There are myriad ways to celebrate with your sweetheart beyond dinner and a box of chocolates. Here is your inspiration guide—five fabulous ideas for a fun, memorable date.
Couples’ Massage
Enjoy a relaxing, side-by-side massage treatment that will leave you both feeling good. Northern Quest Resort and Casino’s La Rive Spa in Airway Heights has two couples options, one that includes a candlelight, in-room massage in your suite if you stay there, and one that provides massages for two in a private room. Call 509-481-6108 to book an appointment.
Wine, cookies, and chocolate? Yes, please! Saturday and Sunday, February 9 and 10, Spokane Winery Association wineries will be open from noon to 6:00 p.m. for wine tasting paired with sweets. You can also enter to win another great date—Spokane Symphony tickets—at all locations. Many wineries will offer discount specials for this event, so you can buy some great wine for celebrating again on February 14. Click here for a map of wineries. Tasting fees apply and are usually applicable to a wine purchase.
Date Pass at Riverfront Park
Get the new Date Pass from Riverfront Park and play in the park with someone special. For only $30 per couple, you will enjoy ice skating, mini-golf, and a beautiful Sky Ride over the Spokane River. The pass is good on Saturdays and Sundays through March 3. Walking through the snowy park and taking in river views are free and fun activities to complete your date.
Pick up a new, romantic hobby to do with your partner! Simply Dance Studio in downtown Spokane makes it easy to try out new dances, and they offer social dances for couples to practice their new steps. Saturday night salsa is an especially good choice for celebrating Valentine’s Day. Learn steps during a lesson at 8:15, then dance the night away until 1:00 a.m. Or if swing is more your style, come to a lesson at 8:00 p.m. on Friday, February 8, followed by open dancing until 11:00 p.m. Check the calendar for schedules.
Spokane is a vibrant, fun, beautiful city to visit any time of the year. Something is always going on! Below is a list, by no means complete, of some of the most popular annual events that draw people from all over the region.
From Garden in the Sea, one of the films being shown at the 2013 Spokane International Film Festival.
This is a golden opportunity to see some of the previous year’s best films from all over the world on the big screen. Some of them may not ever be available on DVD in the United States. Festival passes are available. Individual tickets go on sale online January 12 and range from $5.00–$10.00. Films will be shown downtown in the Magic Lantern Theatre and the Bing Crosby Theater. Click here for a list of this year’s selected films.
Spokane celebrates all things Irish as well as a sense of community with a festive parade through downtown Spokane. Marching bands, creative floats, school groups from around the region, and dancing are some of the sights to be had. Come early to stake out a good place to watch! Click here for the parade route.
The first Sunday of every May, runners, walkers, and people using wheelchairs trek 12 km (7.46 miles) in and around downtown Spokane, WA in one of the nation’s largest annual foot races. Elite runners competing for the championships come from all over the world, but many more people are there for the fun of it. Flamboyant costumes, creative team themes, and great on-course entertainment are guaranteed to help distract you from the physical exertion. You can register online anytime through April 21 for $17 plus $1.69 online processing fee. Beginning March 1, mail-in forms will be available at various locations around town (must be postmarked by April 16).
Spokane is known for its gorgeous, though short-lived, lilacs that bloom in the spring. Each year, at around the time the lilacs are blooming, the community celebrates with a big torchlight parade, a car show, and several other events featuring the Lilac Royalty (princesses and a queen). The main events are on Saturday, May 18. The Cruzin’ the Falls Classic Car Show runs 10 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. downtown on Spokane Falls Boulevard, and the 75th Spokane Lilac Festival Diamond Anniversary Armed Forces Torchlight Parade starts at 7:45, also downtown. Click here for a full list of Lilac Festival events.
Coeur d’Alene’s IRONMAN triathlon course is one of the most scenic in the nation. Competitors swim two loops (2.4 miles total) in beautiful Lake Coeur d’Alene, cycle two loops (112 miles total) through rural, scenic North Idaho, and run two loops (26.2 miles total) parallel to the lake. Spectators cheer on the athletes during the running course. There will be 50 qualifying Age Group slots to the IRONMAN World Championship on offer at the 2013 IRONMAN Coeur d’Alene. About 2,800 people participate.
