Categories: Community

St Patrick’s Day: Green Beer and Some Bad Decisions

St. Patrick’s Day in Peterborough arrives the way these things always do — not as a polite cultural observance, but as a green-flecked civic spell, a licensed excuse for daytime drinking, loud guitars, and the annual suspension of whatever dignity this town had left after winter.

It starts in respectable fashion, at least on paper, with the 26th Annual Peterborough St. Patrick’s Day Parade on Sunday, March 15 at 2 p.m., heading from City Hall down George Street to Lansdowne. Organizers say there will be nearly 80 entries and representation from more than 20 Irish families, which is the sort of detail that makes it all sound wholesome and heritage-minded, right up until the crowd drifts off the curb and into the bars.

Because let’s be honest: the real religion of St. Patrick’s week in Peterborough is not ancestry. It is amplification. It is pints before sunset. It is the old miraculous belief that live music can improve both your mood and your decision-making, when history suggests it usually destroys one and emboldens the other.

The pubs, naturally, are ready. Black Horse Pub kicks off parade day with Mike MacCurdy and Jeremy James from 1 to 6 p.m., a long afternoon stretch designed for people who like their Sundays marinated in beer foam and acoustic swagger. By Tuesday, March 17, the whole city seems to go into cheerful decline. Crook & Coffer rolls out John & Rod from 2 to 4 p.m., then hands the controls to the Electric City Ramblers from 5 to 8 p.m. — a smooth transition from daylight optimism to full evening disorder.

Then there is McThirsty’s Pint, which appears to have looked at the concept of moderation and set it on fire. They’ve booked Jacob Henley from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., James Higgins from 4 to 7 p.m., and Chris Collins from 8 p.m. to midnight — a full relay of live music for anyone determined to treat St. Patrick’s Day not as an outing, but as a campaign. It is the sort of schedule that suggests somebody behind the scenes understands the local temperament all too well.

Elsewhere, the fever spreads. Puck’ N Pint has Brisk Recharge from 3 to 7 p.m. Pig’s Ear Tavern is hosting an 8 p.m. open stage, which is either a charming invitation to local talent or a dangerous experiment in Irish confidence. Springville Tap n’ Grill gets in on the act too, with a St. Patrick’s Lucky Party featuring Brennen Sloan from 6 to 9 p.m. No one can say Peterborough lacked options. The city may not be Dublin, but it does know how to outfit a Tuesday with enough music and alcohol to make people forget what month it is.

And because this is Peterborough — a place that still likes to keep one foot in community-hall tradition while the other disappears under a pub table — there are other celebrations circling the edges. Mapleridge Recreation Centre hosts a St. Patrick’s Day Dance on Saturday, March 14 from 7 to 11 p.m., with live music by Four Lanes Wide Dance, plus a cash bar and door prizes. Which is lovely. Very civilized. A more orderly form of delirium.

So that’s the week ahead: a parade for the families, a dance for the wholesome, and a pub circuit for the rest of the maniacs. Peterborough on St. Patrick’s Day does not aspire to elegance. It aims for momentum. A moving tide of fiddles, amps, pints, and people in green hats making reckless promises to each other under strings of shamrock decor.

For a few days, the whole town tilts Irish — or at least Peterborough’s version of Irish, which is part heritage, part bar tab, and part beautiful, low-level public chaos. And really, that may be more authentic than anything.

thewire

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