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			 The 4-H Clubs from around the county choose a country 
			to research and then present a program covering many of the aspects 
			of the country that make them different from all others. Four clubs 
			were involved this year, Chester with a report on Costa Rica, 
			Cloverdale represented Nepal, Hollanders spoke about Haiti, and 
			Pioneers took everyone to England. 
 This year, 4-H member and Lincoln Community High School senior Grace 
			Lessen was the guest presenter. She spoke about her time as an 
			exchange student in Costa Rica.
 
 “International Fest has been a long standing tradition of Logan 
			County 4-H,” said Logan County 4-H Coordinator Amy Hyde. The call 
			goes out for clubs to participate, to choose the country they want 
			to research, and make a presentation before parents and relatives at 
			the University of Illinois Extension Office at the Logan County Fair 
			Grounds. But this is not just looking up some facts about the 
			country. The 4-H members prepare a story board about the country, 
			make a presentation, and then prepare a feast for the audience.
 
 Yes, they find out about native foods and prepare them for all to 
			enjoy. No one went away hungry. There were Nepalese dumplings, rice 
			and beans, orange cake and plantain porridge from Haiti, fried 
			plantains from Costa Rica, and Sheppard’s pie and bangers and mash 
			from Britain. What a wonderful spread.
 
			
			 
			Grace Lessen has been a 4-H member for nine years. She went to Costa 
			Rica last year for two weeks as an exchange student. She found the 
			environment and culture to be very different from what she was used 
			to. One of her most memorable experiences was the cultural attitude 
			to life in Costa Rica. “One of the things I found so different is 
			something called 'Tico time' in Costa Rica,” she said.  
			
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Tico time is just a way of living, not the structured and hurried 
life of the US, but a more relaxed lifestyle. “I was really surprised at how the 
pace of life was much slower than at home. I always have to be on time all the 
time, always rushing around, but it is not that way in Costa Rica at all,” she 
said. 
			 
 
Grace found this to be true even in the school she attended. 
Students came to class when they wanted to and left whenever. “There was a one 
hour break in the morning and afternoon, and one hour for lunch,” she said. 
Students did not have to obtain a permission slip to leave class before it 
ended. They just got up and walked out, came back when they wanted to. “I was 
very surprised at this way of life,” she said. But she adapted. When asked if 
she was getting used to this pace she said “After two weeks I felt myself 
getting into a new pace, not feeling rushed to stick to a strict schedule.” 
 Part of her experience in Costa Rica was a visit to a national park. “The 
animals were unique to the country. I had never seen anything like it, from tiny 
poisonous frogs, to huge iguanas, and colorful parrots that dived underwater to 
snare fish to eat,” she said. “Some of the iguanas were four feet long. We gave 
them a lot of space when they were lounging on the stairs at the resort where we 
stayed,” she said with a laugh.
 
 Hyde said, “4-H is not just about farm life.” Attend an event like International 
Fest in Logan County and that becomes crystal clear.
 
 [Curtis Fox]
 
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