We almost bought tickets for Solfest last year, but the
horrendous weather put us off. I’m so glad we went this year though, as the sun
shined most of the weekend, with just a few scattered showers on the Friday. This
made it our first mud-free festival for three years!
Solfest is a small, family-friendly festival held on Tarnside Farm near Aspatria in Cumbria
over the August bank holiday weekend.The location is stunning, if somewhat hard to
find (signage from the main roads approaching the festival would be beneficial,
for those of us who don’t know the area!).
The great thing about Solfest, is that you can actually camp
right next to your car, so you don’t need to lug your tent, camping equipment
and kids, for what seems likes miles until you can find a space
to pitch your tent! We arrived on the Friday afternoon, when most of the prime
spots had been snapped up, so I would recommend either arriving on the Thursday
(for an extra £15 per car) or early on Friday.
The festival campsite is split into different areas (noisy
- right near the main arena toward the dance tent, family - near the main arena
but away from the dance tent, quiet- the furthest away from the main arena, but
much flatter and near to the live-in vehicles field).
We opted for the family field which was mainly sloping; this
meant that we all found we slid down our airbeds at night! Although we camped
away from the noisy camping field, we could still hear the rather loud bass coming from the dance tent, until around 4am each morning! There were portaloos and water taps dotted
around the campsite and a few showers were available at a cost of £3.00. I was
impressed with the cleanliness of the portaloos, but the loo roll and hand
sanitiser did tend to run out during the day, so make sure you take your own!
Barbecues and campfires are permitted on the campsite and many
families seemed to go back for a barbecue in the evenings. You can also take your own food and drink into
the arena (no glass bottles). If you don’t want to self-cater though, there
were plenty of reasonably-priced food stalls (lots of vegetarian options
available) and the bar prices weren't bad either.
My kids, being 12 and 14, were happy to sit and watch the
bands with us, but as the whole festival area was enclosed, we were more than
happy for them to wander off on their own to the different stages or to get
something to eat or drink. We did have a wander through the kids’ area though, and thought it looked great; there were all
sorts of FREE facilities and activities to keep babies and children of all ages occupied, including a massive wooden climbing frame and sandpit,
bouncy castles, face painting, baby chill-out tent, craft and music activities, live entertainment, circus
skills and even a ‘youth club’ for teens to hang out in with a pool table,
table football etc.
Solfest is the only festival I've been to, where they haven’t announced the running order in advance. Apparently this is to encourage people to come for the whole festival and not just for their favourite band/s, but I can’t really see the point of this as you have to buy a weekend ticket anyway!
Solfest is the only festival I've been to, where they haven’t announced the running order in advance. Apparently this is to encourage people to come for the whole festival and not just for their favourite band/s, but I can’t really see the point of this as you have to buy a weekend ticket anyway!
Although it's small, we were surprised at the variety of music on offer on the two outdoor stages, bar stage, dance tent and 3 other smaller, covered stages. There was a good mixture of bands, with Maximo
Park, Flogging Molly and The Afro Celt Sound System headlining the main stage. We
particularly enjoyed seeing our old favourites Oysterband and discovering Dehli2 Dublin, (Asian/Irish fusion!) who really got the crowd going and seemed very happy
to go down so well at the festival.
There was plenty of room to sit and watch the bands, or to get up and dance, depending on your mood. Strangely, the smaller Dry Stone stage (featuring more folk-based bands) often pulled a bigger crowd than the Main Stage acts; the Sunday ceilidh proving to be particularly popular.
We found Solfest to be one of the friendliest and most
laid-back festivals we've been to (and we've been to quite a few!). We had a
fantastic time and would happily go again next year, weather permitting!
Read my full review over at Festival Kidz.
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Read my full review over at Festival Kidz.
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