BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide

BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide: Radio 1’s Big Weekend returns to Sunderland for the first time in 21 years, having last visited Herrington Country Park on 7–8 May 2005 (Foo Fighters and Black Eyed Peas headlined, with local acts Maximo Park and The Futureheads playing). It is organised in partnership by the BBC and Sunderland City Council, with backing from the North East Combined Authority and North East Mayor Kim McGuinness’s office. Daily capacity is approximately 33,960 (31,000 GA + 2,960 VIP) — per Teesside Live’s confirmation that “31,000 general admission tickets and 2,960 VIP tickets will be available” each day — totalling “over 100,000 music fans” across the weekend.

Herrington Country Park is a 113-acre former colliery park off Chester Road (A183), beneath the iconic Penshaw Monument. The festival footprint contains three stages — Main Stage, New Music Stage (a covered marquee), BBC Introducing Stage — plus a large Radio 1 “Mackem Eye” ferris wheel, food and drink concessions, a VIP enclosure and an accessible viewing area. The Main Stage backdrop is the floodlit Penshaw Monument (a half-size 1844 replica of the Temple of Hephaestus). Navigation address: Chester Road, Penshaw, Sunderland, DH4 7EL.

Gates open 2 pm Friday (over-18s only — a dance/electronic day), 11 am Saturday and Sunday (all ages, under-16s with an adult 18+). Last entry 9 pm; music ends approximately 10 pm each day.

Weather (Met Office and Sunderland Echo forecasts, week-of-event).

Friday — clear skies, unbroken sunshine, high 25 °C, less than 5 % chance of rain. Saturday — sunny spells with more cloud, rain probability dropping from ~30 % in the morning to 10–20 % by afternoon. Sunday — clear skies, sunshine, 24 °C, light south-easterly winds, <5 % rain. The Met Office is trailing “an exceptional spell of warmth for May.”

Details

1. Dates, times and headliners (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

  • Friday 22 May 2026 — Gates 2 pm, finish ~10 pm. Over-18s only. Dance Party day headlined by Fatboy Slim, with FISHER, MK, Sonny Fodera and Clementine Douglas on the Main Stage.
  • Saturday 23 May 2026 — Gates 11 am. Headliner Zara Larsson — Music News Blitz notes “the Swedish singer and songwriter will be making her fourth appearance at the festival” — with Ellie Goulding, Lola Young, Louis Tomlinson, Skye Newman and Nothing But Thieves on the Main Stage.
  • Sunday 24 May 2026 — Gates 11 am. Headliner Olivia Dean, with Niall Horan, Kehlani, Dermot Kennedy, CMAT and Myles Smith on the Main Stage. Sold out.

2. Venue and layout (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

Herrington Country Park, Houghton-le-Spring, Sunderland, DH4 7EL — landscaped on the former Herrington Colliery site (closed 1985) and home to a boating lake, sculpture trail, skate park and adventure play area. The main vehicle/pedestrian entrance is off Chester Road (A183), just off the Penshaw Monument roundabout, one mile from the A19 and accessible from A1 junction 63. Pedestrian access is permitted from Chester Road in both directions during the event.

The three festival stages: Main Stage (open-air, Penshaw Monument backdrop), Radio 1 New Music Stage (covered marquee — useful if weather turns), BBC Introducing Stage (regional emerging talent). The VIP area has a dedicated entrance, card-only bar, gourmet food vendors, DJ sets and premium toilets. A Radio 1 ferris wheel — nicknamed the “Mackem Eye” by the Sunderland Echo — is installed as a centrepiece.

3. Full lineup and stage times (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

Friday 22 May — Main Stage

  • 3:00–4:10 pm Boo
  • 4:10–5:25 pm Charlie Hedges
  • 5:25–5:55 pm Clementine Douglas
  • 6:15–7:15 pm Sonny Fodera
  • 7:15–8:00 pm MK
  • 8:00–8:45 pm FISHER
  • 8:55–9:55 pm Fatboy Slim

Friday — New Music Stage: Sarah Story (2:40), Ahadadream B2B Arthi (3:20), Arielle Free (4:00), Horsegirl (4:40), L.P. Rhythm (5:20), NOTION (6:05), Danny Howard (6:55), Ewan McVicar (7:35), Marlon Hoffstadt (8:20–9:20).

