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Catch the Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival

CORTEZ – There’s something old and something new at the 38th Annual Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival, Feb. 15-16, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the historic fishing village.

Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival
– Cindy Lane | Sun

If you go

Who: Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH)

What: The 38th Annual Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival, featuring fresh seafood, live music, nautical and environmental art, marine life dock talks, kids’ activities and an interactive display including recordings from NOAA’s Voices from the Fisheries, part of the Vanishing Culture Project

When: The weekend of Feb. 15-16 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. both days

Where: Enter at the Florida Maritime Museum, 4415 119th St. W., Cortez or the FISH Preserve one block east

Why: Support the FISH Preserve

Enjoy old favorites including fresh seafood, live music, nautical and environmental art, marine life dock talks and kids’ activities.

 

Music schedule

 

Saturday, Feb. 15

10-11 a.m. – Shanty Singers

11:30-1 p.m. – Doug Demming

1-1:30 p.m. – Awards and introductions

2-4 p.m. – Eric Von Band

4:30-6 p.m.- Jason Haram

 

Sunday, Feb. 16

10:30-noon – Soupy Davis and his Band

12.30-2 p.m. – Koko Ray Show

2:30-4 p.m. – Karen and Jimmy Band

4:30-6 p.m. – Ted Stevens & the Doo Shots

1-5 p.m. – Eric Von on the Bratton store porch

And there’s something new this year, which is actually quite old – recordings from NOAA’s Voices from the Fisheries, part of the Vanishing Culture Project, will run continuously during the festival. The project aimed to preserve vanishing cultures like the Cortez commercial fishing culture, and includes music by the Cortez Grand Ol’ Opry and interviews with the likes of commercial fishermen Blue Fulford, Walter Bell and Albert Mora, fish house manager Karen Bell, musicians Goose and Richard Culbreath, local historian Doris Green and many others.

This year’s logo is also both new and old; “10 Years Later, Holding Steady, Cortez is Still White Boot Ready,” hearkens back to the festival’s most popular T-shirt, picturing a white pelican wearing white fishing boots that dates back 10 years to the 28th festival.

The festival won’t just be a great weekend event, it will help support a great cause – the FISH Preserve.

The Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH) has been purchasing the 100-acre preserve a parcel at a time for four decades, systematically clearing the land of invasive, non-native vegetation like Brazilian peppers and Australian pines and planting mangroves and other native plants.

Bordered by Sarasota Bay to the south, Cortez Road to the north, mobile homes to the east and the fishing village of Cortez to the west, the restored mangrove wetland habitat was once an unofficial trash dump, with old tires, large appliances and even boats that FISH has removed.

FISH Preserve wetlands draw white ibis and other shorebirds. – Cindy Lane | Sun

FISH also was recently able to purchase a problematic parcel in the middle of the preserve that threatened to break up the preserve if the owners had built a planned home there.
Festivalgoers who park at the FISH Preserve parking area will get a glimpse of the habitat restoration in progress.

The Boy Scouts – who have built footbridges in the FISH Preserve to provide access to the interior of the preserve – will offer on-site parking for $5 at the FISH Preserve, located one block east of the village off Cortez Road. A park-and-ride shuttle is available on an MCAT shuttle bus for $3 round trip from two locations, G.T. Bray Park, 5502 33rd Ave. Drive W., Bradenton (turn east off 59th Street onto 33rd Avenue Drive) or at Coquina Beach in Bradenton Beach on Anna Maria Island. On Saturday only, a free park-and-ride shuttle will be available from the Cortez Baptist Church, 4411 100th St. W. on Cortez Road, 1 1/2 miles east of the festival.

For more information, visit www.cortez-fish.org.

Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival
– Cindy Lane | Sun

Letters to the Editor: Thanks for Sun support

On behalf of the board of directors of the Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH) and the Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival committee we want to say thank you to the AMI Sun for your continued support and sponsorship of our festival.

