Chattanooga Times Free Press

Easter events

Helicopter egg drop among area’s first Easter events

- BY LISA DENTON STAFF WRITER Contact Lisa Denton at ldenton@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6281.

The Hixson Youth Athletic Associatio­n is benching the Easter Bunny and putting a whirlybird in charge of delivering Easter eggs Saturday.

The helicopter egg drop is one in a daylong series of events marking the start of baseball season at the park. In a phone interview, park secretary Natalie Bigham said the opening celebratio­n at 10 a.m. will include Chattanoog­a Lookouts mascot Looie throwing out the ceremonial first pitch and salutes to the organizati­on’s past presidents and the park’s founding family.

The egg hunt, which is co-sponsored by Abba’s House, will start at noon, with 15,000 eggs dropped from a Chattanoog­a Helicopter­s chopper piloted by owner/operator Noah Farley.

In a phone interview, Farley said this is one of a half dozen Easter events his company has scheduled this spring in Tennessee and Georgia.

“Normally around Easter, we’ll do three to 10 drops,” he said. “It depends on the year and who wants them.”

He said the helicopter will hover “about treetop level, maybe 50 feet high” to drop the eggs. He’ll have a crew of two with him to release the eggs from large trash bags.

Bigham said this is the first time park officials have planned an enhanced celebratio­n for opening day, but they’re hoping to build on the success of another community event, the Ball ‘Til You Fall Festival, which they’ve held in October the past two years.

“We probably had over 3,000 attend last year,” she said, explaining that free helicopter rides were one of the draws.

“I was looking for a wow factor to bring people in and ran across the helicopter tours,” she said. “That’s something a lot of families would never be able to experience otherwise.”

Beyond the focus on youth sports, Bigham said she wants to provide a day of fun for the community at large. Saturday’s event also will include craft vendors, free inflatable­s and other activities for children.

“It’s more about bringing families and the community together,” she said. “Hixson doesn’t have as much going on for families as it used to. I’ve kind of made it my mission to bring it back to families and to be able to do fun things and not get in their pocket for every dime they have.”

For Saturday’s egg hunt, children will be divided into four age groups. They’ll redeem their finds for candy and other prizes, including free meals at Texas Roadhouse and Moe’s Southwest Grill. A cash prize awaits whoever finds the 6-inch baseball egg.

Bigham said she hopes the execution of the event goes better than the preparatio­n for it. Originally, she was trying to accumulate 15,000 eggs by pulling a few dozen at a time from the shelves at discount stores. Even if she could fill several carts at a time, it was slow going — 15,000 eggs equals 1,250 dozen.

So she placed a bulk order with a local Dollar Tree. But when the shipment came in last week, instead of finding eggs, “they sent me ranch dressing and boxes and boxes of flowers,” she said.

“As much as I tried, I still had to buy buggies full again,” she said.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS ?? Children excitedly pick up as many eggs as they can during 2022’s Easter at Coolidge.
STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS Children excitedly pick up as many eggs as they can during 2022’s Easter at Coolidge.

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