This very popular event is already sold out for general entries, but there are still Ironman Foundation entry fee spots available ($1,250, half of which goes to the Ironman Foundation). Come and support a competing athlete you know or just watch this incredible feat of endurance!
This is the largest 3-on-3 street basketball tournament in the world, with over 7,000 teams and almost 28,000 players in 2012. People of all abilities can put together a team and register, but the youngest players must be entering the third grade in fall of 2013. From the 3BA Elite Division to occasional players, there is a bracket for everyone, and prizes are awarded to the winners in each bracket. Registration opens March 15. If you want to be actively involved without playing, volunteer! Hoopfest is made possible by 3,000 people who volunteer their time.
Independence Day Festival, July 4
Music and other live entertainment, food, vendors, community booths, and fireworks at dusk at Riverfront Park.
At the Riverside State Park Equestrian Area on July 13, you can stomp in puddles all you want, whether you are 8 or 80, and no one will care that you are ruining your shoes and splattering everyone around you. In fact, it’s actually the point of the event to get just as filthy as you possibly can while negotiating a slippery, 3.5 mile obstacle course of walls, mud hills, pipes, giant slip ‘n slides, and more features. There is even a “Beer Chug Obstacle” (root beer also available) where you will chug a beer before attempting the challenge (for beer, you must present your ID and get a wrist band before the race starts). There is also a shorter Piglet Plunge for ages 2–12 (must be accompanied by a parent, $20 to register), a 1-mile course with kid-friendly obstacles and features like the “Hog Wash” and the “Pig Sty.”
Register as a team or an individual. Costumes, bad mustaches, and outrageous hair are highly encouraged, and you might just win prizes for them, along with other creative categories. Cost is $35.00 through January 31, then it goes up gradually until July 10, when it is $55.00.
Don’t miss one of the best free music festivals in the Northwest, held in Riverfront Park. This huge, six-day celebration begins on the Wednesday before Labor Day. Three stages plus roving entertainment provide something for everyone. Of course, there are also about 54 food booths offering up all kinds of cuisine, from foot-long hot dogs to samosas. Local and regional bands as well as national headliners play.
It’s all here—farm animals, amusement rides, rodeo, live music, art, crafts, giant produce, wickedly good junk food, trinkets, antique machinery, and much more. The fair ushers in the fall; it’s the last big summer weather event. Watch the website for details of the 2013 fair as they become available!
The exact dates have not been announced yet, but in the second half of September, the 4th annual Spokane Oktoberfest will be held in Riverfront Park. This 21-and-older event features a large variety of Washington state beers for tasting. Live music, German concession food, and an Oktoberfest costume contest are all part of the fun.
Green Bluff Growers Festivals, May through December
Green Bluff, home to a few dozen farms, is located about 15 miles north of Spokane in the scenic foothills of Mt. Spokane. During the summer and fall, you can visit growers and buy food directly where it is grown. You can even pick your own berries, tree fruits, pumpkins, and more. On festival weekends, farmers and shops offer live music, farm-fresh cuisine, tours, and more. Some farms have play areas for kids, petting zoos, wagon rides, and corn mazes. There are even wineries and candy makers to visit.
Green Bluff farms open up to the public beginning with the Blooms on the Bluff (flowers, plants, crafts) on Mother’s Day Weekend. At the end of June and beginning of July, you can enjoy some super fresh, sweet, local strawberries during the Strawberry Festival. Next is the Cherry Festival, two weekends in July, including the Cherry Picker’s Trot annual fun run. The Peach Festival runs late August through Labor Day, and the Apple Festival is late September to the end of October. You can even come back for holiday shopping during Holiday Memories November 23 through December 24 and cut your own Christmas tree or pick up unique, local food gifts. Each farm has its own hours and events. Click here for the growers’ map, from which you can access information pages for each farm
The biggest, most inclusive New Year’s Eve party in Spokane starts at 6:00 p.m. (some kids’ activities start at 3:00 p.m.) It runs until midnight, but you won’t run out of things to do and probably will not have time to see everything you want to! Click here for a description of the dozens of performance and attractions at First Night Spokane 2013. Admission buttons are just $12 through December 30 or $15 on December 31. Kids 10 and under are free when accompanied by a button-bearing adult. Get your buttons at Cenex Zip Trip stores, the River Park Square concierge desk, Auntie’s Book Store, or Mountain West Bank. Not going to be near any of those places in the next few days? Just order online and pick up your buttons at the Spokane Convention Center beginning at 3:00 p.m. on New Year’s Eve. Your button gets you into all First Night events.