This year and for the past 37 years, the FISH Festival has provided the funds needed for FISH to purchase the 98-plus acre FISH Preserve and to fund its ongoing restoration. The FISH Preserve will, within the next 12-15 years, be the only undisturbed parcel of land on North Sarasota Bay. Our annual festival has allowed us to purchase the old Church of Christ, now Fishermen’s Hall, and the Cortez Firehouse. These places represent the commercial industry, culture and environment on which this village was established more than 130 years ago. A strong and proud history that continues to struggle in the “Changing Tides” of time. You (the AMI SUN) are essential to our success – we simply couldn’t do it without your support, and we thank you for your many years of loyal participation.

Jane von Hahmann

V.P. FISH Board of Directors

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Food, fun, fine at fishing festival

Updated Feb. 23, 2019 – CORTEZ – The 37th Annual Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival drew 15,000 lovers of all things nautical last weekend thanks to good weather, good food, good music and good fun.

The two-day event raises money to restore and enlarge the FISH (Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage) Preserve east of the Cortez commercial fishing village, a federal historic district.

Visitors took in the sights, like jewelry made from coquina shells, metal sculptures of fish and other nautical art, and listened to live music by local bands, including two Cortezians, Eric Von and Soupy Davis, and the Shanty Singers.

The Museum and the nearby Cortez Cultural Center welcomed visitors with exhibits on seashells, historic boats and the history of Cortez and its fishing families.

Kids rode ponies, had their faces painted and bounced on trampolines while attached to bungee cords.

Service awards were presented to festival volunteers Ardith Black and Joe Egolf, and Robin Schock won the community service award. Patricia (Pattycakes) Banyas was presented with the pioneer award; she attended the Cortez Rural Graded School that is now the Florida Maritime Museum “in bare feet,” she said.Cortez fest 2019 Changing Tides

As white pelicans skimmed Sarasota Bay at the docks at Cortez Bait and Seafood, John Stevely and Angela Collins showed visitors the different types of fish caught locally, gave some perspective on the 1995 gill net ban that drastically reduced mullet fishing in Florida and answered questions about commercial fishing.

The festival featured the blessing of the commercial fishing fleet and dock loads of seafood for visitors to enjoy.

The past six months have been especially tough for Cortez fishermen with a long-lasting red tide bloom that killed huge populations of local fish, as well as dolphins, manatees and seabirds.

It’s not the only difficulty fishing families have faced.

Despite fishing regulations, runaway development, overpopulation, pollution, mangrove destruction and foreign seafood imports, the Cortez commercial fishing tradition has survived, as portrayed by artist Rose Lipke’s 2019 festival logo, an octopus juggling all the issues in the face of “Changing Tides.”

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FISH Preserve a dream come true

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Solve the Cortez history mystery

Susan Curry's artwork welcomes guests to the festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Susan Curry's artwork welcomes guests to the festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Cortez crab traps - Cindy Lane | Sun

Cortez crab traps - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Shanty Singers were among the eight bands that entertained festival goers. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Shanty Singers were among the eight bands that entertained festival goers. - Cindy Lane | Sun

A net shed on the edge of the FISH Preserve in Cortez. - Cindy Lane | Sun

A net shed on the edge of the FISH Preserve in Cortez. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Peggy Donoho and Ron Prouty, authors of Miguel's Bay, an historical novel about Terra Ceia pioneers. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Peggy Donoho and Ron Prouty, authors of Miguel's Bay, an historical novel about Terra Ceia pioneers. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Marine biologists John Stevely and Angela Collins gave "Dock Talks" about fishing at the festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Marine biologists John Stevely and Angela Collins gave "Dock Talks" about fishing at the festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Ed Straight, of Bradenton Beach-based Wildlife Education and Rehabilitation Inc., with two of his rescued owls. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Ed Straight, of Bradenton Beach-based Wildlife Education and Rehabilitation Inc., with two of his rescued owls. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Buoys colorfully painted as fish were a new addition to the nautical art show. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Buoys colorfully painted as fish were a new addition to the nautical art show. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Boy Scout Matthew Kurutz wants to earn the rank of Eagle Scout, and he plans to build bridges to do it in the FISH Preserve. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Boy Scout Matthew Kurutz wants to earn the rank of Eagle Scout, and he plans to build bridges to do it in the FISH Preserve. - Cindy Lane | Sun

