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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Some will wear Pig Out’s fare

His face dashed with the remnants of a huckleberry ice cream cone, Gavin Scoggin, 5, keeps an eye on his father Sean’s Fish Po’ Boy Sandwich as he finishes off a juice drink during Spokane Pig Out in the Park on Wednesday in Riverfront Park. (Tyler Tjomsland)

Barbara Towey knows most people don’t go to food fairs and outdoor concerts for the fruit.

But that hasn’t stopped her from offering a healthier substitute for fried Twinkies and bacon cupcakes so often found at those events.

The Seattle resident and her husband, a former minor-league baseball player, created Shishkaberry’s in 1998 and now travel the West selling strawberries, pineapple and banana shish kebabs covered in chocolate.

“People like us because we’re so high-quality,” Towey said.

Towey and her mobile Shishkaberry’s stand – a minihouse on wheels nicknamed the Shishkashack – are making their fourth appearance this week at the 33rd annual Spokane Pig Out in the Park.

For Towey, the event is a chance to stretch her business east. She and her husband also have a Shishkaberry’s concession stand at Safeco Field in Seattle. She said the fruit snack doesn’t likely amount to as much profit as other fair food stands, but their product is still popular for its uniqueness.

“It’s very fresh, and we dip every berry individually,” she said.

Pig Out founder and organizer Bill Burke said upward of 95,000 people will visit Riverfront Park for this year’s event.

The total of 54 food vendors is up just one from last year, Burke said, but the event is growing rapidly in its entertainment offerings.

Last year’s event, he said, featured 25 music artists. This year – 100.

“We’ve had over 1,400 different acts approach us to play Pig Out in the Park,” Burke said. “They call every day. I have people come to my front door and they’ll audition on my front steps.”

The most popular act this year, he said, is The Yardbirds, a 1960s blues band that once included Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page. The band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1992.

The Yardbirds will perform at 9:30 p.m. Saturday.

“With the weather as it is, at 80 degrees, we’ll be packed,” Burke said.