Minnesota crop artists may have reason to give thanks this week.
They may owe that thanks to a century-old nonprofit that safeguards this state's crops — including the crops we glue together and display at the State Fair.
Yellow mustard seeds were a crop art staple. Plentiful, uniform in size, easy to dye, available in the grocery store spice aisle. But this year, fair officials warned, could be yellow mustard's last year.
The first rule of Minnesota crop art is that you construct your art out of Minnesota crops. There was no evidence that anyone in Minnesota was growing yellow mustard.
But before officials cut the mustard, they put the question to the Minnesota Crop Improvement Association.
In the lobby of the state's official seed certification agency hangs a framed piece of crop art: the MCIA logo, crafted out of soybeans. Everyone on staff had placed at least one soybean in the picture.
The Minnesota State Fair had come to the right place.
"Yellow mustard seed is sold as cover crop seed in Minnesota and crop producers usually use it for this purpose," said Fawad Shah, president and CEO of the association that works to ensure that if you plant an MCIA-certified seed, that seed will grow.