failings, as well (though mere awkwardness seems possible, too).

    But you cant fix what she does. You can only fix what you do and for that you have to be open to the possibility that some of your choices are flawed enough to need fixing. Which means admitting fault.

    You give yourself a great place to start in your letter: Admit you are smug about your son and his accomplishments.

    Then, admit your smugness could have at least some part in alienating your fiancs sister.

    Then use this insight to approach her from now on not as a rude familial appendage, but as your equal in the struggle to be understood and appreciated.

    Thats a fine place to start any do-over regardless: shared humanity.

    Specifically, make the effort to see her, to see how you might legitimately annoy her instead of focusing only on how she annoys you and to see how you can be the one to disarm.

    Im not offering this as some miracle path to friendship. You might just not like each other, and for good reasons.

    But your marrying her brother means shes not going away, so doing the hard work to soften your opinion of her will be worthwhile no matter how it plays out; compassion mends what contempt tears apart.

    Plus, this is not the last difficult relationship you will ever have to navigate. If you can go into these situations from now on with full awareness that sometimes you are the bad guy, then youll have taken the most important step toward not becoming just that.

    E-mail Carolyn Hax at tellme@washpost.com.

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    Hax: To mend fences, improve yourself - StarTribune.com - Minneapolis Star Tribune

    On NAFTA: Good trade deals, not fences, make good neighbors – The Hill (blog) - July 12, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The office of the U.S. Trade Representative recently held a marathon three-day hearing to discuss the future of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in the Trump era. This effectively began the process of renegotiating one of our most important and controversial trade pacts.

    To say NAFTA has been a political lightning rod would be an understatement. On the campaign trail, Trump wasted no opportunity to trash the pact, at one point saying, NAFTA is the worst trade deal maybe ever signed anywhere, but certainly ever signed in this country.

    Unfortunately, President Trump does not appear to be following the same pattern as his predecessor. In addition to taking steps to renegotiate NAFTA, the administration has engaged in several smaller, yet still troubling trade spats that have strained economic relationships in North America.

    For instance, frustrations over access to Canadian dairy markets led to the administration retaliating with a hefty 20-percent tariff on Canadian softwood lumber, a key product for home building. This could significantly increase the price of new homes, asthe cost of lumber accounts for about 17 percent of the construction cost of the average house, according to data from the National Association of Home Builders.

    Tensions have increased further due to a recent spat between U.S.-based Boeing and the Canadian company Bombardier. Boeing has alleged it is being harmed because Bombardier is dumping its aircraft in the United States. This is a peculiar claim because the dispute centers around a Bombardier airplane in a class where Boeing manufactures no competing products.

    Nonetheless, the U.S. Commerce Department is currently reviewing Boeings request for duties and is expected to issue a ruling in September. This could raise the price of aircraft and, subsequently, result in higher prices for airline passengers.

    Things are escalating even further now that the Trump White House is reportedly considering hefty tariffs on imported steel and aluminum. The exact size and scope of these tariffs which almost comically are being suggested in the interest of national security remains unclear. Yet, Canada, which is our largest source for imported steel, is far from pleased with the threat and currently pursuing an exemption.

    The economic implications of these tariffs are enormous, as steel and aluminum are essential for the manufacturing of everything from automobiles to beer cans. Consumer prices could skyrocket if the administration puts these taxes into effect.

    These are troubling times when it comes to free trade, broadly, and our critical relationship with our North American neighbors, specifically. The worsening climate will only make NAFTA renegotiation more difficult. Still, if done properly, this process could be beneficial to all three nations. That would require the Trump administration to approach the process with several key priorities in mind.

    First, NAFTA renegotiation must not result in any new tariffs on imports or exports. One of NAFTAs crowning achievements was phasing out virtually all tariffs between the three countries. Moving in the opposite direction would be harmful to American businesses, consumers and taxpayers. Particularly problematic is the fact that import tariffs are almost always regressive in nature, meaning that lower-income Americans would be hit the hardest.

    Second, the Trump administration should push to reduce non-tariff barriers to trade. This means working to open up Canadas highly protected dairy market and liberalize Mexicos protectionist sugar and energy policies. These will not be easy tasks and will arguably be more difficult in a trilateral arrangement than they were in the multilateral Trans-Pacific Partnership process.

    Finally, its imperative for the administration to recognize the vital importance of a strong relationship between the three nations. In an economic sense, Canada and Mexico are our largest trading partners and 14 million U.S. jobs are directly dependent on these relationships.

