Railroad Days wraps up with some rain, lots of fireworks


 

NORTH CANAAN — If you weren’t one of the thousands strolling down the middle of Route 44, picnicking on hillsides before the fireworks and enjoying fantastic entertainment Saturday night, where were you?

There is a reason why a lot of people plan family visits to North Canaan during Railroad Days.

They are already wondering about dates for next year.

Organizer John Lannen and the North Canaan Chamber of Commerce are working on it, and on trying to find a weekend where there isn’t much competition. There was a conflict this year, for example, with the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival.

"They’re both great events and we don’t want people to have to decide between one and the other. We may move Railroad Days up a week," Lannen said. "But I can tell you the fireworks are booked and we will definitely have them next year."

Rumors floated in the weeks before Railroad Days that the fireworks were off, due to a planned move of fuel tanks to the vicinity of the staging area at Lindell’s lumberyard. That work has not even started yet, and Lannen said it won’t mean the end of the 10-day festival’s premier event.

Another misconception that circulated this year was that Railroad Days is a fundraiser for the chamber. It began in the 1960s as August sidewalk sales for local merchants to clear out summer inventory. Over the decades, it evolved into two weekends and a week in between of fun events, as businesses offered up their own fun and entertainment, free to the public.

"The fundraising part is actually something I’ve been hearing the last few years," Lannen said. "Railroad Days is a community event. A lot of businesses are sponsoring events and contests. They’re spending money. It’s also an opportunity for nonprofits to raise funds through events such as selling food."

The chamber does look for donations to help with the thousands of dollars in costs for things like the fireworks, insurance and portable toilets.

Looking ahead to next year, the chamber is considering roadside signage and other possible ways to better communicate rescheduled events.

"We’re always at the mercy of the weather," Lannen said. "We canceled Wednesday’s events because it rained. We were supposed to get thunderstorms Thursday, so we rescheduled for Friday. We tried to get the word out, but it seems the best way is to have a sign at Lawrence Field."

All that said, how could one go wrong with Saturday’s entertainment, which extended beyond the spectacular fireworks. The entertainment portion of the weekend hit the big time as local boy Donny Sawyer, whose star is rising in Nashville, came back for a special Railroad Days concert.

At Poetry is Music 13 at the Collins Dinner it was Steve Dunn and his band, with their mix of covers and original hits that have garnered them a tremendous following. They are regulars at Mohegan Sun.

"Canaan is the best place we play!" Dunn told the crowd in front of the diner, during their set following the fireworks.

In its first years, Poetry is Music seemed like a best-kept secret. While the masses headed to Lawrence Field for the Salisbury Band and other great old-fashioned entertainment, a faithful crowd gathered at the diner for more interactive and eclectic entertainment. They were moved by organizer Ameen-Storm Abo-Hamzy’s poetry and Joseph Firecrow’s flute. They were mesmerized by a belly dancer and danced to blues and percussion groups. In the middle, they watched the fireworks pop up from behind Canaan Union Station.

Others watched Poetry is Music with curiosity from hillsides across the street, a popular fireworks vantage point. More and more are heading over afterward to join the fun.

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