It’s easy to learn when there’s a goat

FALLS VILLAGE — Seven youngsters learned about food and food production at the David M. Hunt Library on Thursday afternoon, July 18.

The learning was cunningly disguised in game form by 4-H interns Shelby Jacquier and Sarah Ammirato, who started the group off with cards, some adorned with foods and some with where the foods come from, all face down on the table.

It was a memory exercise. A child picks up a card with a tomato on it, and then turns over another card. 

If the second card represents a garden, then it’s a match. If not, the cards go back down.

The challenge is to remember where those cards are.

The second game was done “Jeopardy”-style, with erasable markers and boards. About midway through, the group shifted, by consensus, to the simpler “shout the answer” format.

A sample of the questions: This school in Connecticut uses robots to milk cows, and is also really good at basketball.

Or: What do we get from a goat?

This question elicited several answers.

“Milk!” said one child.

“Cheese!” said another child.

“Goat mac and cheese!” announced a small boy, with a note of triumph.

Jacquier, a graduate of Housatonic Valley Regional High School and a student at Cazenovia College, and Ammirato, a Wamogo graduate and student at the University of Connecticut, have been doing educational presentations, sometimes three or four per day, five days a week, at 17 different locations since May. 

On Thursday,July 25, children will be making — and eating — ice cream at the library. For information on summer programs, go to www.huntlibrary.org.

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