It took over 2,600 dancers in wooden shoes to set a world record at Tulip Time this May, and now a unique keepsake is available to commemorate the event.
[simage=2369,400,y,center]
In a parade field loaded with crowd-pleasers, the Tulip Time Steering Committee was able to find a way to narrow down the top entries in this year’s festival.
[simage=2369,200,y,left]
[simage=2370,200,y,right]
In a parade field loaded with crowd-pleasers, the Tulip Time Steering Committee was able to find a way to narrow down the top entries in this year’s festival.
The committee that organized the record-breaking wooden shoe dance at this past weekend’s Tulip Time has tallied the official number of participants that set the new mark.
As Saturday night’s final performance on the Tulip Toren was winding down, the Pella Public Works Department was already beginning the clean-up process from the 75th Annual Tulip Time festival.
[simage=2328,400,y,center]
Well over 2500 people danced their way into the record books Saturday morning in Pella on the final day of the 2010 Tulip Time festival.
[simage=2316,400,y,center]
Though cold temperatures, strong winds and the occasional sprinkle certainly made for a dramatic turnaround from Thursday’s weather, it wasn’t enough to dampen the spirits of the thousands of guests in Pella for the second day of the Tulip Time festival.
[simage=2263,400,y,center]
Saturday marks the final full day of Tulip Time in Pella, and the 75th annual event is expected to close out with a big bang – or at least the thunder from over 5,000 wooden shoes.
Congressman Leonard Boswell and former Iowa Governor Terry Branstad are among the political candidates expected to be in Pella Saturday for the final day of Tulip Time.
[simage=2326,200,y,left]
[simage=2325,200,y,right]
Of the many attractions in Pella during Tulip Time, few are as widely heralded and sought after as the sweet and flaky Dutch letter pastry. Pella’s downtown bakeries – the Jaarsma Bakery and Vander Ploeg Bakery – serve up a steady stream of the S-shaped treat, with lines that often extend well beyond their storefronts. Kristi Jaarsma-Balk, owner of the Jaarsma Bakery, says the popularity of the Dutch letter mainly grows by word-of-mouth.
“People hear about it and want to come and sample it, and once they do, they fall in love with it and bring them home to friends and neighbors,” said Jaarsma-Balk. “It just is a snowball effect from there, which is great for us.”
Of course, the Dutch letter wouldn’t be so popular if it weren’t for some of its finer qualities. Vander Ploeg Bakery owner Jeff Wichhart says the secret lies in the dough.
“I think the key to Dutch letters is the pastry itself,” says Wichhart. “Our puff pastry is a nice flaky dough. When you bite into it, it just sort of flakes apart in your mouth. And of course the filling is an important part too – everyone likes that almond filling”
Both owners agreed that the Dutch letter is, by far, their number one seller all year round, and especially during Tulip Time. The two bakeries sold an estimated 57,000 Dutch letters during last year’s Tulip Time celebration, and expect to top that number by the end of this weekend.
[simage=2309,200,y,right]
Thousands of visitors and locals alike are excited to have the 2010 Tulip Time festival underway in Pella, including the city’s mayor, Darrell Dobernecker.
[simage=1854,400,y,center]
It takes a great deal of time and manpower to spruce up the city of Pella before Tulip Time, but just as much effort goes into maintaining that look during the three-day festival.