The evening begins with a masquerade parade at 6:10 p.m. from the Spokane Convention Center to the Riverfront Park Fountain and ends at midnight with a fireworks show that starts at 11:50 p.m. In between, there is a large variety of entertainment for everyone. As always, First Night Spokane is alcohol free and family friendly. To help you decide, here are some great choices, one for each hour counting down to 2013.
Bring the kids to the Spokane Convention Center for three hours of fun. Activities are centered around this year’s First Night theme: Across the Universe: the Year of the U.F.O. Kids can create their favorite “Martian Marmot,” launch a rocket, get a robot hat, and put on a washable tattoo. There will be dancing, a “moon surface walk,” “space writing wall,” and music. There are even special activities just for tots 2–4 years old.
7:00 p.m.—Outrageous Wild Women Crown Making
Stop by first, or anytime throughout the evening, to decorate a personalized crown. Not just for kids! Grown-ups need to feel like royalty, too! Located in the Crescent Court, 2nd floor.
8:00 p.m.—SCC Players at the Spokane Public Library
Check out live theatre performances by the Spokane Community College Players at 7:00, 8:00, or 9:00 p.m. Last year’s show included actors performing unique folk stories from faraway lands; this year is sure to be equally interesting. While you are there, check out the photographs of Afghanistan by Casey Johnson.
9:00 p.m.—Blue Door Theatre, Convention Center Conference Theatre
Check out Spokane’s great improvisational comedy group, Blue Door Theatre. They will perform every hour all night. Every show is different because it is influenced by audience participation and random, on-the-fly ideas. Very entertaining, with jokes that require creativity rather than crudeness—it’s all clean humor.
10:00 p.m.—48 Hour Film Festival, Produced by NXNW
Each year, local film makers are invited to enter short films that must be written, filmed, and edited in just 48 hours. In case you are wondering (I was) how they prevent cheating, NXNW keeps the storyline requirements secret until the 48 hour timeline begins. Come watch the contestants’ submissions anytime throughout the night in the Spokane City Council Chambers meeting room in the lower level of City Hall. If you don’t have time to catch them during First Night, you can watch them on YouTube.
11:00 p.m.—Ice Skating and Looff Carousel Rides
End your night in the park to be close by when the fireworks begin. Your button provides free rides on the carousel and free ice skating at the Ice Palace (skate rental is not free, though). As you stroll through the park, stop at the many bonfires to warm up, or warm up by dancing to DJ music at the Riverfront Park Fountain. Visual artists will also be showing their work in the area.
Parking
Get a happy start to your night, rather than an irritating one, by choosing the easy, free parking option for First Night Spokane! Park at the Riverpoint Campus just east of downtown at 412 E. Spokane Falls Blvd. in the yellow lot for free. Then catch a free STA bus, which will run every 10 minutes from 3:00 p.m. until 1:00 a.m., to various venues of First Night. Catch a bus back at the end of your evening. Click here for a parking and shuttle service map. Easy peasy!
Forgo the standard this year and surprise everyone on your list with gifts that are fun, memorable, and very Spokane! Most of these gifts emphasize experience over stuff. So they are perfect for kids, people who abhor clutter, or those who have “everything.” Read on for inspiring ideas to help you finish up your shopping fast!
Historic Looff Carrousel at Riverfront Park
Passes for Riverfront Park, Summer Swimming, and Golf
Right now, Spokane Parks and Recreation is offering amazing deals on passes to Riverfront Park’s attractions, the City Aquatic Centers, and the city’s four golf courses.
