Ann Arbor Summer Art Fair Opens; Here's the Report

Submitted by BursleyHall82 on July 15th, 2021 at 12:37 PM

After a year off, the Ann Arbor Summer Art Fair opened today (it runs through Saturday). I stopped by this morning, and I'm so happy I did. It's the first normal day I've experienced in Ann Arbor since attending the Michigan-Nebraska basketball game in early March 2020. It felt GREAT. Some notes:

- I only walked along State Street, but everything is open. It looks like a normal Art Fair in every way. A few people wearing masks by choice but the vast majority appear to be vaccinated and maskless.

- All the stores are open, and there are some great sales in front of the stores, too. At its tent out front, the MDen has all the 2020 football season shirts that didn't sell, and you can get them CHEAP. In case you'd like a wearable reminder of that season.

- The Union is open, too, but there's a card system to get in, so you need to wait for someone to walk out to let you in. I think it's been closed for all of the pandemic, so it was great to be able to walk around inside, too.

- All in all, if you haven't been to Ann Arbor since the pandemic, it's the perfect time to come back. Find a time over the next three days when it's not raining and come on down.

mGrowOld

July 15th, 2021 at 12:44 PM ^

'At its tent out front, the MDen has all the 2020 football season shirts that didn't sell, and you can get them CHEAP. In case you'd like a wearable reminder of that season.'

I already got mine.

Oh look we suck again.png T-Shirt

Broken Brilliance

July 15th, 2021 at 12:44 PM ^

Glad you had fun! Gonna probably get lunch down there at some point over the next few weeks. Anyone know if they will resume giving out free season schedule posters at the front desk in Schembechler Hall/Townsley Museum? I made a habit of picking one up for about five years but haven't gotten one since 2016.

Sam1863

July 15th, 2021 at 2:44 PM ^

The only food vendor I saw was the Chicago Dogs stand on State. Didn't find anybody selling bottled water. There were a few lemonade stands and an Italian ice stand near Hill Auditorium. Entertainment-wise, there was a xylophone player as well as the sax guy, and the violinist who wears a wolf mask was at his usual spot at Main and Liberty.

BlueAggie

July 15th, 2021 at 1:01 PM ^

A few people wearing masks by choice but the vast majority appear to be vaccinated and maskless.

I suspect that adherence to regulations requiring the unvaccinated to mask is...low. But hey, maybe I'm just overly pessimistic?

Brhino

July 15th, 2021 at 1:29 PM ^

It's like this everywhere.  As soon as we gave unvaccinated people the out of "well, if you're vaccinated, you don't need a mask, and we're going to take your word for" it was all over.  Michigan's numbers are still doing pretty good but if we get another spike because of Delta Variant + Anti-Vaxxers it's gonna be damn depressing.  Like the CDC says.  Every death from this point forward was 100% preventable.

kehnonymous

July 15th, 2021 at 1:43 PM ^

Ayup.  And, look, I don't care that much if you forgo a mask outdoors since the risk of transmission is quite low.  But indoor spaces essentially implementing the honor system for being maskless "only if you're vaccinated" is gonna be every bit as effective as "do not click if youre under 18" warnings  on pr0n sites

1WhoStayed

July 15th, 2021 at 2:05 PM ^

All the title does is support the narrative that the “right” is the culprit for all (negative) things covid. 
As an example, in Hawaii the indigenous population are the ones  lagging behind in vaccination. They are NOT generally right wing.
In Michigan it’s the Black community that is lagging in vaccination. Again, not exactly a right wing stronghold.

But I guess it’s easier to make it political…

BTW - Saw a Trump 2024 hat on an old guy at a market yesterday and almost threw up in my mouth!

CRISPed in the DIAG

July 15th, 2021 at 2:40 PM ^

I appreciate what you're saying - sometimes it's an issue of access or ability to get a shot and I'm sure we can think of a couple apolitical folks who are resisting the vaccines, but it's largely divided along a political line. States voting for Biden have higher vaccination rates - much higher, in fact - than the GOP strongholds. 

Lionsfan

July 15th, 2021 at 2:46 PM ^

Eh, once you read the article, you can see they're not arguing that every single bad Covid thing is because of conservatives. It's actually talking about how the largest source of Anti-Vax disinformation is thanks to conservatives.

That massive amount of shit flinging into the world affects everybody, not just people who voted Republican

Clarence Boddicker

July 15th, 2021 at 6:11 PM ^

As an example, in Hawaii the indigenous population are the ones  lagging behind in vaccination. They are NOT generally right wing.
In Michigan it’s the Black community that is lagging in vaccination. Again, not exactly a right wing stronghold.

True, yes, but the context is that both Black and indigenous populations have a long, sad history of being used for medical experimentation. So there's distrust--well-earned distrust as tragic as it is.

jmblue

July 15th, 2021 at 2:15 PM ^

If you are concerned about Covid, you should get the vaccine. (I had to for my job but probably would have anyway.). If you are not, then don't get it.  That's up to you.  

