Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Autumn events draw crowds to Pahrump Valley

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Acouple of eagerly anticipate­d events — the Sept. 2225 Pahrump Fall Festival and the Oct. 1-2 Grape Stomp — will draw crowds of locals and visitors in the Pahrump Valley this fall.

The unincorpor­ated town of Pahrump, the largest community in Nye County, is about an hour’s drive from Las Vegas, following state Route 160 over Mountain Springs Pass into the valley west of the Spring Mountain Range.

The fall festival has been a community favorite for 50 years. It includes a fair, parade, carnival and rodeo.

The parade starts at 9 a.m. Sept. 24 and features a range of marching groups, bands, vintage vehicles, equestrian groups, floats, politician­s, kids and pets.

The rodeo starts at 7 p.m. Sept. 23 and 24 costs $10 per night. All-day carnival passes cost $25 and are available on the Pahrump Chamber of Commerce website (www. pahrumpcha­mber.com) or at the gate.

When the community held its first fall festival, Pahrump was a far different place, home to several hundred residents. Today more than 36,500 live there.

The valley then was mostly agricultur­al, as it had been since American settlers arrived in the late 1800s. Pahrump took its name from what the original native inhabitant­s called it, meaning “Water Rock.” The valley had many artesian springs that native people used to farm small plots of land.

Soon, farmers and ranchers exploiting the water farmed large areas, with orchards, truck gardens and pastures for livestock. By the 1960s, the valley supported dairy herds, alfalfa crops and fields of long-staple Egyptian cotton.

It proved to be too much for the artesian flow. Necessary changes in water usage led to the demise of agricultur­e as the valley's economic mainstay.

Wine-making is one agricultur­al enterprise thriving in the Pahrump Valley these days, considered an acceptable and water-thrifty use of resources. The wine industry has establishe­d a foothold in several places throughout arid Nevada since grapes produce far more than other kinds of crops using the same amount of water.

Pahrump has two wineries with vineyards, and several separate vineyards in nearby Amargosa Valley provide some of the grapes.

The Grape Stomp, a popular autumn event at Pahrump Valley Winery, celebrates the grape harvest in Pahrump.

Gates open at 11 a.m. both days of the festival. Admission costs $10. The winery's party draws hundreds for food, wine tasting, music, crafts, wine auction and the traditiona­l stomping of the grapes.

Two-person teams have two strenuous minutes to crush grapes in a barrel. The juice amounts are carefully measured to determine the winners in various categories. Those who want to compete in the Grape Stomp should reserve a spot now at www. pahrumpwin­ery.com.

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 ?? LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL FILE ?? The Pahrump Valley High School Junior ROTC marches in the Pahrump Fall Festival parade. The festival, set for Sept. 22 to 25, and the Oct. 1-2 Grape Stomp are two popular fall events in the Pahrump Valley.
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL FILE The Pahrump Valley High School Junior ROTC marches in the Pahrump Fall Festival parade. The festival, set for Sept. 22 to 25, and the Oct. 1-2 Grape Stomp are two popular fall events in the Pahrump Valley.
 ?? LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL FILE ?? Two-person teams compete in Pahrump Valley Vineyard's Grape Stomp.
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL FILE Two-person teams compete in Pahrump Valley Vineyard's Grape Stomp.
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