Friday — BBC Introducing: Max Jones (2:20), Jude Lawless (3:20), Mia Lily (4:00), Niamh (4:40), Ellie Scougall (5:20), Sorley (6:00), Anish Kumar (6:45), Jaguar (7:30–8:15).

Saturday 23 May — Main Stage

  • 12:15–1:15 pm Maia Beth (Happy Anthems DJ set)
  • 1:15–2:00 pm Ellie Goulding
  • 2:00–2:45 pm Dean McCullogh’s Pop Anthems
  • 2:45–3:20 pm Skye Newman
  • 3:20–4:05 pm Rickie & Melvin Workout Anthems
  • 4:05–4:45 pm Louis Tomlinson
  • 4:45–5:20 pm Nat O’Leary & Vicky Hawksworth Radio 1 Anthems
  • 5:30–6:15 pm Nothing But Thieves
  • 6:15–7:00 pm Charlie Hedges Dance Anthems
  • 7:00–7:50 pm Lola Young
  • 7:50–8:40 pm Jeremiah Asiamah
  • 8:45–9:50 pm Zara Larsson

Saturday — New Music Stage: Erin Le Count (12:30), Florence Road (1:30), Wasia Project (2:30), MUNA (3:35), Rachel Chinouriri (4:45), Mitski (6:00), Sarah Story (7:00), James Blake (7:45–8:45).

Saturday — BBC Introducing: Emma Harbs (11:30), Swindled (12:30), Heidi Curtis (1:30), Tom A Smith (2:30), Aaron Rowe (3:30), BombayMami (4:30), LeoStay Trill (5:30), Bella Barbe (6:30).

Sunday 24 May — Main Stage

  • 12:15–1:15 pm Maia Beth (Happy Anthems)
  • 1:15–2:00 pm Niall Horan
  • 2:00–2:45 pm Dean McCullogh’s Pop Anthems
  • 2:45–3:25 pm Myles Smith
  • 3:25–4:10 pm Rickie & Melvin Workout Anthems
  • 4:10–4:50 pm Dermot Kennedy
  • 4:50–5:35 pm Nat O’Leary & Vicky Hawksworth Radio 1 Anthems
  • 5:35–6:15 pm Kehlani
  • 6:15–7:00 pm Charlie Hedges Dance Anthems
  • 7:00–7:50 pm CMAT
  • 7:50–8:40 pm Jeremiah Asiamah
  • 8:45–9:55 pm Olivia Dean

Sunday — New Music Stage: Alessi Rose (12:45), Odeal (1:45), FLO (2:50), Jorja Smith party set (4:00), Holly Humberstone (5:05), Maisie Peters (6:20), Jack Saunders (7:05), Ezra Collective (7:50–8:50).

Sunday — BBC Introducing: Jenna Cole (11:30), Able Jack (12:30), Wohdee (1:30), Imogen and the Knife (2:30), Venus Grrrls (3:30), Finn Forster (4:30), DC3 (5:30), Rubii (6:30).

Local heroes to watch. Sunderland City Council confirms eleven North East artists on BBC Introducing, including six Sunderland-born acts — LP Rhythm, Anish Kumar, Sorley, Able Jack, Tom A Smith and Swindled — joined by Finn Forster, Heidi Curtis, Max Jones, Imogen and the Knife and Ellie Scougall.

4. Tickets (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

Tickets are sold exclusively via Ticketmaster UK (sole booking agent). Allocations were geographically weighted: 30 % reserved for Sunderland city residents, 60 % for the wider North East Combined Authority (NECA) region, 10 % for the rest of the UK.

Pricing: Friday GA from £34.50 (£30 + £4.50 booking fee), Saturday GA from £44.50, VIP £86 (£80 + £6 booking fee). Sunday is sold out; official resale via Ticketmaster’s Fan-to-Fan function may surface occasional returns at face value — monitor bbc.co.uk/backstage/bigweekend/tickets. Tickets are name-locked and barcode-scanned at the gate; ID may be requested.

