Contestants for the 130rd Sequim Irrigation Festival’s royalty court include, from left, Roxy Woods, Glenna Cary, Lily Tjemsland, Malachi Byrne and Joanna Morales. The pageant will be at 6 p.m. Saturday at Sequim High School’s auditorium. (Keith Ross, Keith’s Frame of Mind)

Contestants for the 130rd Sequim Irrigation Festival’s royalty court include, from left, Roxy Woods, Glenna Cary, Lily Tjemsland, Malachi Byrne and Joanna Morales. The pageant will be at 6 p.m. Saturday at Sequim High School’s auditorium. (Keith Ross, Keith’s Frame of Mind)

Five candidates set for Irrigation Festival royalty

Creative displays, QA featured on Saturday

SEQUIM — Five contestants for royalty for the Sequim Irrigation Festival will seek a seat at the upcoming Royalty Scholarship Pageant.

Malachi Byrne, Glenna Cary, Joanna Morales, Lily Tjemsland and Roxy Woods will share creative displays, answer questions and perform at 6 p.m. Saturday at Sequim High School’s auditorium, 533 N. Sequim Ave.

Tickets are available in advance from contestants, at the First Federal Sequim Avenue branch and at the door.

Cost is $15 for adults and $5 for those 10 and younger.

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This year marks the festival’s 130th anniversary, and it maintains its streak as Washington’s longest continuous running festival.

The royalty will represent Sequim with appearances at about 20 events across the region, including the Sequim Irrigation Festival’s two weekends of events set for May 2-10.

After a year as royalty, they’ll receive scholarships for their efforts.

For more information about upcoming events, visit irrigation festival.com.

The contestants include:

Malachi Byrne

Sponsor: BrokersGroup Real Estate

Platform: Raise awareness for Captain Joseph House Foundation

Creative display: Perform “Ashokan Farewell” on violin

Byrne, a Sequim native, said one thing that is distinct about him is his many interests, including mountain biking, fiddling, video game design, building computers, being outdoors and more.

“I am very busy for a high school student,” he said. “It’s good to be busy.”

While he has many interests, Byrne said his passion has always been in helping others, which led him to discover scouting.

He joined Cub Scouts as a first-grader and as a Life Rank in Scouting America, formerly Boy Scouts of America, is working toward his Eagle Scout, the highest rank in scouting.

Byrne said scouting’s virtues have helped him become the person he is today and, as a member of Scout Troop 90, he’s been involved in supporting many community organizations.

While serving as a scout at the Captain Joseph House Foundation’s Memorial Day ceremony, Byrne said he discovered his desire to support families who have lost loved ones in service to the country. If selected to the royalty, he’d want to support the education of the Captain Joseph House Foundation.

Upon graduating high school and Peninsula College with an Associate’s degree, Byrne hopes to attend the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to pursue an electrical engineering degree.

In Sequim, his favorite place to go is Carrie Blake Community Park because he has spent so much time there playing, and as a scout volunteering for events such as the Sequim Lavender Festival.

He said the Sequim Irrigation Festival is an important tradition for the community because it brings awareness to the importance of agriculture and local history. He hopes to be the festival’s first king.

Glenna Cary

Sponsor: Glamorous

Platform: supporting children in the hospital

Creative Display: Singing “Homecoming Queen” by Kelsea Ballerini

Cary, also a Sequim native, has a passion for cosmetology as she’s helped out in her mother’s salon. She said being part of the royalty court has been a lifelong dream. When she was little, her mother would do the royalty’s hair before the parade and she loved seeing all the princesses in their dresses.

Since she loved princesses so much as a girl, her mom bid and won a birthday party for Cary when she turned 6. The royalty came to her party and gave her a mixed CD of upbeat songs.

“I still have (it) and I listen to it sometimes because it gives me really happy memories,” she said.

She likes the festival because everyone in town seems so happy and there’s something for everyone.

In her spare time, Cary enjoys making floral arrangements, making new recipes for her family to enjoy for dinner, discovering new skills, getting a coffee from Original Grinds Coffee Shop (OG) and going to the Dungeness River Railroad Bridge. Cary said she has owned seven birds — Shrek, Jasmine, Olive, Jazzy, Tony, Thud and Blue.

Cary said she was born with a birth defect that required at least 13 surgeries as a baby, leading to a scar on her stomach. She’s worked hard, with support from her family, to overcome body image issues, and has grown to love herself.

For her platform, she has chosen to support hospitalized children with a day of the royalty to paint nails, have fun and help the young patients feel special and have confidence.

She’s working on her cosmetology license apprenticing with her mom.

Joanna Morales

Sponsor: Dungeness Kids Co.

Platform: support Sequim Food Bank

Creative Display: Folklórico dance

Morales has lived in Sequim since she was 3. She enjoys the outdoors and visiting Carrie Blake Community Park and Railroad Bridge Park.

