Monday, 18 July 2011

Kenilworth Carnival 2011 - we won!



Scenes from Kenilworth Carnival 2011

Our entry for Kenilworth Carnival 2011 was The Chinewrde Marching Band
We had an excellent day and won a huge cup!
Fantastic!!
And due to our flag bearer, the streets of kenilworth were swept as we went along too.

Please see our blog for this years carnival:  http://ccmarchingband.blogspot.com/

Also, if you missed the day see this:


and for official photo's of the whole day:


an excellent day!

Thursday, 30 June 2011

Roll on Kenilworth Carnival 2011


We are so looking forward to Saturday!

Our costumes are ready, the props are almost finished and soundtrack is loaded...
Roll on KENILWORTH CARNIVAL 2011!

We like to keep our theme secret, so the only hint we will divulge is: it totally fits our manifesto and we are a ‘walking’ category with a 4x4!

Coming soon after the day...
·         We will be uploading our history with the carnival and what we have been over the years
·         We will be uploading pictures from this year’s carnival after Saturday

We are especially pleased that our good friends the Chinewrde Marching Band will be playing during the procession this year. And although their trumpet section has just quit (Dotty just called me) I am sure that they will put on an excellent show on the day.

For full details regarding their line up and the full track list for the day visit their blog:

Monday, 6 June 2011

Being in The Carnival!

Being in the carnival

My family has a long tradition of entering Kenilworth Carnival and as I grew up I was part of the procession myself. Groups who entered the Carnival (as I was growing up) included:

·         Local Businesses; Pubs; Shops
·         Schools; Brownies;  Girl Guides; Cubs; Scouts
·         Streets;  Families; Friends
·         Theatre Groups etc

Before I was born my family were on floats within street groupings, or in pairs walking in fancy dress. During my early years I was in the Carnival with my cousin and then the following year I was with the Brownies.

In 1988 I joined in with my family as part of ‘the Harris family’ group and we were usually on a float. The Harris family ‘disbanded’ in approx. 1997 and after that a few of the members (my mum and aunties) continued to enter as fancy dress walkers, but I didn’t re-enter again until 2009 – although I made sure I still watched each year to offer support.

Over the years the Carnival has decreased in size and other blows have come to knock the day,
·         An increase in health & safety legislation - thus making it more difficult to enter into the carnival
·          Rumours that the fair will not be coming to the Abbey Fields anymore
·         And even more worryingly rumours that the lorry sponsorship may end (for the actual floats) or that there may be a fee
·         The Godiva Festival being on at the same time as our Carnival in recent years
·         A changed time for this years Carnival, and less marketing for the Carnival in the past few years.

Many local carnivals have ceased, I would hate for Kenilworth’s to go the same way. It is a shame that the audience attending the day has decreased and more worryingly the procession has decreased in size too. Less people are putting floats together with their neighbours, families, friends and other groups that they belong to, meaning that there are less floats as well as fewer fancy dress walkers.

To be part of the day is great fun! And it is easy to get involved. Kenilworth’s annual Carnival takes place on the first Saturday of July each year (this year’s Carnival is Saturday 2nd July).  Anyone can take part in the Carnival either by entering a float or by walking the route in fancy dress. Any mode of transport can be entered for the procession. There are several classes, each is judged. A prize is awarded for the best entry in each class. For further details use the link for the ‘Kenilworth Carnival Committee’ or contact Anne on 07737518386 or email annebrough@ntlworld.com
Also, there is the opportunity to have a stall on the Abbey Fields to sell stuff, for more details and to make a booking in order to be involved, email lizmea@ntlworld.com

The first stirrings of The Chinewrde Carnival Collective

In 2009 my mum was recuperating after a heart bypass but did not want to miss out on being in the Carnival.  It would have been uncomfortable for her to be pushed around in a wheelchair; so I decided to get a few family members and a couple of friends together on a float for old times sake. This would keep mum in the Carnival and also help keep the Carnival tradition going. That year we quickly came up with the theme of an old fashioned 1930’s Travelling Carnivale troupe and we won first prize in our class – Hooray!! After a fantastic time making the props and costumes; installing the lorry (float) on the day; getting posters done and various other exciting Carnival related necessities we realised how much we missed it. So we came back together in 2010, with a name – The Chinewrde Carnival Collective and a manifesto!

The Carnival is an important part of Kenilworth and its heritage; it needs to continue into the future. The Carnival is important to my mum, and other members of my family; it is important to my friends and to me. Kenilworth Carnival raises money for charity and it is a legacy which has been in place for a very long time.

Kenilworth Carnival needs entrants in the procession, but it also needs an audience. So please get your creative hat’s on and enter into the Carnival, and if that’s not for you just come along and enjoy the day!

Saturday, 26 March 2011

Memories of Kenilworth Carnival

The origins of Kenilworth Carnival are really interesting, it is generally agreed to have ‘started’ in 1926, developing from an earlier fund raising event (approx. 40 years older). The original fund raising event was a way of donating funds to Warneford Hospital in Leamington. In 1925 there were two parades, both with different fund raising goals and although these were not linked at the time, it is possible that these two parades sparked what was to become the procession part of The Kenilworth Carnival. The afternoon / evening during the 1926 Carnival included dancing in the Abbey Fields to a band; the following year permission to use Abbey Fields for a fair on carnival Day was granted, and in 1928 cars were allowed to park in the Abbey Fields and the attendance at the fair exceeded the population of the town. Also in 1928, another tradition of the Carnival was started - having a Carnival Queen. The first Carnival Queen was actually from Coventry (which caused a little controversy) however, the following year we had our first Kenilworth Carnival Queen from Kenilworth.

Started by very generous people in the town approximately 122 years ago; changed and developed along the way; with a different charity to collect for - Kenilworth Carnival is a great tradition, one which has been going for years, and I hope it never dies out.

Having lived in Kenilworth all my life, I have seen a fair few Carnival processions; seen the choosing of the Carnival Queen many a time; been to the fair a lot; and even been an entrant with Brownies, family and friends. My memories of Kenilworth Carnival are of a vibrant and noisy procession through the streets of Kenilworth for a day during the summer, followed by fun at the fair.

As a child, I remember sitting on the hill watching the procession go by and I remember being scared to death by the ‘cowboy’ who would fire his guns into the air - I would hide behind my mum! We would watch as lorries (floats) would be slowly driving up Rosemary Hill with weird and wonderful displays on them and we would hurl pennies and two pence’s onto the bed of the floats in order to help raise funds for charity. There were plenty of fancy dress walkers in between the floats, dressed as characters from popular culture, or from individual imaginations.

After the procession we would go down to the Abbey Fields and have a go on some of the rides at the fair, we would win prizes on the hook a duck and various other stalls and I would be so happy when my mum would win me my yearly goldfish. We would walk home past all the other kids in the street picking up the mislaid coins off the ground, knowing that this money would be used down the fair later on that night.

For further reading on the carnival history:
http://victorian.reuna.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=11&Itemid=14 )