Age policy: Friday is over-18s only. Saturday and Sunday have no age limit, but anyone 15 or under must be with an adult aged 18+. Under-2s do not require a ticket.

5. Access and transport (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

No on-site parking for general attendees; no on-street parking in nearby residential streets, which fall under a Resident Protection Zone requiring permits. Vehicles parked there will be subject to enforcement. Designated routes:

  • Shuttle buses (return tickets from £13, book in advance) from three hubs: Heworth Metro Station (Gateshead — best for Newcastle, North Tyneside, South Tyneside); Park Lane Interchange (central Sunderland — closest to Sunderland Central rail station); Belmont Park & Ride (Durham).
  • Regional return coaches from 23 pick-up points across the North East and Tees Valley: Billingham, Blackhall Colliery, Blyth, Bowburn, Byker, Cramlington/Gosforth, Darlington, Easington, Gateshead Metrocentre, Hartlepool, Kingston Park, Marske, Middlesbrough, Newton Aycliffe, North Shields, Ord Street Coach Park, Percy Main, Peterlee, Redcar, Seaham, Skelton-in-Cleveland, Spennymoor and Whitley Bay.
  • Metro: Tyne & Wear Metro to either Heworth or Park Lane for the shuttles. Managed queueing will be in place at both interchanges after the show.
  • Rail: nearest stations are Sunderland Central (walk to Park Lane shuttles), Heworth, Newcastle and Durham. Important: Network Rail engineering on the East Coast Mainline 23–25 May (York–Northallerton) will cause rail-replacement services between York and Darlington, and Grand Central trains will not stop at Sunderland.
  • Walking: pedestrian access from Chester Road (both directions) is permitted; designated walking routes have been published.
  • Pick-up/drop-off: a pre-registered slot system applies; you cannot turn up unbooked.
  • Sunday traffic warning: Sunderland AFC host Chelsea at the Stadium of Light on Sunday 24 May, layering match-day congestion onto festival travel.

Accessibility: pre-approved accessible parking only — apply via the BBC accessibility form at bbc.com/backstage/bigweekend/tickets/#accessibility. Blue badges are not valid on the day; event-specific passes are issued in advance. Shuttle buses have accessible facilities and a dedicated drop-off point. The accessible car park is approximately 200 m from the main entrance across a grass route, with detailed arrival information sent in the accessibility guide. A dedicated accessible viewing area is available.

6. Facilities on site (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

  • Food and drink: a wide range of stalls (all contactless payment only) including local Sunderland traders such as Bobacat Kitchen and Redheads Mac n Cheese, plus the special Big Weekend session pale ale brewed by Vaux (the revived Sunderland brewery).
  • Toilets: extensive temporary toilet provision across the site; premium toilets in the VIP enclosure.
  • Medical: event-medic stations and welfare tents on site.
  • Lost & found / info points: managed on site; check the Big Weekend app for locations.
  • VIP area: dedicated entrance, card-only bar, gourmet food vendors, DJ sets, premium loos.
  • App: download the official Radio 1 Big Weekend app (iOS App Store / Google Play) for stage times, interactive site maps, live updates and a personal schedule builder.

7. Weather expectations (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

Sunderland in late May typically delivers daytime highs of 13–15 °C with overnight lows around 7 °C, around 6.4 hours of sunshine per day (its sunniest month on average) and modest rainfall (May averages near 50 mm over the month). The actual forecast for 22–24 May 2026 is unusually warm: ~25 °C Friday, ~22 °C Saturday, ~24 °C Sunday, very low rain probability, with the Met Office trailing “an exceptional spell of warmth for May.” Pack light layers regardless — coastal evenings cool quickly and overnight feels-like temperatures can drop to ~11 °C.

