Norwich's Rose Arts Festival 2022 guide: Food trucks, bar-hopping, art, competitions

NORWICH — On Saturday, from 11 a.m to 7 p.m., the Rose Arts Festival is back from its COVID-19 hiatus. Originally running from 1965 to 1998, and rebooting in 2017, the event features plenty of bands through the day and into the night, along with other activities to delight.

Kelly August, the Festival’s chair, said the event is free to attend thanks to many sponsorships, and is meant to be an all-ages event.

“We’re really encouraging people to spend the day with us,” August said.

The event aims to attract 15,000 people to Norwich, based on the 10,000 that came in 2019.

Tom Lee, of Essex and formally of Norwich, left, and Kevin Hoyt of Newtown toast at the beer tent at the 2018 Rose Arts Festival in Norwich.
Tom Lee, of Essex and formally of Norwich, left, and Kevin Hoyt of Newtown toast at the beer tent at the 2018 Rose Arts Festival in Norwich.

Preparing to go: What to bring

August said people should think of going to the festival like they’re camping out for the day. This includes bringing a tent and camping chairs. Pack a day bag. Wear sunscreen. Make sure your phone is charged.

Before the festival: Rose Arts Festival Foot Race

5K and 10K races, collectively the Rose Arts Festival Foot Race, will be at Mohegan Park, on June 25 at 8:30 a.m., with proceeds supporting both the festival and the Larry Pontbriant Athletic Safety Fund, which helps supply automated external defibrillators to schools and other public places. One random participant will win a $100 prize.

Music: Reggae, rock, folk and more, onstage and in bars

Officially, the Rose Arts Festival ends at 7 p.m., but the music lasts all night. The first half of the day features artists and bands on the main stage at Chelsea Parade. The rest of the evening, performers are spread throughout downtown venues.

For some of the main stage bands, sounds range from the country blues of the Erin Harpe Duo and the reggae jams of  I Anbassa & The Word Sound Power Movement, to the piano and harp infused pop and rock sounds of Mikaela Davis.

11:00am-11:40am: Erin Harpe Duo

12:00pm-1:00pm:  I Anbassa & The Word Sound Power Movement

1:30pm-2:30pm:  Mikaela Davis.

3:15pm-4:45pm: The Suffers.

5:30pm-7:00pm:  Dustbowl Revival

The great variety of music continues until after midnight, with plenty of bands at different bars, restaurants, and venues in downtown Norwich. Later night music ranges from the versatile singer-songwriter stylings of Ruby Rae, to the soulful Fernanda and The Ephemeral.

Strange Brew Pub, 86 Water St.

7:00pm-7:40pm: Fernanda and The Ephemeral

8:00pm-9:00pm: Canopy

9:30pm-10:30pm: The Mary Jane Jones

11:00pm-12:30am: Bella’s Bartok

Harp & Dragon Irish Pub, 130 Main St.

7:00pm-7:40pm: Fleet

8:00pm-9:00pm: Penniless Wild

9:30pm-10:30pm: Jake Kulak Band

11:00pm-12:15am: Julie Rhodes & Electric Co.

These Guys Brewing Co., 78 Franklin St.

7:00-7:25pm: Dear Samson

7:30pm-8:00pm: Michelle Eileen

8:10pm-8:50pm: Mary-Elaine Jenkins

9:00-10:00pm: Ali McGuirk

Epicure Brewery, 40 Franklin St.

7:00pm-7:30pm: The Hard Feelings

7:40pm-8:10pm: Kala Farnham

8:20pm-9:00pm: Nick Bosse

Billy Wilson’s Ageing Still, 57 Broadway

7:00pm-7:30pm: Allison Rose

7:40pm- 8:10pm: The Bauer Brothers

8:20pm-8:50pm: Stephen Brodie

9:00pm-9:30pm: Coltt Winter Lepley

9:40pm-10:10pm: Ruby Rae

10:20pm-11:00pm: The Meadows Brothers

Enso Studio, 30 Franklin St.

7:00pm-7:45pm: Pocket Vinyl

8:00pm-9:00pm: Jampson Jubilee

Wauregan Art Gallery, 200 Main St.

7:00pm-7:45pm: Ramblin’ Dan Stevens

8:00pm-9:00pm: Victim Or Victor

Reliance Health Stage at Reliance Health, 40 Broadway

7:00pm-7:25pm: Anna May

7:30pm-9:00pm: Static & Rust

Art Space Art Gallery

7:00pm-7:45pm: Will Bartnicki

8:00pm-9:00pm: Chris Listorti

GOATS On Main, 287 Main St.

7:00pm-9:00pm: Uncle Fester

Also, Pie Hops/ Latin Quarters at 80 Broadway will feature a dance party with DJ Sangria from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m.

Other Performers: Stick around for dancers, magicians and plays

The Rose Arts Festival also has a second performing arts stage, featuring dancing, magicians, local singers, and plays.

Food: Pizza, ice cream, barbecue and more

As people might get hungry at an all-day event, the Rose Arts Festival has 20 dining options to fill you up, ranging from touring street trucks to local eats, and from dinner to sweets.

The food options include:

Rustic Streats

GV Bites

Wild Bill’s Soda

Canggio

The Dog House

The Food Station

Soulfully Vegan

Curb Your Appetite

Greekin’ Out

Ra Ra’s Ice Cream

Right Path Organic Café

Uncle D’s Blazin’ BBQ

Good Karma Café

Sweet Connfections

La Stella Pizzeria

Vendors: 100 to peruse

If supporting local crafters is more your thing, the Rose Arts Festival has plenty of options. A total of 100 vendors, in groups of 10, will be at Chelsea Parade during the festival.

Creative Stations: Free art classes

If you go to the festival, and you want to make some of your own art, Liberty Bank is sponsoring the Creative Station. August said these are free art classes where people of all ages can attend for half an hour or an hour, and make their own art project to bring home.

There are also community art projects in the creative stations, at which August said the community gets to make a project together.

Competitions: Floral arranging to pie-making

August said there are competitions at the Rose Arts Festival. Along with the floral arranging competition and the pie competition, the festival features the Budding Artist Competition, which August clarifies has no age limit. The art prize is $500, whereas the floral and pie competition prize is $125. While the artists had to sign up in advance, people can participate in the floral and pie competitions by showing up with the said item in hand at 11 a.m. Rules for the competitions are on the official website.

Beer, wine and betting

Along with the usual alcoholic fare at the beer and wine tent, Mohegan Digital will have games where attendees can win vouchers and prizes.

Children's activities: Kids Zone, Touch-A-Truck, model train

Along with a Creation Station for children, there will be a model train setup under a tent, and Hartford Healthcare will sponsor a Touch-A-Truck event, where the festival's younger attendees can get a close-up look at emergency response vehicles.

There is also a dedicated Kids Zone, with activities including dunk tanks and obstacle courses.

This article originally appeared on The Bulletin: Norwich Rose Arts Festival: Music, food trucks, beer and wine tent