Brandyjane wrote:You covered Texas really well, EntAllat! We went to the Houston Rodeo - well, the livestock show part, anyway - last week. It was a lot of fun, especially for my little one who got to ride a pony and watch the pig races.
I went last week too - to both the livestock show and the rodeo/concert. I usually see the trailriders come into town too, but I missed it this year. There are other rodeos closer to me, but I grew up in Houston and miss the HLSR.
Kylah618 wrote:Here in Charleston, WV, we have
Festivall in June. The concept of the event is to turn the city into a work of art. There's music, street performers, a New Orleans funeral parade, a street art fair, a Lego building competition, concerts... the list goes on and on. Ten days of the arts.
You had me at LEGO building contest.
Kylah618 wrote:In the fall, we have
Bridge Day about 45 minutes away. This is an event that I usually will not attend, because I have a paralyzing fear of heights. The festival takes place on the New River Gorge bridge (which used to be the longest arch bridge in North America). At either end of the bridge are arts, food, and all of the usual festival stuff. But in the middle, the bridge is open for the day to base-jumpers, rapelling, and bungee jumping for the day. It's pretty cool to watch.
That. Looks. Awesome.
Kylah618 wrote:And somewhere around the end of August/first of September, in my itty-bitty hometown of Summersville, WV (about an hour away) we have the
Potato Festival. Also known as Spud Fest. Carnival games, potato auction, potatoes cooked in any possible way you can imagine (including potato candy), a parade (I've marched in it five times!), battle of the bands, and rides.
I love any and all food/harvest festivals. I wish I could go to all of them.
Glory1863 wrote:It's a little early for anything "cool" in my area because it's usually still snowing and/or raining in March. However, they do this every year in the city for
St. Patrick's Day. The stuff they put in looks like Tang, but it really does turn that glow-in-the-dark shade of
GREEN.
That looks like fun. I loved Chicago - I've only been there once but I'd like to visit again and see more of it.
lfvoy wrote:Boy, EA, you come up with good questions sometimes.
Hah! Thanks.
lfvoy wrote:Most people in fandom, of course, have heard of
Dragon*Con which happens in Atlanta across Labor Day Weekend (this year it is August 31-September 3).
I want to go to that one of these days.
Maybe this year? Unlikely, but... who knows.
lfvoy wrote:During that same weekend, Atlanta also has its own
Montreux Jazz Festival which I've been to a couple of times. It's usually held close enough to Dragon*Con that a visitor could easily do both.
Nice to know. If I ever make it out there for Dragon*Con, I'll see about attending this too.
lfvoy wrote:General question: are there lots of cool things year-round in your area too?
Hm.
Caving? It's not really an event, but this part of central Texas is riddled with
limestone caves, so there's a few show caves, some protected ones, and a lot on private property. They're pretty much a year round thing. For that matter, the weather is pretty mild along the Texas coast too, so fishing and most outdoor activities would be (almost) year round. It's a little chilly in January and February but temps in the 80s in December aren't unheard of.