For Riverfront Park, you can get a holiday package to use now (valid 12/19/12 through 1/1/13) that includes an IMAX movie, ice skating admission and skate rental, mini-golf, and a carrousel ride for only $12. Or, you can give a summer 2013 season pass for unlimited access to the Looff Carrousel, amusement rides, mini-golf, and more for just $39.95. The season pass also includes discounts for the Spokane Falls SkyRide, concessions, parking, and Mobius Kids.
Kids and adult swimmers would love a City Aquatic Center summer 2013 pass for fitness swimming as well as fun water play toys and slides. Pre-season prices for these passes are deeply discounted, $39.95 for kids and seniors, $79.95 for adults, and $159.95 for families.
Golf passes and memberships for discounts are also available, including a special 25% off four-game package for $89 that is only available through December 25. Click here to order any of the Spokane Parks and Recreation gift passes.
Spokane Symphony Tickets for a Romantic Night Out
Good news! Our wonderful Spokane Symphony musicians and their board of directors have reached a two-year agreement that ends the recent five-week strike. This winter and spring, there are shows of all styles to choose from: the Spotlight Series, with the Commanders Jazz Ensemble or Savion Glover’s SoLe Sanctuary, the classics concerts, the SuperPops Series, with Cirque Musica or the Pirates of Penzance, the new Symphony with a Splash concerts, featuring local bands, and the Chamber Soiree concerts. You can buy tickets for individual shows online, at the box office at the Martin Woldson Theater at The Fox at 1001 W. Sprague, or by calling 509-624-1200. Not sure which show to choose or when people are available? Give a Spokane Symphony gift certificate! Just call 509-624-1200 for more information.
Movie Night at Spokane’s Independent Theaters
There are two independent movie houses in Spokane, the Magic Lantern Theatre and the Garland Theater. The Magic Lantern, located downtown at 25 W. Main, is known for showing independent, foreign, and critically acclaimed films that you won’t find anywhere else in the area. Selections include comedies, dramas, documentaries, action flicks, and horror; however, there aren’t a lot of choices for young children, so a gift certificate here is probably best for the adults on your list. Ticket prices are only $7 all the time, but you may want to include enough on the gift certificate for some of the delicious, organic espresso, fresh popcorn, and desserts from Madeliene’s sold at the concession stand. Gift certificates are available at the theatre every day from a half hour before the day’s first scheduled show. Add a gift certificate to the Saranac, located in the same building with lots of good choices including fish, burgers, flatbread pizza, and vegan/vegetarian options, to make it a dinner-and-movie package. Call 509-473-9455 or stop by to get one.
The Garland Theatre, at 924 W. Garland Avenue, is a beautiful theatre that first opened in 1945. It has been lovingly restored over the years and shows second-run popular new films as well as old family favorites. This is great for kids and families! Admission is $1–$4.50, and there is a full concession stand that offers bottomless tubs of popcorn for $6. Gift certificates are available at the theater box office or by calling 509-327-2509. For the 21 and over recipients on your list, you can add a gift certificate to Bon Bon, the old-fashioned, hip little bar right next door. For more information on Bon Bon gift certificates, call 509-413-1745 or stop by during business hours (4 p.m. to midnight Monday through Thursday and 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. Friday and Saturday.)
Roast House Nutcracker Suite coffee, available only in December
Seriously Good Local Coffee with a Personalized Label
At Spokane’s Roast House Coffee, you can get the coffee lovers on your list excellent local coffee with a personalized label of your choice (up to 10 words) for no extra charge. Roast House purchases, roasts, and markets only organic, shade grown varietals of coffee. All coffee is either Fair Trade certified or ethical direct trade, so you can feel good about buying it. And it tastes amazing! Click here to shop online. Check out the Nutcracker Suite, available only in December. Coffee mugs and canisters are also available to create a gift package. You can also shop the Roast House at 423 East Cleveland Avenue, Monday–Friday, 8 a.m.–4 p.m. Call 509-995-6500 for more information.
A Night Away in a Gorgeous Suite
A perfect gift for your spouse is a night away. You don’t have to go far to get away from everyday life. Stratford Suites is near downtown Spokane as well as Northern Quest Casino and Resort. All rooms are beautifully furnished and feature full kitchens, high-speed Internet, and 50” HDTVs with DVD players. Now through December 31, Stratford Suites is offering a great special: the Shop and Stay package includes a one-night stay and your choice of a $50 gift card to Riverpark Square, Red Robin, or Red Lobster for only $135.00 (package can be used through 2013). Call 509-321-1600 to reserve.
