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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230427
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230501
DTSTAMP:20260405T050721
CREATED:20211101T184639Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230405T125742Z
UID:94902-1682553600-1682899199@northeasttennessee.org
SUMMARY:30th Annual Appalachian Farm Show & Farmer's Reunion
DESCRIPTION:Tractor enthusiasts from across the South will make a trip to Northeast Tennessee for the 30th Annual Appalachian Antique Farm Show April 27-30 at the Appalachian Fairgrounds in Gray\, Tenn.\, hosted by the Tri-State Antique Power Association.\n\n\n\nIn an event that has grown to showcase hundreds of rare and popular tractors over the years\, a familiar returning face includes Brian Baxter from the RFDTV series Tractor Fever.  The agriculture inspired television network has featured the Appalachian Antique Farm Show and Northeast Tennessee for a number of years on the classic show dedicated to tractors\, enthusiasts and events across the United States.\n\n\n\nEach year the Appalachian Antique Farm Show is dedicated to a specific make\, model or style of tractor.  The 2023 Appalachian Antique Farm Show will feature numerous styles and models of vintage equipment under the John Deere brand. Along with the featured tractors\, exhibits of all makes and models will include antique tractors\, steam\, gas\, hit and miss antique engines\, stationary steam engines\, threshing machines\, gristmill\, antique farm tools\, live steam saw mill\, belted equipment demonstrations and other farm related equipment.\n\n\n\nEach year the show features a specific make\, model or style of tractor.\n\n\n\nThe full weekend of activities include a flea market complete with arts and crafts\, antiques\, farm and tractor memorabilia\, commercial vendors\, new and used farm equipment parts within the swap meet area\, a quilt show and tradition inspired farm games such as a Skillet Throws and a Barn Dance. Other popular events include the Parade of Power throughout the Appalachian Fairgrounds\, various equipment demonstrations and the kiddie pedal tractor race and pull.\n\n\n\nAll exhibits will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Thursday\, Friday and Saturday\, and from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday.  Admission is $5 and children ages 12 and under are free.\n\n\n\nThe 30th Annual Appalachian Antique Farm Show is hosted by the Tri-State Antique Power Association ad sponsored by Food City..\n\n\n\nVendors are stationed throughout the show including a swap meet\, quilt show\, tractor inspired decor\, apparel and more.\n\n\n\nThe Tri-State Antique Power Association is a nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving agricultural history through the restoration of antique farm equipment. Tri-State Antique Power Association supports the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital\, the Shriners Children’s Hospital for Crippled Children and other local charities including the Ronald McDonald House. TSAPA hosts the Annual Appalachian Antique Farm Show the last full weekend in April each year.
URL:https://northeasttennessee.org/event/29th-annual-appalachian-farm-show-farmers-reunion/
LOCATION:TN\, United States
CATEGORIES:Arts/Crafts,Car/Bike Shows,Children's Activities,Festivals,General,Historical Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230428
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230501
DTSTAMP:20260405T050721
CREATED:20230317T131430Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230317T131430Z
UID:98174-1682640000-1682899199@northeasttennessee.org
SUMMARY:64th Annual Roan Mountain Spring Naturalists Rally
