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  1. #11
    Join Date
    18th October 09
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    Orange County California
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    Quote Originally Posted by jsrnephdoc View Post

    The shopping tents mostly suggested that there were no Red-Faire events on the same weekend...
    Right, the Vegas Ren Faire was the previous weekend, at that same venue.

    Actually that touches on a major change that's occurred with our local Highland Games over the years.

    In the mid-1970s when I first started attending Highland Games they were all organised by local Scottish Societies and were purely Scottish in nature, being called Scottish Highland Games.

    Later Ren Faire people started participating, which was a bit of a head-scratcher to me, Highland Games being purely modern events. (There is a curious thing in many American minds that anything to do with Highland culture is of necessity rooted in the 18th century.)

    Also over the years more and more Scottish Highland Games changed their names to "Celtic Festivals" or "Scottish & Irish Festivals".

    Here in Southern California we used to have a massive Irish Fair which catered specifically to the Irish-American populace. It could be that the adding of "Irish" onto the titles of Scottish Games increased as the Irish Fair began fading.
    Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte

  2. #12
    Join Date
    29th August 24
    Location
    Utah
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    My local Ren Faire has become a popular spot for people to role play animals. They wear collars, bark, and walk on all fours while their "owners" hold their leashes and call them "good boy/girl". Is this a widespread phenomena, or has my local Ren Faire just piqued the interest of these groups? I've never witnessed such behavior at Highland Games/Celtic Festivals.

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