Give the sports fans on your list tickets to a local Chiefs game. Our team is having an exciting season and currently ranked number 3 in the Western Conference and number 2 in the U.S. Division. Check out the many special promotion nights here. Click here for the season schedule. Buy tickets through TicketsWest.
2013 season tickets for Spokane Shock arena football are as low as $90! Surprise someone on your list with the gift of live, indoor football. The first home game is April 12, 2013. Season ticket holders receive extra benefits, including a free T-shirt, discounts on individual tickets, and first priority for upgrades and playoff tickets. Click here for information on purchasing season tickets.
Before the flurry of the holiday season really gets underway, treat yourself to a day of tasting fine Spokane wines at the annual Holiday Wine Festival. Every Spokane Winery Association winery (there are 19!) will open their doors the weekend before Thanksgiving. Many of the wineries are located within walking distance of each other in downtown Spokane. Maps of the local wineries are available at all stops, and each will offer discounts during this special event. Some wineries will offer food selections and gift ideas. This is a great way to find gifts for your hosts during the holidays and to pick up your dinner wines for holiday get-togethers!
Be sure to hit Arbor Crest (4705 N. Fruit Hill Road)for a tasting and a rare tour of their historic Cliff House. The Arbor Crest Cliff House is a three-story Florentine style mansion with panoramic views of Liberty Lake, Spokane Valley, and downtown Spokane. The Cliff House is only open for tours two times a year, Holiday Wine Fest weekend and Spring Release weekend.
If you haven’t been to Marketplace Wine Bar (32 W. 2nd Street) yet, Holiday Wine Fest is a great time to try it. The comfortable, spacious tasting room offers vintages from two wineries, Emvy Cellars and Bridgepress Cellars. Cheese and sausage or hummus plates are available for purchase. Marketplace Wine Bar is located in the same building as the Spokane Public Market, so while you are there you can pick up some locally grown and produced food.
If you want to pick up some easy gifts (not that local wine is not a great gift all by itself!), head east to Latah Creek at 13030 E. Indiana. The gift shop features gourmet food, fun wine accessories, and gift baskets. During Holiday Wine Fest, Latah Creek will offer food, music, dancing, and of course tasting in honor of the release of their new Ellena Ellena wine, which is named after the winery’s co-founder Mrs. Ellena Conway.
If you do go to Latah Creek, it is worth your while to drive a little further and visit Liberty Lake Wine Cellars (1018 S. Garry Road, Liberty Lake), one of my favorite Spokane area wineries. The lovely tasting room, on the second floor of the winery, is set up like the kind of living room you would love to have. While you sip, you’ll enjoy fantastic views of Liberty Lake. During Holiday Wine Fest, $5.00 covers six tastings plus a take-home Liberty Lake Wine Cellars glass.
Spokane has a great theatre scene, with a professional company, a national award winning community theatre, and several college theatres. The play season is just getting into full swing, so be sure to check out the many options for comedy, drama, holiday plays, and musicals. Here are a few highlights of the 2012–2013 season.
Funny Plays
If you like dark, satirical comedies, go see Incorruptible at Interplayers Theatre. The story of two 13th century monasteries competing for a papal visit with bogus claims of miracles runs October 25–November 10.
Every year, Spokane Civic Theatre puts on a wacky, redneck comedy. This year’s selection is Escanaba in Love, by Jeff Daniels, a prequel to Escanaba in da Moonlight, which was performed in a previous season at the Civic. “Albert Soady Jr. marries Big Betty Baloo during WWII and they spend their honeymoon at the ‘world famous Soady deer camp’ where women are not allowed.” Definitely a flannel shirt affair. Runs January 11–February 2, 2013.
