Legends in Butter: Family boasts 2 Princess Kays, multiple State Fair finalists!

Legends in Butter: Family boasts 2 Princess Kays, multiple State Fair finalists!

Kerem Yücel | MPR News
From left to right, Sarah Olson Schmidt, Lana Olson Beckard, and Elizabeth Olson Hall pose for a portrait with their butter head sculpture on Friday in Hutchinson, MN.

MPR News: What do you do with more than 200 pounds of butter that’s been carved into the likeness of your daughters’ heads and now sits in your deep freeze?

Laura Olson hasn’t quite figured out how to answer the question, but the Hutchinson woman is happy for the challenge. Her three daughters have all been finalists over the years to be Princess Kay of the Milky Way, the state’s well-known ambassador for the dairy industry unveiled each year at the State Fair. Two have won the crown.

Two women carry a butter sculpture
Kerem Yücel | MPR News
From left to right, Sarah Olson Schmidt and Elizabeth Olson Hall transport Lana Olson Beckard’s butter sculpture on Friday in Hutchinson, MN.

Minnesota’s 70th Princess Kay will be coronated Wednesday night, but it’s unknown if her lineage will match the Olsons. Besides her daughters, the extended family counts past Princess Kay finalists among aunts and cousins, putting the total of winners and finalists at seven.

While Midwest Dairy, who is in charge of the program, couldn’t confirm if the Olsons hold the record, they say their family is “a great example of how the dairy community enjoys continuing the tradition.”

Two butter sculptures sweat
Kerem Yücel | MPR News
Two butter sculptures start sweating in the summer heat on Friday in Hutchinson, MN.

The Olsons’ story, though, goes deeper. The daughters have all set on careers in the dairy and animal health fields.

“Growing up on a dairy farm, you’re always familiar with the Princess Kay program,” Sarah Olson said. “It was so cool to connect with 11 other women who felt as passionate for the dairy industry as I did. They’re very accomplished in their careers, and many are still in agriculture.”

A family smiles for a photo
Courtesy photo
Sarah Olson poses with her family for a photo of her 2002 Princess Kay of the Milky Way win.

The Princess Kay of the Milky Way program began in 1964. First, candidates must be a county dairy princess. Then, those roughly 100 winners come together for an event and are judged for their communication skills, personality, general knowledge of the dairy community and their commitment to dairy promotion.

Ten finalists are selected and the day before the fair, the new Princess Kay is crowned.

Over the next year, Princess Kay serves as the spokesperson for Minnesota dairy farms. They speak to consumers, conduct media interviews, make classroom visits and more.

A woman smiles with her parents
Courtesy photo
Elizabeth Olson, middle, poses with her parents after winning Princess Kay of the Milky Way in 2009.
The Olson daughters made their first appearance as Princess Kay when Sarah was crowned the 49th Princess Kay of the Milky Way in 2002. In 2005, her sister Lana was a finalist. Four years later, sister Elizabeth was the 56th princess.

“My mom has always told us to take pride in ourselves, to stand tall and speak clearly. And I think this was all part of it, that’s why she holds onto them [the butter sculptures],” said Lana.

Three women fix melted parts of their butter sculpture
Kerem Yücel | MPR News
From right to left, Sarah Olson Schmidt, Lana Olson Beckard and Elizabeth Olson Hall repairs the melted and damaged portions of their butter sculptures on Friday in Hutchinson, Minn.

Each Olson sister said that running for Princess Kay of the Milky Way shaped the arc of their lives. It isn’t your average princess contest, it’s an investment in young Minnesota women.

“Once I moved away from Minnesota, I realized how rare that contest was,” Elizabeth said. “It has an influence on this community of young girls and women … there’s so much training and development poured into it and if you follow all the women that went through the program, they’re doing well, they benefited from it. For an industry that is typically very conservative, it’s pretty great we’ve had this for almost 70 years.”

Sarah is now vice president of marketing at Associated Milk Producers Inc. which provides the butter for the fair, Lana is a content director for an agricultural organization and Elizabeth is a drug representative for an animal health company.

