- November 22, 2024
Loading
The 12th annual Celtic Festival arrived on a cloud-flecked, blue-skied day amid a sea of tartans, tankards and the occasional lilt. Festivalgoers came from all over to attend the event, with the Highland gamers kicking off the weekend festivities early Saturday morning on April 15.
Athletes occupied the grassy area along the walkway approaching Rockefeller Gardens, where food vendors and artisans set up tents, trucks and activities for attendees. Celtic music filled the air, already saturated with the smell of fish and chips, shepherd’s pie and haggis, bolstering the already lively atmosphere.
The Highland Games athletes ranged in age from 17-year-old Brock Burnett to the oldest competitor, 69-year-old Doug Pettit. They participated in a variety of Scottish heavy athletic events sanctioned by the Scottish League Games. Events included stone put, sheaf toss, caber toss, hammer throw and weight for height, to name a few.
Pettit, of Ormond Beach, always enjoyed watching the Scottish games and competed once in 2011. After eight years, he got back into it.
“The first one I ever did, I went up to the lady (at one of the Scottish games) and asked her how I could get involved with this,” he said. “She told me, ‘Give me $20 dollars and go get a kilt.’”
He ran for the Volusia County Council in 2022 but prefers the competition and camaraderie of the athletes involved in the games.
“It’s really a lot of fun, particularly with the older groups,” he said. “A lot of them help each other, and we get to see each other at a lot of the events. It’s great to get together again.”
Veronica Martinson had a similar experience. The Ormond Beach Highland Games were just her third competition.
The first one I ever did, I went up to the lady (at one of the Scottish games) and asked her how I could get involved with this. She told me, ‘Give me $20 dollars and go get a kilt.’” — Doug Pettit, Ormond Beach
She had always been interested but couldn’t get her friends to go to the Scottish games workshop held in St. Augustine, so she decided to attend on her own
“This year I was like, I think I’ll walk over to the field and just go,” she said. “Everybody was so nice and supportive. They’re like, ‘You should just compete tomorrow.’ I said I didn’t know what I’m doing, and they told me this is how you learn.”
Festival attendees could watch the athletes on Saturday as well as enjoy a variety of musicians on multiple stages throughout the weekend.
There were approximately 69 performances on the schedule, including the Parade of the Tartans, led by the Daytona Beach Pipe and Drums on Saturday and the Mount Dora Pipe Band on Sunday.
There were activities for kids and adults throughout the weekend. Everyone had an opportunity to learn about their heritage from one of the clan tables, hang out in the beer garden drinking a Guinness or enjoying the Kidzone as a family.
Mother and daughter Mia and Kieran Jurgens, of Ormond Beach, attended the festival for the first time this past weekend.
“We have lived here a couple years, and this is our first chance to get out here,” Mia Jurgens said. “We can finally wear the (Celtic) dresses I made years ago.”