Showing posts with label festival camping with children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label festival camping with children. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 August 2019

Victorious Festival with Children

Every year we seem to try a new music festival as a family and we all have different criteria.  For me, having plenty for the children to do is a must.  We have four children aged between 3 and 8 and so I know the most enjoyable weekend is one where they are entertained.  Ed on the other hand wants to prioritise good music and make sure there are plenty of bands he wants to see.  He has been going to festivals without children for years and he will spend a long time checking out the lineups.



This year we decided early on that Victorious festival in Southsea fit all the criteria and we were lucky enough to be offered Press Tickets just before we got round to actually purchasing them.  The line up included Two Door Cinema Club, Bloc Party and The Hives that we were keen to see alongside Lewis Capaldi, Rudimental, Professor Green and loads more.  


We arrived late at the camping fields and everything was calm, quiet and well set up.  We were shown a great place to pitch up in the families area and we had so much space around our tent.  Unlike most festivals we have been to, the camping is actually seperate to the festival and we had to get a bus across the city when we wanted to head to the music.  Generally, this worked quite well and we never waited more than about 10 minutes between arriving at the bus stop and leaving in both directions.  The journey was about 20 minutes and on the way home it gave everyone a chance to calm down, meaning the camping fields were always pretty quiet.  My children love a bus, especially a double decker so they had no problems with this! The camping fields had brilliant security but only one coffee van and no other ammenities so we were glad we were prepared!


The festival itself is in Southsea and set along the coast so that within 10 metres of leaving the gates you are on the beach.  It made for a really picturesque festival with the most amazing sunsets over the sea as the artists played. The layout wasn't what we expected but the festival is spread out along the available space and once you get used to it, navigating wasn't hard.  It was huge with the two main stages at different ends and countless small specialist stages all around meaning there was music for everyone.  


The kids arena was obviously a priority and it didn't disappoint.  There was a main stage with its own lineup including Mr Bloom, The Princesses and Peppa Pig but it was everything else that made it special for our children.  There were free fairground rides aimed at the smallest children (perfect for Cora and Finn who are 3 and 4) as well as a selection of bouncy castles that were also free and queues were between about 1 and 15 minutes. (There were also fairground rides for older children and adults at an additional cost of roughly £3 pp)  There were tents full of local businesses offering shows, classes and all sorts and we saw a Jedi training class run by a local dance centre, as well as a drama class aimed at 3-7 year olds that Finn and Cora were completely engaged with, hunting for an invisible 20 headed dragon.  The Lidl Mudder area had obstacle courses for children as well as pedal bikes to make smoothies and free fruit, there were Horrible Histories from the local Docklands teaching kids (rather factually) how to load and clean a cannon and one of our favourite areas was circus skills that was open from 10-6 (the same opening times as the entire kids arena) and had plenty of helpers for the tight rope and all sorts of equipment for the children to practice with.  This is always where they headed first and where they were when everything started packing up.









The music we watched had a great atmosphere and we stayed far enough back that we had space for dancing and running around as well as a blanket to sit on.  There was a huge selection of food vendors offering something for everyone and plenty of shops selling festival essentials like glittery bum bags and more glitter.


Victorious Festival was full of colour, music, smiles and families and whilst you can definitely go child free and have a great time, we thought it was a brilliant family friendly festival.  If we go back again (which we really want to do) then we would break up the crowds of the festival with little escapes to the beach as there is no limit to how much you can go in and out, and it would have been great to cool down in the sea when the temperatures were hovering around 30 all weekend! Southsea pier is also a lovely little area to explore with arcades, a few rides, a soft play (next to Wimpy, which we used for an hour or running free one afternoon) and little cafes.  It would also be great to make an even longer weekend from Victorious and visit the aquarium, Portsmouth city and the local docklands too.  


Obviously my view of the festival is different to that of a child so I have asked the children for their views:


And of course, there are so many more photos of our weekend at Victorious Festival.

















To find out more details on Victorious Festival 2020 check out their website!