White pelicans - snowbirds - and native brown pelicans at the FISH Preserve. - Cindy Lane | Sun

White pelicans - snowbirds - and native brown pelicans at the FISH Preserve. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Seafood was king at the Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Seafood was king at the Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Art by Mike Parrott of Brushes and Bouquets. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Art by Mike Parrott of Brushes and Bouquets. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Cortez Village Historical Society brought their famous strawberry shortcake to the festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Cortez Village Historical Society brought their famous strawberry shortcake to the festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

A "trash fish" made from recycled garbage was on display at the Cortez Cultural Center. - Cindy Lane | Sun

A "trash fish" made from recycled garbage was on display at the Cortez Cultural Center. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The festival had kid's activities for every age group, including bungee bouncing, pony rides and face painting. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The festival had kid's activities for every age group, including bungee bouncing, pony rides and face painting. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Doug Deming and the Jewel Tones were among eight bands that entertained festival crowds. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Doug Deming and the Jewel Tones were among eight bands that entertained festival crowds. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The A.P. Bell docks in Cortez. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The A.P. Bell docks in Cortez. - Cindy Lane | Sun

FISH board member Jane von Hahmann presented a community service award to volunteer Robin Schock. - Cindy Lane | Sun

FISH board member Jane von Hahmann presented a community service award to volunteer Robin Schock. - Cindy Lane | Sun

FISH Board member Jane von Hahmann presented volunteer Joe Egolf with a service award. - Cindy Lane | Sun

FISH Board member Jane von Hahmann presented volunteer Joe Egolf with a service award. - Cindy Lane | Sun

FISH board member Jane von Hahmann presented a service award to Ardith Black. - Cindy Lane | Sun

FISH board member Jane von Hahmann presented a service award to Ardith Black. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Patty Banyas, left, pictured with her son, John Banyas, host of the festival, was presented with the Cortez Pioneer award. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Patty Banyas, left, pictured with her son, John Banyas, host of the festival, was presented with the Cortez Pioneer award. - Cindy Lane | Sun

A mangrove island forms off the FISH Preserve. - Cindy Lane | Sun

A mangrove island forms off the FISH Preserve. - Cindy Lane | Sun

FISH Preserve a dream come true

CORTEZ – A dream fueled by the true grit of Cortez commercial fishing families has grown to 100 acres of prime Sarasota bayfront land that can never be developed.

The Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH) has spent 20 years piecing together the FISH Preserve, and the quilt is now complete, funded largely by the $4 admission fee to the annual Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival.

Second Place

Artist Illustration

2019

Three decades of Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival logos recount the fishing-related themes. – Cindy Lane | Sun

The preserve is the answer to two questions that weigh heavily on FISH members.

How can Cortez fishermen keep “The Kitchen” – the part of Sarasota Bay that laps at Cortez shores – a productive nursery area for the Cortez staple, mullet?

And how can the fishing village, a federal historic district, shield itself from neighbors peering down from high-rise condos and complaining that their backyards are filled with stone crab traps and old boats?

The preserve is a buffer against development encroaching on the historic village, and its mangrove-lined shore ensures that juvenile fish, including mullet, will have a protected place to grow, safeguarding the fishery for the future, said John Stevely, FISH board member and one of the fishing festival’s original organizers.

“Your FISH Preserve is very impressive. Its economic value cannot be judged in terms of dollars alone. I have seen from many places around the world, communities like the fishing village of Cortez, suffering from the demise of the natural resources base on which they depend. Your project is an important reminder of the vital connections between nature and humanity.” – Ocean explorer Jean-Michelle Cousteau, founder of the Oceans Future Society

The first project in the preserve was removing decades of dumped trash, followed by escorting homeless residents out, securing the perimeter, building foot bridges across wet areas, beginning to clear future hiking and kayak trails, recreating wetland habitat and taking out invasive species and planting native trees and plants.

