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Stone Crab Festival a cracking good time

Stone Crab Festival a cracking good time

CORTEZ – The stone crab harvest is being celebrated in a big way at an annual festival in the historic fishing village.

The 11th Annual Cortez Stone Crab and Music Festival will be held at the Swordfish Grill and Tiki Bar parking lot the weekend of Nov. 11- 12 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., featuring music, local seafood, crafts and of course, lots of stone crab.

“The festival celebrates the heritage of Cortez and the kickoff to stone crab season,” Swordfish Grill General Manager Adam Sears said.

Stone Crab Festival a cracking good time
The theme of the 11th annual Cortez Stone Crab and Music Festival is “Crack a Cold One.” – Submitted

The festival was the brainchild of John Banyas, a fourth-generation fisherman from Cortez and owner of Swordfish Grill and Tiki Bar, Cortez Bait and Seafood Inc. and N.E. Taylor Boatworks, named for his grandfather.

Sears said the festival attracts upwards of 5,000 attendees and more than 2,000 pounds of stone crab is sold.

This year’s theme is “Crack a Cold One,” since stone crab is best served cracked and cold.

Stone crab season runs from Oct. 15 to May 1. Stone crabs are harvested for their claws and then returned to the water, where the claws will regenerate.

In addition to stone crab, many other local seafood favorites will be available. The festival also will feature a Kid Zone with face painting and other kid-friendly activities. Vendors from throughout Florida will be selling arts and crafts, including marine and beach-inspired art. Live music is scheduled both days on two stages.

The festival has a charitable component. All proceeds from draft beer sales will benefit the non-profit Bradenton-base Blessing Bags Project, dedicated to providing basic critical needs to the homeless and less fortunate.

“Big Storm Brewery is graciously donating the beer trailer,” Sears said.

The festival will be held rain or shine at 4628 119th St. W., Cortez., and a large, covered seating area will be available. Festival admission is $5, with kids under 12 free.

Parking is available at the FISH Preserve, next to the festival, at a cost of $5 per vehicle. Parking proceeds will benefit the non-profit Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH).

 

SATURDAY’S MUSIC

 

Festival main stage

10 a.m. – Mikey Silbaugh of Concrete Edgar

Noon – Mushroom Soup

2 p.m. – Uncle John’s Band

4 p.m. – Doug Deming and the Jewel Tones

 

Swordfish Grill Tiki Deck stage

11 a.m. – Ted Stevens

3 p.m. – Stockton Brothers

7 p.m. – Tim Chandler

 

SUNDAY’S MUSIC

 

Festival main stage

10 a.m. – Ted Stevens and the Doo Shots

Noon – Berry Oakley and Friends

2 p.m. – Twinkle and Rock Soul Radio

4 p.m. – Trevor Bystrom’s RX featuring Zion Albert

 

Swordfish Grill Tiki Deck stage

11 a.m. – Taylor Opie

3 p.m. – Billy Rice Trio

6 p.m. – Steel Vibes

Stone Crab Festival nets hundreds

Updated Nov. 13, 2017

CORTEZ – The Sixth Annual Cortez Stone Crab Festival netted hundreds of seafood fans on a beautiful fall weekend.

Hosted by the Swordfish Grill and Tiki Bar, this year’s free festival featured nautical art displays, pony rides, live music and, of course, the delicacy the festival is named after.

The Stone Crab Festival benefits the Manatee Chapter of Fishing For Freedom, a commercial fishing group.

A hammerhead shark sculpture at the Stone Crab Festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

A hammerhead shark sculpture at the Stone Crab Festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Englewood Artist Joseph I. Kreisel shows off his pebble mosaics, made from pebbles, bits of tortoise shell, shark teeth and stingray barbs that wash up on Englewood Beach. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Englewood Artist Joseph I. Kreisel shows off his pebble mosaics, made from pebbles, bits of tortoise shell, shark teeth and stingray barbs that wash up on Englewood Beach. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Homemade signs draw smiles at the Stone Crab Festival in Cortez. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Homemade signs draw smiles at the Stone Crab Festival in Cortez. - Cindy Lane | Sun

A Stone Crab Festival attendee admires fish painted on wood by Bradenton artist Mike Parrott of Brushes and Bouquets Custom Art and Flowers. - Cindy Lane | Sun

A Stone Crab Festival attendee admires fish painted on wood by Bradenton artist Mike Parrott of Brushes and Bouquets Custom Art and Flowers. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Wine bottle fish by Village of the Arts artist Kevin Webb, who also displays at Restless Natives on Anna Maria Island, attract attention at the Cortez Stone Crab Festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Wine bottle fish by Village of the Arts artist Kevin Webb, who also displays at Restless Natives on Anna Maria Island, attract attention at the Cortez Stone Crab Festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Suncatchers by artist Marcia Montgomery of The Classic Mermaid. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Suncatchers by artist Marcia Montgomery of The Classic Mermaid. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Stone crab claws are what it’s all about at the Sixth Annual Cortez Stone Crab Festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Stone crab claws are what it’s all about at the Sixth Annual Cortez Stone Crab Festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Musa Ali, of China and Lakewood Ranch, enjoys stone crab claws with his brother, mom and grandmother at the festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

Musa Ali, of China and Lakewood Ranch, enjoys stone crab claws with his brother, mom and grandmother at the festival. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Stone Crab Festival benefits Fishing for Freedom’s Manatee chapter, which demonstrates how gill nets that were banned in 1995 actually allowed juvenile fish to swim through and survive while catching legal-size mullet. - Cindy Lane | Sun

The Stone Crab Festival benefits Fishing for Freedom’s Manatee chapter, which demonstrates how gill nets that were banned in 1995 actually allowed juvenile fish to swim through and survive while catching legal-size mullet. - Cindy Lane | Sun

stone crab

Cortez celebrates stone crabs

CORTEZ – The beginning of stone crab season is a highly anticipated event to those who crave the colorful claws after they come out of the pot, and for the past five years, Swordfish Grill and Tiki Bar at 4628 119th St. W. has held a festival celebrate it.

For its Sixth Annual Stone Crab Festival on Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 11 and 12 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Swordfish spreads the love to Florida blue crabs as well. Swordfish Manager Bob Slicker said the music would extend after 6 p.m. at Swordfish’s two stages and at the Cortez Kitchen next door.

In addition to crabs, there will be cold refreshments and local music at three venues, arts and crafts for sale and a kid’s zone to keep the youngsters entertained.

The lineup of music includes TC & Randy, TH & C, Jason Haram Group, The Kat Crosby Band, The Dr. Dave Band, Billy Rice, Doug Deming & The Jewel Tones, Alowicious, Berry Oakley’s Indigenous Suspects and Twinkle & Rock Soul Radio. There will be a large tent to keep sun and rain off attendees.

The Cortez Stone Crab Festival began as a block party for locals, fishermen and crabbers. John Banyas, fourth generation fisherman and the owner of Cortez Bait & Seafood, Inc., wanted to give the fishermen a party to kick off stone crab season, which is immediately followed by mullet season.

There will be ample parking with the addition of the Florida Maritime Museum parking lot, and the claws will be fresh. As Swordfish advertises, its stone crab “never travels by land.”

The Stone Crab Festival raises money for the Manatee Chapter of Fishing For Freedom, a group that supports commercial fishing.