A party for the ages
While the annual parade usually draws about 5,000 spectators, city leaders expect a record number this year. Saturday morning's parade will feature 115 floats and marching bands.
The theme is "Celebration of Generations." Each decade will get its own grand marshal. Main Street Zephyrhills Executive Director Brenda Welcher had to forfeit her emcee duties due to a nagging case of laryngitis.
The day's events include hay rides, historical tours, archaeological digs and pony rides. Parking is available at all city lots, as well as First United Methodist Church and First Baptist Church.
A community picnic will be held at Zephyr Park on Sunday beginning at 11 a.m. City leaders will bury a time capsule commemorating the centennial celebration at 3:30 p.m.
"We hope all those coming from out of town notice how the community has worked very hard to get in a festival spirit," Welcher said.
A staff report
Town council to run fireworks?
The idea was mooted at a meeting of the council last Wednesday, by the chief executive of Cowes Week Ltd, Stuart Quarrie.
However, members of the council said the issue was so important it would need to be put on the agenda of a future council meeting to allow proper discussion.
Cowes mayor Cllr Alan Wells said: "I am sure we all have strong views on it."
In a statement read out to members, Mr Quarrie said: "Despite the best efforts of all concerned, there was a funding shortfall in 2009 but Cowes Week Ltd believes the general principle of the approach, whereby those enjoying the display should help fund it, was the right one.
"The Isle of Wight Council has always managed the traditional Cowes fireworks display, while in recent years Cowes Week Ltd has procured the necessary funding.
"Given the changes to the funding model, it is felt it might be more appropriate for an organisation concerned with matters of the general community to take on the overall Cowes Week fireworks responsibility. We would be delighted if Cowes Town Council took on this mantle in order to secure the fireworks display for the town."
Earlier this year, fears were expressed by former Cowes mayor Cllr Geoff Banks the display may have to be cancelled due to lack of funds.
Reporter: davidn@iwcpmail.co.uk
Ernst: Fireworks threatened by an unlikely source
There's a new reason: gopher tortoises. Although fireworks have been staged for 20 years from Blind Pass Beach Park on Manasota Key, Sarasota County Parks and Recreation managers have withheld a permit this year because they fear the pyrotechnics will threaten nearby gopher tortoise burrows.
Now you may wonder how fireworks could possibly endanger a shell-encased animal that lives underground in what amounts to a natural bomb shelter and comes out only during the day.
As the news spread through town, Sunrise Rotary President John Mead probably summed up the reaction: "This is crazy. We can't celebrate the Fourth of July because of some turtles?"
First, a little history. Last year, Englewood had no July Fourth fireworks because the Jaycees, who had sponsored the event for years, couldn't raise $10,000. A lot of people were disappointed.
This year, Sunrise Rotary took over. A larger, more affluent club, it has promised a $30,000 show, the best Englewood has ever seen. Volunteers, such as Michael Looney and Ray LaBadie, have solicited sponsors, planned fundraising events and started making four-foot PVC rocket models to display in businesses to collect donations.
Momentum had started to build. And then this.
The problem started when county workers cleared Brazilian peppers and other exotics from the Lemon Bay side of the park.
They found gopher tortoise burrows, maybe 20 to 30 active ones. "We knew we had gopher tortoises, but we didn't know we had so many," says George Tatge, beaches, parks and trails manager.
Now that they know, they're obliged to protect them, which boils down to prohibiting harmful activities within 25 feet of a burrow.
But here's where things began to break down.
Instead of meeting with Rotary members at the location, county staff started marking data points on aerial maps and conjuring worst-case scenarios such as "what would happen if an endangered species showed up the morning of the fireworks display?"
A trip to the site shows that there's plenty of open space. Only six to eight people man the staging area, and onlookers will be at least 500 feet away, in the parking lot or on the Gulf side of the park.
Many spectators, including big sponsors in the VIP pavilion, will watch the fireworks from Lemon Bay Park across the bay.
The proximity of wildlife to fireworks is hardly ideal, but in this case it appears manageable. Fireworks last 45 minutes on one day a year. Obviously the gopher tortoise population has prospered through 20 years of fireworks. Park staff probably caused greater disruption by removing the vegetation that sheltered the burrows.
As for alternatives, each seems to have a problem. Indian Mound and Cherokee parks are too close to houses. The Englewood Sports Complex is too far from the bay, where boaters line up to watch the show. And, a barge costs money, an extra $5,000 to $10,000.
