A half-century ago, the San Antonio Jaycees got together and hatched a plan for a fun way to raise money to support local causes.
They figured they could hold a festival, with rattlesnakes as the centerpiece.
Over the decades, the leading organizers have changed — and so have some of the particulars — but the essence of the annual event remains the same: Every year, on the third weekend of October, residents and visitors flock to the San Antonio Rattlesnake Festival & Run in City Park.
This year, to celebrate the 50th anniversary, organizers have scheduled a two-day festival.
Organizers of the event have gone from the Jaycees, to R.A.G.E. (Rattlesnake and Gopher Enthusiasts), to a group of Rotary Clubs, to the Rotary Club of San Antonio, which has been the chief organizer for the past three years.
“We, of course, have help from the people who did it all of those years,” said Betty Burke, chairwoman of the current organizing committee.
“Dennis Devine, he’s been with it since the beginning, and he’s our music master.
“Jack Vogel is one of the people who started it. He was in the Jaycees,” Burke said. His son, Jay, is this year’s volunteer coordinator.
Betty’s daughter, Andrea Calvert, who works for the Town of St. Leo, is involved, too. The town sponsors a pumpkin patch, which is a popular place for people to take photos of their children, and to snap selfies, too.
Burke’s sister, Winnie, who is the president of the Rotary Club of San Antonio, is also involved. She’s in charge of the arts and crafts area.
Other members on the festival planning committee include Terri Grissom, Rick Behnke and Anne Kibbe.
Event highlights include 5-mile and 1-mile runs, a family bike ride, musical entertainment, a snake show, a cowboy show, crocodile demonstrations, mechanical gopher tortoise races, food booths, children’s rides and a pumpkin patch.
Other attractions include a butterfly exhibit, children’s crafts and games, a farm animal exhibit, M.A.D. Flames Fire Entertainment and Pioneer Village demonstrations.
Vendors will be selling a variety of items, there will be a farmer’s market, and there will be a pet corner, too.
Visitors also will have a chance to learn more about the festival’s history.
In the beginning, preparing for the event meant going out into the woods — equipped with a long pole with a hook on the end — and rounding up snakes.
Amateur and professional snake hunters would bring the snakes in, and organizers would pay for their snakes, according to published reports.
The gopher tortoise races used to feature live tortoises, too.
People would decorate the creatures with glitter and nontoxic paint, and pit them against each other.
The live gopher tortoise races ended after increasing development in Florida led to the state placing them on its protected species list.
Undaunted, organizers began using wooden replicas, operated by yanking ropes to pull them to the finish line.
Over the years, the festival has helped to create many fond memories.
“It is a fun thing. The kids have always had fun,” said Donna Swart, a former volunteer, who recalled how much her kids enjoyed the festival and racing live gopher tortoises.
Eric Herrmann, who has run the mechanical gopher tortoise race for years, said he’s been going to the festival his entire life.
“As the son of one of the founders, I’m very proud of it,” Herrmann said.
“It’s one of the last old-fashioned, hometown festivals,” Herrmann said, noting his dad, Eddie Herrmann, helped to design the mechanical gopher tortoises used in the races.
“It’s a very distinctive and unusual game, that’s pretty much singular to our festival,” he said.
He recalls one festival when a girl desperately wanted to win, but couldn’t, despite repeated attempts.
At the end of the second day, she still hadn’t won a race.
“I made a decision and I called her over, and we gave a one-time award for ‘Perseverance,’” he said.
Those kinds of things make all of the work worthwhile, he said.
“There are moments of pride,” Herrmann said.
One year, a Japanese television crew came to film the event, and the race they chose to cover included the young son of a Japanese-American family.
The boy’s grandmother still lived in Japan.
“The grandmother watched the show in Japan,” Herrmann said. “That was the first time she ever got to see her grandchild — other than in a picture.”
In another instance, a young man who had attended the snake show was bit by a snake after the festival had ended.
Because he’d gone to the show, he knew what to do and sought immediate medical attention, Herrmann said.
“The doctor said, ‘That festival probably saved his life,’” Herrmann said.
The event’s souvenir T-shirts have been wildly popular through the years, he noted, adding, “there are pictures of people all over the world, who are wearing the festival’s T-shirt.”
Kibbe, a volunteer who is handling the public relations for this year’s event, is fond of the festival.
She lives on Pennsylvania Avenue, across from City Park, and she lets musicians who are playing the event to park in her yard.
“I am front and center,” Kibbe said. “I like to tell people, ‘Yes, I’m having a festival this weekend in my front yard.’”
Kibbe appreciates the way the festival has evolved, and she thinks others admire that, too.
“As people became more ecologically and environmentally conscious, we stopped painting the turtles, and we stopped catching the snakes. And now, it’s educational,” she said.
Indeed, families who homeschool their children often show up because there are so many opportunities for learning, she said.
Socially, it’s a great time, too, Kibbe said.
“It’s like a big family reunion in a lot of ways,” she said, noting people who lived in San Antonio come back for the event.
“Folks come back from out-of-town. They moved to Saint Pete, or they moved to Orlando, but they come for the festival. So, that’s a big plus.”
This year’s event is being organized by the Rotary Club of San Antonio.
Proceeds from the event will support local educational programs, scholarships, community projects and international Rotary projects, such as Polio Plus.
The event is partially funded by Visit Pasco Tourism and Visit Florida, and is supported by numerous local sponsors, including The Laker/Lutz News.
San Antonio Rattlesnake Festival & Run
Where: City Park, 12202 Main St., San Antonio, Florida, 33576
When: Oct. 15 and Oct. 16
How much: Parking, admission and most of the entertainment are free; there are nominal charges for the snake show.
Festival schedule
Oct. 15
8 a.m.: Rattlesnake run begins; race winners are announced on main stage at 9:15 a.m.
10 a.m.: Festival opening ceremony
Musical lineup
10:15 a.m.: Graham Music Studio’s Showstoppers
11 a.m.: Crabgrass Cowboys
Noon: Beaumont!
1 p.m.: J2
3 p.m.: Jesse & Noah
4 p.m.: Those Unscrupulous Sunspots
Other highlights include:
- Cates Educational Snake Lectures: 10 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 1 p.m., 2:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. (Free for those 5 and under, $3 for ages 6 through 12; $5 for those 13 and older)
- Cowboy Tom’s Wild West Show: Performances throughout the day (Free)
- Croc Encounters demonstrations: 11 a.m., 12:30 p.m., and 3:30 p.m. (Free)
5 p.m.: Festival closes for the day
Oct. 16
9:30 a.m.: Family bike ride
11 a.m.: Festival grounds open
Musical lineup
11 a.m. to noon: The band called 2 PM
Noon: Moon Dance
1 p.m.: Sassafras Bluegrass
2 p.m.: Mark Hannah & Major Dade’s Last Ride
3 p.m. Mary Smith with Dean Johnson
Other highlights include:
- Cates Educational Snake Lectures: 11 a.m., 12:30 p.m., 2 p.m., and 3 p.m. (Free for those 5 and under, $3 for ages 6 through 12; $5 for those 13 and older)
- Cowboy Tom’s Wild West Show: Performances throughout the day (Free)
- Croc Encounters demonstrations: Noon, 1:30 p.m., and 2:30 p.m. (Free)
3:30 p.m.: Closing ceremony
4 p.m.: Festival ends
Published October 12, 2016
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