[March 21, 2019]
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An Agriculture
Education Day was held by the Logan County Farm Bureau Young Leaders
at the YMCA facility on Wyatt Avenue on Tuesday. Area fourth graders
were led through different ways agriculture impacts their daily
lives.
Throughout the day students moved from station to station learning
about agriculture. |
Outside, Sara Irwin worked from the
back of a livestock trailer and showed the young people a calf. She
and her family have a dairy farm in Logan County. Irwin explained
that their farm has a refrigeration system to store the milk in and
that Prairie Farms comes twice a week to collect the stored milk. |
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Not far from the diary display
was the farm equipment display. The AHW dealership from New Holland
offered a John Deere tractor and a planter. Central Illinois Ag of
Atlanta brought in a Case-IH tractor. Red and Green isn’t just for
Railers! |
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Indoors there were several stations
highlighting the different components of Agriculture.
Students were divided into smaller groups as they learned about
specific areas of agriculture and the role farming plays in our
daily lives.
In one area, students learned about pork production and also about
feeding the animals. Using a bag of trail mix as an example, kids
learned about the different grains used to create hog feed and how
the feed industry and the hog industry works to develop those
products. |
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A second station offered kids the opportunity to make a sweet frozen
treat to eat. Students were led in making ice cream using a zip lock
bag with a mix of sugar, vanilla and half-and-half. They sealed the
bag and mixed the ingredients and then put the bag a larger zip-lock
of ice. The bags were squeezed and rolled around until the mixture
was frozen into ice cream. Much of the focus on that station was
relating to all the products that come from dairy. |
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Downstairs students were learning how to make bio-degradable plastic
from Corn. It was explained how this is a more earth friendly
product and utilizes corn which benefits farmers also. The young
people really enjoyed this activity. |
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This Ag Education program has existed
for 20-plus years. In a conversation with Blair Bruns, Logan County
Farm Bureau Youth Leaders Chairman, he commented he wanted to
educate kids about agriculture and how it impacts them and their
lives. He elaborated that he wanted them to see it was a people
industry and not just a box on a store shelf; someone had to grow
that.
[Roy Logan] |
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