The festival will take place within downtown Salisbury during the following times:
Friday: 6:30 pm – 9:30 pm
Saturday: Noon – 9:30 pm
Sunday: Noon – 6:00 pm
Food Vendors will open at 5:30 pm on Friday, and at 11 am on Saturday and Sunday.
Admission to the festival and all events is free, but food, drink, and merchandise are available for sale. A group of community volunteers will be circulating throughout the festival carrying buckets with an NFF label asking for donations to help cover the costs of the festival. The suggested donation is $10 per person per day. There are no pets allowed, other than service animals. The festival goes on rain or shine.
Masks must be worn by festival attendees, including by children over two. Common-sense exceptions may be made for eating and drinking, while social distancing appropriately. In most places where lines or groups of people may occur, the festival will place markers on the ground to help maintain social distance. NFF staff will more generously space chairs. Festival attendees may get a FREE covid-19 vaccination on Saturday and Sunday at the festival. Updates to these safety protocols will be posted on the festival’s covid-19 webpage.
There is free parking at the following locations, which also contain designated handicap spaces:
Lot 35, Fitzwater St & W. Main St.
Lot 7, Lemmon Hill Ln.
Lot 13, W. Chestnut St.
Lot 9, Church St.
Lot 10, E. Church St. & Poplar Hill Ave.
Lot 5, E. Main St.
Downtown Parking Garage, E. Market St.
Through generous donor support by The Whiting-Turner Contracting Company, National Folk Festival artists will visit a number of Wicomico County public schools the week prior to the festival. These master musicians and artists engage with area students through interactive performances and activities that introduce a world of diverse cultural traditions to enrich these young lives. Together, the artists and students share music, song, craft, stories, and memories that will last a lifetime.
Musical performers include Héctor del Curto’s Tango Quartet; Balla Kouyaté & Famoro Dioubaté, balafon masters; the Irish American All-Stars; and Panfilo’s Güera with her Tejano conjunto fiddle among others.
At the festival, there is a section with a stage devoted to Maryland Traditions. Performances and demonstrations there will include the Barnstormers & the RockCandy Cloggers from Emmetsburg, Washington Samulnori from Kensington, the Blacksmith Guild of Western Maryland, Janice and Anna Marshal with Smith Island cake making, and the Pocomoke Indian Nation.
The festival Marketplace includes Salisbury’s Amused Studios devoted to pottery making, Artesanas Mexicanas from Baltimore, BeeGeorge Honey from Oxford, BugZen of Eden, Erick Sahler’s Serigraphs Co. of Salisbury, and many more.
Check the festival website for the full list of performers and Marketplace vendors.
A native of Wicomico County, George Shivers holds a doctorate from the University of Maryland and taught in the Foreign Language Dept. of Washington College for 38 years before retiring in 2007. He is also very interested in the history and culture of the Eastern Shore, African American history in particular.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk