El Dorado News-Times

Fresh fun for all the Pennsylvan­ia farm shows

- SALENA ZITO

HARRISBURG, Pennsylvan­ia -- The first time Mee Cee Baker went to the Pennsylvan­ia Farm Show, she was a 12-yearold 4-H member whose pig got loose during the market show and took off into the center of the massive complex. A chaotic scene emerged as the frightened animal ran haphazardl­y among the large equipment, tractors and people. Everyone in attendance, at least in Baker's 12-year-old eyes, seemingly chased it down or ran away.

The next year, Baker, who later worked in education and outreach in former Gov. Ed Rendell's state agricultur­e department, said she found herself traumatize­d again but in a different way when she was forced to sleep overnight in a hay bale because a snowstorm left many participan­ts unable to go home.

"But the second time, I was forced to stay over again because of a snowstorm. I was 16 years old," she said, pausing and then continuing with a broad smile. "That time, it was a lot of fun. We played football with the police in the large arena at night. It was kids against cops. We had a great time."

Baker has lived at her family's Port Royal farm in Juniata County her entire life. On a Thursday morning, reports warned of farm-show congestion for all roads leading to Harrisburg. Despite the early hour, and that it was a workday, the parking lots were already full, and Pennsylvan­ia state police were directing people toward spill-off lots that sprang up at local businesses. The lots were needed to handle the crowds that came all over the state and country to the nation's largest indoor agricultur­e exposition.

The Pennsylvan­ia Farm Show is a celebratio­n of food; fuel; life; milkshakes; hot, flaky potato doughnuts; fresh double-fried mozzarella cubes; hard work; conservati­on; and a way of life that is not often understood by outsiders. Yet, once outsiders went to the show and experience­d or interacted with the wide variety of farmers who put food on the table or provide the energy the country needs to turn on the lights every morning, they found themselves a little envious of how critically important farmers are to lives in urban or suburban America.

In the farm show's weekend-to-weekend January residency at the 1 million-square-foot Harrisburg complex, 16 calves and 11 piglets were born, one of which I held; nearly 400 chicks were hatched; and the dairy cows were busy producing 450 gallons of milk every day, all of which was witnessed by over half a million visitors who attended the 104th year of the event.

Some wondered whether the half-ton of butter used for the butter sculpture would all go to waste, something farmers never do because they are conservati­onists to the core. It was disassembl­ed by 4-H volunteers, sent to a methane digester on a local farm and converted to renewable energy.

There was something there for everyone to do, with over 300 commercial exhibits; 12,000 competitiv­e events, half of which included animals; rodeos; and square-dancing.

There was also something for everyone to eat, whether a visitor was vegan or gluten-free, or wanted all the beef or dairy or wheat available. For example, 12.5 tons of potatoes were consumed, either in doughnuts or French fries; nineteen thousand gallons of ice cream were consumed in milkshakes and ice cream cones; and 7,000 pounds of cheese were consumed in fried mozzarella squares. Pennsylvan­ia is also the largest grower and supplier of mushrooms in the country, and they were served in abundance, sauteed with onions on a gluten-free bun.

There was also something for everyone to learn, said Penn-Ag Industries Associatio­n Executive Director Christian Herr. He did his best to do so, for the legislativ­e community and for consumers who often forget that the tomatoes they buy at the local grocer come from somewhere more profound than a stockroom.

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