logo
Calgary Stampede close to breaking attendance record as 2025 event wraps up

Calgary Stampede close to breaking attendance record as 2025 event wraps up

Calgary Herald13-07-2025
Article content
'It sounds like they are all recovering,' Cowley said, adding a CPS investigation is ongoing and no arrests have been made.
Article content
'This was a targeted altercation,' he added. 'That's incredibly disheartening for an event like ours that is supposed to be a celebration, that someone would come on grounds and look to do harm to others.'
Article content
Cowley said Stampede security protocols are reviewed daily in collaboration with the Stampede's security team and Calgary police.
Article content
Article content
The 2025 Stampede saw several attendance milestones. TC Energy Community Day drew more than 193,000 guests, the second-highest single-day total in Stampede history. BMO Kids Day set another attendance record, welcoming more than 161,000 visitors.
Article content
Seventy-three per cent of visitors were from the Calgary area, on par with last year's numbers. 'We take pride in that,' Cowley said. 'This is a community celebration where Calgarians can come together and celebrate fellowship and share an experience.'
Article content
Article content
Article content
Cowley said the remaining 27 per cent of attendees coming from outside Calgary represents a major boost to the local economy, pointing to increased hotel booking and visitor spending. 'That money is coming to Calgary, and it would not otherwise come to Calgary if it weren't for the Calgary Stampede.'
Article content
He cited numbers from the Calgary Hotel Association showing occupancy increased by 2.4 per cent over 2024, with roughly 10,000 more people staying in hotels this year.
Article content
The Stampede is set to wrap up Sunday night with a celebration of Indigenous culture at the Stampede Powwow at the Saddledome.
Article content
'Calgary showed up'
Article content
According to early results from an internal visitor survey, the Rangeland Derby received the highest satisfaction rating of the Calgary Stampede's programming, with 80 per cent of respondents giving it a perfect score, Cowley said. Other popular attractions included the relay race, the Grandstand Show, the rodeo and the Dog Bowl.
Article content
'We're very proud of the offering that we put forth this year,' Cowley said. 'Our focus is truly on providing the greatest experience we can to everyone who steps on park.
Article content
'It is a decision to come to Stampede Park, and we want to make that decision as easy as possible.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Popular series Murdoch Mysteries shooting episode here set during first Stampede
Popular series Murdoch Mysteries shooting episode here set during first Stampede

Calgary Herald

timea day ago

  • Calgary Herald

Popular series Murdoch Mysteries shooting episode here set during first Stampede

Article content A 1912 trip to Calgary to witness the beginnings of a brand new spectacle called The Calgary Stampede is meant to be a relaxing vacation for intrepid Detective William Murdoch and his gruff boss, Inspector Thomas Brackenreid. It's a respite from the murder and mayhem the pair encounter as part of the Toronto Constabulary. Article content But it doesn't take long for the two to get roped into a mysterious death at the first Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth. That's the historical premise behind an upcoming episode of the popular drama Murdoch Mysteries. Article content Article content 'Because it's a murder-mystery, murder quickly ensues,' says Peter Mitchell, an executive producer and writer for Murdoch Mysteries. Article content Article content The long-running Canadian series set up production at the Bar N Ranch in Turner Valley for a three-day shoot. The location, a popular spot for film and television productions, has been transformed into the first Stampede circa 1912. Cameras began rolling on Wednesday, and production will wrap Friday night. Interior shots for the episode will be filmed in Toronto. Article content On Tuesday, actors Yannick Bisson and Thomas Craig — who play Murdoch and Brackenreid, respectively — took part in a fan meet-and-greet at the Calgary Stampede's Sam Centre. Article content The historical series, which takes place in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, has been running for 18 seasons. It was recently renewed for a 19th, and the Stampede-themed episode will air in the fall. Article content Article content 'We've always tried on this show, if possible, to get out to different areas of the country,' Mitchell says. 'We've shot in Newfoundland, Ottawa, Dawson City. We've always wanted to shoot in Alberta. It seemed like a natural storyline. Some of it is just for the fan events. Fans are still into the show. The meet-and-greets are not as important as the shooting, but it's part of the package.' Article content The series often uses real historical figures and events in its storylines. Past episodes have revolved around the Toronto Fire of 1904 and Canadian veterans of the Boer War. Everyone from Queen Victoria to Buffalo Bill Cody, Nikola Tesla, Thomas Edison and Arthur Conan Doyle have made appearances as characters. Article content While the murder at the centre of the Calgary-based episode is presumably fictional, the storyline will feature historical Stampede figures such as founder Guy Weadick and Tom Three Persons, a Kainai Nation rodeo athlete who won the saddle bronc competition at the 1912 inaugural Stampede.

Opinion: How are rodeos still a thing?
Opinion: How are rodeos still a thing?

Montreal Gazette

time2 days ago

  • Montreal Gazette

Opinion: How are rodeos still a thing?

