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A day at the faire
By Stephanie Galindo
KP News
What more could one ask for than a whole day of great
shopping, adventure, entertainment, good food, cold
drinks, and even an education in medieval life — all for
only $10 or $12?
A day at
the Renaissance Faire began with the line at the gate,
where the queen’s entourage joined the populace to
engage in lively banter with the pirates and gentle folk
up on the battlements. Minstrels sang and played a
variety of strange instruments, magicians entertained
the crowd with their illusions, the infamous Pickle
Wench carted out her ice-cold pickles, and bold knights
strolled by, seeking favor for the tournaments later
that day.

Target competition
at close range with a javelin.
Photo by Karen Hale |
Cannons
fired, the smoke drifted by, the gate opened and the
faire began!
Once
inside, children were captivated by seven staging areas
with fire jugglers, storytellers, magicians, gypsies,
faeries, dancers, music, theatrical comedy, a faire-wide
scavenger hunt for faery-tale friends, archery practice,
and live, melee-style sword fighting lessons. Youth
wandered about in faery wings, masks and costumes
(available for rent), and contemplated a nip of cold
Sarsaparilla with a big turkey leg for lunch.
More than
70 merchants attracted curious shoppers, some
manufacturing their goods right there on the spot using
traditional medieval equipment – such as Rainier Metal
Craft spinning fine quality silver, pewter, brass and
copper wares.
The
stadium filled quickly for the phenomenal Cavallo
Equestrian Arts performance, as skilled combatants
demonstrated full-speed hard-hitting jousting, precision
maneuvers with lance and spear, amazing acrobatics, and
competition on horseback with real swords to “capture
the flag.”

A very skilled lady
aims to catch one of three rings on the
tip of her lance. Photo by Karen
Hale |
Farther
afield, the charming, harmonious, (and “slightly”
risqué) Thryce Wycked Wenches, and the rowdy Pirates …
ahem… mercenaries… of the good ship Emerald Rose
commandeered the Ale House for an hour of tall tales
spun in song. While the wenches bragged of their close
encounters in town, the pirates loudly and vigorously
protested their innocence of numerous alleged crimes
against the crown. Even Her Majesty, Mary Stewart, Queen
of Scotland, enjoyed the choice of icy ales, ciders or
mead. One couldn’t ask for more robust and high spirited
entertainment, with crowd participation, too.
And then
there was the dessert: ice cream, fresh crepes, locally
made fudge, spiced nuts, and peanut brittle. And to
think — faire patrons get to do it all again next year!
What bliss!
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News, all rights reserved.
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