Issaquah Salmon Days

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Issaquah Salmon Days is a festival held in Issaquah, Washington, United States, held from 10am to 6pm on the Saturday and Sunday of the first full weekend of October. It is initiated by a parade, celebrating the return of the salmon to their birth-waters, that embraces Issaquah's history, culture, and ethnic diversity. The festival showcases over 300 arts and crafts artisans, attracting many Northwest artists. The art sold offers unique gifts and treasures and includes wood, glass, jewelry, paintings, pottery, and metal. There are five stages for live entertainment, with 40 plus musical bands including cover bands, a kids' stage, and a Bluegrass stage. Sporting events include 5K/10K runs (and a 1K run for kids), a Sporting Weekend which is held the weekend prior to the festival and includes geoteaming, a treasure hunt around Issaquah using GPS. Veterans' Memorial Park is used as the "Field of Fun" offering entertainment for children. The Kiwanis salmon barbecue at the festival is a crowd favorite. The 2010 register revealed over 180,000 people attended the event.[1]

History[]

In 1970 the Greater Issaquah Chamber of Commerce presented the first Issaquah Salmon Days Festival.[2] The event grew out of the desire to replace the once popular Labor Day Festival, as well as a need to celebrate one of Issaquah’s greatest treasures.

In the beginning, attractions included the Kiwanis BBQ, hatchery tours, an art show, children's parade led by J.P. Patches, little league football games at Memorial Field, and fire crew competitions. The Festival remained small for much of the 1970s, driven primarily by the Salmon Days Parade.

In 1980, the Salmon Days Festival and Parade underwent two major changes that have been credited with altering the course of the Festival: Salmon Days became a Seafair-sanctioned event and the very first Festival float was created. As a result, throughout much of the 1980s, the parade and the Festival grew, and subsequently transformed itself from a small-town event to one of the Northwest's premier festivals. To aid in the growth process, merchandise was introduced, the first paid Festival Director was hired, and large official sponsors came on board. In 1990, the Festival introduced the Salmon Days Limited Edition Print, a signed and numbered run of 450 prints featuring original artwork. The Festival retired the collection at the end of 2003 and almost all the past prints have sold out.

Today, Salmon Days is still presented by the Issaquah Chamber of Commerce with the goal of providing a community celebration focused on honoring the return of the salmon. The Kiwanis continue to bake salmon, with the amount now having increased to more than a ton a year[citation needed]. The Grande Parade is still featured, with more than 100 entries annually[citation needed]. Memorial Field, now the Field of Fun hosts free games and activities for families. Official sporting events have replaced the once popular fire crew competitions. What began as an art show has become a marketplace of more than 300 artists selling their handcrafted pieces[citation needed].

A proclamation signed by the Issaquah Mayor in 2014 declares that every year, for the weekend of Salmon Days, the City of Issaquah shall "ohfishally" be known as "Fishaquah."[3]

Festival Attractions[]

Salmon Days includes more than 270 artists that line Front Street and Sunset Way, more than fifty food vendors, the Field of Fun with free activities, and five stages offering live entertainment.

Streets-Arts and Crafts[]

Front Street from Newport Way to Gilman Boulevard and Sunset from Newport Way to Second Avenue SE are closed during the festival due to the different arts and craft vendors and other Salmon Days sponsor booths. During the festival, booths are set up on the side of the roads with items for people to look at and buy. Different arts and crafts offered include jewelry, paintings, children's toys, clothing, pottery, glass sculptures, gourmet food, home & garden art, leather, metal, musical products, photography, and wood sculptures. The streets close at 8 a.m. and reopen at 7 p.m. during both days of the festival.

Memorial Field-Field of Fun[]

During Salmon Days, Veterans' Memorial Park has many activities for children. This area is known as the Field of Fun. Activities include pony rides, inflatables, trampoline jumping, Puget Sound DockDogs competition, and fish prints[clarification needed]. A kids' train also circles the parking lot adjacent to the Memorial Park.

Foods of the World[]

In the area south of the Veterans' Memorial Park in the Train Depot parking lot is the Foods of the World, which has many different foods, such as hamburgers and fries, barbecue, Chinese, Japanese, Mexican, and Korean foods. Drink options include smoothies and fresh-squeezed lemonade. Dessert choices include caramel apple, strawberry shortcake, apple dumpling, elephant ears, and chocolate-dipped strawberries on a stick.

Issaquah Salmon Hatchery[]

The Issaquah Salmon Hatchery, operated by the Washington State Department of Fish & Wildlife, remains open during the festival.[2] There are several locations on the hatchery grounds where visitors can see chinook, coho, and sockeye salmon that have returned to their native waters to spawn. These viewing areas include a pedestrian bridge across Issaquah Creek and windows that provide a view of the hatchery's fish ladder and holding pond. Although tours are not available during Salmon Days, docents from Friends of the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery are stationed throughout the hatchery to answer questions from visitors during the festival.

References[]

  1. ^ "Issaquah Salmon Days". ParentMap. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "History of the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery – Friends of the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery". www.issaquahfish.org. Retrieved March 23, 2018.
  3. ^ Butler, Fred (September 22, 2014). "A Ceremonial Proclamation". issaquah.civicweb.net. Retrieved March 23, 2018.

External links[]

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