8. Rules and what you can/can’t bring (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

Banned items per the BBC:

  • Drugs (including “legal highs”)
  • Drones
  • Professional photography equipment
  • Animals other than registered assistance dogs
  • Alcohol (purchase on site)
  • Selfie sticks
  • Chairs (except registered accessible customers)
  • Golf/large umbrellas (1 m+)
  • Pull-along wagons/carts
  • Flags, knives, fireworks, smoke canisters
  • Sky/Chinese lanterns
  • Gas canisters (aerosols over 250 ml, nitrous oxide / CO₂ dispensers)
  • Megaphones, air horns, sound systems
  • Spray cans, balloons, flares
  • Weapons or hazardous items
  • Laser devices
  • Glass (including perfume/aftershave)
  • Cans, poles, blow torches
  • Unauthorised trading items / counterfeit merchandise
  • Anything that could be used as a weapon, including unofficial hi-vis/tabards

Bring: a small bag, ID, refillable water bottle (refill points on site), sunscreen, lightweight waterproof, portable phone charger, ear plugs (for kids), bucket hat, contactless payment card.

9. Sunderland — brief background (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

Sunderland is a coastal port city at the mouth of the River Wear, around 10 miles south-east of Newcastle upon Tyne. Per the ONS mid-2024 population estimates (cited by homenicom.co.uk), it is “home to 288,606 residents.”

The modern city is a merger of three Anglo-Saxon settlements, Monkwearmouth on the north bank (home to St Peter’s Church, founded AD 674, where the Venerable Bede studied), Bishopwearmouth, and Sunderland, granted a town charter in 1179. It built its wealth on coal, salt, glassmaking (Benedict Biscop introduced glass-making to Britain at Monkwearmouth in the 7th century; Pyrex was later manufactured in the city), and above all shipbuilding: at its 19th-century peak the town had more than 70 yards on the Wear, with the 1835 Lloyd’s

Register of Shipping describing it as “the most important shipbuilding centre in the country, nearly equalling as regards tonnage and ships built all the other ports put together” (per englandsnortheast.co.uk and sunderlandvibe.com). Shipbuilding ended in 1988 and coal mining at Wearmouth Colliery in 1993 (the site is now the Stadium of Light). Sunderland received city status in 1992. The economy today is anchored by Nissan’s Washington plant — “the largest UK motor manufacturing plant,” covering 362,000 sq m and employing more than 6,500 workers directly (Wikipedia/Top Gear) — alongside digital, software and the University of Sunderland.

10. Big Weekend history and scale (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

Radio 1’s Big Weekend grew out of “One Big Sunday” (2000–2002) and the older Radio 1 Roadshow (from 1973). Per Wikipedia, “It was the biggest free-ticketed music event in Europe, until a fee for tickets was introduced in 2018.” The 2026 edition is the latest in a string of high-profile UK editions:

YearCityVenueNotable headliners
2005SunderlandHerrington Country ParkFoo Fighters, Black Eyed Peas, Gwen Stefani, Chemical Brothers, Kasabian, KT Tunstall, Jamiroquai (Maximo Park & The Futureheads local)
2018Multi-city (“Biggest Weekend”)Swansea / Coventry / Belfast / PerthEd Sheeran, Taylor Swift, Sam Smith
2019MiddlesbroughStewart ParkMiley Cyrus, The 1975, Little Mix, Mabel, Khalid (32,000/day)
2022CoventryWar Memorial ParkHarry Styles, Calvin Harris
2023DundeeCamperdown ParkLewis Capaldi, Niall Horan
2024LutonStockwood ParkColdplay, Vampire Weekend
2025LiverpoolSefton ParkMumford & Sons, Sam Fender, Tom Grennan (34,500 GA/day)
2026SunderlandHerrington Country ParkFatboy Slim, Zara Larsson, Olivia Dean (≈34,000/day)

11. Special features and activities in 2026 (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

  • One Big Summer city-centre fringe (free): Sunderland City Council has launched a parallel programme in Keel Square and High Street West from 22–24 May. Friday’s launch from 4 pm features The Bunker, Sunderland College, the Northern Academy of Music Education (NAME) and headliner Isabel Maria. On Sunday, Keel Square hosts a Watch-Along Party screening Olivia Dean’s headline set live for fans without tickets.
  • Greg James and the Radio 1 Breakfast Show broadcasting live all week from a mobile studio in Keel Square — Greg told the Sunderland Echo, “It’s my favourite week of the year doing Big Weekend.”
  • Radio 1 ferris wheel (“Mackem Eye”) installed as a site centrepiece.
  • Anthems DJ sets between live acts on the Main Stage (Happy, Pop, Workout, Dance and Radio 1 Anthems).
  • Vaux Big Weekend session pale ale — a one-off festival beer brewed by the revived Sunderland brewery.
  • Local artwork promotion: Sunderland businesses have decorated with Greg James-themed window murals (created by local artist Del’s Doodles) to mark the city’s hosting.

