Home Successful first Shenandoah Marketplace
News

Successful first Shenandoah Marketplace

Contributors

clyde JenkinsFlush with the success of their first scheduled event, June 11, the Shenandoah Marketplace is eagerly preparing for the July 2 market at historic Stevens Cottage in Shenandoah.

Scheduled for the first Thursday of the month, the Marketplace had to reschedule its June 4 opening because of rain. The rain date, the second Thursday of the month, tested the mettle of vendors and customers as well as the temperature reached into the 90s. Shenandoah Marketplace is a grassroots effort to provide residents access to fresh local meats, produce and locally produced goods, including art, wool, and hand-made basketry.

A second and equal goal according to the group’s president Nancy Boyer is to bring the community together.

“We want this to be a place where our neighbors can meet and visit with each other, as well as providing high quality local products that keep money in the community while providing fresh and original products to our visitors,” she said.

Shenandoah photographer Craig Lancto, who sells products made with images he has photographed added, “I am happy to come and just to meet and talk with some of my neighbors. I enjoy showing my pictures–mostly shot within a half-mile of Stevens Cottage–and selling prints and cards certainly made the first day more enjoyable for me.”

Another vendor, a veteran of numerous local farmers markets, said that she was surprised and delighted that she sold more products than she sometimes does at the larger and more established Farmers Market in Luray.

Vendors who have committed to participating in Shenandoah Marketplace’s inaugural year include:

  • Artistic Renderings by Brenda (Borus) with prints of hand- painted artwork of scenes around the Shenandoah, Virginia, area, portraits of human and pet subjects and handcrafted wooden offerings from John Borus.
  • Shenandoah’s Beedance Cottage with handcrafted fibers and flavors, such as strawberry preserves and other fine jams and jellies.
  • Luray’s Dancing Cow Farm with fresh hormone and antibiotic free, farm-raised beef and pork.
  • Shenandoah’s Dwight Kite with fresh garden produce
  • Images of Shenandoah with wall canvases, giclée prints, and greeting/postcards with images of Shenandoah, and an illustrated guide to Shenandoah and environs
  • Luray’s Patchwork Pastures with lamb pelts, wool, lamb meat and fresh eggs
  • Sperryville’s Triple Oak Bakery, with artisan gluten-free baked goods

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

Politics, U.S. & World

TV: AFP editor Chris Graham talks U.S. Senate passage of ICE funding bill on Fox5 DC

uva basketball ryan odom huddle
Basketball

UVA Basketball: Has Ryan Odom built himself a Top 10 team for next season?

This time last year, UVA Basketball coach Ryan Odom was introducing a bunch of strangers to each other, and trying to convince them, and everybody else, that they could get Virginia Basketball back to where it had been not that long ago. Heading into his second summer as the head coach, Odom is building on...

louise lucas abigail spanberger
Politics, Virginia

Louise Lucas to the ‘Data Center Diva’: No more tax breaks for data centers

Gov. Abigail Spanberger and House of Delegates Speaker Don Scott want the state and localities to continue to be able to offer massive tax breaks to data center developers.

melanie lucero congress
Politics, Virginia

Another contentious Republican primary in the Fifth District in the offing

us politics congress
Politics, U.S. & World

U.S. Senate votes to advance $70B immigration enforcement funding bill

baltimore orioles
Baseball

Baltimore Orioles quietly playing themselves back into playoff contention

joanna hardin uva softball
Etc.

UVA Softball: Coach Joanna Hardin signs three-year contract extension