Next month, heavy equipment will come in and continue the removal of Australian pines and Brazilian peppers in the newest – and most costly – section of the preserve.

The half-acre is in the center of the preserve, where the previous owners advertised the residentially-zoned property for $1.2 million with the tag, “surrounded by your own private preserve.”

FISH purchased the land for $180,000 after prospective buyers learned they would have to run electrical and water lines and a curbed road into the preserve before building a dream home, Stevely said, but even that discounted amount was far more than the not-for-profit organization had ever spent on a parcel in the preserve.

Grants have helped keep the restoration work progressing, with the help of partners including the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Southwest Florida Water Management District, the Southeast Aquatic Resources Partnership and the Sarasota Bay Estuary Program.

But the biggest contributors to the preserve are the tens of thousands of people who have attended the past 36 years of the fishing festival – and don’t let a Cortezian catch you calling it a “seafood festival!”

FISH Preserve wetlands draw white ibis and other shorebirds. - Cindy Lane | Sun

FISH Preserve wetlands draw white ibis and other shorebirds. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Mangroves have been planted at the FISH Preserve, part of many efforts to restore the bayfront land to a natural state. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Mangroves have been planted at the FISH Preserve, part of many efforts to restore the bayfront land to a natural state. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The eastern boundary of the FISH Preserve. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The eastern boundary of the FISH Preserve. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Juvenile fish are protected in the FISH Preserve wetlands. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Juvenile fish are protected in the FISH Preserve wetlands. - Cindy Lane | Sun

A turkey vulture at the FISH Preserve. - Cindy Lane | Sun

A turkey vulture at the FISH Preserve. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The FISH Preserve in Cortez is about 100 acres on Sarasota Bay.

The FISH Preserve in Cortez is about 100 acres on Sarasota Bay.

Wetlands at the FISH Preserve - Cindy Lane | Sun

Wetlands at the FISH Preserve - Cindy Lane | Sun

Wetlands at the FISH Preserve - Cindy Lane | Sun

Wetlands at the FISH Preserve - Cindy Lane | Sun

New mangrove - Cindy Lane | Sun

New mangrove - Cindy Lane | Sun

Native plants are replacing invasive species. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Native plants are replacing invasive species. - Cindy Lane | Sun


Festival celebrates “Changing Tides”

The 37th Annual Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival is the weekend of Feb. 16-17 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. both days, celebrating the village’s enduring heritage in the face of “Changing Tides.”

From the gill net ban 25 years ago, which drastically reduced mullet fishing in Florida, to runaway development, overpopulation, pollution, mangrove destruction, foreign seafood imports and this year’s ongoing red tide, the Cortez commercial fishing tradition has survived, said festival organizer and artist Rose Lipke, who designed this year’s festival logo, an octopus juggling all the issues.Cortez fest 2019 Changing Tides

The festival will kick off on Saturday at 10 a.m. with live music, nautical arts and crafts, Dock Talks about different types of fishing vessels, a marine touch tank, and, of course, fresh seafood.

The main admission gate is at the Florida Maritime Museum, 4415 119th St. W. with another gate at the FISH Preserve parking lot east of 119th Street West. The cost is $4, with kids under 12 free.

MCAT shuttles are available from G. T. Bray Park, 5502 33rd Ave. Drive W., Bradenton. The shuttle will pick up passengers from G.T. Bray Park’s west entrance off 59th Street West, and from the Coquina Beach bus turn-around in Bradenton Beach. Shuttles will pick up and drop off festival passengers from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on both Saturday and Sunday.

The cash fare is $1.50 each way. Discounts are available to anyone at least 60 years old and military veterans. As always, everyone 80 years and older rides MCAT for free.

Paid parking for various prices is available on private property in the fishing village.