Two girls pose with a butter sculpture
Kerem Yücel | MPR News
Aubree Schmidt (15) and Kate Schmidt (14) pose for a photo with their mom, Sarah Olson Schmidt’s butter sculpture on Friday in Hutchinson, Minn.

The extended Olson family is on the cusp of a new era of potential Princess Kays. Laura and Loren have seven grandchildren. Sarah has three daughters. She said if they want to be Princess Kay, she’ll be there cheering them on. Laura said she doesn’t want them to feel like they have to, but of course, she would be thrilled — and ready to make more room in her deep freeze.

The fair has always been extra special for Laura because that is where she met her husband, Loren, in 1977.

Kerem Yücel | MPR News
Loren Olson and Laura Olson pose for a portrait with their daughters butter sculptured on Friday in Hutchinson, Minn.

Loren was showing his cattle and Laura was in the milking parlor working on a project for the University of Minnesota, where she was getting a degree in animal science. She later joined him on his family farm in Hutchinson, where they raised their four children, including son Luke, who did not get a butter sculpture but is an accomplished dairy judge and won at the World Dairy Expo.

Back to the question, though, of all that butter sitting in the freezer, some 200 pounds including the three 90-pound sculptures shaped like her daughters’ heads. The family has tried to make the most of it.

A woman smiles with three butter sculptures-1
Kerem Yücel | MPR News
Sarah Olson Schmidt poses for a photo with her butter sculpture in Hutchinson, Minn., on Friday.

Sarah had a corn roast and got through the scraps and part of her shoulders. They used some for Christmas cookies but then Laura said it got to a point of asking if this is safe to keep serving, and do I want to eat a sculpture of my daughter?

“My decision to stop feeding it to people was really based on safety more than anything,” said Laura, who later went to medical school and the University of Minnesota. “But then it was like well what am I going to do with them? Little did I know I would end up with three and I just can’t give them up.”

Three butterheads sit on a bench
Kerem Yücel | MPR News

From left to right, Sarah Olson Schmidt, Lana Olson Beckard, and Elizabeth Olson Hall carved out of butter.

Sam Stroozas

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Shop With Purpose: Neighborhood Roots MN Merch

Minnesota Carpenter Helps Rebuild Notre Dame’s Fire-Ravaged Roof with Medieval Techniques

Minnesota Carpenter Helps Rebuild Notre Dame’s Fire-Ravaged Roof with Medieval Techniques

A crane lifts a part of the new roof of the Notre Dame de Paris Cathedral on Thursday near Angers, western France. Carpenters building a new timber frame for the fire-ravaged roof of Paris’ Notre Dame Cathedral are using the same tools and techniques as their medieval predecessors. For them, working with hand-axes to fashion oak beams has been like stepping back in time.

MPR: If time travel was possible, medieval carpenters would surely be amazed to see how woodworking techniques they pioneered in building Notre Dame Cathedral more than 800 years ago are being used again today to rebuild the world-famous monument’s fire-ravaged roof.

Certainly the reverse is true for the modern-day carpenters using medieval-era skills. Working with hand axes to fashion hundreds of tons of oak beams for the framework of Notre Dame’s new roof has, for them, been like rewinding time. It’s given them a new appreciation of their predecessors’ handiwork that pushed the architectural envelope back in the 13th century.

“It’s a little mind-bending sometimes,” says Peter Henrikson, one of the carpenters. He says there are times when he’s whacking mallet on chisel that he finds himself thinking about medieval counterparts who were cutting “basically the same joint 900 years ago.”

“It’s fascinating,” he says. “We probably are in some ways thinking the same things.”

Person works on wood beam
Peter Henrikson, 61, measures a beam, part of the new roof of the Notre Dame Cathedral de Paris on Thursday.
Jeffrey Schaeffer | AP Photo

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The use of hand tools to rebuild the roof that flames turned into ashes in 2019 is a deliberate, considered choice, especially since power tools would undoubtedly have done the work more quickly. The aim is to pay tribute to the astounding craftsmanship of the cathedral’s original builders and to ensure that the centuries-old art of hand-fashioning wood lives on.