DESCRIPTION:SIXTY-FOURTH ANNUAL\nRoan Mountain\nSpring Naturalists Rally\nApril 28–30\, 2023\nFOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:\nRally Directors; Gary Barrigar and Larry McDaniel \nfriendsofroan@gmail.com \nTO REGISTER GO TO FRIENDS OF ROAN MOUNTAIN WEBSITE: \nhttps://www.friendsofroanmtn.org \nor \nMAIL PREPAID RESERVATIONS TO:\nNancy Barrigar\, Treasurer\n708 Allen Avenue\nElizabethton\, TN 37643\nSponsored by:\nThe Friends of Roan Mountain\nFeatured Speakers:\nFriday Evening Program:\nCo-existing with Snakes Connie Deegan \nConnie Deegan is a naturalist with the Johnson City\, TN Parks and Recreation Department\, specializing in\nherpetology. Deegan is responsible for trail signage and maps\, trail design and construction\, and keeping the\ntrails clear of downed trees. She conducts week-long seasonal camps about nature and writes a popular weekly\nnature series\, ‘Naturally Yours’. Connie received the Tennessee Wildlife Federation Conservation\nAchievement Award in 2021 for Conservation Educator of the Year. She also received the 2022 Pinnacle\nAward for Adventure Tourism Leader.\nProgram Description:\nSnakes are an amazingly important part of the ecosystem and many people happily coexist with snakes on their\nproperty. Deegan’s program will include a discussion on the physiology of snakes and what to do in the event\nof a rare mishap.\nSaturday Evening Program: \nFlora Lore &amp; Uses – Fascinating Stories About Flowers Tavia Cathcart Brown \nTavia is Executive Director of the 170-acre Creasey Mahan Nature Preserve in Goshen\, Kentucky\, where she\nhas established a two-acre Woodland Garden that highlights native wildflowers and ferns\, along with creating\nmultiple Certified Monarch Waystations. With Tavia’s support\, Creasey Mahan Nature Preserve started\nKentucky’s first full-time outdoor preschool\, Thrive Forest School\, serving more than 350 students and\ncampers a year. During the pandemic\, Tavia created a Take a Walk with Tavia video series about plants\, which\nmay be viewed from Creasey Mahan’s web site or YouTube page. She coauthored the field guide\, Wildflowers\nof Tennessee\, the Ohio Valley\, and Southern Appalachians\, which covers 16 states\, 1\,250 wildflowers\, and\npresents 800 photographs. A highly regarded lecturer\, educator\, writer and photographer\, Tavia shares her love\nof plants and pollinators at every opportunity\, giving presentations to regional and national groups.\nProgram Description:\nTavia will present vivid examples of how Native Americans and early pioneers used plants as medicinal aids.\nYou’ll also discover myths\, legends\, and lore spotlighting wildflowers that were revered and sometimes\nfeared. \nSCHEDULE OF EVENTS \nFRIDAY APRIL 28 Conference Center Activities \n5:30 pm Registration and Check-in \n6:30 pm Buffet Dinner – Requires reservation prepaid by deadline of Tues April 25. \n7:30 pm Program: Co-existing with Snakes by Connie Deegan \n9:00 pm\n1. Night Walk (E\, J\,) Cade Campbell \n2. Moth Viewing (E\,) Larry McDaniel \nSATURDAY APRIL 29 \n6:30 am Early Birds (E) Herndon Chapter TOS. Meet at park Visitors Center (water wheel). Bring binoculars. \n8:30 am Field Trips: Meet at the field adjacent to the park cabins entrance. On-site registration is available. \n1. Birds of Roan Mountain (E\, ) Herndon Chapter TOS. Bring binoculars. \n2. Beginning Birding (E\, ) Herndon Chapter TOS. Bring binoculars. \n3. Salamanders (E\, ) Tyler Wicks \n4. Wildflowers (E) Guy Mauldin\n5. Land Snails (E\, ) Cade Campbell\n6. Introduction to iNaturalist (E\, ) Philip Hylen \n7. Hike to Jones Falls (M/S) Marty Silver\n11:00 am – 1:30 pm Conference Center Activities \n1. Fossil Casting – () Mick Whitelaw\, ETSU Dept. of Geology\, Geoscience Club \n2. Flint Knapping – Demonstration\nof ancient method of fashioning tools from stone. () Bob Estep\n11:30 pm – Nature Slide Show -Tracy Campbell \n12:00 pm Lunch – Bag lunches with prepaid reservation (deadline Tues April 25) or bring your own lunch and join us! \n12:30 pm – Program “Native Orchids to North American &amp; Nearby” – Mary Ruden \n2:00 pm Field Trips: Meet at the field adjacent to the park cabins entrance. \n1. Wildflowers (E) Anne Whittemore \n2. Mosses and Liverworts (M) Jim Goldsmith \n3. Aquatic Insects as Water Quality Indicators (W\, E\, ) Gary Barrigar and Anna Grizzard\n4. Hampton Creek Cove Hike (M\, ) Richard Broadwell \n5. Wildlife Tracking (E\, ) Marty Silver \n6. Butterflies (E. ) Park Greer\n7. Geology/Paleo-ecology Hike 5 mi (M/S\, ) Jeremy Stout.