Cortez docks - Cindy Lane | Sun

Cortez docks - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Pillsbury boat works at the Florida Maritime Museum was relocated from Snead Island in Palmetto. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Pillsbury boat works at the Florida Maritime Museum was relocated from Snead Island in Palmetto. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The FISH Boat Shop at the FISH Preserve is staffed by volunteers who build and restore wooden boats. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The FISH Boat Shop at the FISH Preserve is staffed by volunteers who build and restore wooden boats. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Burton/Bratton store at the Florida Maritime Museum in Cortez was moved from the west end of the fishing village and restored. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Burton/Bratton store at the Florida Maritime Museum in Cortez was moved from the west end of the fishing village and restored. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Florida Maritime Museum is in the former Cortez Rural Graded School building on 119th Street West and Cortez Road West. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Florida Maritime Museum is in the former Cortez Rural Graded School building on 119th Street West and Cortez Road West. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH) built this restored net camp off the Cortez fishing village. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH) built this restored net camp off the Cortez fishing village. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Cortez Cultural Center - Cindy Lane | Sun

Cortez Cultural Center - Cindy Lane | Sun


Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival music lineup

Soupy Davis
Soupy Davis – Cindy Lane | Sun
Saturday, Feb. 16
  • 10-11 a.m.                  Shanty Singers
  • 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.        Doug Deming
  • 1-1:30 p.m.                 Blessing of the fleet; awards
  • 2-4 p.m.                      Eric Von Band
  • 4:30-6 p.m.                 Koko Ray Show
Sunday, Feb. 17
  • 10:30 a.m.-noon         Soupy Davis and his Band
  • 12:30-2 p.m.              Ted Stevens & the Doo Shots
  • 1-5 p.m.                     Eric Von (on the Bratton Store Porch)
  • 2:30-4 p.m.                Jason Haram
  • 4:30-6 p.m.                Karen and Jimmy Band

Boat raffle

The Atavistic (meaning “relating to or characterized by reversion to something ancient or ancestral), is a restored Leeboard sloop with a spritsail designed after the 1850s Florida bay work boats. Capt. Jimmy Hendon of St. Petersburg donated the boat to FISH last August, and FISH Boat Shop volunteers (from left) Dave Curto, Tom Buckland, Bob Buckland and Joe Egolf restored it to be raffled at the Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival the weekend of Feb. 16-17. Tickets are $5 each or 5 for $20.

Cortez will rock, swing, jump and jive during fest

Cortez will rock, swing, jump and jive during fest

CORTEZ – The 37th Annual Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival will feature eight musical acts the weekend of Feb. 16-17, including homegrown Cortezians Eric Von and Soupy Davis, and a motley band of sea shanty singers based in Cortez.

The festival is from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. both days, kicking off with the blessing of the Cortez fishing fleet at the docks on Saturday, Feb. 16 at 10 a.m., followed by two days of live music, nautical arts and crafts, Dock Talks about different types of fishing vessels, a marine touch tank, and, of course, fresh seafood.

The main admission gate is at the Florida Maritime Museum, 4415 119th St. W. with another gate at the FISH Preserve parking lot east of 119th Street West. Shuttles are available from G. T. Bray Park (5502 33rd Ave. Drive W., Bradenton) and the Coquina Beach parking lot in Bradenton Beach ($1.50 one way, $3 round trip), and paid parking for various prices is available on private property in the fishing village.

The cost is $4, with kids under 12 free, with proceeds going to enlarge and restore the 95-acre FISH (Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage) Preserve east of the fishing village.

Here’s the musical program and the players.


The program

Saturday, Feb. 16

  • 10-11 a.m.                 Shanty Singers
  • 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.       Doug Deming
  • 1-1:30 p.m.                Awards and introductions
  • 2-4 p.m.                     Eric Von Band
  • 4:30-6 p.m.                Koko Ray Show

Sunday, Feb. 17

  • 10:30 a.m.-noon         Soupy Davis and his Band
  • 12:30-2 p.m.              Ted Stevens & the Doo Shots
  • 1-5 p.m.                     Eric Von (on the Bratton Store Porch)
  • 2:30-4 p.m.                Jason Haram
  • 4:30-6 p.m.                Karen and Jimmy Band

The players

Doug Deming

Doug Deming
Doug Deming

VIDEO

Doug Deming is an American blues and roots guitarist and vocalist living on Florida’s Gulf coast and playing traditional blues, West Coast and Texas swing, and early 50s roots rock.

