Hours before the 2019 Great Minnesota Get-Together opened its gates for a 12-day run, Nikki Hines hustled across the fairgrounds making her final checks.
"I've seen her every day this week," said Nate Janousek, who runs the Hangar, the food and craft beer establishment that popped up on the north end of the fairgrounds last year. "Nikki has to do everything. She's like superwoman."
Wednesday night was the last chance for Hines — the new supervisor of food and beverages at the Minnesota State Fair — to touch base with the nearly 300 concession vendors who sell everything from chocolate-drizzled bacon to alligator on a stick.
Come Thursday morning, the first of an expected 2 million people will begin making their way through the fairground gates in Falcon Heights. Many will come for the food and the rides; others will come for the animals or exhibits or to grab a few freebies. For some, the dozen-day stretch before Labor Day is the most wonderful time of the year.
"That first day of the fair, it is like Christmas morning," Hines said. "You're just so excited. Everything is so fresh and clean and ready to go."
As opening day approached, a quiet anticipation filled the grounds, punctuated by the sound of workers drilling and piecing together carnival rides and sheep bleating from their new temporary homes.
The streets that would soon be filled with a sea of people were still largely passable as crews rushed to finalize preparations for the chaos to come.
For Jeff Beaver, who's been driving to the fair from North Carolina for 19 years now, that meant unwrapping thousands of Snickers bars. His yellow-topped booth on a street corner sells deep-fried candy bars on a stick.