Festival Honeymoon
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Go to the
International Balloon Fiesta and you can say you spent your
honeymoon walking on air—literally.
(Courtesy of the New Mexico Department of Tourism.
Photograph by Dan Monaghan) |
If you're looking for a wide variety
great food, entertainment, and people on your honeymoon, then plan it
around a festival; it's kind of like attending a huge party in honor of
your wedding. Festivals range from the wacky (watch
locals charm worms in Willaston, England) to the culturally rich (such
as the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival).
Below, we describe a few festivals
as a way to get you thinking about the possibilities. Most likely,
though, you'll need to do some browsing to find a festival that fits
your tastes and schedule. Here are a few tips:
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If you've already settled on a
honeymoon destination, check regional tourism web sites for festivals
that may be going on in the area during your honeymoon.
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If you're still
deciding on a destination start at any one of the many websites that
index festivals around the world; we list several such sites in the
Links section below.
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Search for festivals on Google: Go
to the advanced search page. In the "all of the words" field, enter
your destination (if you've decided on one) and the month of your
honeymoon. In the "any of the words" field, enter the terms
festival, carnival, and fair.
TOP ~ FESTIVALS ~ LINKS
Thousands of festivals are held every
year around the world; here we've just selected a few examples.
January
World Buskers Festival
(Christchurch, New Zealand): The ten-day World Buskers Festival is,
according to its website, "one of world’s largest and best street
performance festivals." "Busking" is any sort of street performance, and
the World Busking Festival has more than 350 of them: "acrobats,
comedians, contortionists, dancers, escapologists, fire eaters,
jugglers, living statues, magicians, mimes, musicians, sword swallowers
and pavement artists."
February
Québec Winter Carnival (Québec
City): The Québec Winter Carnival is the world's largest winter
carnival, and the third-largest carnival overall. Hundreds of thousands
of people gather in the heart of Québec's Old City to participate in a
wide variety of events during the carnival's two and a half weeks: night
parades, an international snow sculpture show, a dogsled race, dances,
concerts, fireworks, candlelight dinners, dogsled and sleigh rides, and
a painting symposium are among the carnival's highlights. Among the
odder events are the snow bath, in which dozens of men and women don
swimsuits to bathe in the snow, the canoe race across the frozen St.
Lawrence River, and a life-size fooz ball game. A giant ice castle
dominates the carnival grounds. Besides the carnival, Québec's Old City
is a romantic destination for a honeymoon in itself.
March
Pre-Lenten Carnivals: Carnivals
in Rio de Janeiro and Mardi Gras in New Orleans are the world's largest
and most famous festivals, but pre-Lenten carnivals are held in cities
around the world in February and March: Festivals.com profiles carnivals
in Nice, France; Singapore; Venice, Italy; and Binche, Belgium (see link
below).
International Cherry Blossom
Festival (Macon, Georgia): Who could resist a festival inspired by
love, beauty, and international friendship—not to mention 275,000
blossoming cherry trees? Starting in the 1970s, the residents of Macon,
Georgia, began planting beautiful Yoshino cherry trees (the same type of
cherry tree found in Washington, D.C.) to beautify their town. A Cherry
Blossom Festival followed in 1982; today, the ten-day International
Cherry Blossom Festival attracts hundreds of thousands of people from
around the world. The festival features more than 500 events, most of
which are free. According to the festival website, events include a
hot-air balloon fest and air show, dances, parades, arts and crafts,
amusement rides, fireworks, historic tours, complimentary horse-drawn
carriage rides,
Cherries ‘n Cream ice cream, and daily concerts by top artists.
April
The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage
Festival (Jazz Fest): New Orleans is known for Mardi Gras, but this
is the town that never seems to stop partying. It's a city of festivals,
including Jazz Fest, a festival celebrating the indigenous music and
culture of Louisiana: blues, R&B, gospel, Cajun, zydeco, Afro-Caribbean,
folk, Latin, rock, rap, country, bluegrass—oh yeah, and jazz. According
to the Jazz Fest website (see link below), the festival spans ten days
and involves thousands of musicians, cooks and craftspeople. Half a
million visitors come for music on twelve stages, crafts artisans from
around the world, and lots and lots of food: Creole stuffed bread, fried
frog legs, pecan catfish Meunière, crawfish etouffée, seafood cornbread,
shrimp macque choux, gumbo, po-boys, fried oyster, catfish filet,
muffuletta, alligator sausage, snow crab maki-sushi, jama-jama,
vegetarian spring roll, Jamaican jerk chicken, peach cobbler, coconut
pie, sweet potato bread, pecan-praline cookies, and more (hungry yet?).
Visitors have the opportunity to learn from artists (and vice versa) in
the festival's Workshop Series. Jazz Fest is held at the Fair Grounds
Race Course, just about ten minutes from the French Quarter.