The 2013 recipient of the Blues Blast Music Awards’ Sean Costello Rising Star Award, Deming draws his influence from greats like T-Bone Walker and Charlie Christian.

Deming’s traditional taste and style are evident in his original music, with three recordings of primarily original tunes to his credit throughout his 20+ year career.

Deming has toured and recorded with many top blues artists, including Kim Wilson, Gary Primich, Lazy Lester, Alberta Adams, AC Reed and Johnny “Yard Dog” Jones to name a few.


Eric Von

VIDEO

Eric Von
Eric Von – Cindy Lane | Sun

Born and raised in Cortez, Eric Von is a singer and songwriter, infusing country tunes with an island flair. A performer since age 14, he has opened for Kenny Chesney, Miranda Lambert, Jake Owen, Aaron Tippin, Casey James and John Anderson.

Von lives in Orlando and Nashville and plays regularly at Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville at Universal City Walk and Nashville’s Broadway locations.

In 2007, he was named the Colgate Country Showdown Winner for the state of Florida. In 2008, he was named the winner of Kenny Chesney’s “Next Big Star” contest for the Tampa area.


Jason Haram

Jason Haram
Jason Haram

VIDEO

Jason Haram moved to Anna Maria Island at 5 years old and started plucking on the guitar at 8. He was exposed to lots of roots type music while growing up on the Island and has always been drawn towards blues and roots music, which shows in his style of guitar playing, singing and songwriting.

His band consists mostly of a power trio with the occasional addition of a harmonica or keyboard player. The Jason Haram group’s style of music is based around blues, funk, rock ‘n’ roll and a little bit of country picking thrown in. The band has played with many blues and rock ‘n’ roll greats.


Karen and Jimmy Band

Karen and Jimmy
Karen and Jimmy

VIDEO

The Karen and Jimmy Band is a merging of two bandleaders with a distinctive sound of classic rock, southern rock, R&B and country. The band features the guitar styling and vocals of the husband and wife team Jimmy and Karen Lally, and each band member (Donald John, keyboard; Chuck Purro, drums; Paul Justice, bass) has an exceptional voice.

Karen was trained in Classical Music at the University of Michigan, then went on to leading Gospel Music during which time she was nominated three times for a Dove award. Jimmy, who hails from the Washington D.C. area, has performed locally, regionally and nationally and recorded for years in Nashville, traveling

extensively with heavy hitters such as Lee Greenwood and Daryl and Don Ellis. Jimmy was recently inducted into the Maryland Entertainer’s Hall of Fame.


Koko Ray

VIDEO

Koko Ray
Koko Ray

Koko Ray Hansen is a multi-instrumentalist, playing flute, saxophone, guitar, keyboard, percussion and vocals.  A bandleader music producer, radio podcaster, visual artist and teacher, Koko Ray plays acoustic, jazz, reggae and rock ‘n’ roll.

He lives on the Gulf coast of Florida and works with several local acts as well as touring and recording.

 


Shanty Singers

VIDEO

Shanty Singers
Shanty Singers – Cindy Lane | Sun

The Main Hatch Motley Shanty Singers were founded in 2005 in the fishing village of Cortez, and meet weekly at the Florida Maritime Museum. They perform sea shanties throughout the community at schools, churches and folk festivals.

 


Soupy Davis and his Band

Soupy Davis
Soupy Davis – Cindy Lane | Sun

Soupy Davis, a Cortez commercial fishermen since 1938, plays fiddle and mandolin, and often sits in at the Florida Maritime Museum’s Music on the Porch series from 2-4 p.m. the second Saturday of every month.

Soupy’s music  and the village of Cortez are featured in “Diamonds Along the Highway.”

