Purple rain: Sequim Lavender Festival goes on this weekend regardless of weather

SEQUIM – It’s a silly question in the Pacific Northwest. Farmer Barbara Hanna of Lost Mountain Lavender answers patiently anyway.

What if it rains on the Lavender Festival?

“It’s rained before, and people said, ‘We’re glad it’s cooler,'” said Hanna, who’s on her fourth festival this year.

“We’ll still make it fun,” she said, adding that the vendors and musicians at her place will be under tents.

Lost Mountain Lavender, at 1541 Taylor Cutoff, is one of the eight farms on the festival tour. Last year, more than 30,000 people visited Sequim on Lavender Festival weekend.

So does Hanna think showers could dilute the throng?

“I don’t think crowds are an issue. Everyone talks about that, and there are a lot more people than usual here,” she replied.

“But it’s not like the Bite of Seattle, where 100,000 people are in one place, Seattle Center, at the same time. [The festival] is three days, spread out over nine locations,” including the farms and the Fir Street fair.

In fact some 30 fragrant fields will be open this weekend. Just across the road from Lost Mountain, for example, is Nelson’s Duck Pond, a 5-acre farm that’s not on the official tour.

It is on the Sequim Lavender Farms driving guide – available at the Sequim Visitor Center, 1192 E. Washington St., – and at the street fair and farms.

What will owner Gail Nelson do if it rains?

“Same thing we do when it’s sunshiney,” she said. “We give out umbrellas,” which shelter people from drops or rays.

Festival goers have more entertainment choices than ever.

Friday night, four “jazz in the alley” concerts will take place in downtown Sequim.

On Saturday, the Sky Ridge Golf Course will start a tournament at 10 a.m., and on Saturday night, the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribal Center will be the setting for “Salmon and Stories,” a dinner with tale-teller Elaine Grinnell.

Friday through Sunday, the Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club’s Lavender Blue show will fill Sequim Middle School’s gym, 301 W. Hendrickson Road, with 200 quilts plus demonstrations.

Shuttle buses will ferry people among the lavender farms, quilt show and street fair.

The latter event will feature live music and more than 150 vendors – and it’s not even the only street fair going on this weekend.

The Sequim Open Aire Market, which has some 50 food, produce and art vendors each Saturday, will expand its hours to be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday on West Cedar Street.

More in News

A Clallam County Public Utilities District worker trims sycamore trees on East Washington Street near the Bell Creek Plaza shopping complex in Sequim on Wednesday as part of an effort to clear branches that may interfere with nearby power lines. The clearing helps pave the way for eventual maintenance on the PUD lines. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Clearing the line

A Clallam County Public Utilities District worker trims sycamore trees on East… Continue reading

Funding cuts to hit WSU extensions

Local food purchase program most impacted

Kaylee Oldemeyer, a second-year nursing student, is among those selling tickets for the Great Olympic Peninsula Duck Derby this Sunday. (Leah Leach/for Peninsula Daily News)
Peninsula College nursing program students selling ducks for annual derby

Olympic Medical Center Foundation to give proceeds for scholarships

Jefferson County library to host preparedness discussion

Talk to cover water systems, food resiliency

Author Caroline Fraser, whose book, “Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder,” won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for biography, is speaking at today’s Studium Generale at Peninsula College. She will talk about Wilder as well as her latest book, “Murderland: Crime and Bloodlust in the Time of Serial Killers.” (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
Pulitzer Prize-winning author to speak in Port Angeles

Caroline Fraser featured as Writer-in-Residence at Peninsula College

Ty Coone. (Clallam County Sheriff's Office)
Search suspended for kayaker missing in Strait

The U.S. Coast Guard suspended its search Wednesday morning for… Continue reading

Clallam County and Astound are partnering with assistance from Clallam County PUD on a $22 million project that will extend Astound’s existing fiber network near Laird’s Corner to almost 100 miles of new above ground and underground infrastructure that will reach more than 1,500 homes in the Highway 112 corridor.
High-speed internet coming to Highway 112 corridor

Clallam County, PUD and Astound involved in $22M project

State leaders discuss budget

Importance of gas tax explained

Conservation measures requested on water system west of Sekiu

Clallam County Public Utility District No. 1 has issued a… Continue reading

Supreme Court justice addresses law day event

Clallam-Jefferson Pro Bono Lawyers hosted an observance of Law… Continue reading

Charter Review Commission to consider seven issues

The Clallam County Charter Review Commission has launched a… Continue reading