State Fair Hound

An independent view of the New York State Fair

Month: August 2018 (Page 2 of 5)

Prize Catch

If a visit to the Department of Environmental fish tanks or the New York Experience pond puts your kids in the mood to cast a line, FISHING WINhead over to the Wade Shows midway where the fishing game stand is among the dozens of spots where they can try to hook a prize.

 

While winning is rarely guaranteed, some games are scaled down for the small fry, giving them a better chance to get a toy to go along with the memory of winning at the Fair. The gurgling streams aren’t exactly mighty rivers, PAINTED FACE GIRLbut kids seem to really enjoy stand-ing by, pole in hand to play for keeps.

It’s also one of the best spots for parents to memorialize the family trip to the Fair with a photo, as State Fair Hound photographer Nick LoPresti shows here.

Mr. Smith

During the heyday of the antique carriages, wagons and buggies that are displayed in the Carriage Museum, you couldn’t just pull into a garage for service. BLACKSMITHYou had to employ a hardworking, skilled craftsman to fabricate metal parts and make repairs. The blacksmith shop located at the back of the museum serves as a charming reminder of how tough that job can be as demonstrators pound away at the anvil and tend the fire to provide that lesson.

It’s a scene worth reviewing when you’re nearby. The Carriage Museum is right next to the Agriculture Museum, near Restaurant Row. Admission is free and there are benches for visitors.

The Cowboy’s Lament

The appearance Sunday of singer Hunter Hayes at Chevy Court gives Live Nation, the New York State Fair’s booking agency, plausible deniability on the issue of country music.

Hunter Hayes is projected on the screen at Chevy Court.

Hunter Hayes is projected on the screen at Chevy Court.

Now in its third year of turning its back on country fans, long among the Fair’s most loyal concert patrons, the booking monster throws hungry fans a couple of morsels of country lite, with the whiny Hayes to be followed on Labor Day by popish Maren Morris. In between, they toss in the novelty act sideshow called Big and Rich to complete their country cover.

There’s fierce debate over what constitutes country music, but Hayes, Morris and most of the acts Live Nation books at the amphitheater are obviously not the same genre as the fiddle-and-steel-guitar stars that dominated concert halls, honky-tonk dance clubs, radio stations–and New York State Fair venues–in the 20th century.

Dave Mason and a back-up singer play Chevy Court Aug. 23.

Dave Mason and a back-up singer perform at  Chevy Court Aug. 23.

Back in 1989, the year before Hayes was born, Chevy Court, then known as Miller Court, featured Hall of Fame outlaw Waylon Jennings, spunky hitmaker Tanya Tucker and southern rockers the Charlie Daniels Band. The trend took hold with such country stalwarts as Trisha Yearwood, Steve Wariner, Marty Stuart, Diamond Rio, Martina McBride, Toby Keith, Patty Loveless, Suzi Bogguss, Crystal Gayle, Mark Chesnutt, Ronnie Milsap, Brad Paisley, Asleep at the Wheel, and a traveling troupe of Grand Ole Opry stars lighting up the stage in the years that followed.

Fans of retro-country deserve a chance to hear their favorites at the Fair and when they had a chance, as with Vince Gill, Sara Evans, Ronnie Dunn, Sawyer Brown, Trace Adkins, the Gatlin Brothers, Gary Allan, Sawyer Brown and the Oak Ridge Boys in recent years, they generally came out in large numbers. Most of the acts mentioned above continue to roll their tour busses over the nation’s highways every summer and there’s no reason a few of them couldn’t park behind Chevy Court for a one-night stand.

No reason except ineptitude and neglect by Live Nation.

Stage Flights

Center stage for music at the New York State Fair is the Chevrolet Court concert series, featuring national acts from across the music spectrum. But Chevy isn’t the only place to get your music fix as smaller stages in various locations around the grounds offer some fine talent.

Just a few steps from the court, for instance, PA STAGE 17the Pan African Village has nightly entertainment with its own spirit and character. You can listen while sitting in the picnic area, enjoying the exotic food that makes the village an unusual Fair locale.

Stop into the Dairy Building where its small stage comes alive several times each day, mostly with singles or duos who play in the shadow of the Milk Bar.

At the other end of the grounds, the large rigging at the edge of the New York Experience pond hosts full bands on a regular schedule, this year presenting some national acts. The Experience stage has a bright future with tons of potential.

RR DUO 18Several food stands along Restaurant Row and on Broadway set up bands to keep customers happy while they gobble a meal or sip a drink.

The Grange Building also features live acts, primarily music and dancing on its small stage.

Music schedules are available on the Fair website, nysfair.ny.gov.

 

No See Ums

One dollar water isn’t the only thing missing at the New York State Fair this year.

Alert State Fair Hound reader Dave Murray asked what’s up with Footsie-Wootsie, not seen this year for the first time in memory. FW KIDS 15The vibrating foot massagers are an annual tradition for Fair enthusiasts, offering relief for just a quarter.

