Updated Release Friday, August 29, 2003
Media contact: 740-435-3335
FIRST DEERASSIC CLASSIC ON AUGUST 23 DRAWS INCREDIBLE CROWD OF 11,500 PEOPLE MAKES $3.7 MILLION ECONOMIC IMPACT
CAMBRIDGE, OH The first Deerassic Classic, the new fund raising event for the non-profit, independent National Whitetail Deer Education Foundation, got off to a spectacular start last Saturday when 11,500 people transformed scenic rural fields into a festive tent city.
The attendance far exceeded expectations at the day long outdoor event near Salt Fork State Park. The gathering exceeded the entire population of nearby Cambridge, the county seat in Guernsey County. The Foundations special events and other related outdoor educational outreach will lead to eventual ground breaking for a national shrine to salute the heritage, history, and the social and economic impact of the whitetail deer.
The August 23 event made a $3.7 million economic impact on a wide area of central and southeastern Ohio. Each visitor spent at least $325 on tickets, overnight lodging, food, gas and other expenses during the weekend. Spectators from all corners of Ohio and from more than 30 other states attended one of Ohios if not Americas largest outdoor fund raising events. Law enforcement and food service professionals confirmed the attendance totals. There were no arrests despite the size of the crowd.
The grand prize of a 2003 luxury edition Hummer was won by Robert Porter of nearby Cambridge. The $50,000 cash prize was won by a retired police officer from Akron now living in Bolivar, Ron Clark. Also, the 2003 Dodge Ram 4x4 truck from Dunning Motors in Cambridge was won by Debbie Hollingsworth from Wilmington, Ohio.
More than 250 other valuable prizes were also awarded as the huge, festive crowd consumed more than 8,000 ice cream bars, 20,000 barbecue meals, and more than 35,000 Pepsi drink products. All food and beverages were free for the spectators. More than 250 volunteers provided services at the Deerassic Park location where there were no first-time event problems other than a long line of cars streaming east on Route 22 throughout the day. Traffic at one point was bumper to bumper from the Classic gate to the Interstate 77 exit located six miles west of the Park.
Visitors were transported from packed parking lots in nearby fields to the Classic tents and entertainment areas by several horse-drawn, vintage wagons. For some veteran observers, the festive scene on Saturday was something like the mystique of how the legendary music festival, Woodstock in upstate New York, grew to immense size in 1969. The 2003 Classic was an "event" far above an attraction for merely deer hunters.
Decades of dreams are indeed coming true for Dean Ziegler and the small group of National Whitetail Deer Education Foundation leadership. "The Classic was everything we hoped it would be, mostly that a huge group of people from all walks of life would come here and enjoy a celebration of the whitetail deer and our outdoor heritage," Ziegler said. "The success of the Classic puts us a giant step forward toward the realization of what I am confident will be the finest museum, park, and shrine to whitetail deer in the entire world."
Deerassic Park presently consists of two large holding pens where Ziegler is studying the genetics and other aspects of live whitetail deer. He also has collected what experts say is the largest collection of whitetail deer trophies in the nation
At least 2,000 people on Saturday at the Classic also visited the Education & Information Station tent led by Outdoor Legacy presenters Mike Brown, Bonnie Baker and Beth Deering from Licking County. The Education Station featured information and conversation about whitetails and outdoor adventure, samples of the Deerassic collection, as well as artists renditions of a new museum and tourism facility concept.
One of the primary mission statements of the Foundation project is "promoting respect, compassion, and education for the continued enjoyment of nature by sportsmen, families, and our children and grandchildren, centered around Ohios official state animal, the whitetail deer."
Ziegler has been developing the overall concept for decades. "Beyond the financial success of making the Classic a major event in its first year," Ziegler said, "the other strong theme of our effort is convincing more people that Ohio is right now the best place in the nation for huge, trophy whitetail bucks. This factor is just one of the reasons why the Foundation believes that our location, our timing, and our message of respect and compassion for the worlds most incredible game animal, the whitetail, is finally getting the attention it rightfully has earned."
"The planned museum and related facilities here will be the centerpiece of national outreach to youngsters, parents, schools and other groups.," Ziegler said.
Likely next steps for the Foundation include development of an educational outreach program to schools and civic groups as well as developing next years Deerassic Classic that could possibly attract nearly double the 2003 attendance. The grand prize list of luxury items could also be greatly increased beyond this years phenomenal first effort.
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