Behind the Scenes of Pony Express Days: How McKinleyville Pulls It Off

Featured Title Image above by Matt Filar

When you think of Pony Express Days, you probably picture the big moments. The parade rolling down Central Avenue. Live music filling Pierson Park. Kids running around with sticky faces. Food vendors cooking. Families setting up lawn chairs. The joyful chaos of the pie-eating contest. That feeling that, for a little while, the whole community steps outside at the same time.

That is exactly what we want people to see.

But behind that picture is a lot of moving pieces, and a lot of people who said yes in different ways to make it happen.

Pierson Park at sunrise with event signs placed in the grass before Pony Express Days begins.
Before the music, food trucks, vendors, and kids activities arrive, the park starts as a blank canvas with a lot of little signs, maps, and decisions.

Why This Takes a Community

Because McKinleyville is an unincorporated community, we do not have a city hall, a municipal budget, or a parks department with a full-time event staff. The Chamber steps into that gap because we are deeply committed to supporting the people who live, work, and play here. But we are a small team with a tight budget and whatever hours our community is willing to give us.

That is what makes Pony Express Days special. It is not just a tradition. It is a community collaboration, rebuilt from scratch every single year.

The Good Old Days vs. Modern Reality

We hear it often: “I miss the old street dances.” “Why isn’t the parade route longer?” “It used to be a whole week of horse events.”

We love that history. We treat it with real respect, which is why we started anchoring each year with a theme: 2025’s “Where Trails Lead to Community” and this year’s “Coastal Roots, Western Boots” being two examples of that effort.

But here is the honest truth: the world of event production today bears almost no resemblance to the 1970s, 80s, or 90s. The things pulled off decades ago with a handshake and a clipboard now require a mountain of compliance.

To shut down Central Avenue or pack Pierson Park, we navigate liability insurance requirements that get stricter every year, months of permits covering public safety and regional health requirements, and a coordinated planning process with multiple public agencies just to handle traffic control and all the details.

When pieces of the festival shift or change, it is not random. It is a deliberate strategy to keep this tradition alive under modern constraints. Every decision is made with the goal of getting to the next year.

From the Mixer to the Main Event

Most people know the Saturday parade and festival, but Pony Express Days is really a full week of community events, planning, preparation, and a little bit of controlled chaos.

The Chamber Mixer kicks things off and sets the tone. Business owners, community leaders, and neighbors all in the same place, catching up and officially launching the celebration. The Friday Night Dance at Six Rivers Brewery worked at bringing something back we had been missing, and it felt like a great step toward rebuilding that energy.

The Pie-Eating Contest, a new tradition in its 2nd year, also hosted at Six Rivers, is pure, messy joy. Watching kids and adults dive face-first into pies with no hands is exactly as hilarious as it sounds. As community member Allison shared on social media, “Such a great turn out, it was fun to watch!”

A volunteer or staff member setting up a Pony Express Days booth near community partner tents in McKinleyville.
Partnerships matter. Pony Express Days comes together because people show up, pitch in, and help make it happen.

The Chili Cook-Off brings out friendly competition and a whole lot of strong opinions, while the stick horse race keeps the kids in the action. We received some wonderful feedback on the park layout this year from Patricia , who shared on the community watch facebook page:

“Chili Cook-Off Kudos! To the participants—WOW. From classic to fiery to green, you did a great job and made picking the ‘best’ very difficult. To the organizers—Fantastic job. Having the booths laid out as a perimeter instead of in aisles made it a lot less congested and easy to navigate.”

Before the parade rolls on Saturday morning, the day starts with pancakes at Azalea Hall. The Dow’s Prairie Grange crew fuels the community for the big day ahead, and there is something genuinely special about starting parade day with hot coffee, pancakes, and familiar faces.

Then comes the big Saturday finale. Central Avenue fills with horses, classic cars, community groups, kids, and people waving from the sidewalk. After the parade, the energy moves to Pierson Park for food trucks, vendors, live music, kids’ activities, pony rides, the petting zoo, and all the little moments that make the park feel alive.

That is the part most people see. Getting there takes months of work.

Spreadsheets, Signs, and Last-Minute Questions

Pony Express Days festival sign, boxes, supplies, and trash cans staged before the event in McKinleyville.
Before the parade and festival, there are signs, supplies, boxes, bins, and a lot of little details to get in place.

Long before anyone grabs a spot along the parade route, there is a lot of unglamorous work happening behind the scenes.