12. Tips for making the most of the day (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

  1. Get to the shuttle hub early. Park Lane Interchange and Heworth Metro are the two main feeders; queues will build sharply after 6 pm and again at finish. Aim to be on site by 1 pm Saturday/Sunday (2 pm Friday).
  2. Pre-book your travel. Shuttle returns (£13+) and the 23-stop regional coach network sell out; do not drive — the Resident Protection Zone is enforced.
  3. Download the official app. It carries the authoritative running order, site map and live changes; set times move on the day.
  4. Travel light. Bag searches will be tight; carry only contactless cards, no glass, no chairs.
  5. Plan for sun, not rain. With 25 °C forecast Friday, sunscreen, a hat and a refillable water bottle (refill points on site) matter more than a poncho — but pack a thin layer for cooler coastal evenings.
  6. Use the New Music Stage marquee as both a discovery venue and a weather hedge — Mitski, James Blake and Ezra Collective are headline-quality acts inside.
  7. Sunday traffic: SAFC v Chelsea kicks off at the Stadium of Light on Sunday — add at least an hour to any Sunday journey within Sunderland.
  8. Families (Sat/Sun): arrive early for the accessible viewing platforms; the BBC Introducing Stage has shorter slots and shorter queues.
  9. Pace yourself on Friday. It’s a dance day (over-18s) — Fatboy Slim closes 9:55 pm and last shuttles leave promptly.
  10. Make it a weekend. Combine with a free walk up Penshaw Monument (literally next to the site), Roker Pier or Sunderland Museum & Winter Gardens.

13. Nearby attractions in Sunderland (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

  • Penshaw Monument — Grade I-listed 1844 Greek-temple folly on Penshaw Hill, immediately adjacent to the festival site and the iconic Main Stage backdrop. Climbable via a hidden spiral staircase (when seasonally open, via the National Trust). Free.
  • National Glass Centre (St Peter’s Riverside) — glassblowing demos and exhibitions; note the present building is slated to close in 2026 due to unaffordable repair costs, with a replacement targeted for 2028 — check opening before visiting.
  • St Peter’s Church, Monkwearmouth (AD 674) — one of England’s oldest churches, linked to the Venerable Bede.
  • Stadium of Light — 48,707-capacity home of Sunderland AFC; stadium tours available.
  • Roker Pier and Lighthouse, Roker Beach, Seaburn Beach — Blue Flag beaches and Victorian pier walks.
  • Sunderland Museum & Winter Gardens — Mowbray Park; significant L.S. Lowry collection (free).
  • Washington Old Hall (National Trust) — ancestral home of George Washington’s family.
  • North East Land, Sea and Air Museums (NELSAM) — including a former RAF Avro Vulcan.
  • Hylton Castle — restored medieval gatehouse with interpretation centre.

14. Accommodation options (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

Sunderland has limited large-hotel stock; many attendees will commute from Newcastle, Gateshead or Durham. Demand for 22–24 May is very high — book now.

  • City centre / walkable to Park Lane shuttle hub: Holiday Inn Sunderland City Centre, Hilton Garden Inn Sunderland, Premier Inn Sunderland City Centre, Travelodge Sunderland Central, Grand Hotel Sunderland, The Magnum Hotel (Best Western).
  • Seaburn / Roker (Metro to Park Lane in ~15 min): Roker Hotel (BW Premier Collection), The Seaburn Inn, Beach House Boutique Hotel, Sunderland Marriott (Seaburn).
  • Newcastle / Gateshead (Metro then Heworth shuttle): Maldron Newcastle, Copthorne Newcastle, Leonardo Quayside, Village Hotel Newcastle.
  • Durham (Belmont Park & Ride shuttle): Hayat Hotel Durham, Radisson Blu Durham, Premier Inn Durham City Centre.
  • Budget further afield: Metro Inns Newcastle (~£50, ~13 miles), Travelodge Sedgefield (~£60, ~18 miles).