“We want to restore this cathedral as it was built in the Middle Ages,” says Jean-Louis Georgelin, the retired French army general who is overseeing the reconstruction.

“It is a way to be faithful to the (handiwork) of all the people who built all the extraordinary monuments in France.”

Facing a tight deadline to reopen the cathedral by Dec. 2024, carpenters and architects are also using computer design and other modern technologies to speed the reconstruction. Computers were used in the drawing of detailed plans for carpenters, to help ensure that their hand-chiseled beams fit together perfectly.

“Traditional carpenters had a lot of that in their head,” Henrikson notes. It’s “pretty amazing to think about how they did this with what they had, the tools and technology that they had at the time.”

The 61-year-old is from Grand Marais, Minn. The bulk of the other artisans working on the timber frame are French.

The roof reconstruction hit an important milestone in May, when large parts of the new timber frame were assembled and erected at a workshop in the Loire Valley, in western France.

The dry run assured architects that the frame is fit for purpose. The next time it is put together will be atop the cathedral. Unlike in medieval times, it will be trucked into Paris and lifted by mechanical crane into position. Some 1,200 trees have been felled for the work.

“The objective we had was to restore to its original condition the wooden frame structure that disappeared during the fire of April 15, 2019,” says architect Remi Fromont, who did detailed drawings of the original frame in 2012.

The rebuilt frame “is the same wooden frame structure of the 13th century,” he says. “We have exactly the same material: oak. We have the same tools, with the same axes that were used, exactly the same tools. We have the same know-how. And soon, it will return to its same place.”

“It is,” he adds, “a real resurrection.”

John Leicester contributed to this report from Paris.

The Associated Press

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ICYMI: Woman paints homage to ‘Mount Target,’ the infamous Eden Prairie snowbank!

ICYMI: Woman paints homage to ‘Mount Target,’ the infamous Eden Prairie snowbank!

Becky Allen’s watercolor piece “King of the Mountain Shopping Cart – Eden Prairie Target March 2023″ depicting a snowbank outside a Target in Eden Prairie Center on Sunday.
Courtesy Becky Allen

Minnesota: Mountains are not in the Minnesota landscape due to the glaciers flattening the area thousands of years ago, but this year we have a new mountain in Eden Prairie, Minn. to compete with the Appalachians and Rocky mountains.

Welcome one of the latest man-made geographic features of Minnesota: “Mount Target.”

The mountain, also sometimes called “Mount Eden Prairie,” is a large snowbank in the parking lot of a Target in Eden Prairie Center. Photos showing the mountain’s crags and a Target shopping cart at its peak have gone viral in the past week on social media.

Some have been inspired to try to reach the top of the mountain, while others have captured the moment on paper.

A cart on top of a snowbank
A cart appears at the top of a snowbank in the parking lot of a Target in Eden Prairie Center on Sunday, March 19, 2023.
Courtesy Jen Fuller

The cart on the mountain inspired her to paint.

“If I hadn’t seen the cart on it, I probably would’ve just thought, ‘Oh, that’s a big snowbank’ and kept driving on. But the cart, it stands out. Who put that there? Why? That’s hilarious!”

“I hadn’t painted in quite a few months and I had been wanting to for awhile” Allen said. “I thought it was cute and saw the pictures and just decided, ‘I’ll try painting this.’”

After seeing it on Saturday, it took about an hour to paint and sketch on Sunday. She used watercolor because “it’s kind of a tricky medium to use, so it’s just kind of fun to play around with and practice more with.”

The painting shows a red Target cart achieving a new level of royalty.

When deciding on a title, Allen explained, “I’m not very good at naming things. I know ‘King of the Mountain’ is when you were kids and you would all climb up on the snowbank and you would try to push each other off and whoever was the last one standing was ‘King of the Mountain’ so that’s probably also subconsciously thinking of that.”