If you caught The Underpants by Steve Martin some years back at Interplayers, you know it is hilarious, witty, and, ultimately, shows some unglamorous truths about what it means to love and support someone. Eastern Washington University Theatre will perform this farce about a housewife who attracts the attention of certain onlookers and the ire of her husband when her underpants fall to the ground during a parade for the king, November 9–18. Call 509-359-2459 for reservations. Tickets are $10 (free for EWU students).
Holiday Plays
Spokane Civic Theatre’s 2010 performance of White Christmas.
If you are a fan of the old movie White Christmas, you can come hear all your favorite songs from it live at the Spokane Civic Theatre November 16–December 21. White Christmas is a classic story of goodwill wherein two war veterans with a song-and-dance routine follow a couple of singing sisters to a Christmas show at a Vermont lodge. People are nuts about this classic holiday show, so get your tickets early!
Interplayers Theatre is performing another classic Christmas story, turned into an old-fashioned radio play. It’s a Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play will be played by five actors who are responsible for all characters and sound effects November 29–December 30. This is sure to be a popular choice for families and couples, so order tickets early!
Drama Plays
Maybe it’s the recession, but neither Interplayers nor the Spokane Civic is performing a drama this season. Laughing when times are tough is good medicine, but you might want to round out your entertainment with some more somber material. College productions to the rescue!
SFCC’s 2011 production of Dracula
Shakespeare’s Hamlet will be performed by the Spokane Falls Community College Revelers November 8–18. The SFCC Revelers, under the direction of William Marlowe, have put on some excellent productions in recent years, with great casts and captivating sets, including last year’s wickedly funny Dracula. As for the story, well, it is probably one of Shakespeare’s most well known plays, in which a young heir tries to prove that his uncle murdered his father (whose ghost is haunting Hamlet and the castle). Tickets are available at the door and are only $8 (free for students).
Eastern Washington University Theatre will present the world premier of Ode by celebrated poet and EWU professor Jonathan Johnson March 8–14, 2013. Considered one of the greatest true love stories in the history of literature, the famous poet John Keats will meet his ruin or his muse in Fanny Brawne, a beautiful woman who moves in next door. Call 509-359-2459 for reservations. Tickets are $10 (free for EWU students).
The Timber Terror rollercoaster at Scarywood. Copyright Silverwood and Boulder Beach.
Each October, happy, bright Silverwood Theme Park, near Coeur d’Alene, ID, is transformed into a dark, haunted “Scarywood.” Roller coasters run backwards (apparently, this is scarier than forwards), and ghosts, ghouls, and other nasty creatures prowl the grounds.
Haunted attractions include the Blood Bayou haunted house, Terror Canyon Trail, Zombie Wood Express (the benign train ride turned into a zombie hunting machine!), and the brand new 3-Dementia, a 3-D attraction of a “pleasant fun zone gone horribly wrong.”
Not all rides are open during Scarywood, but there are plenty to keep you busy all evening, and all are decked out in spooky decorations and swarming with horrifying people to keep your adrenaline pumping. The website advises visitors to plan on attending twice if they want to see everything. While not as crowded as Silverwood Theme Park during the summer, Scarywood is still very popular. If you can, go in the middle of the week for smaller crowds and shorter lines (and cheaper admission price!). Before you go, check out the visitor tips page. Note that Scarywood is not recommended for kids under 12—this is not just an overly cautious warning. The place is very fun, but too intense for young kids! Dress very warmly, as you will be standing outside a lot. Visitors are not allowed to wear costumes, so save yours for the parties.
Tickets are $24.99 at the gate or $19.99 if purchased online for Wednesday and Thursday admission (6:30–11:00 p.m.), $29.99/$34.99 Friday (7:00 p.m.–1:00 a.m.), and $34.99/$29.99 Saturday (7:00 p.m.–1:00 a.m.). Bonus: for every Scarywood ticket you purchase, you’ll receive a free Silverwood May admission ticket! Click here to buy your ticket online.
If being chased screaming through a corn maze sounds like a good time, be sure to check out the Field of Screams at the Incredible Corn Maze near State Line, ID (3405 N. Beck Road, Hauser, ID 83854, 509-990-6088). There are three non-haunted mazes in addition to the 3.5-acre haunted corn maze. Click here for Field of Screams hours. Prices are $7 to $10. While you are there, you can also shoot corn out of a cannon, pick a fresh pumpkin, and let the kids play at the tractor tire playground.
