
August 31, 2009
Contact:
Lisa Taylor
Director of Communications
Kansas Department of Agriculture
(785) 296-2653
lisa.taylor@kda.ks.gov
Agriland offers hands-on opportunities to learn about agriculture
TOPEKA -- Agriland, the anchor of the Pride of Kansas building at the Kansas State Fair, engages the senses and stimulates the minds of children and adults alike with its interactive activities that teach the importance of Kansas agriculture.
Agriland is also where teachers can sign up to win one of five classroom presentations that focus on teaching students where their food comes from. The presentations will be provided by the Kansas Foundation for Agriculture in the Classroom, and they come with a pizza lunch for an entire classroom. To be eligible to register for one of the giveaway presentations, teachers must visit Agriland at the fair with their class. Presentation expenses will be covered by the organizations that join forces to bring Agriland to the fair each year.
To find Agriland in the Pride of Kansas building, all you have to do is look for the 6-foot-tall greenhouse where visitors will be able to see different crops in their seedling and mature stages. The greenhouse will also showcase products that come from Kansas grains.
The greenhouse exhibit is new, as is the beef exhibit where children can climb onto a saddle to learn what it's like to herd cattle.
Another well-liked feature of Agriland is the life size milking cow that gives children and adults alike the opportunity to learn the art of milking. It has a self-contained pump to circulate fluid milked from the udder into an authentic stainless steel milking pail.
The My Pyramid display helps children and their parents learn more about the food guidance system developed by the United States Department of Agriculture. My Pyramid is the symbol USDA designed to represent the system that provides many options to help Americans make healthy food choices and to be active every day.
Agriland also features a soil tunnel that lets children explore what's below the plants, trees and crops that cover the Kansas landscape. The three-dimensional display illustrates how important soil is to plant growth, waste recycling, water purification and habitat for organisms.
Other returning features include the "bright and shining faces" sunflower cutout display where children can poke their faces through openings to become "shining faces" among the large, yellow blooms.
In the byproducts section, visitors can play the "Did you know?!" interactive game to learn how livestock and crops are used in thousands of products from toothpaste to crayons, shoes and fuel. Children and adults will learn about livestock -- how they are raised and what they eat – and they may even pose for a photograph with wood cutouts of a steer, sheep and hog. A stop at the scales will tell you if you weigh as much as a bushel of corn or a baby calf.
Kids can look at Kansas grains displayed in a kid-sized grain elevator, or dig into kid-sized vats filled with grain if they want to know what it feels like.
The ever-popular ride in a John Deere combine cab shows how Kansas crops are harvested in the field.
Teachers can make a stop in the teacher resource center to see what materials are available to help them teach about Kansas agriculture.
A huge implement tire serves as a centerpiece to the environmental stewardship area, where visitors learn how farmers care for their livestock and crops, and how they work to keep the land, air and water clean.
Another feature is a section of carpet that lies underneath Agriland. It was donated by Universal Textile Technologies of Dalton, Georgia. The carpet has a flexible foam backing made from SoyOyl, a soy-based polyol developed with funding from the soybean checkoff. It is estimated that 47 million bushels of beans would be used if soybean oil was used for all U.S. commercial carpets.
Volunteers from the cooperating commodity groups will staff Agriland each day of the fair. Cooperators include the Kansas Department of Agriculture; Kansas Beef Council; Kansas Corn Growers Association and Commission; Kansas Dairy Association; Kansas Wheat; Kansas Grain Sorghum Producers Association and Commission; Kansas Soybean Association and Commission; Kansas Agriwomen, Kansas Sunflower Commission; and the Kansas Foundation for Agriculture in the Classroom. Kansas FFA chapters also help with Agriland.