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    Gatecrasher Festival

    4.0 (1 review)

    Gatecrasher Festival Photos

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    18 years ago

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    Cropredy Village

    Cropredy Village

    5.0(1 review)
    11.4 mi

    Cropredy is a beautiful, tiny village near Banbury on the banks of the Cherwell. It is an old…read morevillage, dating from before the English civil war, and it looks it (in the quaint, lovely way, rather than the rundown way!) It has a thriving community, including a school, a church, pubs, a doctor's surgery, general store and other small business appropriate to an English village and a rather spiffing website (http://www.cropredyvillage.info/index.htm) . The website will tell you all about the history of the village (including the civil war battle fought here in 1644 and its mention in the Domesday Book), the age of the properties (from really quite old to not really very old at all), the amenities, and its location (the Cherwell valley, three miles north of Banbury and Junction 11 of the M40 Motorway). Do visit the website for loads of useful information. However, I'd like to give you my impressions. It is one of the friendliest places I have ever been. The local residents are of all ages, and welcome visitors with open arms (and, once a year, they get a rather large influx of visitors, but more on that in a minute). The church warden will gladly show visitors around, and discuss the new bells installed a couple of years ago. The residents will recount the age and history of their homes. There is a cricket club, which is quintessentially English. There are moorings on the river and canal for boats. This is a beautiful village, but you might well ask how I, an ex-pat American living in London has found herself there not once but three times. You might also wonder what I am talking about when I mention the annual influx of visitors. Each year, Cropredy plays host to Fairport Conventions annual...well....convention. This is a fabulous folk festival over a weekend in August. There are many, many things that make this different from other festivals - there is only one stage, for a start, the age range tends to be older, it's folk...but what makes this festival unique is that the village positively welcomes the up-to-30,000 visitors the village plays host to. The boy scouts are on litter duty. Local lads sell programmes. The pubs open for breakfast. The cricket club opens for showers. The residents mind the inconvenience (traffic, parking restrictions, smelly festival goers) not a whit. Fairport Convention allocate a ticket to each of the 750 residents to do with as they please. Everyone is happy. An idyllic English village indeed - and one well worth visiting even if you're not a folk music fan...

    Elder Stubbs Festival - FestivalSunflowers

    Elder Stubbs Festival

    5.0(2 reviews)
    22.0 mi

    This is an annual event. We went yesterday and it was a lovely atmosphere. It is held on actual…read moreallotments. Very reminiscent of country fetes that used to be held in someone's (huge) village garden. Was worth being stuck in traffic forever on our 1 1/2 hour journey there. Huw Lloyd-Langton (formerly of Hawkwind) kindly donated his time again, and this was who we went to see really. The Assassins of Science also did a 40 min set with Huw joining them in some numbers. The Elder Stubbs Festival is a highlight of the Cowley calendar, bringing together allotment holders, members of the Elder Stubbs Garden Group, artists, musicians craftspeople and the public at large from all over the local area in a celebration of work and talents. Two stages allow for musical and poetic expression, and many stalls throughout the site represent local organisations involved in social and environmental work. Fresh vegetables, plants and homemade jams and pickles are available if you get there fast enough, and refreshments are also sold on site. Book stalls, plants, face painting, organic produce amongst others. Hot veggie food and meat stuff. Families. Twisted tree sculptures. Arts, crafts, poetry. The Elder Stubbs Festival began as a small event (2000+ visitors each year now) thirteen years ago as a joint venture between Elder Stubbs and RESTORE as an attempt to generate community support for projects. This proved a great success, and the large amounts of publicity generated have meant it has become a fixture in local life, raising money for RESTORE and the profile of both organisations. There is now strong competition to play on both stages! One of a funniest highlights was the fly past by The RED BARROWS! Team members running round the site in a line pushing red wheelbarrows. Elder Stubbs Festival is special: animals for petting, magicians, belly dancers, bagpipers, weavers, martial artists, poets and rock stars standing shoulder to shoulder amongst flowers, sculptures and vegetables. Set on the Elder Stubbs allotment site, there was a diverse array of attractions from performing arts and workshops to stalls, speakers, children's activities and the vegetable show, as well as a wide choice of foods. Around 50 different stallholders use the festival as a forum to share information about local groups and organisations, sell home-made goods, run an activity or vend an assortment of world cuisines. All proceeds are to charity (£1 entrance fee. Bit of info/history: Elder Stubbs Charity is the proud owner and manager of Elder Stubbs Allotments, at Rymers Lane in Cowley, Oxford. The site is a leading example of the successful reinvention of allotment management, and provides a working model for the involvement of disparate members of the local community in city land use. It provides over 100 allotments for local residents. In addition it has diversified by letting tenancies to other charities with similar aims to itself. Notable amongst these are The Porch Steppin' Stone project which cultivates an area of land to grow the organic vegetables used at its day-centre to provide meals for the long-term unemployed, and the Elder Stubbs Garden Group, part of RESTORE, which cultivates 2 acres as an organic market-garden and orchard run as an horticultural therapy project for people recovering from mental illness. Elder Stubbs Allotments were an award to the poor of Cowley under the Inclosure Act of 1852 in compensation for the enclosure and subsequent loss of their Common on Shotover. 150 years later the charity still provides over 100 allotments for local residents. In addition it has diversified by letting tenancies to other charities with similar aims to itself. Really worth a look next year for something different.

