Wanna check out the real sweet stuff at the Minnesota State Fair? Then forgo that deep-fried Snickers bar and head for the 4-H Building.
Sprawled throughout the ancient edifice's walls are hundreds of handmade posters crafted by thoughtful teens. They cover a vast array of topics: Dachau and deer-hunting stands, bullies and Bullwinkle, famine and family trees. Some are timely (hydraulic fracturing, concussions), others timeless (equality in America, a tooth-decay experiment involving chicken bones). Some are poignant, others plucky, almost all of them personal.
"They are as varied as kids are," said 4-H communications manager Wendy Huckaby. "God love 'em, this is science, and science is not supposed to be tidy."
This being the State Fair, the 4-H youngsters are competing for ribbons being awarded this week. But the program's primary point is to have students concoct and create a themed tri-fold poster; if it edifies and perhaps entertains the hordes at Minnesota's Great Get-Together, all the better.
Displays created by 4-H kids have been part of the fair since 1902. Brad Rugg, superintendant of the fair's 4-H program, said the posters and three-dimensional displays "merge some of the new ways of learning with the old ways of learning. So we have a new power go-kart in the entryway and all the oldies but goodies around the walls.
"We've always brought in something visual, like food prep and gardens," he added. "But the way kids learn is by using their minds."
Since many of these youngsters grow up on farms, it's no surprise that animals are a particularly popular topic. The headlines on livestock diseases alone are worth the trip: "Scrapie the Silent Killer," "Hemorrhagic Bowel Syndrome," "Wry Neck aka Torticollis" and "Bloat in Goats."
Having a blast with the past