My name is Jessie Binns and I am doing
the guest post this week. I’ve worked in the Lakes for 6 years now with the
National Trust, and one of the highlights of my year each year is the Keswick
Mountain Festival.
This year the National Trust was
nominated as the official supported charity for the festival for the second
year running. They have thousands of people entering the running, cycling and
swimming races (which mostly take place on fells and in lakes that we care for
around Keswick).
What we help them with is making sure that the families who
come onto the ‘Festival Village’ on our Crow Park at Keswick also have a really
good time.
When I was talking with the Lakes
rangers about what we should do on the National Trust stand this year, they
started talking about a really inspirational film they’d seen at our ‘Outdoor
Conference’ last October. Project Wild Thing is a funny, and moving documentary about one father’s quest to find out why his
children prefer watching TV to playing outdoors. The National Trust helped to
fund the film and so the rangers wanted to use our stand at Keswick Mountain
Festival to launch a ‘Wild Summer in the Lakes’ to give families lots of ideas
of places to go and things to do to make it easier to make the outdoors fun.
So, on the stand we had den building,
mud pie making and ‘extreme’ tree climbing to 35ft (thanks to the Lake District
forestry team for this). Inside the yurt we had some amazing wild art
activities run by the staff from Wordsworth House and Garden,
who reminded us that of course William Wordsworth grew up roaming the
riversides and fells of the Lake District and could be described as the
original wild child!
Working at the festival is both
exhilarating and exhausting. I’d put our people counters on the main gate and
they tell us that 16,898 people came onto the Festival Village at Crow Park
over the weekend – and that’s just during the day, let alone the music
concerts. The ranger team worked in shifts from 8am to 6pm with some covering
the evening until 11pm – it’s a lot of work!
I think my highlight was, after enjoying
watching Seth Lakeman playing on the main stage on the Saturday night as the
sun set behind the fells, seeing him bring his children into the National Trust
yurt to do some wild art on the Sunday morning, it’s great that every family,
no matter where they’re from, can connect with us and find something that
appeals to them.
The festival’s over for another year,
the bunting has been washed, dried and put away and it’s time for some very
tired rangers to have a well-earned rest.
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