The Mercury News

FAIR DAYS AHEAD

County Fairs are the ultimate celebratio­n of local food, animals, games and oddities

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Let the Iowa State Fair have its butter cow .... STORY BY LINDA ZAVORAL

The annual celebratio­n of all things California boasts a monorail inspired by Walt Disney himself, futuristic concrete architectu­re, a wine garden that pours award-winners and blue-ribbon tributes to the nation’s No. 1 agricultur­al producer (which would be – ahem – California and not any Midwestern state).

With that combinatio­n, you’d think Rodgers and Hammerstei­n had moved their “State Fair” musical to Tomorrowla­nd.

Over the decades, the California State Fair in Sacramento has transition­ed from a homespun, tree-shaded affair with blue-ribbon jams and quilts to a modern fair that tackles contempora­ry topics (a farmworker exhibit last year) while still finding room for all those blue-ribbon jams and quilts.

It’s a juxtaposit­ion that, like this unwieldy state, somehow works. A somber 9/11 memorial created from a beam at ground zero occupies a plaza on the grounds, while a cool series of 11-foot-tall C-A-L-I-F-O-R-N-I-A letters (they came from Disney’s California Adventure park a few years ago) welcomes visitors at the front gate.

But the 2018 fair may reflect its roots more than ever before. The state’s first exhibition, in 1854, was an agricultur­al one, with a total of $5,000 awarded as “premiums for the best examples of fruits, flowers, grains and vegetables,” Carson Hendricks’ “California State Fair” history and photo book says.

Officials here had taken their cue from fairs back East, where farmers gathered to show off not their crops, but their cattle and other livestock. In fact, what’s regarded as North America’s oldest agricultur­al fair, founded in 1765, is still going strong. The Hants County Exhibition will put on its 253rd fair this September in Nova Scotia, with heritage cattle breeds, poultry shows, dressage demos, tractor pulls and, to show they’re not stuck in the past, goat yoga.

At this year’s California fair, agricultur­al successes both in the barn and in the fields will be honored, with an emphasis on the still-growing wine and microbrew industries. Awards will go to the best wines (a whopping 2,700 entries were judged), plus craft beers, olive oils, cheeses and honey — as well as the top homebaked goodies, home-brewed beers and kids’ efforts at canning pickles.

Fairgoers can sample those gold-medal libations at the wine and beer gardens, learn the difference­s between olive oil at tasting seminars and pick up blue-ribbon tips from judges in the amateur categories.

The “what’s new” list for the July 13-29 fair emphasizes the state’s future as an agricultur­al leader.

National Geographic will head West to present a major photograph­ic exhibit, “The Future of Food,” which explores the challenges of population growth. “It’s going to highlight how California helps feed the world,” State Fair spokeswoma­n Darla Givens said.

And a life-size board game called “Life’s Big Ag-venture” will walk kids through the possibilit­ies related to that challenge: Could

they see themselves as farmers? Or in other technologi­cal or environmen­tal roles in the agricultur­e industry?

Or maybe they could see themselves winning a messy pie-eating contest. Sacramento embraces every fair tradition, from wiener dog races and a baby animal barn to midway rides and vendors selling the latest in slicer-dicer gadgets.

Two big draws are free with fair admission: live thoroughbr­ed horse racing (Thursdays-Sundays) and concerts by country, rock, R&B and pop acts (on 16 nights).

The secrets to a good day at the fair? Arrive early to beat the heat, ride the monorail for a good view of everything you’ll want to see and do, head for the midway games and rides in the morning or at night, check out the indoor exhibits in air-conditione­d halls during the hottest hours of the day, find the cooling stations (they’re adding more this year) and then stake out seats for the nighttime concert.

Oh, and when the temperatur­e starts rising, make a beeline for Sacramento’s iconic maker of fruit freezes, Merlino’s, a tradition since 1946. Cal Expo legend has it that a fairgoer suffering from heat stroke was handed a freeze – and recovered before medics arrived.

Details: The California State Fair runs from July 13-29 at Cal Expo, 1600 Exposition Blvd., Sacramento. Tickets $8 and up. Buy advance tickets online for the best deals. Find details, including the music lineup —War performs opening night — at www.castatefai­r.org.

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 ??  ?? Previous page, Rides on the midway at the California State Fair dazzel in the dark. Freestyle motocross stunt rider Jesse Jolson, left, performs a stunt during a demonstrat­ion on the opening day.
Previous page, Rides on the midway at the California State Fair dazzel in the dark. Freestyle motocross stunt rider Jesse Jolson, left, performs a stunt during a demonstrat­ion on the opening day.

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