Producing Magic: The Year-Long Journey Behind Nature at Night: Moonbeam

On May 30, 2026, more than 600 guests gathered beneath the stars at the Nature Center at Shaker Lakes for an unforgettable evening known as Nature at Night: Moonbeam.

For attendees, the experience lasted just five magical hours.

For the team behind it, those five hours represented nearly a full year of planning, collaboration, problem-solving, and an unwavering commitment to creating something truly extraordinary.

The result? The most successful Nature at Night in the Nature Center's history.

As the Nature Center at Shaker Lakes celebrated its 60th Anniversary, Moonbeam became more than an annual fundraising gala. It became a celebration of six decades of conservation, environmental education, and community stewardship—while helping secure resources that will support the next 60 years of impact.

The Art of Making It Look Effortless

One of the greatest compliments an event producer can receive is when guests have no idea how much work went into the experience.

Guests arrived to beautifully illuminated pathways, incredible food, live music, interactive experiences, seamless logistics, and a welcoming atmosphere that felt as though it had naturally emerged from the landscape itself.

In reality, every detail had been thoughtfully considered months in advance.

Where should guests encounter their first musical performance?

How can hundreds of people move through the property without creating bottlenecks?

Where should lighting be added to preserve safety while maintaining the enchanting ambiance of a moonlit evening?

How do you transform a beloved nature preserve into one of Northeast Ohio's most unique culinary destinations—for just one night?

These are the questions that begin long before the first tent is installed or the first wine glass is poured.

Building a Culinary Experience Worthy of the Occasion

For Moonbeam, food was never intended to be an afterthought.

The culinary program became one of the defining features of the evening, requiring nearly a year of relationship-building, recruitment, coordination, and collaboration.

Under the leadership of Culinary Chair Douglas Katz, one of Cleveland's most respected chefs and restaurateurs, the event assembled an extraordinary lineup of culinary talent representing many of the region's most acclaimed restaurants.

At a time when Cleveland's culinary scene continues to earn national attention, Nature at Night brought together chefs whose work is helping define the future of dining in Northeast Ohio.

Among them was Chef Vinnie Cimino, a frequent James Beard Award nominee and the visionary behind Cordelia, a restaurant celebrated for its elevated interpretation of Midwestern heritage cuisine. Guests also had the opportunity to experience Rosy, Cimino's newest culinary venture, generating excitement among food enthusiasts across the region.

Chef Cameron Pishnery represented Kiln, a restaurant already creating significant buzz among critics and diners alike. While inaugural awards and accolades may still be forthcoming, many local culinary observers view Kiln as part of a new generation of restaurants producing Michelin-worthy dining experiences in Cleveland.

The evening's culinary lineup also featured exceptional contributions from:

  • Flying Pig Tacos — Chef Jorge Hernandez

  • Tumbao58 — Chef Marielis Navarro

  • FrankieLynn Hot Dogs & Chutni Punch — Chefs Rachel Ventura, Lloyd Foust, and Sahithya Wintrich

  • Cordelia — Partner Vinnie Cimino and Chef de Cuisine Adam Bauer

  • Rosy — Partner Vinnie Cimino

  • Abundance Culinary — Liu Fang

  • Doc's on Harvard — Chef Kolnita Riggins-Walker

  • Kiln — Chef Cameron Pishnery

  • Spice Hospitality Group — Ben Bebenroth

  • Rid-All — Shemerah Eshet Ahtur Keymah

  • Luna Bakery & Café — Bridget Thibeault

Complementing the culinary offerings were beverage experiences from Cleveland Whiskey, Vitis Global, and Verbena Free Spirited, ensuring every guest could enjoy thoughtfully curated pairings throughout the evening.

Creating an Experience Beyond Dinner

Nature at Night has always been more than a fundraiser.

Moonbeam was designed to encourage discovery.

Guests began the evening at the exclusive Trailblazer Reception while enjoying Brazilian jazz performed by Moises Borges and Jack Schantz. As twilight settled across the Nature Center grounds, attendees embarked on a culinary journey through the property, discovering new flavors, performances, and experiences around every corner.

Throughout the evening, guests enjoyed performances from Pop Avenue, acoustic blues from Bob Frank and David Krauss in the Cleveland Whiskey Lounge, and late-night dancing with DJ Krooze.

Interactive experiences invited guests to engage with the event in unexpected ways, including:

  • Live caricatures

  • Temporary tattoos

  • Astrology readings

  • Tarot card readings

  • Messages from the Universe

  • A live painting experience that evolved throughout the evening and ultimately became a one-of-a-kind auction item

Every activation required its own planning timeline, logistics, staffing, electrical needs, setup requirements, and guest-flow considerations.

What appears spontaneous is often the result of dozens of planning meetings and countless emails.

The Details Guests Never See

Months before Moonbeam, conversations were already underway about lighting plans, power distribution, permit requirements, transportation logistics, silent auction placement, sponsor recognition, entertainment schedules, volunteer assignments, culinary needs, waste management, registration flow, signage, weather contingencies, and guest safety.

The silent auction alone represented hundreds of hours of work—from securing donations and building packages to writing descriptions, photographing items, organizing displays, and managing mobile bidding technology.

By event day, hundreds of individual decisions had been made by staff, volunteers, sponsors, committee members, vendors, chefs, entertainers, and production partners.

Each decision contributed to a single goal: creating an experience that felt magical.

Celebrating 60 Years—and Looking Ahead

Moonbeam carried special significance because it coincided with the Nature Center's 60th Anniversary.

Founded in 1966 through a grassroots effort to protect the Shaker Parklands from freeway development, the Nature Center has spent six decades connecting people with nature and inspiring environmental stewardship. Today, it remains one of Northeast Ohio's most beloved environmental organizations and a model of community-driven conservation.

For one evening, guests gathered not only to celebrate the organization's history, but also to invest in its future.

The success of Moonbeam demonstrates the incredible power of community when individuals, businesses, sponsors, volunteers, chefs, artists, musicians, and supporters come together around a shared mission.

A Night Made Possible by Many

While guests experienced five unforgettable hours beneath the stars, Moonbeam was truly the culmination of a year's worth of work by hundreds of people who believed in the Nature Center's mission.

To our sponsors, volunteers, committee members, chefs, entertainers, beverage partners, donors, staff, and guests: thank you.

Together, you helped create the most successful Nature at Night in the Nature Center's history.

And perhaps most importantly, you helped ensure that future generations will continue to discover, explore, and connect with nature for decades to come.

That is the real magic behind Moonbeam.