5th Annual Love Your Mom Event

5th Annual Love Your Mom Event

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742 742 people viewed this event.

What if there was a place where you could spend a meaningful day celebrating the women who mean the most to you?

A place where moms, daughters, grandmas, and friends could gather…

shop unique gifts…

support small businesses…

and enjoy a day filled with encouragement and community.

That’s exactly what the Love Your Mom Event was created to be.

Now in its 5th year, this special event has become a favorite tradition for families looking for a thoughtful way to celebrate Mother’s Day.

✨ Browse a variety of vendors offering handmade, natural, and unique items

✨ Find meaningful Mother’s Day gifts you won’t see in big box stores

✨ Support local small businesses

✨ Spend quality time with the women you love

Whether you’re looking for the perfect gift for Mom, planning a fun girls’ day out, or simply want to enjoy a positive community event, this is the place to be.

Bring your:

💐 Mom

💐 Daughter

💐 Sister

💐 Grandma

💐 Best Friend

Or come treat yourself — because every woman deserves to be celebrated.

https://www.facebook.com/reel/1262130082551320

📅 Date: Saturday, May 9th, 2026

📍 Location: 1901 N. Kansas Ave, Topeka, KS

⏰ Time: 10am-3pm

🎟 Admission: FREE!!

Event: 5th Annual Love Your Mom Event

Invite your friends and make a day of it!

We can’t wait to celebrate with you. 💗

 

Date And Time

05-09-2026 @ 09:00 AM to
05-04-2026 @ 03:00 PM

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Local value-added products aren’t cute. They’re insurance.

Lionberry 's Weekly Delusion and Re-illusion Update.

People act like small batch is a hobby.

Nope.

Every bottle from a small farmer is a value-added product inside a value food chain.

That chain is made of humans, not container ships.

If global trade gets tariffed to death, or the truckers strike, or a war kicks off, or a fuel shortage hits, or a natural disaster…guess what?

Walmart will not be driving to Thailand for pineapple juice.

Local food is the only thing that can actually disrupt the global supply chain — in a good way.

And here’s the delusion:

Everyone thinks “we’ll connect with the local farmers when we need them.”

Nope.

If the shelves go empty, it’s already too late.

Now is the time to get the relationships built. The value chain in motion. 

Now is the time to slot locals in the stores — even if it’s as “novelty items” at first on a local farm shelf.

Because when the global pipeline hiccups?

The people who will actually feed your region

aren’t the ones with the biggest warehouses.

Shop local or… we’ll be learning how to season cardboard and call it rustic.