The Post Falls Lions Club will scare you for a good cause at their annual fundraiser haunted house at 4th and Post in Post Falls, ID. This year’s event promises to have all new frights, with an “underground” them. The house is open Friday and Saturday nights from 6:00 p.m. to midnight through October, except October 28–31, when it will close at 10:00 p.m. The cost of admission is $7, or $5 if you bring two non-perishable food items to donate to the Post Falls Food Bank
If you want some reality with your spookiness, check out the Spokane Symphony’s Spooky Spokane walking tour on October 19, 6:30–8:00 p.m. or October 26, 6:30–8:00 p.m. For 90 minutes, stroll through downtown with a guide and learn about Spokane’s colorful and spooky history. The tour begins at the Fox theater and covers a 12-block radius with indoor and outdoor stops. Tickets are $15 and benefit the Martin Woldson Theater at the Fox. Buy them at the Fox Box Office at 1001 W. Sprague Ave. or by phone at 509-624-1200. They are also available online at www.martinwoldsontheater.com and at all TicketsWest outlets.
If you are looking for information about the Ignite! Theater haunted house at Riverfront Park, I’m sorry to tell you that it will not be performing this year. Due to construction on the planned Pacific Science Center, the group was not permitted to use the Riverfront Park venue, and they were unable to find another place. They hope to revive the haunted house next year at a new location.
The Verve Pipe headlines at Pig Out in the Park this year.
Labor day weekend is coming, the last big holiday before kids go back to school and summer officially ends. You could go camping at your favorite lake spot, but let’s face it, camping at a beyond maxed out campground is not really all that fun. On the other hand, music festivals packed with people ARE really fun, and at Pig Out in the Park you can pick and choose from 100 concerts, all free!
The line-up, spread out over three stages, includes some great national acts, including the Verve Pipe (Friday at 9:15 p.m. and Saturday at 12:00 p.m.), the Yardbirds (Saturday at 9:30), JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound (Thursday at 9:00 p.m.), Fishbone (Sunday, 9:30 p.m.), and more. There are just too many don’t-miss local musicians playing over the weekend to mention them all, but a few highlights I recommend are Hot Club of Spokane (Thursday at 8:15 p.m.), Silver Treason, Terrible Buttons (Saturday at 7:15), Cary Fly (Sunday at 7:00 p.m.), and Civilized Animal (Sunday at 7:30 p.m.). Saturday and Sunday at 4:00 p.m., kids can enjoy a roving magic show. Click here for a full schedule of the festival’s entertainment.
Chocolate dipped cheesecake at Pig Out in the Park
While the festival has become known for an incredible array of live music performances, drawing people from all over the Inland Northwest, it’s called Pig Out in the Park for a reason. You will find copious amounts of a wide variety of foods from Navajo fry bread tacos to maple bacon cupcakes. Food booths will offer food from all over the globe—Thai, Chinese, Japanese, Cajun, Native American, Italian, Mediterranean, Mongolian, Southwest, and Indian, plus amazing desserts like chocolate-covered fruit kebobs and huckleberry brownie fudge sundaes. And yes, if you must, have a deep-fried Snicker’s bar or Twinkie. After all, Pig Out in the Park only comes around once a year. I like to go with a food tasting buddy or two, so I can try and share several items for less money. Click here for a helpful list of food vendors with sample menu items to help you plan your indulgence strategy—naturally, the food booth areas are very crowded so knowing where you want to go before you arrive is very helpful! There are also three adult beverage gardens.
Pig Out in the Park runs August 29—September 3 10:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. in Riverfront Park, downtown Spokane. Admission to the event and to all entertainment is free. All food items are $9.25 or less. Pets are prohibited from this event. Parking is available in paid lots and at street meters throughout downtown (Sunday, meters are free). Click here for bus schedules if you don’t want to deal with parking!
Travel Spokane is a website built to inform Spokane visitors about the latest news, events, and opportunities in Spokane. The information is provided free courtesy of Stratford Suites. If you are looking for a Spokane Hotel be sure to check out our website at www.stratfordsuites.com