    Outside the economic realm, Canada and Mexico are important allies in geopolitical affairs. NAFTA renegotiation is about far more than economic growth and job creation. The stakes are extremely high, and its essential that this enormous undertaking leads to a stronger, more prosperous integrated relationship with our neighbors to the north and south.

    Brandon Arnold is the executive vice president of theNational Taxpayers Union, which supports lower taxes and smaller government at all levels, and theNational Taxpayers Union Foundation. He has testified on fiscal policy before Congress and numerous state legislative committees, and has appeared on several television and radio networks, including C-SPAN, Fox News, Fox Business, BNN, and Russia Today.Previously, he was director of government affairs at the Cato Institute and a research analyst at the National Republican Senatorial Committee. Follow him on Twitter@BrandonNTU.

    The views expressed by contributors are their own and not the views of The Hill.

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    On NAFTA: Good trade deals, not fences, make good neighbors - The Hill (blog)

    Fences Summary – Shmoop - July 3, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The first act of the play is a swirling portrait of Troy Maxson's life. We meet all the main people surrounding Troy. There's his best friend, Bono, whom he met while in prison. Now the two work together as garbage collectors and sip gin every Friday night. Then there's Rose, Troy's loving and dutiful wife. Lyons, Troy's son from a previous relationship, stops by to borrow some money. We also meet Gabriel, Troy's brother, who suffers from a World War II head wound and now thinks he is the archangel Gabriel. Last, there's Cory, Troy's son by Rose.

    Wilson plants all the major conflicts of the play in the first act. Troy is trying to break the racial barrier at work by becoming the first black garbage truck driver. This conflict is actually quickly resolved as Troy wins his battle. We also get strong hints in the first act that Troy is having an affair with a woman named Alberta.

    Ultimately, however, it seems that the main conflict of the play will involve Troy's son Cory. Cory has the chance to go to college on a football scholarship, but Troy refuses to sign the permission paper. Troy says he doesn't want his son to suffer from the same racial discrimination that kept Troy from being a pro baseball player. This tension comes to a head when Troy tells Cory's high school football coach that Cory can't play football anymore, which destroys Cory's hopes of going to college.

    Things start to go really bad for Troy in the play's second act. When Alberta becomes pregnant, he's forced to fess up to Rose about his affair. Making matters worse, Alberta dies in childbirth. Rose agrees to raise the baby girl, Raynell, but says she no longer considers herself Troy's woman.

    Not only does Troy lose his mistress and his wife, he also loses his best friend, Bono. We learn that the two men no longer hang out. This is partly because ever since Troy got the promotion to driver, the two don't work together anymore. More than that, though, it seems like Bono is really disappointed in Troy for having the affair. We also learn that Troy has had Gabriel put away in a mental hospital. Rose accuses him of doing this just to get half of Gabriel's disability check.

    The play comes to a climax when tensions explode between Troy and Cory and the two go at each other with a baseball bat. Though Troy wins the fight, he loses his son forever.

    The last scene of the play takes place years later on the day of Troy's funeral. We see Cory return home in a military uniform. He's gone out and made his own way in the world but is still struggling with the shadow of his father. He considers not going to the funeral, but is talked out of it by Rose. We're given hope that Cory is on the path to becoming his own man and forgiving his father when he and young Raynell sing a song together in honor of Troy.

    The play concludes when Gabriel returns. He tries to blow his trumpet to open the gates of heaven for Troy. When no sound comes out, he does a ritualistic dance and chant. In the play's final moment, we're told the gates of heaven are wide open.

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    Fences Summary - Shmoop

    Vinyl Fences – Cedar Rustic Fence Co. - July 3, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Imagine if we could reproduce the beautiful simplicity of the epic American white picket fence in a durable, maintenance-free material. We can! Cedar Rustic Fence Co.s vinyl fences look great and last a lifetime. With a Cedar Rustic vinyl fence, you can even go beyond the simplicity of white pickets. Our fences are available in multiple colors with styles to fit any home from traditional to contemporary.

    You may not know it from our name, but Cedar Rustic Fence Co. is the largest fabricator and installer of PVC fencing in the Chicagoland area. Each fence is precisely routed on one of our computer numerical controlled (CNC) machines and assembled specifically for you.

    Cedar Rustic Fence Co. always considers our customers first when manufacturing our vinyl fences. Most fence installers buy vinyl fencing products from third party manufacturers. These manufacturers are primarily concerned with their profitability and at times will skimp on product quality. Over the last 80 years, Cedar Rustic Fence Co. has gained perspective on the long-term value of customer service. We understand that compromising on product quality today will adversely impact the long-term success of our business.