May
Brighton Festival (Brighton,
England): The three-week Brighton Festival features "the best in
world dance, theatre, classical and contemporary music as well as books
and debates and street arts," according to the festival website. The
festival features hundreds of events ranging from author panels to
opera, theater, dance, and workshops. Outdoors, hundreds of street
performers from around the world present free, live (often wacky)
performances throughout the festival. Brighton's own version of Spain's
Las Fallas Festival features giant papier-mâché statues "caricaturing
the great and not so good in a riotous pageant of parades and
fireworks." The Brighton Fringe Festival runs at the same time,
featuring music, theatre, dance, comedy, literature and open houses at
local art galleries.
June
World Worm Charming Championship
(Willaston, England): According to Festivals.com, "Participants
use music—including chiming garden forks—to get as many worms out
of their square plot as they can in 30 minutes."
Lewis & Clark Festival (Great Falls,
Montana): During this Step back in time to join Meriwether Lewis,
William Clark, and their Corps of Discovery on the banks of the Missouri
River in 1805.
October
National Storytelling Festival
(Jonesborough, Tennessee): "The National Storytelling Festival is
the oldest and most respected gathering devoted to the art of
storytelling anywhere in America," according to the Library of Congress
"America's Story" website. Nearly 10,000 people descend on historic
Jonesborough, Tennessee (population 4,000) every October to be
spellbound by tales told by the world's best storytellers. Why? Perhaps
because live storytelling, the oldest form of entertainment, still has
the power to move people to tears, gales of laughter, deep insight, and
hope. Stories are told in several large tents all day and well into the
night during the three-day festival; the Midnight Cabaret and Ghost
Stories are especially popular nighttime events. Although most of the
storytellers are professionals, anyone can tell stories at the Swappin'
Ground. Picturesque Jonesborough is an attraction in itself, having
preserved its historic charm. It is home to the National Storytelling
Center, and it is considered the birthplace of country music;
appropriately enough, live music is offered in the town square every
Friday night from May through September.
If you can't make it to Jonesborough
for the National Storytelling Festival, search the web for one of the
many other storytelling festivals that began due to the National
Storytelling Festival's popularity.
International Balloon Fiesta
(Albuquerque): This event has grown so popular since its inception
in 1972 that the image of hundreds of colorful hot air balloons
ascending into a turquoise-blue sky has become almost synonymous with
New Mexico. That image is from the Fiesta's "mass ascensions," in which
about 750 hot air balloons rise into the sky over a two-hour period
beginning around dawn. Days at the Fiesta feature mass ascensions,
competitions and races, and visits to the Balloon Discovery Center.
Visitors can even wander the grounds, walking among the balloons and
talking to the pilots. At night, the balloons are inflated and lit from
within, creating a magical, colorful landscape. Special shape balloons
add a whimsical flavor to the fiesta—look, it's a flying house (or car,
cactus, cow, etc.)! If you have a few hundred extra bucks to spare, you
can even ride into the sky on a hot-air balloon during the Fiesta
through Rainbow Ryders (other hot air balloon rides are available,
presumably at a cheaper rate, several miles from the Fiesta).
The Fiesta isn't all hot air,
though; live entertainment, car and quilt shows, and the Fiesta del Vino
wine-tasting festival (featuring free samples of New Mexico's
award-winning wines) offer welcome distractions from the main event.
The downside to this event is that
it can be crowded, drawing up to 100,000 people; also, Albuquerque isn't
usually considered a top honeymoon destination—although you might find
a romantic retreat in nearby Santa Fe (about an hour from Albuquerque)
or Taos (about two and a half hours).
TOP ~ THINGS TO DO ~ LINKS
American Bus Association
Top 100 Events in North America
A popular list of the top 100 events in North America for the current
year, including brief descriptions and contact information.
Carnaval.com Guide
to global carnival celebrations, parades, and travel information.
Festivals and
Events at BugBog.com
Worldwide festivals and events in five
categories: arts festivals, colorful festivals, European festivals,
exotic festivals, and English-speaking festivals.
Festivals.com
Festivals.com promotes itself as "the
largest resource on the Internet for information about community
festivals, fairs and special events." Lists 40,000 events worldwide in
six categories: arts, culture, kids, motorsports, music, and sports.
Includes a searchable database.
Links to Official Festival Websites
World Buskers Festival
(New Zealand)
Québec
Winter Carnival
International Cherry
Blossom Festival (Macon, Georgia)
The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival
Brighton Festival
(Brighton, England)
National Storytelling Festival (Jonesborough, Tennessee)
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"Captivating Crowds With a Rollicking Tall Tale" is a profile of
the festival in the Christian Science Monitor.
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Also see this
narrative of three college students' trip to the 2003 National
Storytelling Festival. Lots of captioned pictures provide a good
sense of what it's like to visit Jonesborough and the festival.
International Balloon Fiesta
TOP ~ THINGS TO DO ~ LINKS
Your honeymoon story
Have you done this trip (whether on
your honeymoon or other travel)? We'd love to hear about your experience
so we can share it with others . . . just
drop us a line.
Last Updated:
March 29, 2007 |