There were a lot of people in wheel chairs getting pushed across the grounds as well as kids in strollers and people planning the fair make sure to keep their needs in mind when setting up.
For moms moving young children around the fair is as easy as one, two, three.
"Yeah I haven't had a problem everything is really easy," Mom Cate Jones said with a stroller in her two hands.
"I would have to say it's very easy here everything is paved so it helps a lot," April Reader said as she and her two kids in a stroller stopped for cotton candy.
That's because the fair grounds are flat and have easy access buildings. The Champlain Valley Exposition staff are continuously making improvements to make the grounds more accessible for those not on their own two feet.
"It's something we're very conscious of and we are continued to look to approve the experience," Champlain Valley Exposition Executive Director Tim Shea said.
But that doesn't mean it's been there haven't been road blocks along the way. David Chase, who is pushed around the fairgrounds in his wheel chair, said he's had a problem in the past.
"One year I got stuck in the wires and two to three people had to pick me up," Chase said.
It's about the only problem people are having, wires across the walkways. Some of them are covered up by mats but the Exposition staff has a plan to move them even farther underneath the feet of fair goers.
"When we try and improve our drainage we lay conduit to bury the cords in," Shea said.
While there's still a ways to go the improvement doesn't go unnoticed.
"This year there's been no problems," Chase said.