PEI

Cavendish gets ready to host thousands ahead of music festival kickoff

As the final countdown to this year's Cavendish Beach Music Festival begins, hundreds of festival staff and event crews are working to get the site ready to host thousands of people this weekend. 

With record-breaking ticket sales, festival organizers expect 25,000 people each day

Festival organizers say there will be 45 acts performing throughout the festival, with headliners including Luke Combs and Darius Rucker. (Brittany Spencer/CBC)

The final countdown to the Cavendish Beach Music Festival weekend has begun, and festival staff and event crews are busy getting ready to host thousands of people.

The festival is returning this summer after being cancelled in 2020 and 2021 because of COVID-19. 

"It's pretty amazing," said festival CEO Ben Murphy. "Just to see a lot of the same people around from different vendors and contract workers, to be working with them again." 

Murphy said workers have been preparing the site for the last two weeks and are now setting up the final details. Food and drink vendors have started to arrive and crews are setting up production equipment on the main stage.  

Murphy said the festival saw record-breaking ticket sales with weekend passes selling out in days. He said the event, which runs July 7-9, will host about 25,000 people each day.

Festival CEO, Ben Murphy, says crews have been working to get the site ready for the past two weeks and staff can't wait to welcome festival guests back this year. (Brittany Spencer/CBC)

"I think it goes to show that there's a little pent-up demand over the last three years and so we can't wait to welcome back people," he said. 

There will be 45 acts performing throughout the festival, said Murphy, and headliners including Luke Combs and Darius Rucker have also fuelled demand for tickets. 

Businesses ready for big crowds 

Next to the festival grounds in Avonlea Village, businesses are stocking extra product on shelves and adding staff to handle the influx of visitors. 

"There's lots to do and we've certainly been working with the music festival to make sure that things progress smoothly," said Peter Fullerton, property manager at Avonlea Village. 

Peter Fullerton says some festival artists will be performing free concerts inside Avonlea Village between 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. each day throughout the weekend. (Brittany Spencer/CBC)

He said fencing has been set up to create pathways directing people to and from the festival.

Some festival artists will perform free concerts on the boardwalk in Avonlea Village between 4 and 6 p.m. throughout the weekend, he said.

At La Rose Bistro, head chef and owner Greg Arsenault said he's looking forward to welcoming lots of diners. He and his staff have been coming in early this week to prepare for the weekend.

"We're just trying to stay on top of things because eventually it will be an absolute zoo around here," Arsenault said. 

Greg Arsenault, owner of La Rose Bistro, says staff have been coming in early this week to prepare for the busy weekend ahead. (Brittany Spencer/CBC)

Further down the boardwalk at COWS Avonlea, manager Mya Welton said the store has brought in an extra shipment of ice cream and staff have spent the last week making cones ahead of the weekend.

"We definitely have more staff on," Welton said. "I'm very overwhelmed with the amount of people coming for sure, but we're definitely prepared, we're ready. I've been preparing for weeks."

Extra police coming from N.B.

RCMP will be patrolling within the festival grounds and throughout the Cavendish area all weekend. Sgt. Jillian Boutilier said an additional 30 police officers will be coming to the Island from New Brunswick.

Organizers say the 2022 Cavendish Beach Music festival will host about 25,000 people each day from July 7-9. (Brittany Spencer/CBC)

"With any large crowd we always have concerns so we've been preparing for the last few months to make sure we have adequate resources," Boutilier said. 

She said drivers can expect to see increased traffic within the area throughout the weekend and police will be giving out tickets and towing vehicles parked in no-parking zones. 

"We want everyone to have fun but we want them to be responsible and we want them to think ahead of time about a safe drive to the festival and a ride home," Boutilier said.