All Over the Map – A U.S. Festival for Each Month of the Year

08/19/09  Print This Post Print This Post    7 Comments   Popular   Written by Sabina Lohr
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Photo from the International Snow Sculpture Championships: randomduck

Planning a road trip through the U.S.? Here’s a calendar of festivals and parties to keep you celebrating alongside the locals each month of the year.
January – Breckenridge, Colorado

Some seriously impressive snow sculptures are created here. Now sponsored by Budweiser, entrants to the contest are provided with 20 ton blocks of snow which they have 65 hours to turn into gigantic, ephemeral pieces of art. Show up during the first few days and see how sculptors turn heaps of snow into temporary masterpieces, or wait until they’re finished and let the towering icy art speak for itself.

February – Seaside Heights, New Jersey

Photo and Feature Photo: plain_jane53177

Raise at least $100 to donate to the Special Olympics, and you’ll be allowed to throw yourself into the 35-degree Atlantic Ocean! The lure is irresistible for many. Over 3,700 plungers from thousands of miles away come to town for the adrenaline rush a near-hypothermia experience will give you.


March – Miami, Florida

Photo from Calle Ocho: Adrian Salgado

Old-world Cuba meets modern-day Miami in a party covering 23 blocks and attracting a crowd of a million. This blowout began in 1978 to celebrate Miami’s growing Cuban culture. It is the crowning event of the ten-day annual Carnaval Miami. Samba music, mojitos and ceviche are just a few attractions that give this massive party a uniquely Cuban flare.


April – Hilo, Hawaii

When King David Kalakaua (AKA the Merrie Monarch) ascended to the throne of the Hawaiian Kingdom in the late 19th Century, he raised near-extinct legends and traditions up from the ashes and reversed a 70-year-old ban on hula. Now for a week each year this island celebrates the resurrection of Hawaiian culture with art exhibits, a parade, and a three-day hula competition. No showy little dance match, this championship has achieved worldwide recognition for its cultural and historic impact.

May – California’s northern coast

Photo from Kinetic Grand
Championship: mcnallyterrence

Contestants custom build amphibious kinetic sculptures in crazy and colorful shapes, get inside and race their wild works of art over land and through water along the northern coast of California. Speed is not at the top of the design qualifications list – it takes three days to travel the course’s 42 miles.

June – Pasadena, California

Each year, five hundred artists prove chalk isn’t just for children when they get down on the ground to create murals during this two-day festival, leaving the sidewalks looking like horizontal walls in an art gallery. The event is free and open to the public who vote for their favorite work in the People’s Choice category. Participating artists vote for their peers in the 12 remaining categories and the announcement on the winners concludes the weekend.

July – Clute, Texas

Photo from the Pasadena
Chalk Festival: mscaprikell

Sometimes you’ve got to grow a sense of humor or just give up. After years of suffering severe and chronic mosquito infestation, this small community in southern Texas decided to stop swatting and start partying. Now they throw a major three-day festival honoring the insects that cause them so much grief – before the weather changes and the air is too mosquito laden to go outdoors anymore.

August – Oak Bluffs, Massachusetts

This town on Martha’s Vineyard starts prepping themselves for the close of the season each summer by holding this one-night get-together. Residents and visitors pile into an open-air tabernacle for a sing-along in a neighborhood filled with gingerbread houses, then watch as thousands of Japanese and Chinese lanterns that have hung all week on the surrounding porches suddenly light up. It’s a bit sedate, as it should be. The tradition is 150 years old.

September – New York City, New York
San Gennaro Festival

For 11 days and 11 nights a million people cram into the one remaining block that comprises Little Italy in Lower Manhattan, bringing back to life, for a time, the flavor that thousands of Italian immigrants brought to the area in the 20th Century. You’ll hardly be able to move at this party, but you will get to see circus sideshows, play carnival games and eat world-class cannoli.

October – Albuquerque, New Mexico

Photo from the Albuquerque International
Balloon Fiesta: Larry and Linda

Noah’s Ark, twin bumblebees, Darth Vader, a cactus plant and – oh, yeah – balloon-shaped balloons sail by the hundreds through the wide blue skies each morning of this festival’s nine days. If you want more than a watch-from-your-front-door experience, you can wake up in the middle of the night and crawl through the hours-long lines of traffic to get to a launch site, where you can check out the inflation process before the balloons hit the sky.

November – Ariel, Washington

The country’s only unsolved hijacking is commemorated in the tiny town where a search team was headquartered to find a mysterious man who parachuted out of an airplane into the woods in 1971 with $200,000 in ransom. The Saturday following Thanksgiving, long-time D.B. Cooper buffs as well as the newly curious come together for fireworks, story telling and, of course, a look-alike contest.

December – New York City, New York

Okay, the whole wide world flocks to Times Square for this party. Of course they do. You have to!


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About the Author

Matador ID: Travellohr

Sabina Lohr thinks that there's way too much world to waste and spends a goodly chunk of her life plotting her next trip, and sometimes even traveling.   She prefers long trips where she can dig in and get to know a place, but will take anything.  Unlike many travelers, she has never kept track of the number of countries on which she has stepped foot but currently is working on upping her continent count.

7 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Michelle replied on August 20, 2009

    Awesome list! I volunteered for Special Olympics for years but never heard of the Polar Bear Plunge- that looks like so much fun!

    And it figures that Texas would have a mosquito festival. Too funny.

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  • Ryukyu Mike replied on August 21, 2009

    Sabina,
    This is great. Don’t know if I’d drink Bud, pay a hundred bucks for a frozen dip or go to the mosquito festival. Balloon’s be fun to shoot, though (camera). Maybe I’ll cook-up some kinda festival for Jack Daniels to sponsor; sounds like a plan !

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  • Sabina Lohr replied on August 21, 2009

    Well, thank you guys!!

    Mike, the Mosquito Festival is harmless, really. It’s more festival than mosquito.

    And Michelle, I always wanted to do an authentic polar plunge. I plunged once in the winter by myself on a deserted beach – some could argue this was not too smart, but I survived it nicely.

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  • Michelle replied on August 21, 2009

    Yikes! I don’t know if I could…my mother-in-law did one in Alaska. One of those super quick dips with pros around to help you- still, I can’t imagine!

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  • TravelHawk replied on August 23, 2009

    Awesome. I don’t live in the US, but these are some of the things that attracts me to live in the US :)

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  • Ron replied on February 2, 2010

    Hmm, I hate when people comment on these sorts of lists and tell the author they missed something… but come on! Don’t forget Mardi Gras!

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    • Kate Sedgwick replied to Ron on February 2, 2010

      I think the point was more to expose festivals not everyone has heard about, but Mardi Gras here we come!

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