Shenandoah Valley Events
Your weekly guide to what's happening in Harrisonburg, Staunton, Augusta, and Rockingham counties. Published every Thursday.
The Steel Wheels' annual roots-music throwdown at Natural Chimneys is the Valley's signature June weekend, and Natural Chimneys itself —...
The Steel Wheels' annual roots-music throwdown at Natural Chimneys is the Valley's signature June weekend, and Natural Chimneys itself — those seven limestone towers rising out of a Rockingham pasture — is the real co-headliner. Camp on-site if you can swing it; the late-night sets around the campground are where regulars say the festival actually lives. Bring sun protection (there's shade but not enough), good walking shoes for the uneven grass, and cash for the food trucks even though most take cards. Day passes work if three days feels like a lot, but Saturday is the sweet spot if you only pick one.
Event page →Downtown Harrisonburg's summer kickoff is exactly what it sounds like and somehow still delivers — music spilling out of side streets...
Downtown Harrisonburg's summer kickoff is exactly what it sounds like and somehow still delivers — music spilling out of side streets, kids' art projects, food vendors set up along Court Square, and the Sip & Stroll for the over-21 crowd who want to wander with a drink. Park in the deck on Water Street, not the surface lots, which fill first. Best move: hit it from 2-ish onward, when the heat breaks and the energy picks up, then stay for dinner at one of the downtown restaurants once the festival winds down.
Event page →The Loudoun Street Mall closes ranks for kids on Saturday — performers, crafts, the kind of bounce-and-balloon chaos that wears small...
The Loudoun Street Mall closes ranks for kids on Saturday — performers, crafts, the kind of bounce-and-balloon chaos that wears small humans out in the best way. The trick locals know: park at the George Washington Hotel garage or the Braddock Street deck, not the closer lots that everyone tries to grab. Bring water bottles (refills are easier than buying), and plan to stick around for an early dinner — half the Old Town spots have patio seating that gets you out of the leftover sun.
Event page →Kernstown is one of those Valley sites that doesn't get the press of Cedar Creek or New Market but absolutely should — two battles fought...
Kernstown is one of those Valley sites that doesn't get the press of Cedar Creek or New Market but absolutely should — two battles fought here, and the preservation work is the real deal. Reenactors set up camps, demonstrate drills, and the educators on hand actually know their stuff. Wear sturdy shoes; the ground is uneven pasture. Mornings are cooler and the demonstrations feel less crowded — aim for 10:30 AM if you want time to talk with the interpreters before the afternoon rush.
Event page →After KidzFest clears out, the pedestrian mall flips into evening mode and the free concert takes over. Grab a table at one of the patios...
After KidzFest clears out, the pedestrian mall flips into evening mode and the free concert takes over. Grab a table at one of the patios that line the mall — Bonnie Blue or Village Square if you want the sightlines, the Half Note Lounge if you want cocktails first — and let the music come to you. It's the best free date night in Winchester all summer, and you don't have to plan anything beyond showing up.
Event page →The Stonewall Brigade Band is older than Virginia statehood feels like it should allow — one of the oldest continuously performing...
The Stonewall Brigade Band is older than Virginia statehood feels like it should allow — one of the oldest continuously performing community bands in the country — and their Monday night concerts at the Gypsy Hill bandstand are pure summer Americana. Bring a folding chair or a blanket; the lawn around the bandstand is generously sloped and there's no bad spot. Older folks love this for good reason: it's seated, it's gentle, and you're done by 9:30. Pro move: grab ice cream from Sweet Charlie's before you head over.
Event page →A Pride-month book fair with authors, signings, and local vendors at the R.I.S.E. Center — the kind of event Winchester needed and is...
A Pride-month book fair with authors, signings, and local vendors at the R.I.S.E. Center — the kind of event Winchester needed and is finally getting. Smaller, browse-able, conversational. Easy to drop in for an hour, easy to spend three. If you've been looking for a way to connect with the local LGBTQ+ community or just want to support indie authors, this is the warm-welcome version of that.
Event page →The astronomy programs at Skyland are a Valley gift — solar viewing in the afternoon, then telescopes once the sky goes dark. Skyland sits...
The astronomy programs at Skyland are a Valley gift — solar viewing in the afternoon, then telescopes once the sky goes dark. Skyland sits at 3,680 feet, well above most of the light pollution, and the rangers running these are genuinely good teachers. Pack layers (it gets cold on the ridge even in June), bring a red-light flashlight if you have one, and arrive before sunset so you've got time to settle and let your eyes adjust. Dinner at the Skyland dining room before the show is a legitimately romantic move.
Event page →Constitution Park's riverside setting is what makes this market different from the others — you can grab coffee, browse the producers, then...
Constitution Park's riverside setting is what makes this market different from the others — you can grab coffee, browse the producers, then take a walk along the South River Greenway and barely notice an hour has gone by. Dogs welcome on a leash. June is when everything actually starts hitting at once: strawberries finishing up, the first squash and tomatoes coming in, herbs in serious quantity. Get there early for the bakers — the good stuff is gone by 11.
Event page →The Sunday version at Turner Pavilion is a producer-only market — every vendor grew, raised, or made it themselves — and the downtown...
The Sunday version at Turner Pavilion is a producer-only market — every vendor grew, raised, or made it themselves — and the downtown setting makes it easy to roll a morning out of it. Bring the dog (leashed, water bowls scattered around), bring cash for the smaller stands, and budget extra time for the prepared-food vendors because the line at the empanada stall gets real by 10. Easy parking on the surrounding streets if you skip the obvious lots.
Event page →Staunton's downtown is one of the best-preserved Victorian-era streetscapes in the South, and the Historic Staunton Foundation's free...
