Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Florida Keys business owners are trying to weather the economic storm after Irma.

Fantasy Fest bringing much-needed income

- By Jennifer Kay

KEY WEST, Fla. — Things are weird, as usual, in Key West.

A pair of Vikings push a stroller full of stuffed chimps down Duval Street. A man with a ponytail swallows a steel sword. People dressed only in body paint and glitter wander and jiggle from bar to bar.

Fantasy Fest — one of Key West’s major tourist draws of the year — is in full swing. And that’s a relief for Florida Keys business owners trying to weather the economic storm that hit after Hurricane Irma battered the middle stretch of the tourism-dependent island chain.

The festivitie­s have not disappoint­ed Gary Gates from Buffalo, New York, who planned this “bucket list” trip 10 months ago with six friends.

“We were coming whether there was a hurricane or not,” the former NFL cameraman said. “I’ve never seen anything quite like this. To come down here and actually see people dressed in all kinds of costumes — or no costumes at all — was something that I needed to see.”

Gates flew into Key West and has not left during its annual 10-day festival of costume parties and parades, so he has not seen the devastatio­n that still lingers more than a month since Hurricane Irma made landfall Sept. 10 about 20 miles north of the city.

The mostly residentia­l middle stretch of the island chain took the brunt of the hurricane’s 130-mph winds. The area is still almost entirely brown, with debris piled alongside the highway and mangroves stripped bare.

But at opposite ends of the 120-mile-long island chain, tourist attraction­s in Key Largo and Key West escaped significan­t damage.

Scott Saunders, president and CEO of Fury Water Adventures, estimated tourism in Key West has been about a third of what it was at this time last fall, even though the city’s hotels, restaurant­s, cruise ship operations and beaches quickly reopened after the storm.

“There’s no reason not to be doing everything we did last year,” Saunders said before one of his fleet’s sunset cruises. “We should be having that tourist base down here, but we haven’t had any.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Revelers costumed as raptors Friday proceed down Fleming Street in Key West, Fla., during the Masquerade March. The event was staged almost seven weeks after Hurricane Irma passed through the Keys on Sept. 10.
The Associated Press Revelers costumed as raptors Friday proceed down Fleming Street in Key West, Fla., during the Masquerade March. The event was staged almost seven weeks after Hurricane Irma passed through the Keys on Sept. 10.

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