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Out & About: The Westmoreland's Oktoberfest toasts polka, pumpkins, pints | TribLIVE.com
Art & Museums

Out & About: The Westmoreland's Oktoberfest toasts polka, pumpkins, pints

Shirley McMarlin
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Shirley McMarlin | Tribune-Review
From left, Patti and John Hoke of Greensburg and Diane Meess and John Pekar, both of Memphis, Tenn., enjoy Friday’s Oktoberfest at The Westmoreland Museum of American Art in Greensburg.
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Shirley McMarlin | Tribune-Review
From left, Jason and Nicole Slonceski of Greensburg with Kelly and Bob Capanna of Murrysville enjoy a balmy evening during Friday’s Oktoberfest at The Westmoreland Museum of American Art in Greensburg.
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Shirley McMarlin | Tribune-Review
Denise Haluck (left) and Nancy King, both of Greensburg, attend Oktoberfest at The Westmoreland Museum of American Art in Greensburg on Friday.

How do you fix a broken tuba?

With a “tuba” glue, obviously.

If you had attended Friday evening’s Oktoberfest at The Westmoreland Museum of American Art in Greensburg, you would have known the answer to that.

The PolkaMeisters, a Pittsburgh-based good-time party band, entertained the crowd with a touch of cornball humor mixed in with polka favorites like “The Happy Wanderer,” “In Heaven There Is No Beer” and “She’s Too Fat for Me” — although band members debated whether that last should be amended to “She’s Too Hot for Me.”

It was a perfect night for an outdoor, socially distanced party — more like an Augustfest than an Oktoberfest, with temperatures hovering in the high 70s. Some guests saw it as a last warm-weather hurrah, with temperatures forecast to plummet overnight.

Providing a different kind of entertainment, master ice carver Richard Bubin of Churchill, founder of Ice Creations, applied his formidable skills to a few pumpkins.

Bubin said he’s been carving ice for more than 38 years, after starting as a chef carving fruits and vegetables. He earned a Guinness World Record in 2002 as the fastest ice carver with 61, 300-pound blocks of ice carved into 61 different sculptures in 4 hours, 22 minutes and 55 seconds.

He’s been a regular at Kennywood and Pittsburgh’s Light Up Night and First Night.

“I’ve traveled the world with a chainsaw,” he said, but at this time of year, pumpkin-carving predominates.

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Shirley McMarlin | Tribune-Review
Richard Bubin, a master ice and vegetable carver from Churchill, demonstrates his pumpkin-carving prowess during Friday’s Oktoberfest at The Westmoreland Museum of American Art in Greensburg.

The museum offered more fun with make-your-own fraktur and art scavenger hunt activities.

And of course, there was beer — from All Saints Brewing Co., Invisible Man Brewing and Sobel’s Obscure Brewery and hearty party food from Roadrunner Hot Dawgs.

Seen: Christine D’Alesio, Heather Wensel, Janey Wensel, Tu Bui, Alexa Sell, Jeff and Sally Sell, Ben and Renee Kiner and John, Annie and Cooper Wilson; and representing The Westmoreland, Director/CEO Anne Kraybill with husband James Kraybill and sons Liam and Calvin, Chief Curator Barbara Jones, Randall Oaks, Bonnie West and Claire Ertl with daughter Audrey.

Shirley McMarlin is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Shirley by email at smcmarlin@triblive.com or via Twitter .

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Categories: Lifestyles | Art & Museums | Out & About
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