Morales said she’s gained an appreciation for nature in Sequim, leading her to start a small backyard garden with her parents to grow onions, beans, corn and more. She also enjoys baking and listening to a variety of music in her free time.

Next school year, she’ll attend the University of Washington to pursue a biology degree.

Morales said she looks forward to going to the Irrigation Festival each year, especially the Grand Parade. She and her family tend to watch it “anywhere we can get a good view,” which has been the 101 Diner in recent years.

For her, the festival brings up good childhood memories and she’s known many people who have participated in the festival in some capacity, including her cousin Karla Najera, who was queen in 2017.

Morales said while she was middle school, she planned a family trip to Seattle to see Christmas lights. She booked the tickets, found the routes and ferries and more.

“I remember being so stressed out until we got there and they stamped the tickets, and once we got in, I was so happy,” she said.

“My parents have always told me I’m really independent, and if I want to do something, I just do it. I, of course, think it through, first, though.”

Over the last year and a half, Morales has volunteered at the Sequim Food Bank each Saturday and she said it has deeply impacted her. She’s helped lead the Saturday events where teens volunteer for the program and supported Sequim High School’s Boo Hunger Campaign around Halloween.

Morales said she’s passionate about helping other people and her platform will involve raising awareness about food insecurity and encouraging others to get involved in supporting their community.

Lily Tjemsland

Sponsor: Olympic Theatre Arts

Platform: Support the Welfare for Animal Guild (WAG)

Creative Display: Acting as Dorothy from “The Wizard of Oz”

Tjemsland has lived in Sequim since she was 6 and said she’s fortunate to be part of a Sequim pioneer family. Last year, she had the delight of watching her grandmother Shirley be celebrated as an honored pioneer.

Tjemsland said being in a pioneer family has given her a deeper appreciation of Sequim’s sense of community, and it’s one of the reasons she wants to be on the royalty court.

Through her years in Sequim, she’s enjoyed going to the Grand Parade, pageant and various festival events, and she’s learned how much farming and irrigation has meant to her family and Sequim.

Among her favorite places to go, Tjemsland said she particularly loves the water at the Dungeness Spit. She’s even hiked to the New Dungeness Lighthouse a handful of times.

Her passions include science, fashion, art, theater and volunteering.

She loves all forms of art, including ceramics and theater, and is proud of an Audrey II statue she made last year as an homage to “Little Shop of Horrors.”

“I love that musical so much, and I got to watch it and I felt really inspired so I made a really big Audrey sculpture,” Tjemsland said.

For her creative display, she’ll share her acting chops performing as Dorothy, reminiscing about her time in Oz and longing to go back.

Tjemsland said she has acted in many plays and has started volunteering for Olympic Theatre Arts. She helped with makeup for the zombies in “Night of the Living Dead.”

Tjemsland also is an animal lover and has three rescue dogs: Martha, Fern and Cosmo. She also volunteered for a few years with an alpaca rescue, and she looks to support Welfare for Animals Guild through her platform, if selected.

Roxy Woods

Sponsor: Woods Guitar Service

Platform: Raise awareness for Celiac Disease

Creative Display: Ballet

Woods moved to Sequim three years ago with her family. She holds a passion for the arts along with science and mathematics.

From an early age, Woods said she knew she wanted to be a ballerina. While she’s done other dance styles, ballet is what she wants to pursue professionally. She said she trains hard to perfect her technique, whether it be with Port Angeles City Ballet or at home.

After graduating from high school, she plans to audition for several ballet companies. For the pageant, she’ll perform “Cupid’s Variation” from the “Don Quixote” ballet.

Upon fulfilling her ballet goals, she plans to finish degrees to become a dietitian because healthy eating and dietary awareness is very important to her. She was diagnosed with Celiac Disease at a young age and wants to bring awareness to the disorder, and she might look to do a food drive for gluten-free and Celiac Disease-friendly food items for the Sequim Food Bank.

In Sequim, she enjoys going to Carrie Blake Community Park and its Dog Park with her three dogs Charlotte, Gomez and Pugsley.

While she’s relatively new to the area, Woods said she’s grown up loving festivals and parades, including during her time in Port Orchard and in Hong Kong.

“It’s something that my family always participates in, regardless of where we are,” she said.

In Port Orchard’s Fathoms O’ Fun Festival, she remembers their princesses and a feeling that she wanted to be one, too.

“As I got older and learned more about it, I thought, ‘Wow, this is a great community thing too, and it’s a great way to get involved and get to know people,’” Woods said.

Her favorite part of any festival is the parade, she said, and she and her family tend to gather in front of the Co-Op Farm and Garden.

________

Matthew Nash is a reporter with the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which is composed of Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum. He can be reached by email at matthew.nash@sequimgazette.com.

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