Salisbury’s festival flourishes over three days of activities

Salisbury’s festival flourishes over three days of activities
Attendees of Salisbury Fall Festival enjoyed sunny weather on Sunday, Oct. 8. Outside of Scoville Memorial Library, tables were set up with slime-making materials and pumpkin painting. 
Photo by Patrick L. Sullivan 

SALISBURY — As the Fall Festival got underway on Friday, Oct. 6, people put up scarecrows, set up their tents, and kept a wary eye on the cloudy sky.

At the Salisbury Association, Sarah Morrison tidied up the grassy area around the old iron kettle and a wood representation of the Ore Hill Miner.

The figure is based on a photo of a group of miners on Ore Hill taken in 1914 by John R. Jordan. Morrison had a laminated enlargement of the photo handy.

She said small boys seemed fascinated by the miner’s unblinking stare.

Larissa Vreeland was setting up the Salisbury General Store tent, and pointed with pride to the accompanying scarecrow, made by work/study students from Housatonic Valley Regional High School.

Inside the Congregational Church, there were quilts draped over the pews and hanging from the gallery. One in particular was from Rich and Lynn Reifsnyder, with this information:

“This quilt was given to us in 1994 by the Oyster Bay Presbyterian Church after we served there for 14 years. Individual squares were made by families — each one a treasured memory.”

At the Friends of the Scoville Memorial Library book sale, business was brisk, with a whopping 26 dealers waiting around at the opening.

The rain held off until about 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 7. 

Hannah Pouler, a former Lakeville Journal intern and now a resident of Jersey City, where she works for a tech firm, also works part-time handling communications for the Affordable Housing Commission.

She worked on the affordable housing exhibit in the Salisbury Association’s Academy Building, and was ready under the affordable housing tent with information.

Asked if it is a pain to come to Salisbury from New Jersey, she laughed and said “No, it’s an excuse.”

Pouler said she has a personal connection to affordable housing. “I have friends who want to come back and can’t. When I see it affecting people, it brings it home.”

Pandemonium reigned supreme at the library, where the threat of rain forced the scheduled magic show indoors, in the main room with the circulation desk.

The room was crowded with small, wiggly children and parents as magician Chris Lengyel worked through his routine.

With the return of the sun on Sunday, the library lawn seemed to explode with children, who buzzed around long tables wielding paint, markers, and stickers, decorating pumpkins and faces alike.

The Salisbury Central 8th grade and EXTRAS program oversaw games of corn hole and taught the traditional art of slime-making. Others enjoyed the classic and timeless “Heave the Wet Sponge” game.

Over in Lakeville, owners walked their dogs—including two French Bulldogs dressed as bumblebees—around a block in a rag-tag “pet parade,” then all of them received superlative awards (“Best Ears” was awarded twice).

The artisans’ fair, which the rain had unceremoniously bumped from Saturday’s schedule, unfolded across the lawn in front of the White Hart Inn, while the Joint Chiefs played on. Attendees ran their hands over loom-woven wool blankets, children’s sweaters with clever buttons, and one another; one white-haired couple danced to the music in the grass. 

At the Salisbury Winter Sports Association’s annual Brew-ski gathering at Satre Hill, the fall weekend casual that had dominated on Main Street gave way to more intentionally styled après ski looks. Weekend warriors armed with tiny glasses sampled a range of craft beers and ciders, cocktails, and local moonshine, while they waited for individually-sponsored golf balls to be rolled down Salisbury’s famous ski jump.

Tom Morrison was signing copies of his latest comic novel by the Salisbury General Store.

The “Heave the Wet Sponge” game was a hit as always. Photo by Patrick L. Sullivan

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