\n6:30 pm Buffet Dinner—Requires reservation prepaid by deadline of Tues. April 25. \nConference Center Activities\n7:30 pm Program: Flora Lore &amp; Uses – Fascinating Stories About Flowers by Tavia Cathcart Brown\n9:00 pm \n1. Night Walk (E\, ) Cade Campbell \n2. Moth Viewing (E\, ) Larry McDaniel\nSUNDAY APR 30 \n5:45 am Sunrise Hike (M\, ) Connie Deegan (meet at Carver’s Gap parking area\, walk up Round Bald\, will be back at park\nfor 9:00 AM field trips) \n9:00 am Field Trips Meet at the field adjacent to the park cabins entrance. \n1. Birds of Hampton Creek Cove (M\,) Herndon Chapter TOS. Bring binoculars.\n2. Laurel Falls Hike: Dennis Cove to Hampton (M\,) Gabrielle Zeiger\, Mick Whitelaw\, Don Holt. All-day hike;bring\nwater\, lunch and rain gear.\n3. Snake Talk/Walk Connie Deegan (E. ) \n2:00 pm Field Trips Meet at the field adjacent to the park cabins entrance.\n1. Salamanders (E\,) Lance Jesse \n2. Twin Springs Ephemerals and Plant Ecology (E) Jamey Donaldson \nKEY: E Easy\nM Moderate\nS Strenuous\n Kid-friendly\nW Wade in water
URL:https://northeasttennessee.org/event/64th-annual-roan-mountain-spring-naturalists-rally/
LOCATION:Roan Mountain State Park\, 527 TN-143\, Roan Mountain\, TN\, 37687\, United States
CATEGORIES:Children's Activities,Festivals,General,Outdoors
GEO:36.170384;-82.1006244
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230429
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230430
DTSTAMP:20260405T050721
CREATED:20230410T152428Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230410T152428Z
UID:98333-1682726400-1682812799@northeasttennessee.org
SUMMARY:Spring Garden Fair
DESCRIPTION:Kingsport\, TN – In a time-honored area tradition\, Exchange Place Living History Farm will once again\nhonor the arrival of spring\, and the planting season\, with its beloved Spring Garden Fair. The oldest\ngarden fair in our region will be back for its 37 th year on Saturday\, April 29\, from 10 a.m. until 5\np.m.\, and Sunday\, April 30\, from noon until 5 p.m.\, at the 1850s farmstead\, located at 4812\nOrebank Road in Kingsport. Admission is $5 for ages 12 and older\, with no charge for\nanyone under the age of 12. \nEagerly anticipated by area gardeners — from beginners to experts – the Fair will feature thousands of\nplants for sale\, from old favorites to rare and hard-to-find varieties. Growers will offer perennials\,\nannuals\, trees and shrubs\, with an emphasis on herbs\, natives and heirloom plants. Gardening experts\nwill be available throughout the weekend to share their knowledge about plant selection and care\, and\nfolk and yard artisans will also be found throughout the grounds with unique plant and garden-related\narts and crafts. \nDemonstrations of springtime activities on the farm\, which is more than 200 years old\, helps to bring the\npre-Civil War years to life\, and are always highlights of the Fair. The Overmountain Weavers Guild\ncontinues their long tradition of “Sheep to Shawl” with sheep being sheared and the wool carded\, spun\ninto yarn and woven into a shawl within hours. In the blacksmith shop visitors may watch iron being\nshaped into nails\, hooks and other useful objects. The newly-renovated hearth kitchen will be filled with\nwonderful aromas as the Eden’s Ridge Hearth Cookery Society will be churning butter on Saturday\nand using the butter to make a pound cake on Sunday.  Meanwhile\, in the Cook’s Cabin\, they will be\nmaking hoecakes and other foods showcasing African American and rural Appalachian foodways. And\nthe Junior Apprentices will be hosting the second annual Tennessee Dancing Gourd Spin-Off and\ndemonstrating other chores and activities all over the farmstead.  In the garden\, they will be available to\ntalk about heirloom vegetables and herbs used in the 19th century. \nNumerous special events will highlight this year’s festival\, starting with a very unique memorial for\nDennis Marshall\, who passed away last July.  He was a Master Gardener and Southern Appalachian Plant\nSociety (SAPS) member who had been a regular volunteer at Exchange Place festivals for many years.