Rock This Town

Libertyville Days Festival kicks off today to the theme of “Rock this Town”. Libertyville Days will run Thursday through Sunday and offers plenty of entertainment for everyone in the family!

There will be live music on the main stage every day of the festival. Tonight also features the Libertyville Pagents at Cook Park. The carnival rides and beer tent open are open from 6pm-11pm tonight and Taste of Libertyville will open at 5pm. The Arts & Crafts Show will start on Friday and run through Sunday in Cook Park. Unlimited ride special is available on Thursday from 6-11pm for $22 per person.

There will be plenty of entertainment throughout the weekend, including Libertyville’s Got Talent and Libertyville Idol Contest. Perhaps the highlight of the weekend is the parade on Saturday beginning at 10am. The parade will begin at 10am from the Libertyville Metra station and head down Milwaukee Avenue  and end at Rockland Road. The parade is one of the largest in Lake County and will have giant helium balloons, marching bands, antique cars and more!

The Libertyville Days Festival is the annual fund raising event for the Libertyville Civic Center Foundation and put on in cooperation with the Village of Libertyville. For more information and complete schedule of events, visit the Libertyville Days Festival page.

Just north of Libertyville Days on Milwaukee Avenue is Adler Park where you can play a round of disc golf.

As always, we welcome your comments, thoughts and suggestions on what makes Green Oaks, Libertyville, Mundelein and Vernon Hills such a great place to live, work and play!

It’s a Winter Wonderland in Vernon Hills

Today we saw the first snow fall in Vernon Hills. Although there wasn’t much accumulation, it did leave a dusting of white on some areas. Every December, between Thanksgiving and the New Year, Vernon Hills presents their Holiday Light Show on the grounds of Cuneo Museum and Gardens.It’s a drive thru light festival that provides a true winter wonderland. Living in Greggs Landing and driving by the entrance every year, day after day, I can share some tips for you to consider if you want to see the Vernon Hills Holiday Light Show. First of all, the best time to see the lights (in mine and most people’s opinion) is when there is fresh snow. This is evident by the longer lines, but it’s worth it! Don’t forget, once the snow turns dark and unappealing at the nearby Hawthorn Mall and on the roads, the Cuneo Museum and Gardens grounds are mostly untouched except for the car traffic for the light show. Another suggestion is that prices are higher on Friday, Saturday and Holidays, and so are the lines. Save yourself some money and go on a Sunday-Thursday, which are usually not as crowded. Finally, the light show opens at 6pm. There is usually a line that forms before it opens. So you will sit and wait until it opens and then wait in line. Going later will, most of the time, allow you to forgo the waiting.

And for those of you that don’t know how to get to the Vernon Hills Holiday Light Show, please don’t follow directions to the Cuneo Museum and Gardens. The light show has it’s own entrance off Lakeview Parkway. You can access it off Townline Road (Route 60) about halfway between Milwaukee Ave. and Butterfield Road.

Visit the Lake County Happens Calendar for dates and times plus find other holiday events and much more happenings in Vernon Hills and the surrounding Lake County villages!

Feel free to share you comments, pictures and videos on the Vernon Hills Holiday Lights Show with us.

Highwood Pumpkin Festival

Highwood holds it’s first Pumpkin Festival on Wednesday, October 21 from 3-8pm. Gearing up for a Guinness world record in 2010! Should be quite a site both this year and next! Check out some of the news coverage they got on CBS

Highwood prepares for Guinness world record

By: Blair Chavis/Triblocal.com staff reporter
10/12/09 02:46 PM 316 hits


Highwood purchased 1,000 pumpkins that are being stored in a warehouse in preparation for the “Great Wall of Pumpkins.”

One thousand pairs of eyes will be lit up in Highwood this October when the city holds it first ever pumpkin festival.

Prelude to the Great Pumpkin Festival of 2010 is a run-through for when Highwood tries to break the Guinness Book of World Records’ number for most lit jack-o’-lanterns on display.