County commissioners shouldn't have to get involved in things like this, but Shannon Staub did at the request of the Rotarians. Within hours, the e-mails were flying, setting up a meeting Monday afternoon at Blind Pass.
"We're not trying to deny this for no reason," Tatge says. "We're just trying to do the right thing."
Fair enough. Then do it.
Fireworks and street theatre provide the perfect start to festival week
In Limerick tonight the annual National Lottery Skyfest lights up the city. King John's Castle provides the backdrop to this year's display of explosive effects over the river Shannon.
The event begins at 6.30pm and viewing areas for people with a disability are located at St Munchin's Church and adjacent to the Court House at City Hall.
Earlier in the day in Dublin, the St Patrick's Festival Treasure Hunt offers a way for
all the family to get out and explore the capital city.
With plenty of prizes on offer for the fastest, cleverest and best dressed teams the hunt begins at City Hall at 10am.
From noon tomorrow, Merrion Square in Dublin will turn into a giant playground for children and adults alike with street theatre, music and a "flash tea party" serving free tea and cakes in front of unsuspecting guests. You can also pick your song on the "Human Jukebox" or go to the flicks at the solar-powered "Sol Cinema".
The "Big Day Out" is described as a festival within a festival and features performers from Belgium, Britain, France, Spain and home.
In Cork, the Barry's Tea Food Market takes place on the Grand Parade and boardwalk on the South Mall this weekend from 10am to 6pm and will feature up to 40 stalls of locally produced food and craft.
Participants include the Cork cup cake company cupcake.ie, an artisan gourmet pizza company Volcano's Pizza and hand-crafted natural cosmetics from the Naked Soap Company.
There is also a programme of street performers which is sure to delight kids and families such as the Clucking Fantastic Crowd Control Chickens and Chapeau Magique, a magician from France, with his spectacular folding paper workshops which generate hundreds of large-scale paper hats.
There will be a combination of outdoor musical performances on the main stage adjacent to Nano Nagle Bridge as well as acoustic performances throughout the market. These include The Roaring Forties, a jump jive swing band, The Red Herrings an American blues band as well as popular Irish Traditional bands such as The Ceili All Stars.
More information on the St Patrick's Festival is available by logging on to stpatricksfestival.ie
Fans of Irish rugby will celebrate fireworks of another kind as Brian O'Driscoll joins the ranks with John Hayes in becoming a centurion when he lines up against the Welsh in Croke Park at 2.30pm today.
The Grand Slam may be a distant memory after the French once again broke Irish hearts in Paris, but the team's win against England last week means the Triple Crown is still on.
Wales travel to Jones Road on the back of some disappointing displays but they will provide a dangerous test for Declan Kidney's men as they seek to spoil the St Patrick's party.
Ahead of the exodus to Cheltenham next week, racing this weekend takes place at Limerick and Navan. Weather for the weekend is looking good with Met Éireann forecasting dry and bright days with top temperatures of 9-12 degrees.
Fallbrook fireworks on July 4 saved by county
The county Board of Supervisors gave a $35,000 neighborhood investment program grant to The Beautification Alliance of Fallbrook, which hosts the event at the Grand Tradition Estate.
The Independence Day celebration is the major fundraiser of the alliance, which uses the proceeds for its projects, such as maintaining the medians on Mission Road, adding flowerpots to downtown and maintaining the Art in Public Places program.
The organization applied for the money through the Neighborhood Investment Grant Program in late 2009. Any nonprofit can apply for the grant. The application was submitted to county Supervisor Bill Horn, who presented it to the rest of the board. The alliance should have the money within a month.
"It looks good, thanks to the community support and that from the Board of Supervisors," said Jerri Patchett, president of the alliance. "We are beyond thrilled."
Patchett said all that is left is for the alliance's board to accept the grant when it meets Monday, which was the deadline for it to decide if the fireworks show would take place at all.
The organization has held the event for five years. The celebration was in jeopardy when many of the regular sponsors backed out this year because of the recession.
Members of the alliance worried that if the show were canceled, people would travel out of town to other venues and the alliance would have to drastically reduce its support of its beautification programs or stop them all together.
The organization makes money from the event through ticket sales — general admission is $25 for adults and $10 for children — and concession sales. The organizers sent word to other organizations, groups and individuals that $25,000 was needed just to reserve the display, but only $12,000 was raised.
Patchett said that while all of the organizations in the community have been generous, the alliance needs to look for another solution to fund the fireworks show and picnic.
The celebration is held at the Grand Tradition Estate at 1602 S. Mission Road. Tickets go on sale May 1.
Patty McCormac is a freelance writer from Oceanside.

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