Photo by Megan Pacer/Peninsula Clarion Shane Borth, a violinist and composer for Quixotic, plays during the group's performance Sunday, Aug. 7, 2016 at Salmonfest in Ninilchik, Alaska. Quixotic is a cirque nouveau that blends live music with dance, lights and other performance art.

Photo by Megan Pacer/Peninsula Clarion Shane Borth, a violinist and composer for Quixotic, plays during the group's performance Sunday, Aug. 7, 2016 at Salmonfest in Ninilchik, Alaska. Quixotic is a cirque nouveau that blends live music with dance, lights and other performance art.

Balancing acts: Salmonfest brings the noise, knowledge

Always a music fan, never a music festivalgoer. That’s been my M.O. since I was old enough to attend.

Call me crazy, but the prospect of paying an arm and a leg to camp out in a muddy field for three days with limited access to clean bathrooms, all to get jostled around by hundreds or thousands of other people trying to get the same obscured view of the stage as you, has never appealed to me. The fact that I’m 5-foot-1 and need a pair of shoulders to perch on to ever get a good view of a band probably has something to do with it.

When the lot of covering the annual Salmonfest in Ninilchik fell to me last year, I can’t confess excitement.

To be completely honest, growing up in rural northern Michigan did not provide me many opportunities to become familiar with music festivals or the culture surrounding them. The few I have experienced have been on a small scale, and so unique to the communities they were in that I had nothing with which to compare them.

So naturally for the past two years my question has been: What makes Salmonfest so special? What makes this gathering of music lovers any different or more worth jostling in front of the stage with than any other?

Walking through the gates into Salmonfest for the first time last year as a relative festival newbie, I wasn’t sure what I was about to immerse myself in. Part of me expected a sea of girls in cutoff shorts and flower crowns, glued to their phones, while another part expected a gathering of Alaska’s oldest and most bearded residents somberly handing out flyers on salmon advocacy.

Luckily, neither of those scenarios came true. I found myself not knowing where to look first. At this point, I’d like to take a moment to pay homage to the festival food, which deserves its own mention based on sheer variety, not to mention its quality.

After I managed to contain my excitement over what is quite possibly the best grilled cheese sandwich I’ve ever tasted, I was able to look around and see just what I had been missing about festivals all this time. The musicians are friendly, keeping up a running conversation with the crowd as they go from set to set. At Salmonfest they come from our backyards and from all over the country.

The vendors know each other, a few of them having hawked their wares at Salmonfest since it began in 2011, formerly Salmonstock.

The musical acts continue to evolve, blending the bread and butter of bluegrass and country with contemporary styles and even performance art. Watching a fire dancer juggle flames mere feet from my face to the tempo set up by drums and a violin had to be the highlight of this year’s festival for me.

And while the “salmon causeway” has its own space in the festival, its advocates and educators are just as friendly as everyone else. They don’t seek to draw attention away from the bands everyone has flocked to see, but rather to use the infectious heightened buzz of emotions surrounding the festival to incite people to care about the event’s namesake.

Salmonfest has proved to be an eclectic mix of music lovers from far and wide and concerned advocates trying to harness the power of a music festival to direct attention to their causes. As one organizer put it to me this year, music festivals bring with them a lot of love, emotion and camaraderie — it only makes sense that some would seize the opportunity to spread some of that love around to the salmon.

For me, this is what makes Salmonfest such a unique and down-to-earth experience. In one corner you have protesters raising awareness about mines, fracking and other threats posed to one of Alaska’s most beloved resources — in another, a guy dressed in a sleeping bag with holes cut in it gets his face painted before rushing off to the next act.

Salmonfest isn’t a three-day, free-for-all lovefest and it’s not a soapbox for fish. It uses the energy drummed up through music lovers coming together and channels it toward goals of conservation and environmental mindfulness.

As long as the festival can retain that balance, I think it’s safe to say it’ll have a loyal returning customer in me.

Maybe next year I’ll even swap my camera lens for a flower crown. Crazier things have happened.

 

Reach Megan Pacer at megan.pacer@peninsulaclarion.com.

More in Life

File
Powerful truth of resurrection reverberates even today

Don’t let the resurrection of Jesus become old news

Nell and Homer Crosby were early homesteaders in Happy Valley. Although they had left the area by the early 1950s, they sold two acres on their southern line to Rex Hanks. (Photo courtesy of Katie Matthews)
A Kind and Sensitive Man: The Rex Hanks Story — Part 1

The main action of this story takes place in Happy Valley, located between Anchor Point and Ninilchik on the southern Kenai Peninsula

Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion
Chloe Jacko, Ada Bon and Emerson Kapp rehearse “Clue” at Soldotna High School in Soldotna, Alaska, on Thursday, April 18, 2024.
Whodunit? ‘Clue’ to keep audiences guessing

Soldotna High School drama department puts on show with multiple endings and divergent casts

Leora McCaughey, Maggie Grenier and Oshie Broussard rehearse “Mamma Mia” at Nikiski Middle/High School in Nikiski, Alaska, on Tuesday, April 16, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Singing, dancing and a lot of ABBA

Nikiski Theater puts on jukebox musical ‘Mamma Mia!’

This berry cream cheese babka can be made with any berries you have in your freezer. (Photo by Tressa Dale/Peninsula Clarion)
A tasty project to fill the quiet hours

This berry cream cheese babka can be made with any berries you have in your freezer

File
Minister’s Message: How to grow old and not waste your life

At its core, the Bible speaks a great deal about the time allotted for one’s life

Kirsten Dunst, Wagner Moura and Stephen McKinley Henderson appear in “Civil War.” (Promotional photo courtesy A24)
Review: An unexpected battle for empathy in ‘Civil War’

Garland’s new film comments on political and personal divisions through a unique lens of conflict on American soil

What are almost certainly members of the Grönroos family pose in front of their Anchor Point home in this undated photograph courtesy of William Wade Carroll. The cabin was built in about 1903-04 just north of the mouth of the Anchor River.
Fresh Start: The Grönroos Family Story— Part 2

The five-member Grönroos family immigrated from Finland to Alaska in 1903 and 1904

Aurora Bukac is Alice in a rehearsal of Seward High School Theatre Collective’s production of “Alice in Wonderland” at Seward High School in Seward, Alaska, on Thursday, April 11, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Seward in ‘Wonderland’

Seward High School Theatre Collective celebrates resurgence of theater on Eastern Kenai Peninsula

These poppy seed muffins are enhanced with the flavor of almonds. (Photo by Tressa Dale/Peninsula Clarion)
The smell of almonds and early mornings

These almond poppy seed muffins are quick and easy to make and great for early mornings

Nick Varney
Unhinged Alaska: Sometimes they come back

This following historical incident resurfaced during dinner last week when we were matching, “Hey, do you remember when…?” gotchas

The Canadian steamship Princess Victoria collided with an American vessel, the S.S. Admiral Sampson, which sank quickly in Puget Sound in August 1914. (Otto T. Frasch photo, copyright by David C. Chapman, “O.T. Frasch, Seattle” webpage)
Fresh Start: The Grönroos Family Story — Part 1

The Grönroos family settled just north of the mouth of the Anchor River