In 2010, the city is looking to have 32,000 jack-o’-lanterns aglow.

As of now, Boston’s Life is Good Pumpkin Festival still holds the title from 2006, with 30,128 jack-o’-lanterns lit, according to the Guinness Web site. Before Boston, The Keene Pumpkin Festival in Keene, N.H. held the title.

Highwood’s 4th Ward Alderman Eric Falberg said he got the idea to start a similar event after living in Vermont and visiting the Keene festival.

“It was just a spectacular site,” Falberg said. “There’s nothing like it. It’s just awe-inspiring.”

Falberg said he hopes this event eventually draws people from throughout the Midwest. This year, however, Highwood is starting small with 1,000 pumpkins. They will be propped on an approximated 32-foot-high by 90-foot-wide wall of scaffolding, or “Great Wall of Pumpkins,” in front of city hall, as similarly seen at Keene’s festival. In addition, jack-o’-lanterns will line the streets alongside the local businesses.

“It takes a lot of logistics to break a world record,” Falberg said. “If we could really do this and do it right…we could knock the socks off of everybody.”

Falberg said next year he plans to invite the Guinness Book of World Records to the event to count the pumpkins.

“We’re going for two records next year,” Falberg said. “[The second] will be for the world’s tallest tower of jack-o’-lanterns—we plan on scaffolding up the entire water tower and having jack-o’-lanterns lit all the way up. It would be quite a sight.”

Next year, Falberg said he envisions that the entire city will be enveloped. The water tower will be lit, storefronts will feature pumpkins, the streets will be lined with jack-o’-lanterns propped on multi-tier milk crates and throughout the parks and residential streets, he added.

Falberg is also in discussion with the city regarding turning the festival into a country pumpkin music festival—a play on the phrase “country bumpkins,” he said.

“That’s why this is so important, the success of this particular prelude,” Falberg said. “Because it really will help us lead off to [next year].”

This year’s festival will take place from 3 to 8 p.m. Oct. 21 in conjunction with the city’s last farmers’ market of the season.

Pumpkins will be on sale for $5 each, and can be carved in a tent from 3 to 6:30 p.m.

Falberg said Highwood Mayor Charlie Pecaro, who is expected to be dressed as the Headless Horseman, will kick off the pumpkin lighting at approximately 6:30 p.m. once the pumpkins are brought to the great wall. About 36 volunteers will also help in lighting.

The festival will include live music, hot cider and coca and $1 hayrides from 3 to 8 p.m. Residents can trick or treat at Highwood’s local businesses from 3 to 6 p.m., and the businesses will be offering discounts to families with at least one member in costume.

“We’re going to have our specials, not only at the shop that day, but we will offer [them] and free sampling at our booth[s] that night,” said Pastificio! owner Patricia Galli, who is on the city’s special events and public outreach committee with Falberg.

For those who want a head start on carving, a 30-foot long booth will be set up at Highwood’s Last Call Art Festival from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 17 and Oct. 18.

Additionally, pumpkins can also be carved at a fun fair from noon to 4 p.m. Oct. 18, at Oak Terrace School, 240 Prairie Ave.

Families can pick up their carved pumpkins from Oct. 22-24. Remaining pumpkins will either be donated to local families or composted at The Resource Center of Chicago.

—By Blair Chavis|Triblocal.com reporter
Triblocal.com photo by Blair Chavis

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Highwood Last Call Art Fair: Chicago art festivals, fairs, fine art summer art fairs

Maybe a stretch to call it a “summer” arts fair, but what a great way to enjoy an October weekend with great opportunities on the art, music, food and beer. (I didn’t hear Oktoberfest, but that’s what comes to my mind) It on our schedule for Sunday. Hope you get a chance to check it out and if I’m there Sunday, you know I’ll be letting you know!

Posted via web from tamcdonald’s posterous