Things to Do in Guelph This Summer
Summer in guelph

By the time the patios fill up along Macdonell Street, Guelph has already shifted into its busiest season. Summer here is short and the city packs a lot into it. If you only know Guelph in the colder months, the warm stretch from June into early September is when the place really shows you what it is.
Here is what is actually worth your time this summer, from someone who lives and works here all year.
The festivals start early and they keep coming. The Guelph and District Multicultural Festival opens things up at Riverside Park from June 12 to 14, and this year marks its 40th in the city. Admission is free, the food is the reason a lot of people go, and the weekend pulls in more than 20,000 people across three days. A few weeks later, Hillside Festival takes over the Guelph Lake Conservation Area from July 17 to 19 with a stacked music lineup and the kind of laid back island setting that has made it a regional favourite for decades. Then the season closes out loud with Ribfest at Riverside Park over the weekend of August 28, free to walk into with a donation at the gate, ribs everywhere, live music, a midway, and a car show.
Saturday mornings have their own rhythm. The Guelph Farmers' Market runs every Saturday from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 2 Gordon Street, right downtown, and it has been a gathering point in this city since 1827. In summer the vendor count more than doubles. You go for the produce and the apple cider donuts and you end up staying downtown for coffee and a walk along the river.
That river is the other thing that defines a Guelph summer. The Speed and the Eramosa run right through the middle of town, and the trail system that follows them gives you kilometres of shaded riverside walking and riding without ever needing to drive somewhere. Riverside Park, Royal City Park, and the University of Guelph Arboretum all give you green space within minutes of almost any neighbourhood.
Here is something I notice every summer working with buyers. People who visit Guelph in July and August fall for it differently than people who see it in February. The parks are full, the festivals are on, neighbours are out on their porches, and you get a real sense of what daily life in a given pocket of the city actually feels like. If you are thinking about a move, summer is the season that tells you the truth about a street. Walk it on a Saturday morning. You learn more in an hour than you do from any listing photo.
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