Op Eds The Calgary Stampede has a long history; it dates back to 1912 when it was promoted by American Guy Weadick to celebrate cowboy culture and the Wild West. However, it's clear to those of us who care about animal welfare that rodeos have a long history of animal cruelty. Most recently, a horse was euthanized at the Calgary Stampede — having broken his leg during the chuckwagon race. His name was Rider. The chuckwagon race involves four horses pulling a 1,300-pound covered wagon — reminiscent of old-time food wagons — in a race against other wagons. Entrants can reach speeds of up to 65 km/h and it is often during these races that animals are injured or killed. Outside of the chuckwagon, rodeo events also include calf roping, bull riding, tie-down roping, steer wrestling and wild cow milking which also carry significant risk for animal injury and death. Since 1986, there have been 110 known fatalities at the Calgary Stampede, with 79 horses killed during chuckwagon races alone. Other animals killed and injured include calves, steers and bucking horses. While many suffer from leg injuries and must be euthanized, horses also die from heart attacks, and exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhages. According to the Calgary Humane Society, these numbers only reflect the official number of animals killed during the event itself; there are countless other animals who die behind the scenes while riders are attempting to perfect their skills. It is small wonder that animal rights groups have been calling for the termination of the rodeo events at the Stampede for years. In fact, Animal Justice has recently filed a legal complaint, calling for a full investigation into whether there should be charges laid against rodeo participants under provincial and federal animal protection laws following Rider's death. A smaller scale version of the Stampede takes place every September in Quebec. The Festival Western de St-Tite attracts thousands of visitors annually. Animal events include saddle bronc riding, bull riding, tie-down roping and steer wrestling that have drawn criticism over the years. In 2017, a horse named Grady died of a suspected spinal cord injury during the bucking bronco event. In 2018, Alain Roy, a respected Université de Montréal law professor and animal rights activist, published a report based on witness accounts at over 20 events. This lengthy report accused the organizers of the St-Tite festival of violating Quebec's animal welfare laws and found evidence that the animals were exposed to serious risk of injury as well as psychological distress. According to the CBC, the festival's promoters responded that the report was biased and dismissed its findings claiming that their own animal treatment specialist had found 'no abuse, negligence or unacceptable behaviour' on their part. Professor Roy had previously been unsuccessful in preventing the urban rodeo held at Montreal's 375th anniversary celebrations in 2017. The fact that the St-Tite rodeo continues to run, undeterred by complaints of animal cruelty, is curious, particularly in a province where its Civil Code (art. 898.1) recognizes animal sentience —requiring that animals be considered as more than just 'things' (i.e. property) but as beings with biological needs, capable of feeling pleasure and pain. While the recognition of sentience in the Civil Code since 2015 is a step in the right direction, it must be more than symbolic to have any real effect. Moreover, one wonders if people would feel differently if companion animals were being killed annually at rodeos. What if the headline had read instead: 'Labradoodle euthanized after injury during chuckwagon race at the Calgary Stampede'? Perhaps because cows and horses are not considered pets, nor are they part of our families (for most people), they do not rate the same considerations. Arguments in favour of rodeos focus on their history, the so-called entertainment they provide and 'sport.' However, the injury, death and cruelty to animals that we see must stop. Rider and Grady, and countless others like them, deserve no less. Kathryn M. Campbell is a full professor of criminology at the University of Ottawa. She is a member of the Canadian Animal Law Study Group and resides in Montreal.

Bell: Calgary crime and grime in our faces and we get more city hall baloney
Bell: Calgary crime and grime in our faces and we get more city hall baloney

Calgary Herald

time2 days ago

  • Calgary Herald

Bell: Calgary crime and grime in our faces and we get more city hall baloney

More political manure is shovelled our way this day. Article content When will Calgary city hall wake the hell up? Only the votes of Calgarians will pierce through their privileged cocoon. Article content Article content Dan McLean is a Calgary city councillor known for pitching puzzlers to the city hall establishment — a group of handsomely-paid seat warmers who often appear either clueless or look like they just don't give a damn. Article content Article content McLean kicks off the Tuesday city council meeting asking a city bigshot about what's up with all this crime and social disorder where even Calgary city hall's propaganda machine can't make us believe the city is on its way to Disneyland. Article content Article content 'It was a long-winded answer and I can't even tell you what it was about.' Article content Well, what was it all about? Talking points patting the heads of Calgarians. Now, now. Article content When people are 'unwell' that can 'increase people's sense of discomfort,' says the bigshot, taking a page out of the latest hug-a-thug pop psychology book. Article content But people are feeling better. Article content Yep, that's Calgary city hall. Dismissing the verdict of the court of public opinion. The worst it's ever been. Article content You can't really blame McLean. Article content McLean's truck was one of several vehicles stomped on by some jerk in East Village. The episode even made it on Instagram. Article content Article content During Stampede, someone tried to steal his truck. Article content Ah, the East Village. Article content Article content Back in the day, it was called urban blight when you could see streetwalkers in the same part of town as a legendary gym, a well-known fish market, the firefighters union office, the Golden Age Club offering up music and bingo, the old-school King Eddy missed by many and the St. Louis. Article content Now there are new shiny apartment blocks and lovely shops mixed in with a three-ring circus of crime and grime and daily disorder too numerous to count, with the Calgary Drop-In Centre providing its own sad and often dangerous spectacle. Article content McLean knows the area. It's right out back from city hall. Article content 'I've seen people die. They pulled the bodies away,' says McLean.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store