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It may make your trip to the New York State Fair easier to navigate if you check available traffic cameras before heading to Geddes.
For one site, you can go to the State Fair website, select “your visit,” then click “plan your trip,” then “parking and transportation.” You’ll see the 511NY logo, which will route you to that site. There are several cameras on the map that are near the Fairgrounds that will help you get an idea how things are looking around the parking areas.
The WeatherBug site also has several views of nearby traffic.
Timing matters when going to the Fair and knowing whether traffic is flowing smoothly or bogged down can help you decide he best times to go.
Car pool if you can and remember that taking a bus is always an option, too.
![Join the crowd at Chevrolet Court to hear some great music. Check the schedule and plan ahead to get a good spot. Don't forget the Experience Stage as it grows in popularity.](http://www.statefairhound.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/LS-AT-CC-17-1024x653.jpg)
Join the crowd at Chevrolet Court to hear the concert of your choice, unless you’re fan of traditional-style country music, which continues to be blackballed by Fair promoters (Triangulation, July 15, 2019). Check the schedule and plan ahead to get a good spot. Don’t forget the Experience Stage as it grows in popularity.
The full list of attractions scheduled at the 2019 New York State Fair in now available on the website (nysfair.ny.gov) and it includes several new acts.
Wild animals are featured performers for Bearadise Ranch and Wolves of The World, in addition to perennial favorite Hawk Creek Wildlife Center, which brings in birds of prey.
The domesticated, yet wildly entertaining dogs of K9s in Flight will also perform, while human stars Hilby and Bandoloni will return. Also back are the Coronas Circus and the SkyRiver Butterflies.
Three unusual additions are hypnotism master Marshal Manlove, holding court in the Art and Home Center’s Empire Theater, a live character illusion called The Living Wall and nine-foot-tall Rock-It the Robot. Most acts run three shows per day.
Pyrotechnics fans should make note that the annual fireworks display will blast off this year on Saturday, Aug. 31, not the usual Labor Day evening.
Also–remember that the sand sculpture has returned to the Center of Progress.
From the Fair’s homepage, select “Fair attractions page.”
The New York State Fair has announced plans to open a new parking lot one mile from the main gate.
The 10.5- acre lot is still under construction on property purchased from Honeywell, just east of the Fairgrounds. Vehicles would have to enter on Willis Avenue at the intersection of State Fair Boulevard. Shuttle buses would then transport patrons west on the Boulevard to Gate 10.
The new lot has an estimated 1800 parking spaces, so its a significant and much-needed boost to Fair parking accommodations.
The usual $5 per car fee would apply while round-trip bus service would be free.
The only practical way to approach the entrance to the lot would be to drive north on Willis Ave, which makes it most accessible from Solvay, Tipperary Hill and the western suburbs.
Other changes were announced that pertain to Centro Park-and-Ride service to the Fair, so check ahead before heading to your favorite parking site.
![Many of the favorite once-a-year experiences at the New York State Fair involve animals. Patting a cow, riding a pony, petting a sheep, feeding a duck or cradling baby chick in your hands--as this boy is doing--are wondrous moments for many kids. It's a great chance for families to put down the smart phone and participate in a real life moment.](http://www.statefairhound.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/CHICK-HOLD-18-e1554072307594-577x1024.jpg)
Many of the favorite once-a-year experiences at the New York State Fair involve animals.
Patting a cow, riding a pony, petting a sheep, feeding a duck or cradling baby chick in your hands–as this boy is doing–are wondrous moments for many kids.
It’s a great chance for families to put down the smart phone and participate in a real life moment.
Time for a New York State Fair music quiz.
Question one–What do these musical acts have in common?
Rick Springfield, Grand Funk Railroad, .38 Special, Bad Company, Vince Neil, The Roots, Blood, Sweat and Tears and Jackyl.
If you said they’re all booked to play one of the big stages at the 2019 New York State Fair, that’s correct.
If you said they were popular acts before 2000, that’s also correct.
Question two–What do these musical acts have in common?
Alabama, Brooks and Dunn, Vince Gill, Sara Evans, Alan Jackson, Martina McBride, Lorrie Morgan, Kathy Mattea, Diamond Rio, Pam Tillis, Steve Wariner, Lee Ann Womack, Marty Stuart, Suzy Bogguss, John Anderson, Joe Nichols, Rhonda Vincent, Alison Krauss, Ricky Skaggs, Trisha Yearwood, The Whites, Connie Smith, Dolly Parton, Emmylou Harris, Gene Watson, Johnny Rodriguez, John Conlee, Tanya Tucker, Janie Fricke, Asleep at the Wheel, Becky Hobbs, Radney Foster, Clint Black, Mary Chapin Carpenter and Ricky Van Shelton.
Yes–They also have decades of popularity playing shows from coast-to-coast. But none of these country acts will perform at the 2019 New York State Fair, although most of them appear to have some availability during the Fair time frame and several will be touring the northeast at that time.
Several of them are in the Country Music Hall of Fame while many are winners of awards including Grammys and Country Music Association awards. There are probably many more acts beyond those named above that would also be good choices for Fair stages.
A recent news report revealed that Live Nation is no longer booking Fair acts and that’s good news. The Triangle agency is back as the concert promoter, but improvement in results has so far been elusive. With the exception of the rock gray-hairs and a couple of other acts, fans beyond their thirties could add the prefix, “Who-the-hell-is” to the names of the acts booked.
Meanwhile, we’re still seeing few country shows, limited to young acts that flirt with country at best. One hot young act, the band Midland, will be a rare exception at Chevy Court. Otherwise, the loyal country fans who had packed Fair concert venues for decades continue to be ignored.
The big question is, if classic rock concerts can be successfully booked here, why can’t classic country? There is no acceptable explanation for such neglect. Country fans are tired of excuses.