Eagar spotlights student art, logo contest and Eagar Days 2026
Eagar is using student art, a logo contest and Eagar Days 2026 to turn school pride into June turnout, with vendor and car-show registration already open.

Eagar is turning student creativity and school milestones into a public push for summer participation, using its live feed to elevate a high school mural project, a youth logo contest and the Round Valley High School Class of 2026 all at once.
The town highlighted the Eagar Mural Project and said the high school art class is bringing the work to life. In the same post, Eagar thanked art teacher Ariana Mortenson, Brandee Snyder and Tony Contreras for their guidance and leadership, and said it could not wait to see the finished mural. A separate post announced that Hannah Hunt won the Eagar Days logo contest, which drew 22 submissions and drew praise from the town for the talent and creativity shown by local youth.
The timing matters because Eagar Days 2026 is scheduled for June 20, 2026, with activities running from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Ramsey Park and Cowpuncher Pond. Event listings say the fishing tournament starts at 8 a.m. at Cowpuncher Pond, and the day’s lineup includes a car show, vendors, a donut contest, a skate and scooter competition, music, a photo booth and awards.
The town’s event page says vendor registration and show-and-shine registration are available. Local listings identify Jessica Vaughan as the contact for Eagar Days questions and Aimie Richard as the show-and-shine car show contact, giving families, vendors and car owners a direct path into the event before summer begins.
The live feed’s focus on the Class of 2026 adds another layer to the town’s messaging. By publicly congratulating Round Valley High School seniors alongside younger artists and contest winners, Eagar is presenting school pride as part of its civic identity, not just a campus event.
That approach fits a broader image Eagar has built around signature community events. The town describes the Round Valley Dome as the only domed high school football stadium in the United States. Eagar says the dome opened in 1991-92 at a cost of $11 million and seats 5,500 for football and 9,000 for basketball and volleyball. The town also points to its Fourth of July celebration in Round Valley, which includes a parade, a rodeo that has gone on for more than 100 years and fireworks put on by the local fire department.
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