Jump to content

Woollybear Festival

Coordinates: 41°25′18″N 82°21′41″W / 41.421728°N 82.361327°W / 41.421728; -82.361327
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Woolybear festival)
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
Woollybear Festival
Genrefestivals
Location(s)Vermilion, Ohio
Coordinates41°25′18″N 82°21′41″W / 41.421728°N 82.361327°W / 41.421728; -82.361327
CountryUnited States
Years active50–51
Inaugurated1973 (1973)
Websitewww.vermilionohio.com/woollybear-festival/

The Woollybear Festival is held every Fall in downtown Vermilion, Ohio, on Lake Erie. The one-day, family event, which began in 1973, features a woolly bear costume contest in which children, even pets, are dressed up as various renditions of the woolly bear caterpillar.

The festival is held every year around October 1 on a Sunday on which the Cleveland Browns either have an away game or are not playing.[1] It is touted as the largest one-day festival in Ohio, with attendance over 100,000.[2][3]

History

Former Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich, and his wife Elizabeth, at the Woollybear Festival parade in 2008

The festival is the brainchild of the late Dick Goddard, the former long-time weatherman at Cleveland's WJW-TV.[4] The Woolly Bear Caterpillar is similarly celebrated for its mythical association to winter forecasting.[2] After the caterpillars' eggs hatch in fall, folklore suggests the severity of an upcoming winter can be gauged by observing the amount of black versus orange in the caterpillars' bands.

Attracting 2,000 spectators in the first year, the number grew to an estimated 15,000 by the eighth festival and quickly overwhelmed the town of Birmingham. Of the 13 cities that expressed interest, organizers selected Vermilion as the new home.[2]

The "Woollybear 500" is a comedic race [citation needed] that starts off with Vermilion's police and fire chiefs selecting woollybears to race. The woollybears are obtained by the Vermilion Chamber and details of the training and skills of said woollybears are not divulged to the participants. The race is monitored by professionals from TV-8. No woollybears are harmed in the making of these races.

The 2020 Woollybear Festival was the first since the event's inception not to be held because of the COVID-19 pandemic.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ Zurcher, Neil (2010). Tales from the Road: Memoirs from a Lifetime of Ohio Travel, Television, and More. Cleveland: Gray & Co. p. 273. ISBN 978-1598510645. One of the little-known facts about the Woollybear Festival is how its date is chosen each year. Goddard has worked for many seasons as the statistician for all home games of the Cleveland Browns. He waits until he sees the team's schedule each fall, then picks the Sunday in late September or early October that the Browns are playing out of town. That becomes Woollybear Sunday.
  2. ^ a b c Vermilion Chamber of Commerce. "Woollybear Festival". Retrieved 2020-08-10.
  3. ^ Stratford, Suzanne (2012-09-25). "40th Annual Woollybear Fest Preps Underway". WJW-TV. Retrieved 2012-09-30.
  4. ^ Crump, Sarah (2009-05-04). "Dick Goddard is most sunny when it's 70: My Cleveland". The Plain Dealer. Retrieved 2012-04-26.
  5. ^ Coe, Sandra (2020-07-13). "Woollybear Festival goes into hibernation for 2020" (PDF) (Press release). Vermilion Chamber of Commerce.