Now that the weather is heating up throughout most of the U.S., festival season is on the horizon. USA Today "teamed up with a panel of festival experts to find the best music, food, culture, art and film festivals in the U.S," Lydia Schrandt reports for USA Today. Readers were then allowed to vote for their favorites, and some of the winners include festivals in rural areas or with rural resonance.
Among the best music festivals, No. 2 was the Electric Forest Festival, a four-day music fest in Rothbury, Mich., a village with a population of 424. An estimated 50,000 people attend the festival every year. No. 7 on the list is Bonnaroo, a four-day festival held on a 700-acre farm in Manchester, Tenn. The festival had more than 90,000 attendees last year.
For poetry enthusiasts, the Best Cultural Festival list includes the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko, Nev. The six-day event is "an annual celebration of the ranching and rural West," says the organization's website. Also on the list are the Texas Renaissance Festival, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Frozen Dead Guy Days, Cheyenne Frontier Days, Sturgis Motorcycle Rally and Festivals Acadiens et Créoles.
No. 2 on the list of Best General Food Festival is the Bounty of Yamhill
County, located in the Willamette Valley in Oregon. The Bounty of Yamhill County
"is a three-day annual event that celebrates this vibrant community of
famous wineries, celebrated chefs and sustainable family farms. No
other locally sourced food and wine event can boast such nationally
recognized participants," says the organization's website. No. 9 on the
list is the Beaver Creek Food & Wine Weekend, a four-day event in Beaver Creek, Colo.
For a complete list of best festivals, click here.
A digest of events, trends, issues, ideas and journalism from and about rural America, by the Institute for Rural Journalism, based at the University of Kentucky. Links may expire, require subscription or go behind pay walls. Please send news and knowledge you think would be useful to benjy.hamm@uky.edu.
Friday, April 24, 2015
USA Today lists best festivals in the U.S.; many promote tourism in rural areas
Labels:
art,
country music,
folk music,
history,
local food,
music,
poetry,
rock music,
rural-urban disparities,
sustainability,
theatre,
tourism,
wine
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