The Jerk Hut, a food stand in the Pan African Village from its the beginning, isn’t serving its Jamaican food this year. State Fair Hound has been told by neighboring vendors that Bongo Hanslip, the hut’s founder and driving force has been sidelined with an unspecified illness. Loyal customers no doubt miss the spicy-hot Caribbean  cuisine and the proprietor’s charming accent. The Hound joins them in wishing Bongo a speedy recovery and a return next Fair.

The Hound is surprised that there hasn’t been an uproar over the absence of the adorable whiskered ones known as the Sea Lion Splash. singing-seals-16Their poolside antics have been a perennial favorite, but their usual spot in front of the Youth Building is dry this year.

And while there’s plenty of music being heard around the grounds, the one-man band virtuosity of Bandolini isn’t strutting to his rocking beat.

There’s so much terrific free entertainment at the State Fair, it seems almost greedy to ask about missing favorites. bando-16But Fair fans are such a traditional bunch, you know they miss what they aren’t seeing.

State Fair Hound has reached out for comment from the Fair and we’ll let you know when we hear back.

 

 

 

Bag It

Some families have to find ways to cut costs when attending the New York State Fair. There are several free or reduced ticket deals but food expenses can add up when feeding three or four kids, so resourceful parents can pack up a few sandwiches or some fruit for a picnic lunch. PICNICING 17Just to remind you, there’s no rule against bringing in food, just don’t bring glass bottles. There are plenty of spots among the madness to rest and have a family meal.

Sure the kids will be enticed by all of the ice cream, fried dough and cheese fries around, so if Mom and Dad can budget for a few treat while making carried-in food the main course, maybe everybody will be happy. No doubt, you can spend a fortune at the Fair, but you can also have a great time on a budget.

Color Me Baaaaad

Of all the breeds of livestock on display at the New York State Fair, sheep may be the most visitor friendly. HOODED SHEEPSigns on the pens tell you they may bite, but they rarely do. Still, ask permission to pet them. If you do, you’ll be rewarded with a luxurious experience as those curly heads are soft and supple.

The ewes and rams are also quite visually appealing, sometimes wearing cloaks to keep them clean. SHEEP SHEARThere is often some shearing going on and that’s fun to watch as well. The kids in your party will enjoy hearing the sheep bleating, their shrill cries almost human-sounding.

The barn, really just a roof overhead, is a great spot to duck in from a shower or to avoid intense sunshine. Really, you can’t beeeeeat it.

Stop, Look–No Really, Look

Most upstate New Yorkers have been to the State Fair many times and think they’ve seen it all. But if you really want to get a new perspective on the nation’s oldest state fair, sometimes you have to make an effort.

It helps if you take a camera, intent upon getting some unusual, creative shots. BLEACHER SEATS 17Taking a photographer’s attitude will make you think about what you’re experiencing. But it’s not the only way. Just stop, take a breath and look around. Those venerable buildings were built about 100 years ago. What a contrast to the up-to-the-minute technology of the midway rides.

The Iroquois Village has people, artworks and a replica longhouse that can help you envision the region centuries ago. A couple of hundreds yards away, the shiny, new Exhibition Center stands in stark contrast, making its debut near the spot where the New York Experience pond brings a fresh look to the former infield area.

It’s all about unleashing your senses to the wonder of the New York State Fair. Enjoy a show, eat great food and whirl on your favorite ride. But don’t forget to open your eyes and ears to the whole event. It’s quite a show.

Boats and Beacons

Ahoy, sailors, fishing buffs and history students. Be sure to drop anchor on the shore of the New York Experience pond every day of the new York State Fair for a new nautical exhibit from New York Sea Grant.

BOAT BUILD 18The family-friendly, interactive exhibit shines its beacon on New York State’s 70-plus lighthouses and light boats, with a special focus on women who serve as keepers of those vital structures.

Daily demonstrations on the pond will showcase boat building, water drones, lifesaving science, a data-gathering buoy, a lifesaving exhibit, boat building demonstrations and a name that boat contest. One lucky visitor will actually win a boat.

Camera Man

If you’ve been wandering the grounds of the New York State Fair for years, there are no doubt some familiar faces you’ve seen many times. One of those faces has been on hand every year for decades, often hidden behind a camera.

Award-winning local photographer Michael Davis has had hundreds of State Fair photos published locally as he covered the Fair for the weekly Syracuse New Times. DAVIS 18He can be considered a true blue Fair fan and something of a historian, having covered concerts at the Grandstand and races on the track as well as many scenes at now-defunct stands on Restaurant Row and around now-demolished places throughout the grounds.

Davis says that his retirement is on hold and that’s good news for Fair fans. Look for him taking shots at Chevy Court, framing portraits of the Fair’s people and animals or just enjoying lunch at his favorite spot, Baker’s Chicken Coop. When you see him, wish him well and thank him for his dedication to keeping the Fair in his sights, treating us to his well-focused perspective.

 

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