The Harvest Festival is an annual event sponsored by the Briarcliff Manor Chamber of Commerce to promote local business.
“And it wasn’t in spurts or waves, there was a steady flow of people on the sidewalks all day. It was packed from the time we started at 10 a.m. until 5 or 6 p.m.” Borho, who’s also an owner of Wondrous Things, said the event has expanded a bit over the past five years, largely, to include activities for children.
In addition to rallying the community, the festival also yields potential new business opportunities for local establishments.
Michael and Miriam Risko, owners of the Mike Risko Music School, provided live music and ran the stage all day. Miriam Risko, who opened the music school with her husband Michael Risko in 1995, was glad to participate.
The Mike Risko Band, as well as a number of the music school’s students from Briarcliff and Ossining, performed at the event. The great part, according Miriam Risko, was that they played in the Pocket Park right in the middle of the festival, so cars driving by could hear the music throughout the entire street. “It was like a drive-by concert!” she said.
Miriam Risko added that participating in Briarcliff’s annual festivals gives them a chance to meet other people in the community and puts them somewhere they wouldn’t usually be, in this case, the middle of Briarcliff’s main street. “Because we are a part of many different communities it’s nice to be able to bridge that gap and have friends and customers from different areas come to the event,” Miriam Risko said.
“The Briarcliff Manor Chamber of Commerce, which was previously the Briarcliff Business Association prior to officially filing as a Chamber of Commerce in 2010, has grown to include over 100 local businesses,” Borho said.
Borho, who moved to Briarcliff in the 1960’s, said he’s witnessed tremendous changes in the Village over the decades. “But it still does have that nice, small town feel,” Borho said.