![]() |
![]() | ||||||||||
| Home/Search | Student Help Center | Add/Update Listings | Career Portals | By Schools Search | Metro Area Search |
|
||||||||||
Navigate EducationforAdults.com:
|
Events in Seattle
January Martin Luther King, Jr., Celebration - Seattle Center - The Seattle Center is the hub for many activities in the city over the course of the year and this is one of the earliest. The celebration remembers Martin Luther King, Jr., and with choirs, concerts, speakers and a reading of his famous "I Have a Dream" speech. The mayor also presents MLK Youth Awards to young people who have done an outstanding job of promoting King's values of peace and unity in their community.
February Chilly Hilly Bicycle Ride - For a different sort of wheels, check out the bicycle ride, which sees not only traditional bicycles, but unicycles, tandem bikes, and just about anything else on wheels that could be considered bike-like. Riders take the ferry each year from Seattle to Bambridge (approximately 3,700 riders in 2004, but it varies). Registered riders in 2004 ranged in age from 3 to 84. The route is 37.2 miles, but includes a number of hills that add challenge to the route. The ride is sponsored by the Cascade Bicycle Club of Seattle, one of the nation's largest, and raises money for them as well as a number of local charities.
March Whirligig! - The Seattle Center hosts its annual carnival in the Center House with free entertainment and fun for the family. Kids can bounce, slide, glide, and ride on super-size inflatables. And if that is not enough to put a smile on the little faces, there are also clowns, face-painters and an array of other entertainers to amuse and delight.
April Seattle Cherry Blossom & Japanese Cultural Festival - The roots of this festival stretch back to 1976 when the late Prime Minister of Japan, Takeo Miki, and the Japanese government gifted Seattle with 1,000 cherry trees in honor of the U.S. Bicentennial. The prime minister had also spent time in Seattle as a student and developed close ties to the city, so this was also a personal "thank you" from him. A small group of people gathered in Seward Park to have a ceremony to celebrate the trees. This grew and eventually moved to the Seattle Center, which helped to further publicize and grow the event and introduce more people to Japanese culture. Today the festival lasts three days and includes dancers, puppeteers, sword makers, and other performers and artists who showcase traditional and contemporary Japanese culture to more than 30,000 attendees.
May Salute to America's Armed Forces - Memorial Day weekend sees the Museum of Flight in Seattle taking time to honor the armed forces. The salute is a three-day event that features presentations, tours, patriotic music and autograph signings.
June Washington Summer Brewfest - The Washington Brewers Guild hosts its festival on Father's Day Weekend featuring three days of fun, food and beer. Kids can enjoy a root beer garden and plenty of games and activities. Also patrons can enjoy live music and festival activities while traveling between beer tasting booths for home-made, craft and imported varieties. Use It Again, Seattle! - In an effort to keep good, reusable items out of landfills, Seattle sponsors this free event where it encourages its residents to bring clean, working, reusable items (such as appliances, exercise equipment, clothing, furniture, books, art, etc.) to give to others. People can bring items or take them, and the city asks only that people take just what they need for themselves rather than taking extra items to resell.
July Chinatown-International District Summer Festival - The largest Pan-Asian American street fair in the Pacific Northwest spills through Seattle's Chinatown as part of Seafair. The festival offers food, arts & crafts, community booths and cultural performances. Sports demonstrations are available in a variety of sports from boxing to fencing and various martial arts. For those desperate to try their skills, there is an inflatable sumo-wrestling match available, where people can put on large padded outfits and smash into each other. Meanwhile, the Dragon Stage features various musical performances including the lion/dragon dance, steel drum band, Japanese taiko drum, martial arts, Hawaiian hula dance and many others. And for some random entertainment, sign up for or just watch the Karaoke Idol competition. Milk Carton Derby - Part of Seafair, this Seattle tradition is bound to excite praise from those who encourage creative trash recycling. Each summer, more than 100 milk carton boats gather at Green Lake, brought there by anxious kids, teens, parents and corporations who have spent countless hours constructing their milk carton creations in hopes of winning the derby. In addition to the milk carton engineers, 35,000 spectators turn out to see the derby as well. More than $10,000 in prizes is awarded.
August Seattle HempFest - With a slight twist on the typical festival, this is both a celebration and a political statement as thousands of people (an estimated 185,000 in 2003) join together to peacefully protest the rights of cannabis enthusiasts with speakers and music. The festival has grown astonishingly since its slow start in 1991 with a group of 500 attendees and 20 staff.
September DjangoFest Northwest - For another festival that is out of the ordinary, try DjangoFest, which was started several years ago to celebrate the music of Django Reinhardt and a unique style called Gypsy Jazz. The festival features not only performances, but also a variety of workshops and even a few jam sessions.
October Pumpkin Prowl - Halloween festivities make the Woodland Park Zoo an even more exciting place for three days at the end of October. Kids can go trick-or-treating, and there is entertainment for the whole family. The hundreds of carved, lighted pumpkins provide the most spectacular part of the event.
November Heather Tartan Ball and Silent Auction - This ball is sponsored by the Scottish Highland Games Association and proceeds benefit their Highland Games and Clan Gathering in July, another fantastic event. The ball features pipe bands, musicians, highland dancing, country dancing, ballroom dancing and a Silent Auction.
December New Year's Eve - The Space Needle hosts the world's tallest structure-launched Fireworks Show with more than 2,000 pyrotechnic effects. Down below, a crowd of 50,000 people stand watching in the West Coast's version of Times Square, with approximately 400,000 people watching from the surrounding neighborhoods.
Sources:
(http://www.seattle-travel-services.com)
(http://www.lonelyplanet.com) |
| |||||||||