Monday, October 8, 2012

Apple Harvest Festival

or How Did They Do That?

Ward and I spent the weekend with Miss Landers at her cabin. As part of our plan, we visited the Apple Harvest Festival in Burlington, WV, where the showcase event was apple butter making. There were several large copper kettles cooking apples and spices that produced gallons and gallons of apple butter. All of the stirring was done by volunteers and started a week before the festival began. People came from far and near to stir and to buy the finished product. We didn't help with the stirring, but we certainly helped with the buying.

In addition to the apple butter making, there was an Apple Dumpling Contest, continuous live music, a fiddle contest, a parade, a quilt show, crafts, a car show, a big flea market, an ox roast, a carnival, and lots of friendly people. Even though the grounds were crowded, everyone seemed to be in a good mood and to be having a good time.

While we enjoyed ourselves at the festival, we wouldn't normally think much about an outing like this later. However this time, we had a lot of food for thought. Burlington is a town of 182 people. How could a town of 182* manage to put on something this big? I actually talked to someone at the information booth about this very question. She told me that since it was for Burlington United Methodist Family Services, the local library, and the local fire department; everyone pulled together to make it happen. And after almost 40 years, it has become a local tradition.

Now that's an interesting idea--people helping their neighbors. They just saw a need in their community and did what it took to make it work. No magic, just hard work. And that's how they did it.

 Our Day at the Apple Festival

The apples for the apple butter came from a local orchard.


Sometimes families worked together to stir the cooking apple butter.



There were some amazing quilts in the quilt show.


We also bought some cider.


Ward browsed a lot of the flea market, but didn't buy anything.



This stage hosted the music


* In case you're wondering, Burlington is not a suburb in a large metropolitan area. The next closest town is about 15 miles away has around 5000 people in its"metropolitan area".




8 comments:

  1. What a wonderful event! It sounds like you had a fun weekend.
    How's the apple butter? Is it spiced or plain?

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    1. We bought some sweetened and unsweetened. I've only tasted the sweetened and I found it very good. Not too sweet with still a bit of apple tang to it. We made a lot of apple butter growing up that wasn't overly sweet, so this was just right for me.

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  2. That looks like it was fun. It's not been a good year for apples here - we'd normally be buried in them by now from our one tree, but this year there's nothing, so I'm missing all things appley.

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    1. Overall, I haven't heard about there being a big apple problem. However, my sister who lives in the mid Atlantic area, says that their apple trees didn't do very well this year. They only got a few small apples. She said that when the blossoms were supposed to set, the weather was too cold.

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  3. I don't live too far from WV I'm going to have to try to make next years festival. I love when small towns find a way to make something like this happen. Looks like it was a lot of fun.

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    1. It's always the first weekend in October if you want to plan ahead. I grew up in a small town with a small town festival like this, so it was a lot of fun for me.

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  4. I think it's wonderful what this small town is doing to raise money for children in need.

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What do you think?