    Whether you are looking to add privacy, security or character to your yard, CR Vinyl from Cedar Rustic Fence Co. is the right choice for you. Our lifetime warranty is the most comprehensive in the industry. We guarantee your vinyl fence will never chip, peel, warp or fade unevenly. If it does, we will fix it at no additional cost to you.

    Add charm to your yard and value to your property with a vinyl fence from Cedar Rustic Fence Co.

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    Vinyl Fences - Cedar Rustic Fence Co.

    Dawson Behl is National Fence Painting Champion – Hannibal.net - July 3, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The Hannibal Jaycees' first pee wee fence painting contest for ages 5 to 9 and girls' contest for ages 10 to 13 were a big success, with 35 children registered in the pee wee and 12 in the girls' contest.

    The Hannibal Jaycees' first pee wee fence painting contest for ages 5 to 9 and girls' contest for ages 10 to 13 were a big success, with 35 children registered in the pee wee and 12 in the girls' contest.

    Both took place Sunday, July 2, before the National Fence Painting. The national event had only four contestants, including the local and state winners from the previous day.

    Dawson Behl, 12, of New London, who won the state contest on July 1, was the winner. In addition to several prizes, he received the governors trophy, which may be displayed in the state capitol for one year. The trophy is to be returned to Hannibal on the Fourth of July in 2018, when Dawson will be a judge of the contest.

    Ben Schwartz, 12, of Hull, Ill., whose brother, Henry, won in 2016, finished the national contest in second place.

    Corgan Kramer, 12, who won the local contest on July 1, finished third, and Noah Lusk, 10, of Houston, Texas, fourth.

    Girls' winners announced

    Mollie Ferrel, 13, of Shakopee, Minn., won the girls' fence painting. Hannah Schindler, 10, of Hannibal, finished second, and Nicole Moore, 11, of New London, third.

    Hannah, the daughter of Russell and Jessica Schindler, had prepared for her fence painting debut by practicing her technique but not using paint. Her costume for the judging included a bag full of items such as a mouse, marbles and firecrackers.

    Three girls competing had been in the Tomboy Sawyer contest on Saturday. They were the new Tomboy Sawyer Rylee Rodriguez, Sophia Vandiver and Savannah Corey, who both also won contests at that event.

    Additional contestants were Alana Lemon, 10, Kaite Locke, 12, and Riah Wigfall, 10, all of Hannibal; Brook Doughty, 11, of New London; Delaney Bowie, 11, of Deer, Ark.; and Megan Boteler, 11, of Liberty, Mo.

    Natalie Vandiver wins pee wee contest

    The pee wee fence painting contest was won by Natalie Vandiver, 7, the daughter of Kristen and Josh Vandiver of Hannibal.

    Second place went to Landon Nichols, 8, of Hannibl, and third to Logan Upchurch, 9, of St. Charles, Mo.

    One contestant came from Berkeley, Calif. Moses Trujillo, 8, was visiting his grandparents, Jim and Nettie Antoinette of Macomb, Ill. After competing he said he had never painted anything except pictures. He discovered the brush was heavy, then decided, Maybe it was the paint. His family toured Mark Twain Cave on July 1, and his mother especially enjoyed Hannibal's historic homes, reporting, Mostly I love to see the old buildings in the city.

    Also competing in the pee wee contest were Hannibal youngsters Keegan Gillmore, Wyatt Terrill, Faith Watkins, Eran Dalton, Carlee McCoy, Tuck Danehy, Nathan Tweedy, Cathy Cothern, Allen Saxbury Jr., Zach Locke, Amara Coffey, Rorrie McCoy, Madison Straube, Bella Hayes, Rhett Hayes, and Kayln Butler.

    Young fence painters from New London were Noah Hathaway, Jessica Moore and Thomas Moore. Also competing were Michael Fries, Hull, Ill.; Emma Tate, Center, Mo.; Molly Boteler, Liberty, Mo.; Tyrani Cranmer, Thompson, Mo.; Henry Schwartz, Hull, Ill.; Sophia Lusk, Houston, Texas; Connie Janusz, Sedalia, Mo.; and Rowan McDonough, New Lenox, Ill.

    Short fences were provided for the pee wee contest. The Jaycees encouraged the crowd to support the company that provided the fences. This was 2x4's for Hope, which had a booth at the fence painting. Its founder, Chris Lawrence, explained to the crowd that each $3 or more donation for a 2x4 board helps build a tiny home for a homeless military veteran. The agency is based in Quincy, Ill., and the website is 2x4forhope.org.

    Reach reporter Bev Darr at bev.darr@courierpost.com.

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    Dawson Behl is National Fence Painting Champion - Hannibal.net

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