The point of all our restrictions on society over the last year and a half was to ensure that we would have functioning health systems.  Now that most of our most vulnerable people have been vaccinated, our health systems should be able to function OK.  The evidence suggests that not only do the vaccines largely ward off Covid infections, but that even in cases of breakthrough infections, they seem to offer adequate protection so that symptoms are minor.  

People should not obsess over the number of new cases at this point.  The UK has had a surge of new cases (30-40,000 a day lately, in a population one-fifth our size) but far fewer hospitalizations and deaths than in previous surges.  Your mindset about Covid shouldn't be the same now as it was in the days before mass vaccination.

If some don't want to get vaccinated, hey, it's their life.

Hotel Putingrad

July 15th, 2021 at 2:23 PM ^

Yes, but if say 40% of the population stays unvaccinated, the virus will keep moving from pocket to pocket and mutating into more dangerous variants (see Lambda in SA) for those who aren't able to be vaccinated like young children or immunocompromised. Yes, the shutdowns were to preserve the hospital capacity originally, but now we're talking preventable deaths for no good reason other than willful ignorance abetted by the loudest carnival barkers.

GoBlue96

July 15th, 2021 at 4:07 PM ^

My daughter goes to preschool summer camp.  Yesterday was baby shark day and a live performer was supposed to come in.  There is still a mask requirement because all the kids are obviously unvaccinated.  The performer arrived at the school yesterday morning and was told about the mask requirement.  He refused to put on a mask and left.  The kids were devastated.  I don't know how someone could do that to 3-5 year old kids.

JFW

July 15th, 2021 at 4:20 PM ^

I got serious about that a number of years ago when I had a friend at the office contract Cancer. she was a single mom and the chemo was wrecking her immune system. 

Sure, not coming in to work when I had a fever and sanitizing extra before I went into her office was mildly inconvenient. But it wasn't about me.

We who can need to take the little extra effort for those who can't. I used to support our cancer center. You see kids in there getting infusions. I'm going to try to make sure I don't give them or their parents one more thing to worry about. If people want don't want to vaccinate, then mask. Get over yourself.

Just my $0.02. 

Gulogulo37

July 15th, 2021 at 2:51 PM ^

The problem is Americans are less healthy and have worse health care than in the UK. Also, I'm not sure of the age breakdown of vaccination rates exactly but from all I've read there was much less vaccine skepticism in the UK. Their vaccination rate is 60% and only 52% here. But the US never dipped below around 230 deaths per day in a 7 day moving average, and it's already starting to climb a bit now. The UK was down to 5 or so deaths per day, which is a lot fewer per capita. Their cases were rising exponentially without much of a budge in deaths for a while, that already doesn't quite seem to be the case in the US. Combine that with no restrictions and no masks and low vaccination rates and a worse variant, and it's not going to be as bad as before but it could get quite bad again, especially in a few big hotspots.

blue in dc

July 16th, 2021 at 12:01 PM ^

jmblue - You may want to check in on Arkansas.

https://www.4029tv.com/article/arkansas-hospitals-are-being-stressed-by-increase-in-covid-19-patients/37041800
 

“Our COVID ICU unit is full and the majority of the patients are on ventilators right now. Our COVID unit upstairs, which is our med surge COVID unit, is also full right now," said Debbie Hewett, R.N. and director of critical care services at Mercy Fort Smith. "Our patients here in the ICU are just so incredibly ill and that's COVID and non-COVID patients.  Hewett said the hospital is not yet seeing record numbers of COVID-19 patients, but they are much more sick than in previous months and when combined with non-COVID-19 patients and limited nurses, it is a stress for the health care system.“

 

blue in dc

July 16th, 2021 at 12:07 PM ^

Or Missouri:

“The Springfield, Missouri, health department is requesting funding for an alternate COVID-19 care site in response to a spike in infections and hospitalizations in recent weeks, health officials announced Wednesday.

Several local health facilities and hospitals jointly requested the alternative care site funding, which would include money for more beds, staff and antibody testing. One of those facilities was Springfield-based Mercy Hospital, which had so many hospitalized COVID patients last week that it had to call in backup ventilators from other hospitals in its network when it ran out.

The increase in severe illness is taxing the health system and sick patients are expected to outpace hospital capacity, according to the Springfield-Greene County Health Department.”

https://abcnews.go.com/Health/dwindling-hospital-space-missouri-prompts-officials-request-alternate/story?id=78860710

SagNasty

July 15th, 2021 at 9:17 PM ^

We do the same. Daughter turns 12 in late September and will be eligible for vaccine. A lot of her classmates/friends are already 12  but their parents have told us they are not vaccinating them because they think it could make them sterile. So our daughter will continue to wear a mask for the foreseeable future. 

Don

July 15th, 2021 at 1:21 PM ^

A few people wearing masks by choice but the vast majority appear to be vaccinated and maskless.

I certainly hope the vast majority of fair attendees are vaccinated, but it's impossible to tell whether anybody actually is by simply looking at them.

Gulogulo37

July 15th, 2021 at 2:54 PM ^

Yeah I hardly see anyone wearing masks even indoors now, but when you consider just under half are vaccinated in my county, it's a solid assumption that at least half of the people there are unvaccinated and maskless. If anything, it's probably more than that because probably anyone wearing a mask is already vaccinated.