Staunton's downtown is one of the best-preserved Victorian-era streetscapes in the South, and the Historic Staunton Foundation's free Saturday tours are the smart way to actually understand what you're looking at. Pace is gentle, two hours total, and the docents have stories that aren't in any guidebook. Wear comfortable shoes — there are hills — and tip your guide.
Event page →A community soccer celebration at Sherando Park with the kind of multicultural, multigenerational vibe that the Blue Ridge United club has...
A community soccer celebration at Sherando Park with the kind of multicultural, multigenerational vibe that the Blue Ridge United club has built genuine reputation around. Bring water, sunscreen, and folding chairs if you want to watch the matches rather than play in the open kickabouts. Great event for kids who are just discovering the sport.
Event page →The summer solstice gets its own civic holiday in Harrisonburg — free programming across the city's parks from sunrise to sunset, the...
The summer solstice gets its own civic holiday in Harrisonburg — free programming across the city's parks from sunrise to sunset, the longest day put to its actual purpose. Pull up the schedule that morning and pick two or three things; the city makes a real effort and the activities span everything from playground takeovers to evening movies. Excellent way to wear kids out before the school-year wind-down.
Event page →Staunton Clayground is a legitimately charming little studio and the beginner wheel class is one of the better date-night moves in the...
Staunton Clayground is a legitimately charming little studio and the beginner wheel class is one of the better date-night moves in the Valley if your bar is set above "another dinner." Wear something you don't mind getting clay on. Spots are limited; if it's not booked by Thursday afternoon they may have a walk-in slot but don't count on it.
Event page →Two hours, $35, supplies included — you leave with something you made and a slightly better sense of why people get into resin in the first...
Two hours, $35, supplies included — you leave with something you made and a slightly better sense of why people get into resin in the first place. Art Hive runs these regularly and the instructors keep the group small enough to actually help everyone.
Event page →Winchester Book Gallery is the Valley's best indie bookstore and they punch above their weight on author events. A regional-history signing...
Winchester Book Gallery is the Valley's best indie bookstore and they punch above their weight on author events. A regional-history signing is exactly the kind of thing they do well — intimate, conversational, the author actually wants to talk to you. Easy combination with KidzFest two blocks away if you're making a downtown day of it.
Event page →Three-day theater intensive for 5th–7th graders with Silver Line — the kind of camp that takes mythology seriously and lets kids actually...
Three-day theater intensive for 5th–7th graders with Silver Line — the kind of camp that takes mythology seriously and lets kids actually perform with it. Registration is the move if you haven't yet; call ahead to confirm any last-minute openings.
Event page →The park is right in the sweet spot of its year — wildflowers still going, summer haze hasn't fully settled in, evening temperatures on the...
The park is right in the sweet spot of its year — wildflowers still going, summer haze hasn't fully settled in, evening temperatures on the ridge cool enough that you actually want a layer. If you're picking one overlook this week, make it Hawksbill Gap to Crescent Rock (around mile 44.4) for the late-afternoon light, or Big Meadows for the easy access and the dependable wildlife — deer everywhere, sometimes a bear sighting at dusk near the campground. The Saturday night astronomy program at Skyland on June 20th is the headline reason to point you here, but even a weekday drive is the move: pack a sandwich from a Valley deli, take the south entrance at Rockfish Gap if you're coming from Waynesboro, and stop wherever the light looks good. $30 per vehicle gets you a week's pass — buy the annual at $55 if you'll be back twice more.
Visit →The view from the Brix & Columns patio — Massanutten Peak across the valley, vines sloping toward the road — is the kind of thing that...
The view from the Brix & Columns patio — Massanutten Peak across the valley, vines sloping toward the road — is the kind of thing that makes you want to stay for one more glass. Their estate Petit Manseng is the local move and the wine that put them on the map, but the Cab Franc is also genuinely good and pairs with whatever's coming off the food truck that night. They run a rotating Friday and Saturday food-truck schedule that's worth checking before you go (it's not always posted until the week of). Reservations aren't required but help on summer weekends, especially if you want shade. Bring well-behaved dogs on a leash — they're welcome on the patio and there are usually a couple already there. About 20 minutes from downtown Harrisonburg, easy drive in either direction.
Visit →Massanutten in summer doesn't get the credit its ski season does, and that's actually the appeal — far fewer crowds, and the WaterPark is...
Massanutten in summer doesn't get the credit its ski season does, and that's actually the appeal — far fewer crowds, and the WaterPark is the obvious move with kids but the mountain itself is where the surprises live. The lift-served mountain biking is genuinely good, the zip line tour clears the tree canopy in a way that beats most of what the Valley offers, and the dining at the lodge has gotten better the last couple of years. If you're not staying on-property, day passes for the WaterPark are the value play — buy them online ahead, the gate price hurts. Sunday afternoons are quieter than Saturdays for everything. Twenty minutes from Harrisonburg, an hour from Staunton, and a legitimate full-day outing.
Visit →Before You Go
- Weather — Mid-June in the Valley is reliably warm (mid-80s daytime) but pop-up afternoon storms are the rule, not the exception — check radar before you head out and pack a layer for any ridge-elevation event.
- Pro tip — Saturday June 13 is the most stacked day of the week across the entire Valley; pick one city and one event, don't try to chain four together in a day.
- Local resource — Visit Shenandoah is the most reliable aggregated calendar across the eight-county region if you need to plan past what's here.
- Jun 11 - Jun 28 Virginia Horse Center Events Cluster - Virginia Horse Center, Lexington
- Jun 11 Dogs 2 Read 2 - Not specified, Harrisonburg