“I didn’t know it had an official name until after I did the painting, people started calling it various things.”

She posted her painting on Reddit on Sunday afternoon and it quickly drew more than 3,500 upvotes and more than 100 comments. Some people have asked to buy prints of the painting.

“At this point, no, I’m not selling prints. But if somebody wanted to download and print it out themselves or set it as their phone background that’s cool with me. Just as long they’re not claiming it as their own or make money, I don’t really care who shares it.”

The snowbank was so popular that Eden Prairie police posted on Monday that officers visited it.

Eden Prairie police visit a large snowbank
Eden Prairie police visited “Mount Target,” a snowbank in the parking lot of a Target in Eden Prairie Center on Monday.
Courtesy Eden Prairie Police Department

Allen can’t say when or where she’s seen snowbanks previously like this one.

“It’s an impressively big snow bank. What’s so impressive about it is it’s not just that it’s tall, it’s also very long.”

“It had to have been a good two stories — it’s big,” Allen said.

“Spring seems to be coming soon, so if anyone wants to see it in its full glory, probably go see it sooner that later. Obviously it’ll be around for a while, but I don’t think it’s gonna be quite as big looking,” Allen said.

Someone plants an American flag on a snowbank
Someone plants a flag on a snowbank near Ridgedale Center in Minnetonka in early 2023.
Courtesy Sonja Faegre

It may be here for a while. Snowbanks take a long time to melt, especially if they’re dense.

“Mount Target” joins Lake Chipotle and crater-sized potholes on the list of Twin Cities weather-made wonders. . Several other mountainous snowbanks can be spotted around parking lots in numerous cities.

Sonja Faegre, whose Twitter name is @letloverule23, captured a photo of someone standing with an American flag on the Ridgedale Center snowbank a few weeks ago.

And Twitter user @amy_abts caught a photo of a “fallen comrade” at the edge of a snowbank — a red cart that appeared to have tumbled off its own peak. Perhaps there are several mountain kings to find and protect.

A red cart sits on the side of a snowbank
After a photo of a cart at the peak of a large snowbank went viral, Twitter user @amy_abts shared this photo of a cart downed on the side of a snowbank, calling it a “fallen comrade.”
Courtesy Twitter user @amy_abts

Target had not responded to MPR News’ request for comment.

We may need a team of cartographers to capture the newest snow-mountain range beginning in Eden Prairie.

At the moment, though, we have videos, photos and a watercolor documenting the short-lived shopping cart’s legacy. People on social media reported it had disappeared from its throne by Monday afternoon.

Robyn Katona

ICYMI

National Eagle Center: Soar With The Eagles (Spring Hatch) – Wabasha, MN

Gary Paulsen: “The most important thing you can do is read.”

Gary Paulsen: “The most important thing you can do is read.”

A photo of a man in a hat smiling.
Brian Adams | Getty Images file
Gary Paulsen, a three-time Newbery Honor–winning author, died at the age of 82.

Arts and Culture: Gary Paulsen once said, “The most important thing you can do is read.”

He went on to exhort people to read everywhere: “Read all the time; read when they tell you not to read, what they tell you not to read, read with a flashlight under the covers, read on the bus, standing on a corner, waiting for a friend, in the dentist’s waiting room. Read every minute you can. READ LIKE A WOLF EATS. Read.”

The acclaimed and prolific children’s author, who died Wednesday at the age of 82, provided lots of material for those following his instructions.

Paulsen wrote more than 200 books for children and adults. Some 35 million copies of his books have been sold.

He told MPR in 1996 that the response to “Hatchet” was overwhelming.

“It struck something, a chord in people, that is really strange. It is wonderful,” he said. “And really, I get about 200 letters a day. And I have for years, and that’s almost a constant — between 200-300 a day. And I answer them.”

By that point, in the days before email, he reckoned he had received 300,000 letters. He said a huge percentage asked questions about the ending of “Hatchet.”