Permits. Insurance. Vendor layouts. Safety planning. Parade entries. Sponsor follow-up. Volunteer schedules. Maps. Posters. Social media. Signs. Tickets. Supplies. Emails. So many emails. And yes, a truly unreasonable number of spreadsheets.

Turning Pierson Park into a festival space is its own puzzle. Food trucks need room. Vendors need spaces. Kids’ activities need to fit safely. The band needs power. People need to find the bathrooms. Trash and cleanup need to be planned for. Parade logistics need to be answered. Volunteers need to know where to go.

And then event day arrives.

Someone needs an extension cord. Someone cannot find check-in. Someone has a parking question. Someone needs ice, tape, scissors, a trash bag, a chair, or a quick decision on something no one predicted.

You are carrying a box, answering a text, pointing someone in the right direction, and trying to remember where you left your water bottle.

It is chaotic. It is tiring. And then you look up.

You see kids laughing, old friends reconnecting, local businesses getting cheered on in the parade, vendors serving long lines of people, volunteers helping without being asked, and Pierson Park full of community life. That behind-the-scenes hustle didn’t just make things smooth for visitors – it kept our local business and artisan economy moving too. Hearing from our vendors makes every bit of the coordination worth it:

  • “Very much enjoyed Pony Express Days as a newer vendor. Had a great time and met lots of great people!” — Randy
  • “I think this was my first vendor event that I didn’t have a chance to take photos—it was busy!” — JoAnn
  • “It was wonderful! Very well organized. Very family friendly.” — Maria

Thinking Ahead to 2028

Pony Express Days has been part of McKinleyville since 1968. In 2028, we celebrate the 60th anniversary, and that milestone is already on our minds.

A diamond jubilee will not build itself. It will be built on a community deciding to show up, year after year, with fresh energy and a willingness to carry a piece of the weight. We want the years leading up to 2028 to bring in new ideas, new volunteers, and new momentum while still honoring what this tradition means to the people who have been part of it for decades.

If you want to see an old event come back, help us build it. If you see a problem, help us fix it. Our doors are genuinely open.

Why We Keep Doing This

Events like this support the local economy. They bring people into town, give vendors a place to sell, give sponsors a way to invest in the community, and give nonprofits and local organizations a chance to connect with the people they serve. They give families memories. They give volunteers a role.

They also help McKinleyville tell its own story.

As McKinleyville grows and changes, traditions like Pony Express Days help keep us connected to place. They remind us that we are not just a spot on the map. We are a community with history, pride, humor, generosity, and a whole lot of people willing to roll up their sleeves.

Families visiting vendor booths and food trucks at Pony Express Days in McKinleyville.
This is why the planning matters: people finding vendors, kids enjoying the day, families spending time together, and local businesses getting in front of the community.

A Genuine Thank You, McKinleyville

To every person who played a part. Whether you sponsored an event, marched in the parade, flipped pancakes, cooked chili, sold food, volunteered, hosted, performed, decorated, donated, answered questions, shared a post, brought your family, or simply showed up to enjoy the day – thank you. You helped make Pony Express Days happen.

Chili Cook-Off participants serving food during Pony Express Days in McKinleyville.
Pony Express Days happens because people show up, pitch in, serve, volunteer, and bring the community together.

As community member Shel beautifully shared on the community page alongside photos from the weekend:

“Pictures from the 2026 Pony Express Day Parade. An amazing day in McKinleyville. Thank you to everyone who worked so hard to bring us all together.”

A strong community does not appear on its own. We build it. Sometimes with meetings and maps. Sometimes with folding tables, duct tape, chili pots, parade floats, music, and a whole lot of heart.

Pony Express Days is not perfect. No event this big ever is. But it is uniquely ours. And year after year, McKinleyville keeps showing up for it. That is something worth celebrating.

Share Your Favorite Moments!

Did you capture great photos during Pony Express Days? We would love to see the week through your eyes. Tag the McKinleyville Chamber of Commerce on facebook and Instagram or send your favorites our way. Those photos help tell the real story too!

McKinleyville Is More Than a Place You Pass Through

If you ask someone to describe McKinleyville, they’ll probably start by naming what we’re close to. The airport, Arcata, Cal Poly Humboldt, Trinidad, the redwoods, the beach.

And yes, all of that is true. But McKinleyville is so much more than a convenient line on a map between bigger‑name destinations. It’s not just where you grab rental car keys before heading somewhere else or a stretch of highway to speed through on your way north or south.

McKinleyville is its own community. It’s a place shaped by families, schools, local businesses, and neighborly traditions. Built by people who care deeply about where they live. And the more I work in and around this town, the more I realize something critical: if we don’t tell our own story, someone else will tell it for us.

