Mermaids drew a crowd Saturday at the Port Lambton riverfront.
They were there as part of a Mermaids and Mariners festival set in Brander Park on the St. Clair River that featured about 60 vendors, food trucks, a refreshment area, live music and about 17 mermaids from near and far.
It was organized by Sherri DeWolf, with the help of sponsors, including Kern Water, and a $15,000 Lambton Creative County grant, and held in partnership with the St. Clair River Trail.
“This doesn’t happen without community,” DeWolf said.
Vehicles were parked all along the St. Clair Parkway near the park that was busy with spectators.
“It’s amazing,” DeWolf said. “We couldn’t have asked for a better day and a more exuberant crowd.”
DeWolf, a mermaid enthusiast, said, “I think it’s just the magical, water-loving inspiration,” of the mythical creatures that attract people.
The mermaids attending Saturday “swam from waters from Toronto down to Pennsylvania,” she said.
More than 70 tickets were sold at a breakfast with the mermaids Saturday morning.
Admission was free so there wasn’t a firm count of attendance but DeWolf said it was estimated that 2,000 to 2,500 spectators visited the park through the day.
DeWolf said the event was organized as a nautical festival to celebrate the St. Clair River shoreline in Port Lambton. She grew up in Wallaceburg and spent time with her grandparents in Port Lambton enjoying the river.
Now she owns a marketing business and organized a similar event in Key West, Florida.
“When I came home I said, ‘We don’t do anything like that here,’” so she went to work organizing one on a “smaller scale, pun intended,” DeWolf said.
“There actually is an entire mermaid community,” she said. “If you are a lover of mermaids you usually find the groups of people who are mermaiding, or love mermaids.”
DeWolf said it’s possible to swim wearing a mermaid tail, and several demonstrated that at a beach in the park that was designated as Mermaid lagoon. Youngsters were able to try on a tail and have photos taken with the mermaids.
There were also mermaids at a picnic shelter posing for photos with youngsters.
“I’m just overjoyed with the response,” DeWolf said.