\nWe are honoring Dennis by working with The American Chestnut Foundation (TACF) to help restore this\neconomically and ecologically significant tree species. The American chestnut is considered “functionally\nextinct” due to an airborne fungus (Cryphonectria parasitica) that was accidentally imported into the U.S\nin the late 1800s. The Foundation and its research partners are utilizing multiple approaches\, and\ncutting-edge science\, to develop a blight-resistant tree that can again survive and thrive in its native\nhome\, the eastern United States. Earlier this year\, TCAF donated three hybrid American chestnut trees\nto Exchange Place\, which have been planted. A formal dedication of a plaque honoring Dennis will take\nplace on Saturday\, April 29 at 4:15 pm\, and a spokesperson from TCAF will discuss the plight of the\ntree\, and share the latest research efforts towards restoration. \nBack by popular demand\, Jennifer Hanlon will be offering her beginner’s needle felting workshop\, in\nwhich people can learn the art of transforming fibers into a piece of art\, perfect for your springtime \ndecorating. This workshop\, which will be held on Sunday\, April 30th from noon to 4:00\, will allow\nyou to create your own little bunny! The cost is $65\, will be limited to no more than 10 participants\n(ages 10 and up only)\, and includes all the necessary supplies. Registration is done online; go to\nhttps://www.hanlonscreativecorner.com\, and scroll down to “Needle Felting Class Bunny” to sign up.\n(Please note that a deposit is required at the time of registration.) \nAlso on Sunday\, Linda Doan will once again lead the May Pole dance\, beginning at 2 pm\, with live music\nprovided by our very own Junior Apprentices Old-Time Band. And both days of the festival will feature\nFrank Ireson of Viking Leathercrafts demonstrating how shoes were made in the antebellum years\, using\nan authentic\, old-time Cobbler’s Bench\, donated to Exchange Place by Betty Moore.\nAs always\, there will be an abundance of activities for children\, with a focus this year on flowers and\npollination. And children of all ages will enjoy meeting our heritage animals\, including our brand-new\nbaby lambs. The larger critters — our resident cow\, donkey and horse – can be seen in the 1851 barn\,\nwhile our numerous sheep will be in a variety of locations\, with the chickens and roosters in their\nenclosed area behind the heritage garden. Speaking of the animals\, please note that all proceeds from\nthis event help with the care of our permanent residents\, as well as with the restoration and upkeep of\nthe site\, which is proudly listed on the National Register of Historic Places. \nMusic fills the air for much of the Spring Garden Fair. A wide assortment of local and regional talent is\nscheduled to perform throughout the weekend; a complete schedule is listed below. (Please note\,\nhowever\, that it is always subject to last-minute changes.) And don&#39;t worry\, if you get hungry or thirsty\,\nfood\, drinks and snacks will be available. \nMore information is available by calling 423-288-6071\, or by checking the Exchange Place website:\nexchangeplace.info. \nExchange Place is a non-profit\, volunteer-run living history farm\, educational facility and regional\nattraction that seeks to preserve\, protect\, interpret\, and manage the history\, heritage\, and artifacts\npertaining to mid-19 th century farm life in Northeast Tennessee. \nTENTATIVE MUSIC SCHEDULE \nSATURDAY\, APRIL 29 TIMES SUNDAY\, APRIL 30\nKINGSPORT COMMUNITY BAND 10 – 11 a.m. {gates open today at noon}\nTHE BUTTERNUTS 11 am – 12 noon {gates open today at noon}\nSTRING BREAK 12 noon – 1 p.m. DEXTER RAMEY AND FRIEND(S)\nCHRIS LONG 1 – 2 p.m. BUDDY DELP\nJIM ANN COUNTRY 2 – 3 p.m. STATE STREET STRING BAND\nJUNIOR APPRENTICES OLD-TIME \nBAND \n3 – 4 p.m. JUNIOR APPRENTICES OLD-TIME \nBAND \nRENAISSANCE STRINGS 4 – 5 p.m. HEATHER RUPE AND FRIEND(S)
URL:https://northeasttennessee.org/event/spring-garden-fair-3/2023-04-29/
LOCATION:Exchange Place: Living History Farm\, 4812 Orebank Rd.\, Kingsport\, TN\, 37664\, United States
CATEGORIES:Arts/Crafts,Children's Activities,Farmer's Markets,General,Outdoors
GEO:36.5430875;-82.485072
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