We Are a Gateway, But We Are Also a Destination

Let’s be real: McKinleyville is absolutely a gateway. The California Redwood Coast Humboldt County Airport (ACV) is right here, meaning we are the literal front door for visitors exploring the North Coast.

That role matters, but being a gateway shouldn’t mean being invisible. It means we have an incredible opportunity to welcome people well, help them ground themselves in where they are, and give them a reason to pull over. There is something here worth noticing if you take a second to look.

The Beauty of Everyday Places & Local Businesses

Not every meaningful place has to be flashy or designed for tourists. McKinleyville is defined by the spaces we use in real, everyday life, the Hammond Trail, Hiller Park, Clam Beach, and Pierson Park. It’s the local coffee stops, the grocery stores, the gyms, and the neighborhood streets where you inevitably run into someone you know and end up catching up for ten minutes.

Our local businesses are the backbone of those everyday spaces. They aren’t just places to buy things; they are the employers, the youth sports sponsors, the school fundraiser donors, and the neighbors who show up for community needs behind the scenes.

When we talk about building McKinleyville’s identity, it isn’t about chasing a specific population number. It’s about deciding who we are, what we value, and what we want to build. If we want visitors and new residents to see us as a true destination, we have to make it as easy as possible for them to find and support the incredible businesses already rooted here.

Traditions and Real Conversations

We have deep traditions that give us a sense of place. Whether it’s the energy of Pony Express Days, summer evenings at Music in the Park, Chamber mixers, or local baseball games at Hiller Park. They aren’t always perfect, and they don’t have to be. They matter because they give us a reason to gather, helping newcomers feel connected and reminding long-time residents why they love it here.

Being proud of McKinleyville doesn’t mean pretending everything is perfect, either. We’re not without growing pains. But genuine community pride isn’t about ignoring the hard stuff, it means caring enough to keep showing up and investing in what makes this place good.

This Is the Work

At the Chamber, our job is to support local businesses and advocate for a strong economy, but a massive part of that is simply telling the McKinleyville story.

That’s exactly why we’ve been building out more resource-heavy content on our website. When we share business spotlights, trail ideas, or event updates, it isn’t just content for the sake of content. It’s a deliberate effort to help visitors find us, help residents stay connected, and ensure our businesses are seen. It’s a way to remind everyone that McKinleyville isn’t just near the good stuff. McKinleyville is the good stuff.

Stop, Stay, and Explore

So, if you’re flying into ACV, take a little time to notice where you landed. If you’re driving through town, pull over for a meal, take a walk on the trail, or check out a shop you haven’t seen before.

And if you live here? Keep exploring your own backyard. Try a restaurant you haven’t visited in a while. Show up to the local events. Share the post, invite a friend, and cheer at the parade. McKinleyville is a place where people live, work, build, and care. That’s a story worth telling, and it’s a story we’re writing together every day.

Free Things to Do in McKinleyville This Summer

Summer in McKinleyville does not have to be complicated.

Some of the best things to do here are simple. Take a walk. Bring a blanket to the park. Listen to live music. Cheer at a parade. Let the kids run around. Watch the fog roll in and out. Grab a snack, meet up with a friend, or spend a little time outside without needing a full plan.

McKinleyville is not a place that has to try too hard.

That is part of what makes it special.

Whether you live here, are visiting for the weekend, have family in town, or are just looking for a low-cost way to enjoy the day, there are plenty of free and simple ways to experience McKinleyville this summer.

Walk the Hammond Trail

The Hammond Trail is one of the easiest ways to get outside and enjoy McKinleyville.

You can walk, run, bike, scooter, bring the dog, or just take a slow stroll and clear your head. Some sections feel tucked away and quiet, while others connect you to parks, neighborhoods, coastal views, and everyday local life.

Start where you want. Walk as far as you want. Turn around when you are ready.

That is one of the best things about it.

Keep an eye out for birds, coastal views, goats near Hiller if you are lucky, and of course, banana slug crossings.

If you want more ideas for enjoying the trail, you can also read our post about the Hammond Trail and why it is one of McKinleyville’s favorite places to walk.

Spend Time at Hiller Park

Hiller Park works for a lot of different kinds of days.

It is good for families, kids, dogs, casual walks, fresh air, and meeting up with friends. You can make it a quick stop or spend more time there if everyone is happy and the weather is cooperating.

Take the dogs to the dog park, let the kids play on the playground, or bring lunch to enjoy at the picnic tables.

