Britons love country fairs. Why?
Agricultural shows gain moomentum
ANGUS NEISH dared to hope that his fine-looking cattle, bred at Rodmead Farm in Wiltshire, would nab a prize at the Royal Bath and West Show last month. The annual fair, held near Shepton Mallet, in Somerset, is England’s oldest—and grandest. As well as a fiercely competitive livestock parade, it features Morris dancing, sheep-shearing and a vintage fairground. Its pony-chariot races are second to none. Many contestants on a recent afternoon had first given generous custom at the nearby cider tent. They performed vigorously before a large crowd. Thanks in part to sunny weather, 100,000 turned out for some of the three-day show.
This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Gaining moomentum”
Britain July 8th 2023
- How to understand the woeful state of Britain’s water utilities
- Labour’s cabinet would be Britain’s most state-educated since 1945
- The NHS in England gets a plan for fixing its broken workforce
- Britons love country fairs. Why?
- Why right-wing Europeans are flocking to an English thinker
- Britain’s tough asylum plans are held up in court and by the Lords
- Britons turn into Borat when it comes to health, housing and avocados
Discover more
British MPs vote in favour of assisted dying
A monumental social reform is closer to being realised
The slow death of a Labour buzzword
And what that says about Britain’s place in the world
Britain’s Supreme Court considers what a woman is
At last. Britons had been wondering what those 34m people who are not men might be
Can potholes fuel populism?
A new paper looks at one explanation for the rise of Reform UK
Are British voters as clueless as Labour’s intelligentsia thinks?
How the idea of false consciousness conquered the governing party