SEQUIM — A limo ride may be out, but plenty of burgers are in for this year’s Sequim Irrigation Festival button designer winner.
Kendall Adolphe received a certificate and $100 to Shadowline Burgers and Brews for her design work in the festival’s 127th year.
Liz Parks, president of RE/MAX Prime, presented Kendall, an 11-and-a-half-year-old fifth grader at Helen Haller Elementary, with the prizes.
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, Parks would take the winner and a group of friends to lunch in a limo ride courtesy of the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe.
“It’s one of my favorite things to do,” Parks said. “I love the children. I’m disappointed we weren’t able to go on a limo ride for the third year. It’s always a lot of fun.”
For her design that features lavender, mountains and water, Kendall, also a member of Clallam County 4H Junior Royalty, said she was inspired “by the things around her all her life in Sequim.”
Michelle and Emma Rhodes, co-directors of the festival’s button sales, said the buttons will be first available at the festival’s Kickoff Dinner on March 19 at 7 Cedars Casin.
Soon thereafter it will offered at local businesses through mid-May and the Sequim-Dungeness Valley Chamber of Commerce through the summer. Locations will be posted at www.facebook.com/SequimIrrigation Festival/.
The Rhodes said there were more than 250 entries from children in first-fifth grades in Sequim School District boundaries.
“We are so thankful for the support given by the staff at Greywolf Elementary, Helen Haller Elementary, and Olympic Peninsula Academy,” the mother-daughter team said.
Those who entered did not have to attend a Sequim School District school, organizers said.
Students did not sell buttons for a chance at prizes due to COVID-19 precautions, the Rhodes’ said.
For more on the Sequim Irrigation Festival, which will be from May 6-14, visit irrigationfestival.com/.