More Photos Below!Gallery
We visited the “Feast of Ste. Claire” Re-enactor Encampment yesterday, Sunday. It’s near downtown Port Huron right on the gorgeous blue St. Clair River. (Guys were fishing along it under sun umbrellas — one guy had 3 big walleye. I wanted to dive in for a swim. So blue!)
This is a fest for the 1740-1840 period, basically. It’s the French & Indian War time. 600 actors in 100 camps covering French, Indian, British and American styles.
Sadly, we only saw two Indian actors the whole time. Maybe Saturday was bigger for them? They were both fine examples, though — one gave a great talk.
Interestingly, I only saw one little cluster of leghold traps at a camp. What about the trappers whose furs the Voyageurs delivered? I would’ve thought that trapping would’ve been a sizeable part of the re-enacting of that time. The traps probably would’ve been quite primitive, hand-forged.
Hundreds of flintlocks in view; zero percussion-caps. Quite a few gun-maker tents, blacksmiths, knifemakers.
The styles were verging on Ren-Faire — minus the “grog” — made us eager to attend the huge Faire in Holly this Aug/Sept.
I heard there were pirates in attendance on Sat.
We bought a large pewter dinner spoon that an old guy had molded, filed and polished. Elegant. Doesn’t tarnish. $12. Our kind of deal!
Here are my pics…

A handmade rifle. Well, he put it all together and customized it, like they did back then — they’d buy a lock and barrel and do the rest. The guy said it and its carvings were patterned after Crockett’s first gun, but he doubted that it was really his first gun, a bit too fancy.

An amazing kid was stunting on this tree. Over and over. He’d do a jig beforehand then run up and do his flip then land with a pirouette and a jig again. And throw in a few Tai-Chi moves. Hard to catch what he was up to. Modern or ancient or what kids always have done or both?