CHAMPION—August 18, 2025

Two bass guitars, ten six stringed guitars, three mandolins, and two banjos plus a couple of vocalists made Vanzant’s Potluck Jam a humdinger on Thursday. On Sunday Vanzant’s entertainment came from beautiful rolls of thunder and a light shower. The thunder was distant, but lovely, in Champion where there were reports of twelve drops, and seven drops by neighbors just to the west. We remember what rain is like and are grateful for even distant thunder to remind us. We are also reminded that until we get some real rain, we need to be extremely cautious about any outside burning.
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Even way out in West Texas back in the 1950’s when we heard “The Sugarfoot Rag” we knew it was time for the Ozarks Jubilee, a program we never missed on our brand-new television. It is lovely to hear it again along will all the other tunes Tom Peters shares from the McClurg Jam and the Oldfield Opry. Thanks, Tom! This week we heard that one and “Muleskinner Blues” and “I Saw the Light” from Oldfield. From McClurg we were blessed with “Seamus O’Brien,” “Oklahoma Redbird,” “The Cat Came Back,” “Home Brew Rag,” “Milk Cow Blues,” and “Great Big Taters in Sandy Land.” The potluck goodies, the visiting and all the musical camaraderie do not come through on the internet, but distant Champions are grateful for the virtual windows into the old store on nights filled with music.
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“Dry and Dusty” is another great old fiddle tune and it truly speaks to current conditions in these parts. In the old days when the kids were young and there were no air conditioners, some Champions spent a lot more time at the creek than they do now as old folks, cozy and cool watching the electric meter spin. We must appreciate the farmers and merchants, construction workers and laborers of all kinds performing necessary tasks out in the heat. They are keeping the country working. Of course, those ball players, Chiefs, Royals and Cardinals are out there perspiring for glory and for our entertainment. Thanks. Most folks have a cell phone these days and have it with them when they go out. It is also a good idea to have a hat and water in the car or truck and to be sure our shoes are built for walking. Weather prognosticators seem to be saying that the worst of it is almost over. We will believe it when we feel it. Critters are feeling it too. Deer, groundhogs, squirrels and birds and all our local fauna are also at risk. All those cows out there in their fur coats huddle in the shade when they can find it.
Thursday evening had our Champion friend Kaitlyn McConnell up in the Nation’s Capital enjoying a concert at The Library of Congress by the “Creek Rocks,” a musical duo comprised of Mark Bilyeu and Cindy Woolf. They have been studying in the American Folklife Center Archives listening to songs recorded by Ozarkers many years ago. Kaitlyn and Mike O’Brian visited Champion on a Wednesday on their way to lunch at Rockbridge. She told us then that she would be going to D.C. and was only lamenting that the Capital would be militarized while she was there. We look forward to her report on the concert and on the state of the Capital city!
We are also looking forward to a visit by Bobby Emery on his big road grader. One Champion up on the North end of Cold Springs Road says when he hears that machine he will rush out and greet him with a cold beer. A neighbor further to the south on that road has chocolate chip cookies ready for him. We have confidence that if and when he gets here, he will roll those big rocks out of the road and smooth the path to Champion.
All the excitement and hard work getting ready for the start of school is paying off. Students have been busy getting haircuts and new school clothes while teachers and staff have been getting the campus ready for another great year. The Champion School was consolidated into Skyline along with Denlow and a couple of other small schools back in the 1950s. It is one of only two little rural schools left in Douglas County. School days, dear old golden rule days, will surely be some of the conversations going on at the Champion Reunion on Saturday the 30th. It is a potluck luncheon with everyone welcome. Bring a dish and join the fun down at the end of the pavement (the very fancy new pavement with the bright yellow stripes down the middle of it) on the wide, wild, wooly banks of Old Fox Creek in Champion—Looking on the Bright Side!
