The following is scheduled at The Ozark Folk Center State Park for your enjoyment!!

Mother’s Day Buffet at the Skillet
A wonderful Mother’s Day meal at the Skillet is the perfect way to show Mom how much you really appreciate her. Bring mom and the rest of the family to the Skillet for a great meal.

MOTHERS DAY BUFFET AT THE SKILLET

Sunday, May 10, 2015

11:00 a.m.- 2:30 p.m.

  Loaded baked potato soup

Elaborate salad bar

Fresh Fruit Tray

Skillets Famous Fried Chicken

Ham Steak with grilled pineapple

Baked Crab Stuffed Salmon, Hollandaise Sauce

White & Brown Gravies

Mashed Potatoes

Wild Rice Blend

Buttered Vegetable Blend

Seasoned Brussels-Sprouts

Corn on the Cob

Regular & Sugar Free Desserts:

Variety of cobblers, cakes, cheese cake,

Strawberry Short Cake

ADULTS $12.95

Children 10 & under $6.99

High Chair—Free
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Young Pioneers Programs Offer Hands On Fun
On Saturdays through the month of May, and then every Tuesday-Saturday throughout the summer, we have a Young Pioneers program especially suited to those between the ages of 7 and 14. Young Pioneer programs are included in the cost of admission to the Craft Village. The Young Pioneers will be able to start and finish projects, giving them a more complete understanding of Ozark pioneer lifestyle.

Some of the pioneer activities that may be scheduled for these young folks will be:
  • Scent Sacks
  • Play Parties and Square Dancing
  • Making and using quill pens
  • Playing Rhythm Instruments
  • Bats and spiders (make and take home)
  • Pottery
  • Corn Shuckery
  • Spinning Yarn
  • Apple heads
  • Ozark Games
  • Ozark Stories
 For more on programs available for young folks at the Ozark Folk Center State Park, click here to (Read More)

Yarb Tales – Poke Sallet
I want to thank Betty Gray for calling me to talk about poke sallet. Mrs. Gray told me that she has eaten poke all of her life. She boils it, just a little, changing the water several times to rinse out the  toxins that can give a person the stomachache, though she said that she thought that some people parboil it too much. She likes her poke greens with eggs and bacon.

Mrs. Gray recalls that “Growing up in the Ozarks, poke and dandelion were the first greens in the spring. We picked these with Momma and they were a good spring tonic.” She remembers buying canned poke from the Arkansas company, Allens Canning. They have gone out of business. “My old poke patch wasn’t doing very well so I gathered some seeds to plant. I have a pretty good patch growing and it is ready to eat now.”

Then she asked me if I had ever eaten the early, young shoots. “They taste like asparagus. You just cut the sprouts at ground level. If they are too tough to cut, they are too old to eat. Peel the red skin off, then chop the stalks, coat with flour or cornmeal and fry them.”

Mrs. Gray had been doing some research and related that she wasn’t surprised that she does not read articles on eating poke very often. Poke, Phytolacca americana, has some very toxic properties. The perennial root is poisonous. It plunges deeply into the earth and spreads out horizontally. The root has been used, externally, as a wash for scabies. Any internal use can be deadly. I would only use it under the supervision of a knowledgeable practitioner and no other medication alternatives were available.

The Heritage Herb Garden, at the Ozark Folk Center State Park, graces the grounds with visual colors and textures, sweet and pungent aromas and helps us to interpret the history of the human use of plants.
For the complete Poke Sallet Yarb Tales, click here to (Read More)
Join us in the Craft Village Tuesday-Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Noon program on the Bessie Moore Deck next to the School House

Daytime Musicians are located on the outdoor stage at the back of the large Auditorium and performance times are  10:15 / 11:15 / 12:15 / 1:45 / 2:45 / 3:45

Evening Concerts are in the Large Auditorium Wednesday – Saturday. Doors open at 6:00 p.m., concerts start at 7:00 p.m.

Tuesday, May 5
Noon Program – Tina Marie Wilcox – Garden Tours
Daytime Musicians – Fog on the Mountain
Evening – Closed
Wednesday, May 6
Noon Program –  Mary Gillihan – Women of Mountain Music
Daytime Musicians –  Flathoof Stringband
Evening Concert –
  • Leatherwoods
  • Woodsong
  • Prestin Garey
  • Odell Jackson
  • Jack & Mary
Thursday, May 7
Noon Program – Shawn Hoefer – Obadiah T. Fassbinder and his modern medical miracle
Daytime Musician – Carolyn Carter
Evening Concert –
  • Carolyn Carter
  • Possum Juice
  • Peck of Peppy Pickers
  • John Severs
  • Backwoods Arkansaw
Friday, May 8
Noon Program – Kathleen Connole – Native Plants and People
Daytime Musicians – Whoa Mule!
Evening Concert –
  • Nathan Cobb & Friends
  • Mulligan Stew
  • Mary Parkers & Friends
  • Dave Brancecum
  • Scott Poole & Gabi Pervis
Saturday, May 9
Young Pioneers for children 7-14
Noon Program – Spinning Tales with Jeanette Larson
Daytime Musician – Grace Stormont
Evening Concert Jay Ungar & Molly Mason
with
Twang
Smith & Jensen
Flat Broke
Schedule Subject to Change
Craft Village – Open Tuesday-Saturday 10 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Admission $12.00 for adults and $7.00 for children 6-12, children under 6 are free. Family pass is $29.50.
Evening Concerts – Wednesday – Saturday, doors open at 6:00, concert begins at 7:00. A season pass includes both Crafts and Music $75 for adults and $35 for children 6-12. Attend the Feature Concerts by using your season pass!
Skillet Restaurant – Open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. – good old southern country cooking
Homespun Gift Shop – Open 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. – featuring items from Arkansas crafters
Cabins at Dry Creek – Open daily & year-around for comfortable, quiet lodging
Loco Ropes – Highline Adventure open 7-days a week, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
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