 

 

 


Ted Stevens and the Doo-Shots

Ted Stevens
Ted Stevens
VIDEO

Ted Stevens creates music that combines rockabilly, roots rock and surf with a reverb-drenched guitar and a twangy vocal line. The Doo-Shots deliver a hard-driving, instantly danceable blend of homegrown rockabilly with tunes by rock pioneers like Johnny Cash, Elvis and Buddy Holly.

Formed in January 2011, Ted Stevens and The Doo-Shots play more than 150 shows per year and have sold thousands of CDs worldwide. Their recently released CD, “Hits, Misses and Close Calls,” features 16 live tracks.

Stevens has worked with some of the biggest names in rock and roll, including The Temptations, Percy Sledge, The Drifters, Platters, Coasters, and dozens of other pop, blues, soul, and rock and roll artists.

Related coverage

Solve the Cortez history mystery

Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival

Solve the Cortez history mystery

Updated Jan. 25, 2019

CORTEZ – We have a winner!

Hugh Holmes Jr. of Terra Ceia, Florida submitted a photo of the 2000 Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival T-shirt, “Into the Mulletium,” winning two admissions to the festival on Feb. 16-17 and a 2019 festival T-shirt.

We also recognized Larry and Bonnie Heiniger of Morton, Illinois with a prize for submitting a photo of a quilt made of several festival T-shirts, including the 2007 25th anniversary festival T-shirt.

We are well on our way to compiling a complete photographic record of festival T-shirts, which will be submitted to the Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH), the Cortez Cultural Center and the Florida Maritime Museum.

So, while the prizes have been claimed, please look at the list below to see if you have a T-shirt that we don’t have, and send a photo to news@amisun.com.

Thanks for participating in preserving the history of Cortez!

Here are the slogans and years for the T-shirts we already have in our virtual festival T-shirt collection.

1983    Commercial Fishing Festival ‘83

1984    Commercial Fishing Festival Cortez Florida

1990s  Navigating in the 90s

1996    Casting into the Future

1997    Cortez Fishing Festival 1997

1998   Eat more fish

1999    Our Past is our Future

2000    Into the Mulletium

2001    Fishing for a Future

2002    Fishing for You

2003    If Wishes were Fishes…

2004    Got Fish?

2005    Caught up in Cortez

2006    Mullet, Mangos and Music

2007    25th Anniversary

2008    Net Working

2009    Claws

2010    White Boot Ready

2011    You Are Here

2012    Something’s Fishy in Cortez

2013    Better Fish to Fry

2014    Wishin’ I Was Fishin’

2015    I’m a Grouper Groupie

2016    It Takes a Fishing Village

2017    Fishing for our Future

2018    Rooted in History

Our Net, Your Gain

Commercial Fishing Festival Cortez Florida

Commercial Fishing Festival Cortez, Florida (by Dirt Shirts)

Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival, Cortez (by Sheila Mora)

Before There Was Tourism

 


Catch the fishing festival

CORTEZ – This year’s 37th Annual Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival will celebrate the historic fishing village’s enduring heritage in the face of “Changing Tides.”

From the net ban 25 years ago, which drastically reduced mullet fishing in Florida, to runaway development, overpopulation, pollution, mangrove destruction, foreign seafood imports and this year’s ongoing red tide, the Cortez commercial fishing tradition has survived, said festival organizer and artist Rose Lipke, who designed this year’s festival logo, an octopus juggling all the issues.Cortez fest 2019 Changing Tides

The festival will kick off with the blessing of the Cortez fishing fleet at the docks on Saturday at 10 a.m., followed by two days of live music, nautical arts and crafts, Dock Talks about different types of fishing vessels, a marine touch tank, and, of course, fresh seafood.

Touch tank – Cindy Lane | Sun

The festival is the weekend of Feb. 16-17 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. both days. The main admission gate is at the Florida Maritime Museum, 4415 119th St. W. with another gate at the FISH Preserve parking lot east of 119th Street West.

Shuttles are available from G. T. Bray Park (5502 33rd Ave. Drive W., Bradenton) and the Coquina Beach parking lot in Bradenton Beach ($1.50 one way, $3 round trip), and paid parking for various prices is available on private property in the fishing village.