    I wish Id known about this earlier definately would have gone,will check it out for next year,thanxread more

    Photos
    Elder Stubbs Festival - Signs

    Signs

    Elder Stubbs Festival - Sculptre animal

    Sculptre animal

    Elder Stubbs Festival

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    The Bulldog Bash - Arrival gate

    The Bulldog Bash

    5.0(1 review)
    29.0 mi

    Bulldog Bash 2009 - didn't manage to get in to see the event itself, but why should that minor…read moredetail stop a Qype review? Reason was that £55 entrance fee too steep - (OK, this would be a very fair price for a weekend of head banging - Motorhead thrown in for the ultimate bleeding eardrum experience - boozing and V twin harmonic earmashing, but the price is OTT for a quick nose around just to clock up some Qype points) - did give it a go to get in cheaper for a quick mooch but the tattoed (but friendly) gatekeepers not impressed - reckoned they wouldn't see me for the next 2 days. No good arguments worked - even offered to leave them with the Brompton as colateral - they just laughed and said it had no engine and was worth nothing - huh. So, make do with watching the biking cavalcade arriving - amazing - from all over Britain and Europe - all sorts of bikes and trikes - some weird, some menacing, some normal, some so shiny and pearlescent, should wear welders goggles to look at them direct on - a fantastic sight and sound - don't need to be a biker to appreciate all that. A perfect location too - middle of nowhere - an old airfield - even sounds like squadrans of B52 bombers coming in to land. Downside - a lot of fuss made by the local fuzz - even stopping pedal cyclists from following legitimate National Sustrans cycle paths for no clear reason other than seemingly to show their authority. Speaking to the locals round Stratford, general comments were that police appear to be out of touch with the community that supports them. How to get to the Bash? Bike it, obviously. Or, if at all worried by your carbon footprint (tyreprint?) then a return train from Birmingham Moor Street is around £8.50 - a great price for a direct journey to Stratford, just about 1 every hour, on the half hour - take a bike (bicycle, not your Harley Chopper, silly) on for nothing with plenty of room in the special carriages - or hire a bike in Stratford for the day. Cruise around the town on pedal power, head down to the river front, have an early breakfast or perhaps make a massive decision to choose whether to have a Costa or a Nero Americano with hot milk - tough one - maybe take it down to the barge front and sit watching the people, ducks and swans in the early morning sunshine before the crowds arrive - nice. Follow the river bank on the theatre side where it's possible, towards the hauntingly beautiful riverside graveyard of the Holy Trinity Church, to best appreciate the georgeous tree lined river views. Then back round to the 'Stratford Greenway' ( http://www.sustrans.org.uk/sustrans-near-you/midlands/easy-rides-in-the-midlands/stratford-greenway ). This was a railtrack and is now a perfect, easy cycle highway into the countryside south of Stratford - wonderful country and river views and meeting lots of friendly walking and cycling folk, just like you and me of course. There are even 2 railway carriage cafes along the route to provide essential refreshments and bike hire if required ( http://www.stratfordbikehire.com/index.php?id=50 ). And, what do you know - this path takes you directly towards Long Marston airfield and the Bash, where the story started. Not very far - gentle, flat, cycle ride - just do note that due to possible obstructive policing, you might be forced to take a more dangerous road detour to reach the entrance to the airfield. Retrace steps (pedal backwards maybe) to get back to Stratford or shoot along the heavily trafficked B4632 (quicker but probably not recommended on bicycle http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?hl=en&rlz=1C1CHMB_en-GB... (http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?hl=en&rlz=1C1CHMB_en-GBGB335GB339&ei=Wrh8SvCSLoeG-Qa7_qg5&resnum=0&q=long%20marston&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wl) ). Fantastic day out - highly recommeded. Hope this is useful.

    Photos
    The Bulldog Bash - Long Marston aero Museum - Avro Shackleton hulk?

    Long Marston aero Museum - Avro Shackleton hulk?

    The Bulldog Bash - Bridge over the river um, something, on Greenway cycle path

    Bridge over the river um, something, on Greenway cycle path

    The Bulldog Bash - The Bulldog Bash tents

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    The Bulldog Bash tents

    Gatecrasher Festival - festivals - Updated May 2026

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