History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Naples turns a valley grape crop into civic ritual
Naples' grape identity is public and annual, with a regional festival built around grape harvest, pie, and local vendors.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Naples’ grape identity is not just a slogan; it is organized civic culture. Visit Finger Lakes says the Naples Grape Festival has been hosted in Naples since 1961 and is a two-day celebration tied to grape harvest, grape pies, makers, live music, and regional vendors.
That makes Naples feel like a valley town where agriculture, food, and annual public ritual reinforce each other. The point is not to claim Naples is the best at anything. The point is that grape culture has a real place on the civic calendar.
The festival gives a visitor something cheerful and specific to understand. It also gives residents a shared seasonal rhythm: harvest, pies, vendors, music, and a Finger Lakes valley that knows what it is known for.
Naples is larger than one event, but the grape festival is a good local shorthand. It makes the town’s farm-and-food identity easy to see while leaving room for the rest of the valley.
That stands out in the Finger Lakes, where many towns have views and vineyards nearby. Naples has a public ritual around grapes, pies, vendors, and harvest, so the valley’s agricultural identity feels lived instead of merely advertised.