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2010
LORNA WEIR - "A 'FAIR'
FEW"
It's a real honour to be
asked for input into the
design of an arch, and over
the years I've been involved
with a 'Fair' few! Mind you,
the journey from the idea in
my head to the finished
creation isn't always a bed
of roses and come the
hallowed Fair E'en when
there's still shed loads to
do it's not the first time
I've vowed 'never again'!
But then come February when
the Retinue and all the
other characters are being
chosen and champing at the
bit to find out who's been
picked for what and if
there's anyone I know who
might need a hand. The firs
thing that needs to be done
is look at the area we have
to work with and I also have
to establish what the family
themselves in particular the
child whose arch it is want.
I usually arrive with a
couple of ideas and I always
try and offer something that
emulates the theme that the
school has picked, although
it can be good to come up
with something a little bit
different.
I'm often asked which of the
arches I have designed is my
favourite and I have to
admit that it has to be the
Merlin snow globe for Amy
Portis, when she was the
Queen of the Flower Girls
for the Public School in
2007. The snow globe was
achieved with a thick
transparent plastic
inflatable sphere that
opened to accommodate our
Medieval Merlin. It was then
zipped up the back and
inflated using a custom made
hand blower. Once it was
blown up it was anchored to
the stack of books by way of
four strong rubber loops
that moulded to the base of
the ball and tied onto four
large screw in hooks. Fully
filled with air the giant
ball measured a spectacular
three metres and this had
been performed only once up
at Galbraith's Farm where
the rest of the arch was
being built. I had
safeguarded that inflatable
sphere with my life as I was
absolutely terrified it
would be damaged and the
whole arch would be ruined.
You can imagine my face when
during the trial I noticed
that Elaine (Amy's mum) who
very sadly died last year
was supporting it with a
glowing orange cigarette in
her hand! On the Wednesday
evening before the Fair Day
we had everything in place,
leaving only the sphere to
be inflated the next day for
the folk going round the
arches. What I didn't
bargain for was a very
windy Fair E'en so blowy in
fact that when we inflated
the giant spectacle, the
wind caught the ball enough
to topple the weighted
Merlin inside which
consequently ripped the
secured loops out of the
hooks, and the ball, Merlin
and all landed in the front
garden. I can't repeat what
I said next and although we
managed to sort it all out
it took me a long time to
see the funny side of that
one!
Once the design of the arch
has been decided it's
amazing how it all takes
shape with friends, family
and neighbours volunteering
their various skills. It's
astonishing what a
determined Arch Committee
can shamelessly beg, steal
or borrow and I am always
gobsmacked at what people
hoard in their garages, huts
and attics that can be
recycled and used in the
project. For example in
Queen Shanagh Penman's Arch
last year the Tim Man that
drove the Bo'ness Tour Bus
was made almost entirely out
of a roll of linoleum. While
visiting the library with my
youngest son I persuaded the
librarian to let me have the
posters from their
Hippodrome exhibit once they
had dismantled it. When we
were going around the arches
last Fair E'en I bumped into
my pal who is a lab
technician at Bo'ness
Academy. She had provided me
with some old test tubes
that I had filled with green
dye water and plugged with
blue tac to use for the mini
emerald city in the floral
display that was in the
Hippodrome window. She had
just finished pointing out
that wee Emerald City to her
husband telling him proudly
that that was her
contribution to the whole
spectacle and for me that
honestly sums it all up.
Every little thing that
someone does or contributes
to help, no matter how large
or small makes a massive
difference. A chance
conversation Shanagh's dad
had two days before the Fair
E'en last year with a
stranger who was admiring
the Bus enabled us to finish
off the job with custom made
front grill. I suppose the
motto of that particular
story is buy nothing until
you absolutely have to
someone almost certainly
always has what you need or
if they don't they usually
know a man who does.
If I could change anything
about the way our town
embraces the whole approach
to building an Arch for
their child no matter what
part they have to play in
the Bo'ness Fair I would try
and reduce the amount of
props, figures and other
marvellous things that are
sadly thrown away after the
event. I understand that
it's impossible to keep
everything but in this day
and age it's becoming less
and less acceptable to be so
unmindful of the whole
Reduce Reuse Recycle society
we live in. I would love to
see some sort of storage
facility in the town where
things could be taken after
the big day, stripped down
and bundled into lots to be
perhaps sold or indeed
auctioned in early March
once the Fair characters
have been picked. All
proceeds could of course go
to the Fair fund and I for
one would be more than happy
to become involved in
co-ordinating and
implementing this if anyone
else is up for it. When my
own eldest son was Yeoman of
the Guard in 1998, the St
Mary's had that year was
Disney. Our Arch consisted
of a giant cake and we had
about a dozen various Disney
figures painstakingly made.
These lay up mu loft for a
few years as they were just
too good to be thrown away.
When the St Margaret's
family centre opened up in
Cornton Vale prison where I
work, I drove the jail bus
to my house to pick them up
and they are now nailed to
the fence that surrounds the
outdoor play area where the
women have visits with their
children.
This year I'm as excited
about the Fair as I was when
I was a bairn, if it's in
your blood like it is in
mine you don't get to
choose. I'm helping my
cousin make the most
fabulous Bo'ness Fair Door
Wreaths to compliment the
copious amount of flags that
festoon the town and the
arches I'm doing this year
are well underway, fingers
crossed there'll be no
hiccups. I'm already
thinking about next year as
my wee boys pal could be the
champion and I have his arch
half planned.
LORNA WEIR
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