Rib Fest adds a day of feasting to their annual event - you can chow down starting at 5:30 pm today.

News 100 blueBy Staff

September 3, 2015

BURLINGTON, ON

Watch for it. The smoke from the grills at Spencer Smith Park should begin to rise sometime this afternoon as the crews prepare for the opening of the 20th Annual Burlington Rotary Ribfest.

The event starts today Thursday at 5:30pm And runs to 11pm, Friday to Sunday 11am – 11pm and Monday 11am – 8pm

To celebrate the 20th year Rotary added an additional day for feasting on those ribs.

Premier Wynne runs a job training course for MAyor and NAME, gYPTECH

Premier Kathleen Wynne decided to show the boys how ribs should be flipped. Mayor Rick Goldring on the right likes the look of what he has done while Gary Murray, president of Gypsum Technologies adds another to the ribs that will go on sale.

A couple of years ago the Premier of the province put in a shift at the grill – a very short shift – but she was there flipping those ribs.
While all is well at Spencer Smith Park and the Rotary operation – there is a simmering battle between two competing ribfest organizations heating up in Hamilton.

The following was reported in the Hamilton Spectator:

The Rotary Club of Burlington-Lakeshore is locking horns with a private ribfest company, the Northern Heat Rib Series, over the timing and location of their smoky, meaty, BBQ-sauce-infused events.

The Burlington Rotary, which runs Canada’s Largest Ribfest, hosts a massive event at Spencer Smith Park every Labour Day weekend.

The Northern Heat Rib Series — a brand-new business launched in April — hosted the first Hamilton Ribfest at Valley Park on the first weekend in June. Justin Brown, owner of Northern Heat, says he was simply aiming to provide a ribfest in an area that didn’t host one.

But the Rotary club isn’t impressed. Earlier this summer, Brown received a letter from several Rotary clubs — spearheaded by Burlington-Lakeshore — stating the club’s disappointment in his fledgling business venue.

If you looked around there was still some sitting room.  The weather was close to perfect and the music was good - great way to bring a summer to a close.

Burlington RibFest is a remarkable success – the result of a lot of hard work over a long period of time. If you looked around there was still some sitting room. The weather was close to perfect and the music was good – great way to bring a summer to a close.

Soon after, a ribber booked on Brown’s Northern Heat Rib Series was kicked out of the Rotary’s Labour Day event in Burlington. Other ribbers have since pulled out of Brown’s events for fear of the same treatment. Brown has also lost one of his major sponsors.

“I’m not interested in any of this conflict. It’s not what I’ve decided to come into business for,” Brown said.

But Jeremy Racicot, co-chair of Canada’s Largest Ribfest, says Rotary is simply trying to defend its customers. He says the ribfest market in this area has already been saturated.

“We’re not a bully. We’re just protecting our charity,” he said.

This is the 20th year the Rotary Club of Burlington-Lakeshore has been running Canada’s Largest Ribfest — just one of the many Rotary chapters that operates ribfests around southern Ontario. The Waterdown Oh Canada Ribfest, run by the Rotary Clubs of Flamborough and Waterdown is a smaller player — albeit still popular — on the local ribbing scene.

Rib Fest - Thorpe and Penning

John Thorpe on the left and Bob Penning stand beside the cupboard with crests from Rotarian clubs around the world. Both men were founders of the exceptionally successful Rotarian Rib Fest celebrating its 20th year of operation,

Later this week we will tell the story of how Name Thorpe and Bob Penning; two Rotarians, built the Rib Fest to the event it is today. It’s quite a success story.

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