Chattanooga Times Free Press

New festival celebrates Moccasin Bend

- STAFF REPORT

It’s easy to imagine that when the minds behind the new Mocs Bend Fest: Nature, Art & Music started brainstorm­ing ideas, everything stuck.

Which would explain the full slate of activities: Bike. Hike. Paddle. Play. Arts. Nature. History. Crafts. Food. Music. Theater.

What’s closer to the truth is that three events that might have had separate billing have been rolled into one big weekend.

So the Mocs Bend Fest piggybacks on activities celebratin­g the National Park Service centennial as well as an environmen­tal festival called Cool Down ChatTown.

“It’s a large festival, with lots of participan­ts,” laughs Jeannie Hacker-Cerulean of the UTC Theatre department.

So let’s divvy it up into its three parts.

HIKE, BIKE, PADDLE & PLAY

On Saturday, July 30, rangers from Chickamaug­a and Chattanoog­a National Military Park will converge on Moccasin Bend National Archaeolog­ical District, the newest national park, for a series of activities and around the North Shore.

8 a.m.-noon. Take a ranger-led paddle around Moccasin Bend, beginning at the Outdoor Chattanoog­a office at Coolidge Park, 200 River St. Participan­ts will follow the route of the Union Army as they floated around Moccasin Bend to capture Brown’s Ferry in the fall of 1863. The tour also will focus on the American Indian history associated with the area. Reservatio­ns are required. Call 423-643-6888.

2-4 p.m. Take a ranger-led bike/hike tour to the Brown’s Ferry Federal Road. Meet and park at the Moccasin Bend gateway site, 10 Hamm Road. Bring your own bike, or reserve one by calling the park at 706-866-9241.

5-7 p.m. Take a ranger-led bike/hike tour to the Civil War earthworks on Stringer’s Ridge. Meet and park at the Moccasin Bend gateway site, 10 Hamm Ride. Bring your own bike, or reserve one by calling the park at 706-866-9241.

Throughout the day, park staff and representa­tives from the Friends of Moccasin Bend will be available at the gateway site to assist with parking and to provide maps, water and informatio­n about self-guided tours.

For more informatio­n, call 706-866-9241 or 423821-7786, or visit www.nps. gov/chch.

MOCS BEND FEST: NATURE, ART & MUSIC

This new event is a partnershi­p between UTC Theatre and the Friends of Moccasin Bend. Here, the “Play” part of the day takes on a different meaning, as Hacker-Cerulean will debut an original play, “Robin! Coming to a Forest Near You,” a romantic comedy set in an urban forest/river ecosystem.

“UTC Theatre is venturing outdoors with this festival production,” she says in a news release. “We hope with enough community support, this will be an annual event bridging the arts and the environmen­t.”

The play invites audience participat­ion, and those attending will have a chance to make a woodsy costume at an art creation station so that they can be part of the play’s Forest Chorus. Their contributi­ons will be supplement­ed by Skwalking Heads puppets.

Cerulean says she’s especially grateful for the support of Chattanoog­a’s community of artists. Many have studied the archaeolog­y of Moccasin Bend to create place-based art that will be for sale. A sculptural art fence by Chad Burnet, Mirel Crumb and Craig Steel will establish the Stringer’s Garden Gateway to Moccasin Bend, with natural sculpture from Patrick Ironwood. Megan Hollenbeck is creating a short film about the project. “Tree Dimensions” by Merril Val Love and Craig Steel will project moving,

fractal images on the urban forest.

Several bands will provide the soundtrack for the evening’s events.

4-11 p.m. Arts, music and vendors.

7 p.m. “Robin! Coming Soon to a Forest Near You” presentati­on.

COOL DOWN CHATTOWN

Now in its third year, the Cool Down ChatTown festival is organized by Climate Chattanoog­a Healthy Energy for Everyone.

The CCHEE event is designed to encourage a future powered by 100 percent renewable energy. The group also will have a green pod set up Saturday to inform festivalgo­ers about the urban forest and sustainabi­lity.

Cerulean says several vendors will have interactiv­e booths set up with environmen­tal messages, including a ribbon tree, which festivalgo­ers can string with written promises about caring for the Earth.

“They’re not trying to sell you anything,” she says. “They’re just trying to show a better way to live in an urban environmen­t and what you can do to help the planet.”

2-10 p.m. Music, vendors, demonstrat­ions.

 ??  ?? The Moccasin Bend National Archaeolog­ical District, the newest national park, is the focus of a new festival this weekend.
The Moccasin Bend National Archaeolog­ical District, the newest national park, is the focus of a new festival this weekend.
 ?? FACEBOOK PHOTO ?? “Tree Dimensions” by Merril Val Love and Craig Steel will use the forest as a backdrop for projection­s of moving, fractal images during the Mocs Bend Fest.
FACEBOOK PHOTO “Tree Dimensions” by Merril Val Love and Craig Steel will use the forest as a backdrop for projection­s of moving, fractal images during the Mocs Bend Fest.
 ??  ??
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? “Robin! Coming to a Forest Near You,” an audience-participat­ion romantic comedy by Jeannie Hacker-Cerulean of the UTC Theatre department, will premiere at the Mocs Bend Fest.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO “Robin! Coming to a Forest Near You,” an audience-participat­ion romantic comedy by Jeannie Hacker-Cerulean of the UTC Theatre department, will premiere at the Mocs Bend Fest.
 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO ??
STAFF FILE PHOTO

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