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Mermaids Awash in New York at the Mermaid Parade

New York was Awash in Mermaids

New York was Awash in Mermaids

I just discovered that I missed out on an exciting and fun annual event this last weekend called the Mermaid Parade. This unique event was held on June 19th at Coney Island in New York. The Mermaid Parade is an eclectic and colorful mix of people, costumes, and imaginative visual art.

The parade is a Coney Island traditional that started in 1983 by a local arts organization called Coney Island USA. The participants this year ranged from the Street Urchins to synchronized swimmers dressed as mermaids. In case you were wondering, yes, the Street Urchins were mermaids complete with their spiny covered aquatic urchin counterparts. Parade attendees also included mermaid families and barely dressed mermaid women in tutus.

Normally, the tone of the event is one of lighthearted fun, but this year there was a more serious message being delivered. Event organizers highlighted the real danger ocean life is facing in the Gulf of Mexico right now. Many attendees even carried signs chastising BP and bringing awareness to the current plight of the ocean. While the parade did have a serious note this year it was still the same unique, fun, and wacky parade it’s been for the last 27 years. The parade even ended with a Mermaid Ball that was, appropriately, held at The New York Aquarium.

The only thing missing from the parade were the Weeki Wachee Mermaids. Believe It Tour was lucky enough to meet the mermaids during the 2008 tour when the tour group was at Weeki Wachee Springs in FL. Maybe next year the Weeki Wachee Mermaids can put in an appearance at the parade.

Spring Break with the Weeki Wachee Mermaids

Weeki Wachee Mermaid Ashley B

Weeki Wachee Mermaid Ashley B

Spring is in the air and I’m hearing families talk about trips to the south, along with all the spring break buzz, which reminds me of Florida. Having lived there, traveled there on the 2008 Believe It Tour, and visiting grandparents for many years as I child, Florida is one spot I consider home. That could be the reason people ask me what they should do or where they should go when they visit Florida on vacation. The challenge is not coming up with an itinerary of suggested stops, but figuring out what they might enjoy the most as there are so many different levels and types of excursions to be had.

All of the stops could take pages to list. However, there’s one place in particular that was part of the 2008 Tour that I do get questioned about more than you’d think. No, it’s not Disney World or Gatorland Zoo. It’s the Weeki Wachee Mermaids of Weeki Wachee Springs. Yes, the “only city of live mermaids” where even the mayor was a Mermaid.

According to the Weeki Wachee Springs State Park site it was the Seminole Indians that named the spring “Weeki Wachee,” which means “little spring” or “winding river.” The spring is so deep that the bottom has never been found and it has more than 117 million gallons of clear, fresh 72-degree water surging up from subterranean caverns.

The history of the shows in Weeki Wachee Springs dates back to 1947 when the mermaids performed at the underwater theater. In the 1950′s Weeki Wachee was one of the country’s most popular tourist stops. Then when ABC purchased the spring in 1959, Weeki Wachee and the mermaid shows were taken to a new level. Bringing in half a million people per year to watch the Weeki Wachee mermaids. Including the King himself, Elvis Presley.

Weeki Wachee Springs remains a wonderful family experience where visitors can pose with mermaids or swim in the spring at the Buccaneer Bay area of the park. Children can even attend the summer Mermaid Camp and fulfill their dreams of becoming a little mermaid or a merman.

What a great way to allow children to believe in the magic of the Weeki Wachee Mermaids and escape the Florida heat.