It's early August 32 years after they first unveiled Game Fair, and Chuck and Loral I Delaney are watching as the 80 acres of woods and fields that surround their picturesque exurban home and kennel are transformed from private retreat to public playground.
Circus-like tents pop up as far as the eye can see. Electric cables coil on the grounds like snakes. Griddles and deep fryers are slid into food tents.
Opening Friday for a six-day run over two weekends, Game Fair will attract tens of thousands of hunters and anglers to the Delaneys' home turf.
Joining the visitors will be their moms, dads, kids, hunting dogs — and guns.
Guns?
"When Loral I and I first went to Britain in 1980 to see that country's Game Fair, and saw all of the shooting games and competitions they held, we knew we had to offer similar opportunities at our show,'' Chuck said.
So it is, and has been for more than three decades, that at 9 each morning, a line of shotgun-toting fairgoers forms at the event's entrance, their dogs tethered to them by leashes — eager to see the latest outdoor gear and gadgets, while learning from hunting and fishing experts, and also testing their dogs' field skills.
That the Delaneys' rendition of Game Fair has succeeded where others in the United States have failed is testament perhaps equally to their understanding of Minnesota's unique outdoor culture, and to stubbornness.