|
From mushrooms
to Elvis
by
Anna Barron Billingsley
Every
spring, 74-year-old Paul Goland, a mushroom vendor from
Franklin, West Virginia, makes the trek to Front Royal
to participate in the state's only ode to the mushroom.
This year's 16th annual Wine and Mushroom festival on
May 18 will be no different. Goland, who operates Hardscrabble
Enterprises Inc. returns each year for a simple reason:
it's a great place to do business. While festival goers
frolic, Goland sells Shittake logs, dishes out samples
of mushroom soup, peddles books and posters on mushrooms
and even recruits members for a regional mushroom fan
club known as the Mycological Association of Washington,
D.C.
Front
Royal's annual salute to the mushroom is but one of
the offerings in Virginia's diverse array of late spring
and early summer festivals. From Abingdon to Accomac,
weekends - and an increasing number of weekdays - will
be punctuated by the aroma of grilled sausage and simmering
onions, the twangs of bluegrass or beach music and the
sight of craftsmen, clowns and cultural displays. Regardless
of the means or the theme, the message seems to be the
same: We've survived winter; let's go outside and play.
The
state tourism web site includes hundreds of listings
under the category of "festivals, fairs and parades."
Many, like the Virginia Wine and Mushroom Festival,
started on a lark and a small scale. Originally, Front
Royal's festival was designed to venerate the lowly
mushroom, grown by many local farmers. But as local
supply dwindled, wine has taken over as the festival's
main course with as many as 18 Virginia wine vendors
offering samples of their products to wash down Caribbean
mushroom chowder and portabella mushroom sandwiches.
Last year, the Wine and Mushroom Festival occupied the
entire downtown area and drew about 15,000 people. "I
wouldn't miss it," says George Goldman, who invites
out-of-state relatives to the festival. "People
have a good old time."
A
month later and several hundred miles southwest, the
small town of Norton puts on a weeklong Best Friends
Festival that concludes on Father's Day. Residents and
visitors alike sprawl on the grounds of the city park
listening to bluegrass, gospel and karaoke emanating
from a central gazebo. A highlight of the festival -
billed as an opportunity to "meet old friends and
make new ones while enjoying arts, crafts, food, games
and music" - has been its Mardis Gras celebration,
says Joyce Payne, executive director of the Wise County
Chamber of Commerce.
A
highlight - literally - of Virginia Beach's Viva Elvis
Festival, now in its eighth year, is the sight of Elvis
look-alikes falling through the sky. The Skydiving Kings
put on an air show during this three-day tribute to
the "King," which also features Jerry Presley,
the King's cousin; Elvis memorabilia and some of the
crooner's favorite foods. The event takes place on the
Virginia Beach Boardwalk May 31 through June 2.
If
the King's cuisine doesn't appeal to your palate, there
are many other festivals centered on food. The Shenandoah
Apple Blossom Festival May 1 through 5 in Winchester
celebrates Virginia's apple-growing industry, and there
are many varieties to try along with music, a parade
and the crowning of the festival queen. The Hanover
Tomato Festival in Mechanicsville on July 6 draws people
from all over the state who revel in the taste of the
succulent tomatoes. There's even an event celebrating
what many people would like to avoid: the reek ramp,
a pungent member of the leek family that grows in the
wild. The Whitetop Mountain Ramp Festival, to be held
May 19, features a ramp-eating contest.Other festivals
that will get you outdoors:
May
11-19, Damascus
APPALACHIAN
TRAIL DAYS FESTIVAL. Each year in early March
hundreds of hikers leave Springer Mountain, Ga., to
start the 2,200-mile walk to Maine. By mid-May they
have reached Damascus, which offers them not only a
respite, but also food, a town-wide yard sale, music,
crafts, a parade and a hiker's talent show. www.traildays.com.
May
18-19, McLean
18TH-CENTURY
MARKET FAIR. Bob for apples, play quoits and
other children's games. Dine on fresh corn or asparagus,
roast chicken, sausages or bread, lemonade, sugar cakes.
Claude Moore Colonial Farm, 11 a.m.-4:30 p.m. (703)
442-7557, (703) 847-0710. www.1771.org.
June
21-23, Quicksburg
SECOND ANNUAL SHENANDOAH VALLEY POWWOW. A weekend
of singing, dancing and socializing featuring 26 Native
American crafters, fry bread and Indian tacos. Silver
Phoenix Indian Trading Post. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. (540) 477-9616.
For more details on these and other festivals, check
the state's complete listing at www.virginia.org.
Return
to Virginia Business - May 2002
|
|