Many of his stories are about people involved in a struggle, and he told MPR News in 1996 that this reflected his own childhood growing up with parents with alcoholism.

“And I think that kind of leaks through, becomes inherent. I noticed I was doing a lot of books about survival and about wilderness stuff,” he said, again in 1996. “And I realized when I was a kid, I kind of fostered myself to the woods. They were drunk all the time, so I would just head to the woods. That became part of my life and how I write, too.”

As a teenager, Paulsen ran away from home and traveled with a carnival. He went on to have numerous adventures including twice running the Iditarod dogsled race in Alaska. At one point he and his wife, Ruth Wright Paulsen, had 90 dogs. They lived in Minnesota for many years but spent the last years of his life in New Mexico.

Random House Children’s Book said Paulsen’s belief in young people drove him to write. His final novel, “Northwind,” will be published in January 2022.

He is survived by his wife and son.

Readers reflect on Paulsen’s work

“My partner and I bonded over ‘Hatchet’ early in our relationship. We both grew up in volatile families and found a lot of comfort alone in the woods as kids. We actually met in the National Forest, and we both thought of Gary Paulsen during a trip to Alaska this past summer. His work changed our lives.” — Maddie

“‘Hatchet,’ ‘Dogsong’ and ‘The Winter Room.’ I like the wilderness and camping and exploring. I’m a Minnesota girl. Can’t wait to read the new book coming out in January.” — Marjorie-Lee

“‘Hatchet’ was an inspiration. I would not be a writer, or reader, if not for this beautiful human being.” — Dan

“‘The Cookcamp,’ ‘Alida’s Song’ and ‘The Quilt.’ They cut right to my own experiences with my grandparents.” — Matt

“‘Hatchet’ is an absolute classic. I teach language arts and I have been reading this book with my middle schoolers. They have so much interest and enthusiasm for this story. It’s amazing to see kids that might not tend to engage with literature find this book so compelling.” — Tess

“‘Winterdance’! His connection to dogs, their antics and the special bonds he forms with them. Laugh out loud funny! I also always read ‘Hatchet’ and ‘Brian’s Winter’ to my 3rd graders — all kids love it! RIP Gary Paulson — thank you for touching so many lives!” — Chris

“‘Winter Dance.’ because I love sled dogs and dogsledding. This book made me dream and laugh.” — Deb

“‘Hatchet’ was deeply terrifying and deeply moving. Transformative read from my childhood and I read the book to my kids when they were coming into middle school, too.” — Janelle

“My favorite is ‘Woodsong.’ I’ve shared it my 5th grade students for the past 23 years. They loved his adventures in the Iditarod. I felt like I knew Gary.” — Deedee

“When I read ‘Hatchet’ for the first time, it felt like it was written for me specifically. Because it was so easy to see myself in the story. It is the single most influential book of my whimsical and carefree Minnesota boyhood. I think about ‘Hatchet’ more often than any other book I read as a kid, and I am very sad to hear about the passing of Gary Paulsen. God, bless that man … and get him something to write with.” — Devin

Tell us about your favorite book!

George Floyd Square Caretaker & Organizer – Minneapolis, MN

George Floyd Square Caretaker & Organizer – Minneapolis, MN

                      Photo by Laurel Bandy for MPR News
George Floyd Square: Jay Webb is a caretaker and organizer who worked on creating the garden around the “Black Power” fist sculpture at 38th Street and Chicago Avenue. Webb thinks this place has had a positive impact on more than just this corner of the city. He said it’s become a place of community action and healing, which is having a ripple effect on the world with demonstrations and safe spaces popping up everywhere you can think of. “We created our space and our vibration here for Minneapolis. Now what happened after they saw how we responded. What did other cities do?” he said. “They started giving as well. They responded the same way.” This is part of a monthlong series looking at how the community has transformed the site of George Floyd’s killing and at the people behind its transformation. It is the culmination of reporting over several months, and a partnership with South High School to engage neighborhood youth in telling their community’s story. Read more at MPRNews.org.

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