The cost is $4, with kids under 12 free, with proceeds going to enlarge and restore the 95-acre FISH (Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage) Preserve east of the village.


Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival Music Schedule

Saturday, Feb. 16

If you go

What: The 37th Annual Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival, featuring fresh seafood, live music, arts and crafts and Dock Talks

When: Saturday, Feb. 16 and Sunday, Feb. 17 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Where: Main admission gate at Florida Maritime Museum, 4415 119th St. W., Cortez

Park at the FISH Preserve parking lot east of 119th Street West in Cortez; shuttles from G. T. Bray Park (5502 33rd Ave. Drive W., Bradenton) and the Coquina Beach parking lot in Bradenton Beach ($1.50 one way, $3 round trip); paid parking on private property in the fishing village

Cost: $4 (kids under 12 free); benefits the Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage FISH Preserve

  • 10-11 a.m. Shanty Singers
  • 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Doug Deming
  • 1-1:30 p.m. Awards and introductions
  • 2-4 p.m. Eric Von Band
  • 4:30-6 p.m. Koko Ray Show
Sunday, Feb. 17
  • 10:30 a.m.-noon Soupy Davis and his Band
  • 12:30-2 p.m. Ted Stevens & the Doo Shots
  • 1-5 p.m. Eric Von (on the Bratton Store Porch)
  • 2:30-4 p.m. Jason Haram
  • 4:30-6 p.m. Karen and Jimmy Band
Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival
Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival – Cindy Lane | Sun

 

 

Cortez Food Festival
– Cindy Lane | Sun

Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival celebrates heritage

Updated Feb. 19, 2018

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CORTEZ – When kids are petting horseshoe crabs, people are dancing in flip flops to rock and roll and everyone is enjoying fresh seafood under sunny blue skies, you know it’s Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival time.

This year’s 36th annual festival featured the theme “Rooted in History,” with a sturdy mangrove – a plant that lives with its roots in saltwater – serving as the symbol for Cortez commercial fishing families.

Organizers provided easier maneuvering than ever this year, with arts displays and dining areas spread out in several places.

This year’s nautical art and crafts included coconut fish, handmade signs featuring local place names like the Anna Maria City Pier, huge wooden fishing lure wall hangings, blown glass sea creatures and delicate coquina shell flowers among many other creative offerings.

Kids enjoyed having their faces painted and their likenesses drawn, riding ponies, playing with marine life in a touch tank and bouncing to the sky in a harness.

Visitors learned about commercial fishing and local marine life in a Cortez fish house on Sarasota Bay before selecting meals from dozens of fresh seafood vendors.

Live music provided the backdrop for the party with a purpose, namely, to raise money to continue purchasing land to add to the FISH Preserve and continue restoring the nearly 100 acres already acquired by the Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH).

FISH presented awards to:

John Floersheimer, FISH Community Service Award for volunteer work at the FISH Preserve

Theodore (Ted) Adams, Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage Community Service Award for outstanding support and service to the village of Cortez and the Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage

Fidelity Bank, Cortez Branch, the Business Community Service Award for contributions to the business community of Cortez and for volunteer support of the Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival and the Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage

James O. (Junie) Guthrie, the 2018 Cortez Pioneer Award to one of the oldest living residents of a founding family of the village of Cortez.

Cortez has been a fishing village for more than 1,000 years, beginning with Native Americans, Spanish fishermen who established fishing ranchos, and, in the 1880s, settlers from Carteret County, N.C., including Green’s ancestors, the Fulfords.

The village survived a devastating hurricane in 1921, a killer red tide in 1947 and increasing regulations limiting commercial fishing.

Local fishermen created the festival in 1982 to counter growing opposition to the commercial fishing industry. While Florida voters passed a constitutional amendment in 1994 to ban gill nets, putting much of Cortez out of work, the festival – and Cortez – still survived.

The first year, villagers pitched in to make fish chowder, which was gone by noon, recalls festival veteran John Stevely. Nowadays, a huge food court ensures plenty of seafood, including the Cortez staple, smoked mullet.

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