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Monday, 3 September 2018

Beautiful Days Festival - Our Weekend

Our first time at Beautiful Days festival was exciting and exhausting.  It wasn't our first festival as a family and we felt much more prepared with what to pack and what would be useful and we all had a fantastic time.  

This year it was Cora who was the most challenging as two year olds are not known for wanting to walk the same way as everyone else! All four children loved the children's entertainment though and Dylan has declared Feeder to be his favourite band (excellent choice!). We were lucky with the weather in that it wasn't too hot but the sun shone and the rain held off.

We spent lots of time in the children's area, watching the entertainment, having a go on the rides and playing in the lego tent, the circus skills area and the soft play tent for under 5s.  Dylan and Archie made new friends and Finn and Cora mostly stuck together.  We managed to listen to the bands we really wanted to and got a good balance I think between the music we had come for and the playing that the children really needed to do.

I took plenty of photos (of course) which I want to keep somewhere safe to remember them and so this blog post began.  If you want to read about how family friendly we found Beautiful Days Festival then click here.

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com

Beautiful Days, Family Friendly Festival, themummyadventure.com
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Saturday, 1 September 2018

Beautiful Days as a Family Friendly Festival

We booked to go to Beautiful Days festival a little last minute and it wasn't our original choice but on our quest to find a festival that is both family friendly and has good music playing, the name popped up and ticked all the boxes.  It is set down in Escot Park in Devon  and this year's headliners were Feeder, The Manic Street Preachers and The Levellers (who actually organise the festival).  It turned out to be a great choice and we all had so much fun that we are thinking of going back again next year.

beautiful days, family friendly festival, themummyadventure.com

We arrived on the Friday and the best spots in the family camping field were already taken.  Unfortunately the only place we could find to pitch our six man tent was down near the bar and stage (which was oddly placed in the family camping field).  This was about the only negative about our weekend as the bar played music loudly until midnight despite the fact it was nearly always empty.  There were taps for drinking water, shops and food stall and a lovely little kids area with a play tent, a book tent and some outdoor climbing equipment too that all opened around 8am.  It was lovely having somewhere for the little two to play in the morning before we headed across to the main arena.  

beautiful days, family friendly festival, themummyadventure.com

beautiful days, family friendly festival, themummyadventure.com

Inside the main area, the family area was pretty central.  We went to Wilderness last year and the kids area was off round a corner.  At Beautiful Days you couldn't miss it as it was right in the centre and there was a huge soft play and toy tent for under 5s where you could supervise your children as well as watching and listening to the main stage.

beautiful days, family friendly festival, themummyadventure.com

beautiful days, family friendly festival, themummyadventure.com

The little two loved this area and spent hours playing in there and in the sand pit and mud kitchen outside.  There was a baby tent for baby massage and sensory sessions and the big two practiced circus skills in the big open area and loved the lego tent which was full of trays of lego for them to make their own creations.  The festival was small enough to be easy to get around but big enough to have plenty to do for everyone and we didn't have to walk far at all to get from our tent to the arenas.

beautiful days, family friendly festival, themummyadventure.com

beautiful days, family friendly festival, themummyadventure.com

beautiful days, family friendly festival, themummyadventure.com

beautiful days, family friendly festival, themummyadventure.com

There was a children's tent with back to back shows throughout the day that were funny and the boys loved the magicians.  It was a great place to chill out whilst they were entertained and there was plenty of variety.  There were rides aimed at little children, food stalls and a fantastic atmosphere all around.  For older children there was a teens only tent with activities like henna as well as plenty of space to just chill out with beanbags everywhere.

beautiful days, family friendly festival, themummyadventure.com

The whole vibe of the festival was perfect for families, even young ones like ours where the children are all under 7.  I would really recommend Beautiful Days as a family friendly festival and I hope we can return! Next year I would try and get there a little earlier to ensure a better camping spot though!

beautiful days, family friendly festival, themummyadventure.com
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