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Urban Wheat Field is a success story in New York City

Kansas


The Urban Wheat Field, in Manhattan, New York, was attended by thousands of visitors during a three-day tour Oct. 6 to 8. The quarter-acre wheat field depicted a wheat crop from emergence to maturity and enlightened visitors about wheat foods nutrition. The Urban Wheat Field Experience was hosted by the Wheat Foods Council, of which the Kansas Wheat Commission is a member.

The Urban Wheat Field--a Wheat Foods Council effort more than two years in the making--reached thousands of consumers from New York and beyond during its three-day run in the South Seaport area of Manhattan. Visitors were drawn to the exhibit by the bright red combine, a dash of color in the monochrome city.

New York native Bob Frank said the colorful display was a welcome, if not surprising sight.

"I thought I'd seen everything in New York City but now a wheat field in South Street Seaport," he said.

From there, tourists walked through the quarter-acre of green wheat, stopping to read information about the history of wheat and its current production practices. Farmer volunteers from several states teamed up with professional millers and dieticians to tell the story of wheat.

Larry Kepley, Kansas Wheat Commissioner and farmer from Ulysses, volunteered at the Urban Wheat Field with his wife, Virginia. Kepley escorted visitors through the quarter-acre field that represented wheat in growth stages from emergence to maturity.

"We had stockbrokers, architects and attorneys and out of town visitors. All of the comments we had were very positive. One of the surprises I received, were several people told us this was the greenest they had ever seen the island of Manhattan."

Other visitors included hundreds of New York elementary school students, 4-H members, international travelers, visitors from many states and residents of Manhattan, Bronx, and Brooklyn and throughout the metropolitan area.

Marcia Scheideman, president of the Wheat Foods Council, sums up the Urban Wheat Field initiative: "We never would have been able to do it without the cooperation and the dedication of the entire membership of the Wheat Foods Council, which includes the entire grain industry, from producers to millers, to bakers to food manufacturers. All came together with one goal in mind: to educate the consumer about how complex it is to get a bowl of cereal on the table, or a dish of pasta or a loaf of bread, that it doesn't just materialize on the grocery shelf."

Frank, the New York native, believes the exhibit will open the eyes of consumers.

"Maybe these people will find out a little about what they eat and the things that grow in this country that, without this, we wouldn't have the country we do."

10/13/08
1 Star WK\7-B

Date: 10/10/08


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