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Coastal Companion

Your ultimate guide to the coast

Things to do in Georgia – October 2010

September 27, 2010 by Susanne Talentino

When it’s October, fall festival season is in full swing and this is the month before the holidays take over. It’s time for Oktober Festivals, football and to top it off with Halloween.

Pirate Fest, Tybee Island, GA

Oktoberfest on the River – Savannah, GA

October 1 – 3, 2010
Savannah has a wonderful Oktoberfest on Riverstreet. This festival has everything you expect from beer garden, to Oompah band and Wienerdog race. Visit our special events page for Oktoberfest on the River

Tybee Island Pirate Fest -Tybee Island, GA

October 8 – 9, 2010
Quickly change from lederhosen to peg leg and eye patch because as soon as the Oompah band stops playing, the pirates take over the whole island of Tybee. It’s time for the popular Pirate Fest on October 8 – 9, 2010. Check out our special events page for Tybee Island Pirate Fest.

Georgia Colonial Coast Birding & Nature Festival – Jekyll Island, GA

October 7 – 10, 2010
In October Georgia is hosting the greatest diversity of bird species. Jekyll Island celebrates with a special festival where you can learn more about our birds and nature. Check out the special page for Georgia Colonial Coast Birding & Nature Festival on Jekyll Island, GA

The Great Ogechee Seafood Festival – Richmond Hill, GA

October 15-17, 2010
There’s another seafood festival in Georgia in October. This time, head to Richmond Hill outside Savannah for lots of fun for the whole family. Find out more here – The Great Ogechee Seafood Festival.

Shalom Y'All Jewish Food Festival

Tybee Island Festival of the Arts

October 16 – 17, 2010
Tybee Island goes straight from pirates to the arts, and why not. This is a great arts festival with lots of artists from the region. Read more on our page for Tybee Island Festival of the Arts

Shalom Y’all – Jewish Food Festival – Savannah, GA

October 31, 2010
There is another food festival in Georgia this month. This festival takes place in Forsyth Park. Come explore Jewish food. Find out more on our special page for Shalom Y’all – Jewish Food Festival – Savannah

Savannah Film Festival

October 31 – November 6, 2010
This festival is getting bigger and bigger every year. The festival kicks off at the end of October, check out our special events page for Savannah Film Festival.

Wait… There is more to read…
Kingsland Catfish Festival Video
Right Whale Festival – Jacksonville, Fl
Pirate Gathering – St Augustine, Fl
Taste of Charleston

October Events on the coast – new podcast

September 26, 2010 by Susanne Talentino

Here is the latest video podcast from Coastal Companion.  In this episode Joe takes a look at festivals and events coming up in October.  Festival season is in full swing, and October is going to be an action-packed month.

[Read more…]

Shrimp and Grits Festival on Jekyll Island – Interview

September 17, 2010 by Susanne Talentino

Jekyll Island, GA, is one of our favorite places to visit – especially when it’s time for the Shrimp and Grits Festival.  This popular event takes place in the historic district on Jekyll Island with lots of fun activities for the whole family.

Here is the interview:

Read more on our special events page for Shrimp & Grits Festival, Jekyll Island, GA

Shrimp Festivals Fall 2010 – Coastal Companion Podcast

September 17, 2010 by Joe Talentino

In this episode Joe talks about one of his favorite things – food. Here on the coast seafood is popular, and most people enjoy shrimp.  Maybe that’s why we have a lot of shrimp festivals in our area.

Here is the list of events mentioned in the show:

Rock Shrimp Festival, St Marys, GA

Shrimp & Grits Festival, Jekyll Island, GA

Seafood, Jazz & Brew Fest, Hilton Head Island, SC

Little River Shrimp & Jazz Festival, SC

Bluffton Art & Seafood Festival, SC

Beaufort Shrimp Festival, SC

Talk Like a Pirate Day

September 17, 2010 by Susanne Talentino

It’s has to be one of the silliest ideas of the century. Who in their right mind would ever come up with the idea to start a holiday where you Talk Like a Pirate?

Actually two friends, John Baur and Mark Summers, did just that. The idea was born in Albany, Oregon, which as far as we know is not nationally known for its relationship to pirates. This is what happened.

Mark Summers ("Cap'n Slappy") and John Baur ("Ol' Chumbucket"), founders of Talk Like a Pirate Day.

