Lions Club Cake Auction Set

Lions Club Cake Auction Set The annual Lions Club meal and cake auction is set for 6 p.m. Thursday at the Foley Building at the Blaine County Fairgrounds. In years past, brisket was always the featured menu item, but this year there is a change afoot.

The club has decided to also provide smoked pork butt along with the traditional brisket. It will of course be accompanied by baked beans and the other standard barbecue trimmings. Steve Young is serving as the pit master this year. Cake for dessert will also be part of the plate, at a cost of $15 per meal.

The real draw, though, no matter how delicious the meal, is the cake auction. This year the proceeds will benefit the Lions Club scholarship fund, according to Alvin Woodruff.

For as many years as the auction has been held, there has been a gentle rivalry among the bakers of Blaine County to earn the title of high earning cake at the auction. The top dollar has been earned by bakers of repute, like the late Patsy Davis, or Janice Hood, or half a dozen others whose reputation carried the day. There have been times when the presentation was everything. A beautifully decorated cake, or one shaped and decorated like a preferred breed of cattle has also brought in the big bucks. And sometimes it was the description of the offered confection.

Those descriptions are given in great detail, year after year, by Chris and John Ridenhour of Ridenhour Auctions. This year is no exception as the father-son duo are donating their time and talents to the event.

And whether you are a Lion, or a parent who is hopeful his or her child will nab one of the club scholarships, or simply a member of the community who wants to support an event and charity of long standing, there is a place for you at the meal.

Just because a patron comes out to the feed doesn’t mean they have to have deep pockets, Woodruff explained. Coming out and buying a plate while spending time and offering fellowship to folks they haven’t seen in a while is more than enough to warrant locals braving a chilly January evening.