Hurricane

Carowinds, Renaissance Festival cancel events over weather and safety concerns

Carowinds visitors in a haunted maze, part of the Scarowinds event. The park will be closed temporarily due to Tropical Storm Ian.
Carowinds visitors in a haunted maze, part of the Scarowinds event. The park will be closed temporarily due to Tropical Storm Ian. Courtesy of Lisa Stryker

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Tracking Ian

Ian could pack wind gusts of 35 mph to 40 mph, enough to topple trees in soil weakened by the tropical storm’s expected 4 inches to 6 inches of rain this weekend. This is the latest information on the storm.

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SCarowinds, the annual Halloween-themed event at Carowinds, will be closed on Friday due to the expected bad weather associated with Ian, park officials said Thursday.

The park will be closed “in consideration of our guests’ and associates’ safety,” Carowinds officials said on Twitter.

Tickets dated for Friday, Sept. 30, will be valid any day the park is open through Dec. 31, officials said.

At 2 p.m. Thursday, Tropical Storm Ian was predicted to strengthen into a hurricane again Thursday night and make landfall as a hurricane on Friday, “with rapid weakening forecast after landfall,” according to a National Hurricane Center bulletin.

Ian winds remained near 70 mph Thursday afternoon, “with higher gusts,” center officials said.

RenFest closed

The Carolina Renaissance Festival in north Charlotte will not open its two-month weekend run as scheduled on Saturday, Oct. 1.

The festival typically is a rain or shine event, but organizers fear the heavy rains and strong winds expected from the remnants of Hurricane Ian would create unsafe conditions, organizers said in a post Thursday.

Ticket holders for Oct. 1 should check their email for information on full refunds.

Festival organizers hope weather conditions allow for opening on Sunday.

Carolina Renaissance Festival has delayed its 2022 opening by a day because of the weather threats created by Hurricane Ian.
Carolina Renaissance Festival has delayed its 2022 opening by a day because of the weather threats created by Hurricane Ian. Courtesy Carolina Renaissance Festival

This story was originally published September 29, 2022 at 3:21 PM.

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Joe Marusak
The Charlotte Observer
Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news. Support my work with a digital subscription
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Tracking Ian

Ian could pack wind gusts of 35 mph to 40 mph, enough to topple trees in soil weakened by the tropical storm’s expected 4 inches to 6 inches of rain this weekend. This is the latest information on the storm.