I know that not many people have heard of it, but it happens to be the annual funfair that is local to where I am, and it does have huge 1970s and 1980s nostalgia value - the first week in October for people familiar to Nottingham meant Goose Fair, an annual funfair that has been traditionally going for over seven centuries, with the odd year off for wars and all that excepted. It was mostly the first Thursday, Friday and Saturday in October, although this was extended for its 700th anniversary in 1994 and every year since 2010.
Back in the 1980s my family went on the Friday evening - the Infant and Junior Schools gave us that day off to go the fair, but the Comprehensive Schools didn't - cue the truancy levels increasing during the first week of October. We mostly went on rides without being sick (but not the ones that gravity defined), and got the toffee apples, candy floss (when we still thought of it being cotton wool dyed pink), and the helium balloon with some 1980s children's television or cartoon character on it - managed to get it home and see it float to the living room ceiling until around a month later when its helium was lost and we threw it away.
We won soft toys as consolation prize which my nephews later played with - we lost my sister in the crowds who turned up at home the following morning, and I could never get the hang (no pun intended) of the Hook a Duck, even if the locals say "ey up me duck" [sic] locally. And I was nothing like Eric Bristow when it came up playing darts either. A goldfish was won at one of the local funfairs and my parents went ballistic when we returned home with it inside a transparent bag.
In 1999 I was at the fair walking past and exploring, and I was then invited by a resident Fortune Teller to step inside her caravan and have my palm read for a price - she said that I would have some big changes in my life in December of that year (not surprisingly because of the new millennium and Christmas coming up). Two months later I had found that my late mother had passed away in December 1999 from lung cancer, and it made me wonder whether the Fortune Teller was accurately predicting that news to me as a way of "changes in my life", or whether it was just a pure coincidence considering the time range? She seemed to be almost "spot on" to be honest.
I know that not many people are not local to Nottingham (or even Great Britain) on here, but I was wondering whether anyone had ever travelled to Nottingham to visit Goose Fair in the past, or indeed visited a local funfair similar to that close to where they live? I suppose that we can extend this thread to funfairs in general. I have to say that I love the irony that Simply Red's "Fairground" was number one in the British charts during Goose Fair in 1995!
I know that a lot of Nottingham location themed books and films have implicated the annual fair - Alan Sillitoe's books (which are mostly set in Nottingham) are a fine example of this - Sillitoe's short story "Noah's Ark" was one of them, and so was "Saturday Night and Sunday Morning". I have to admit that since teenager Danielle Beccan's killing in 2004 when she was returning with friends from the fair - it had put me off going for a few years because of when it happened, but I have been back since. I have to admit that the crowds and the high crime rate that Nottingham has had in recent years is at least a couple of reasons that put me off going every year these days.
Has anyone visited Nottingham to see the Goose Fair in October (or was it a bit too far and therefore visited a funfair a bit more local to where you live?) I wouldn't blame you if you didn't to be honest.
Back in the 1980s my family went on the Friday evening - the Infant and Junior Schools gave us that day off to go the fair, but the Comprehensive Schools didn't - cue the truancy levels increasing during the first week of October. We mostly went on rides without being sick (but not the ones that gravity defined), and got the toffee apples, candy floss (when we still thought of it being cotton wool dyed pink), and the helium balloon with some 1980s children's television or cartoon character on it - managed to get it home and see it float to the living room ceiling until around a month later when its helium was lost and we threw it away.
We won soft toys as consolation prize which my nephews later played with - we lost my sister in the crowds who turned up at home the following morning, and I could never get the hang (no pun intended) of the Hook a Duck, even if the locals say "ey up me duck" [sic] locally. And I was nothing like Eric Bristow when it came up playing darts either. A goldfish was won at one of the local funfairs and my parents went ballistic when we returned home with it inside a transparent bag.
In 1999 I was at the fair walking past and exploring, and I was then invited by a resident Fortune Teller to step inside her caravan and have my palm read for a price - she said that I would have some big changes in my life in December of that year (not surprisingly because of the new millennium and Christmas coming up). Two months later I had found that my late mother had passed away in December 1999 from lung cancer, and it made me wonder whether the Fortune Teller was accurately predicting that news to me as a way of "changes in my life", or whether it was just a pure coincidence considering the time range? She seemed to be almost "spot on" to be honest.
I know that not many people are not local to Nottingham (or even Great Britain) on here, but I was wondering whether anyone had ever travelled to Nottingham to visit Goose Fair in the past, or indeed visited a local funfair similar to that close to where they live? I suppose that we can extend this thread to funfairs in general. I have to say that I love the irony that Simply Red's "Fairground" was number one in the British charts during Goose Fair in 1995!
I know that a lot of Nottingham location themed books and films have implicated the annual fair - Alan Sillitoe's books (which are mostly set in Nottingham) are a fine example of this - Sillitoe's short story "Noah's Ark" was one of them, and so was "Saturday Night and Sunday Morning". I have to admit that since teenager Danielle Beccan's killing in 2004 when she was returning with friends from the fair - it had put me off going for a few years because of when it happened, but I have been back since. I have to admit that the crowds and the high crime rate that Nottingham has had in recent years is at least a couple of reasons that put me off going every year these days.
Has anyone visited Nottingham to see the Goose Fair in October (or was it a bit too far and therefore visited a funfair a bit more local to where you live?) I wouldn't blame you if you didn't to be honest.
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