If running breathlessly from a snorting, charging, 2,500-pound bull sounds like your kind of thrill, you might not have to pack your bags for Pamplona, Spain, anymore.
A running-of-the-bulls style event is in the works for Shakopee, Minn.
A promotional group recently announced the Great Bull Run series that will pit man vs. beast in 10 locations around the United States over the next year — including a tentative date at Canterbury Park horse race track on May 14. Runners will navigate a quarter-mile section of the track, which will be lined with nooks and scalable fences in case they need to evade the bulls.
While animal rights groups are dismayed, Shakopee Mayor Brad Tabke said he would welcome the event if the leadership at Canterbury had vetted it and felt it was safe. The mayor rode in, and won, a camel race at Canterbury last year, but said he won't be coaxed into this event.
"That's not in my wheel house. I mean, the camel race was pushing the line for what I'm comfortable with," he said. "As a guy with a 6-year-old and a 2-year-old, I have no desire to put myself in harm's way at this time. But that doesn't mean its not someone else's choice."
Organizers said they will be partnering with ranches to provide bulls, which won't be as aggressive as those used in the famed Pamplona event, which draws 20,000 runners every summer and has reported 15 deaths in its 102-year history.
"We're not using the Spanish fighting bulls that are bred to be very aggressive for the entertaining aspect of bullfighting," said Rob Dickens, co-founder and chief operating officer of the Great Bull Run. Nor will the bulls be slaughtered at the end.
Last month in Spain, a University of Utah college student and an Australian woman were gored by bulls. During one run, participants and spectators screamed as a bull tossed a Spaniard to the ground and attacked him, with fellow runners trying to pull the animal away by its tail. The man was eventually dragged to safety.