Brooksville Ranch to Host Two-Day Country Music and Camping Festival in April
Brooksville's Florida Sand Music Ranch expects 3,000 festivalgoers at the inaugural Gone Country at the Ranch on April 24-25, with admission running $45 to $290.

Deep End Productions LLC is launching an inaugural outdoor country music and camping festival at the Florida Sand Music Ranch in Brooksville this month, with "Gone Country at the Ranch" projected to draw up to 3,000 attendees across two nights of live music on the 80-acre wooded property at 85 Myers Road. Admission passes range from $45 to $290, placing it among the more affordable multi-day festival options in the Tampa Bay region for families willing to make the 30-minute drive north on I-75 to Exit 293.
The music schedule runs Friday, April 24, from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m. and resumes Saturday, April 25, from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. The lineup features Southeast country and Southern-rock acts including Crossfire Creek, One Night Rodeo, Hayfire, Whiskey County and Highway 41, all performing under a covered outdoor pavilion with a dedicated dance floor and designated family zones. Organizers describe the event as a full country lifestyle weekend, not a single-headliner stadium show, with 40 exhibitors and four food vendor stations rounding out the grounds alongside contest programming.
For families who want the full camping experience, the ranch offers both water and electric RV hookup sites and primitive tent camping, though utility hookup sites are limited and early reservations are recommended. Campers can arrive before Friday to set up, paying the ranch directly for that early-access night, and checkout is noon on Sunday. The venue includes hot showers and indoor restroom facilities. Campfires are permitted in proper containment structures, and generators on self-contained units must stay quiet. Pets are allowed but must remain on a leash at all times. Attendees who prefer not to camp can purchase music-only day passes and avoid the site entirely after the 11 p.m. cutoff.
Residents and drivers near Exit 293 should expect a noticeable uptick in weekend traffic along Myers Road beginning Friday afternoon as festivalgoers from the Tampa metro area converge on the site. Saturday's 10 a.m. start will extend that pressure across the full day. Anyone with regular weekend travel through that corridor on April 24 and 25 may want to use alternate routes or adjust timing.
If the inaugural edition reaches its 3,000-person capacity, it would represent the largest ticketed weekend event the Florida Sand Music Ranch has hosted as a primarily small-scale retreat venue. A successful first run would give Deep End Productions a strong case to anchor the festival as a recurring fixture on Hernando County's spring calendar. Questions about ticket availability, camping reservations and vendor opportunities can be directed to Roseanne Herndon at 941-758-7585.
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