John and Mark were playing racquetball when, for reasons that aren’t clear to either of them now, they started insulting each other in pirate lingo. They realized it was a lot of fun and one of them said: “We should have a Talk Like a Pirate Day”. They decided to start Talk Like a Pirate Day, and picked September 19th because it is Summers’ ex-wife’s birthday. And the story could have ended there, if it hadn’t been for Dave Barry, who mentioned it in his nationally syndicated newspaper column and then Talk Like a Pirate Day took off.

All around the world and even hundreds of miles above it, people celebrate International Talk Like a Pirate Day every September 19. It’s been celebrated by millions of people on all seven continents – yes, even at the South Pole – and on the International Space Station!

The two friends – now go by the pirate personas of Ol’ Chumbucket and Cap’n Slappy have swashed their buckles from the Gulf of Mexico to the Puget Sound, from Los Angeles to Chicago to Philadelphia. They’ve performed at a glamorous Las Vegas
resort, at libraries, bookstores, schools and at several seedy bars.

This year the guys will celebrate the holiday more than 5,000 miles apart. Cap’n Slappy will be in Alaska as guest of the University of Alaska, Fairbanks. Ol’ Chumbucket moved in 2008 to a sunny island in the Caribbean and can’t think of a reason to leave. www.talklikeapirate.com

There are a number of events around the coast celebrating Talk Like a Pirate Day. Many pubs and bars have special celebrations. 

 

The Pirate Museum in St. Augustine, Florida

September 19, 2011

Starting at 5 p.m. on September 19, The Pirate Museum courtyard overlooking the Castillo de San Marcos–built because of devastating pirate raids–will be transformed into a lively pirate stronghold with:

*    Pirate Soul face painting
*    Sword fighting demonstrations
*    Live pirate music
*    Storytelling and magic by Captain William Mayhem, the Pirate Magician of St. Augustine
*    Talk Like A Pirate contest 
*    Don’t Walk The Plank Trivia Game

Attendees also receive 25 percent off of museum admission during the event, which runs until 8 p.m. 

Regular admission for adults is $11.99 and for kids 5 to 12 years old is $6.99.

St. Augustine Pirate & Treasure Museum

12 S Castillo Drive
St. Augustine, FL 32084

(877) GO-PLUNDER (877.467.5863)

 

These pirates walk and talk. Fernandina Pirate Club.

 

Talking Like a Pirate – The Beginner’s Course

(Excerpt from “Pirattitude!” So You Wanna Be a Pirate? Here’s How!” by John “Ol’ Chumbucket” Baur and Mark “Cap’n Slappy” Summers, published in 2005 by New American Library. All rights reserved.)


“Aarr!” is one of what we call “the Five As.” We call them this because that’s the letter they begin with, and our crack mathematics team assures us that there are five of them.
These exclamations are the glue that binds together pirate lingo. Even if you don’t know a bunghole from a broadside or a mizzenmast from a maidenhead, you can still give your conversation a little pirate panache by injecting these exclamations into yer landlubber lexicon.
Avast – Stop and give attention. It can be used in a sense of surprise, “Whoa! Get a load of that!” when a beautiful woman walks into the room. “Avast! Check out the bowsprit on that fine beauty!” you might say.
Ahoy – “Hello!” Any inference beyond “Hello!” is simply vocal inflection and has nothing to do with the real meaning of the word.
Aye – “Why, yes, I agree most heartily with everything you just said or did.”
Aye aye – “I’ll get right on that, sir, as soon as my break is over.” We’ve never heard any similarly colorful expressions for “no,” perhaps because pirates were the type you didn’t want to say no to.
Arr – This one is often confused with arrgh, which is of course the sound you make when you sit on a belaying pin. “Arr!” can mean, variously, “yes,” “I agree,” “I’m happy,” “I’m enjoying this beer,” “My team is winning,” “My team is losing,” “I saw that television show, it sucked,” “I am here and alive” and “That was a clever remark you or I just made.” And those are just a few of the myriad possibilities of “Arrr!” It’s a little bit like the pirate version of “Oy,” that indispensable Yiddish word that has almost as many meanings as there are ways to pronounce it.

Upcoming Pirate Events on the Coast

Tybee Island Pirate Fest, takes place October 6 – 9, 2011. The party has grown this year with multiple concerts, fireworks, “Buccaneer Ball”, Thieves market, Pirate Victory Parade and Kid’s Zone.

St. Augustine Pirate Gathering
St Augustine Pirate Gathering takes place October 28 – 30, 2011 at St Francis Field in St. Augustine, Florida.


Tybee Island Pirate Fest
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