It is also a great starting point if you want to connect to the Hammond Trail or just enjoy a simple outdoor outing without driving too far.

Bring layers, because this is still the North Coast.

Visit Clam Beach

Clam Beach is one of McKinleyville’s most recognizable outdoor spots.

It is wide open, beautiful, and a little wild in the way North Coast beaches often are. It is a good place to walk, let the kids explore, take photos, watch the waves, or just stand there for a minute and remember that we live in a pretty incredible place.

It is not always sunny. It is not always warm.

But it is almost always worth the stop.

Bring a jacket, watch the tides, keep dogs under control, and be careful around the water.

Enjoy Music in the Park

Music in the Park is one of McKinleyville’s favorite summer traditions.

These free summer concerts at Pierson Park bring together live music, food trucks, families, friends, kids playing on the lawn, neighbors catching up, and that easy summer evening feeling that people look forward to all year.

You do not have to spend money to enjoy it. Bring a blanket or lawn chair, listen to the music, and enjoy being part of the community.

If you want to purchase food or drinks from vendors, that is always a great way to support local businesses too, but the event itself is free and open to the community.

Watch the Chamber website and Music in the Park on Instagram for this year’s schedule and details.

Take Part in Pony Express Days

Pony Express Days is one of McKinleyville’s longest running community traditions, and there are several ways to enjoy it without spending money. It takes place the first weekend of June annually.

You can attend the parade, walk through the festival, enjoy the community energy, check out local vendors, watch the fun, and bring the family out for a day that feels very McKinleyville.

Some parts of Pony Express Days have tickets or costs, like food, drinks, or certain activities, but there are also plenty of free ways to take part. The festival is free to attend, with live music and many free kids activities, including pony rides, the petting zoo, and more.

The parade down Central Avenue is always one of the biggest highlights. Bring a chair, find a spot, and cheer for the local businesses, community groups, kids, service clubs, horses, floats, and familiar faces that help make the day special.

Check Out Local Events and Member Happenings

There is more happening around McKinleyville than people sometimes realize.

Chamber members host open houses, fundraisers, workshops, ribbon cuttings, live music, food and beverage events, seasonal activities, and community gatherings throughout the year.

Some are free. Some have a cost. Some are casual and easy to drop into.

The Chamber Member Events Calendar is a good place to start if you are looking for something local to do or want to see what local businesses and organizations have coming up. You can also read our recent blog post about how to find out what’s happening in McKinleyville!

It is also a good reminder that community does not only happen at big events. Sometimes it happens in the smaller things too.

Explore Local Shops and Public Spaces

Window shopping counts.

Walking through a local shopping area, stopping by a business district, checking out a window display, or browsing a local shop can be a simple way to enjoy the day and get a better feel for the community.

Even if you are not buying something every time, you are noticing what is here. You are learning what local businesses offer. You are helping build that sense of connection that makes McKinleyville feel like home.

And when you are ready to buy a gift, grab lunch, book a service, or support a local business, start local when you can.

You can also find gifts and local finds at Chamber member businesses throughout town, including places like Redwood Community Pharmacy, Miller Farms Nursery, McKinleyville ACE Home & Garden Center, Eureka Natural Foods, Six Rivers Brewery, and more.

Visit the Library or Look for Family Friendly Activities

The McKinleyville Library is another great place to check during the summer, especially for families.

The library offers free or low-cost programs, reading activities, storytimes, and community resources. It is also a good place to head inside, slow down, find a book, or spend a quiet hour with kids.

If you are looking for something simple to do, the library is always worth keeping on your radar.

Make Your Own Simple McKinleyville Day

Sometimes the best free thing to do is just make your own little outing.

Take a walk on the trail. Stop by the park. Watch the ocean for a while. Bring snacks. Meet a friend. Let the kids bring scooters. Take photos of flowers, fog, birds, or banana slugs. Check the calendar. See what is happening. Say yes to something simple.

Not every summer day has to be packed.

McKinleyville is full of small, easy ways to enjoy where we live.

And often, those simple days are the ones you remember most.

Stay Connected

For more local events, member happenings, visitor ideas, and community updates, follow the McKinleyville Chamber of Commerce and Visit McKinleyville online.

You can also explore the Chamber Member Events Calendar, check out the Business Directory, and follow Visit McKinleyville on Instagram for local views, trail ideas, event highlights, and everyday McKinleyville moments.

Home » Archives for June 2026

Monthly newsletter

Stay connected to the McKinleyville business community with updates about chamber events and member spotlights.

Want to view past newsletters? READ MORE >