Date & time | Feb 14 |
Event ends | Feb 17 |
Location | 2321 Sadie Ln, Wadmalaw Island, SC |
Creator | Snoopy |
Wadmalaw Hoopla
Come join us @Waitewoods for President’s Day weekend Feb 14-17, 2025.
Why Hoopla? On our last visit to Edisto Beach State Park, the staff said that FMBC brings the Hoopla!
Camping is free!
2321 Sadie Ln. Wadmalaw Island, SC.
Please contact me to
make a reservation.
Potluck dinner at 4:20
PM Sat with a raffle to benefit a local pet shelter immediately after. Please
bring HANDMADE items to donate to the raffle. This helps to speed
things up and makes the prize more memorable. Non-handmade items
will not be accepted
We will have cornhole
boards available for use.
Two communal fire
pits. We'll provide firewood or you can
scavenge in the woods but please use designated fire pits or bring your own
raised fire dishes AND FIRE EXTINGUISHERS as most sites will not have water
available. We will also have a a 50/50
raffle. Half to you, half to FMBC website to keep the lights on.
I’m hoping to have a
design done in time to have stickers.
Restroom facilities
with a hot shower are available. Electrical hookups are very limited. Please
bring extension cords (mark your name on them).
Wadmalaw Island was
first settled thousands of years ago by Cusabo Indians, who hunted deer and
wild turkey in the virgin forests, grew corn and beans in the verdant soil, and
left behind huge middens of oyster shells. Among them were the Kiawah, Edisto
and Stono tribes, whose names live on in area waterways and islands.
In 1666, Captain John Sanford and his crew landed near the current
town of Rockville, searching for a place to establish the “Carolina” colony.
Things to do
in the area:
In 1960, the
Lipton Company established an experimental island tea farm, and a new
agricultural tradition was born on Wadmalaw Island. Today, now owned by the
Bigalow Family, the Charleston Tea Plantation is the
only commercial tea garden in the United States, markets American Classic Tea
and supplies the official tea served at The White House. Wadmalaw is also home
to the Deepwater Vineyard, which cultivates muscadine grapes to produce five
distinctive wines.
But even with
the growing success of those businesses, Wadmalaw has retained its rural
character in an island of Lowcountry paradise
The Angel Oak (9
miles away) can be found on Johns Island, situated just beyond the bridge from
Wadmalaw, and is recognized as a valuable gem of the Lowcountry. This majestic
Southern Live Oak is hailed as the biggest of its kind east of the Mississippi
River, with experts approximating its age to be between 300 and 400 years old.
Downtown
Charleston is 18 miles away.
The beach is 18
miles away.
The Wall