Big Weekend itself is camp-free — there is no on-site camping.

15. Recent announcements (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

  • Full set times released and confirmed (see Section 3) — Time Out, Sunderland Echo and Clashfinder all carry identical schedules.
  • Daily capacity confirmed ~33,960 (31,000 GA + 2,960 VIP), totalling over 100,000.
  • Sunday sold out; limited Friday and Saturday GA + a few VIP Saturday tickets remain via Ticketmaster.
  • One Big Summer Keel Square fringe confirmed (Friday launch from 4 pm; Sunday Watch-Along Party for Olivia Dean’s headline set).
  • Greg James and the Radio 1 Breakfast Show broadcasting live from Keel Square all week leading up to the festival.
  • Met Office trails “an exceptional spell of warmth for May” — Friday forecast 25 °C and dry.
  • East Coast Mainline engineering work 23–25 May (York–Northallerton): rail-replacement services and no Grand Central trains stopping at Sunderland.
  • Sunderland AFC v Chelsea, Stadium of Light, Sunday 24 May — expect heavy city traffic.

Recommendations (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

If you have tickets:

  1. Book your shuttle/coach now. Walk-up shuttle capacity will be capped. The smoothest combination is Tyne & Wear Metro → Park Lane Interchange → shuttle.
  2. Download the Big Weekend app before you leave home — the only source of truth for clashes and last-minute timing changes.
  3. For Saturday, the must-see triangle is Louis Tomlinson (4:05 pm Main) → Nothing But Thieves (5:30 pm Main) → Mitski (6:00 pm New Music) → Lola Young (7:00 pm Main) → Zara Larsson (8:45 pm Main).
  4. For Sunday, anchor around Niall Horan (1:15 pm) and Olivia Dean (8:45 pm); flex through Jorja Smith’s party set (4:00 pm New Music), Maisie Peters (6:20 pm New Music) and Ezra Collective (7:50 pm New Music).
  5. For Friday’s dance day, plan to be on site by 5 pm — Sonny Fodera → MK → FISHER → Fatboy Slim is the headline sequence from 6:15 to 9:55 pm.

If you don’t have tickets:

  1. Monitor Ticketmaster Fan-to-Fan resale for Sunday returns — face value, no touts.
  2. Head to Keel Square for the One Big Summer free fringe and Sunday’s outdoor Watch-Along Party of Olivia Dean’s closing set.
  3. Consider a Penshaw Monument walk — you’ll hear (and partly see) the festival from the hill above.

Triggers that would change these recommendations:

  • A Met Office yellow/amber weather warning before Friday: switch from light layers to full waterproofs and prioritise the covered New Music Stage marquee for daytime sets.
  • Shuttle sell-out before you book: pivot to city-centre accommodation + walking, or Belmont Park & Ride from Durham.
  • Rail cancellation: the East Coast Mainline engineering works (23–25 May) make Newcastle Metro the more reliable approach than mainline rail.

Caveats (BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend 2026 Planner Guide)

  • Sunday is sold out — beware unofficial resellers; tickets are name-locked and barcode-scanned, and resale outside Ticketmaster’s Fan-to-Fan platform is void at the gate.
  • Set times and lineups can shift — past Big Weekends have seen late drop-outs and substitutions; trust the official app on the day rather than printed running orders.
  • Sunderland City Council’s original November 2025 press release said “around 80,000 fans expected,” later revised upwards by Ticketmaster and event partners to “over 100,000” as capacity firmed up; the ~34,000/day × 3 days math (≈102,000) supports the higher figure.
  • The 2005 Sunderland attendance is not officially published; secondary sources describe “two days of music and mud” but no precise number.
  • The National Glass Centre’s current building is slated to close in 2026 with a replacement targeted for 2028 — confirm opening hours before visiting.
  • Friday is over-18s only; ID will be checked.
  • Weather forecasts more than 48 hours out are inherently uncertain — recheck the Met Office on the morning of each day you attend.

Sources

George Millington

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