The other day I read a blog article, by
Benjamin Nunn, in
which he bemoans the fact that there will be no
CAMRA Great British Beer Festival
this year.
Ben writes under the name of
Ben Viveur,
a title that gives more than a hints of what his blog is about, namely enjoying
real food and drink in the real world. He also writes about cooking, and how to
“Create recipes that taste awesome, but which can be created by mere mortals
without the need for specialist equipment.” Needless to say, beer features
quite highly on
Ben Viveur, and whilst
Ben isn’t a prolific blogger, he always
has something interesting to say.
In his latest post on the
Great British Beer Festival, Ben
professes his deep love for the event, having first attended it
30 years ago,
and never missed one since. In
2023, he took the plunge and spent the week
working at the festival as a volunteer, so you can imagine his deep
disappointment and indeed sorrow over the non-happening of the event in
2024. The
main reason behind the cancellation is the extensive, and ongoing renovations
taking place at
Olympia, and I’m sure this is something we can all accept.
However, Ben has his suspicions that
GBBF might not be quite the same festival
when it does come back.
This arises from what he describes as
“rumours and
tittle-tattle, from various sources,” citing that the festival is living
beyond its means. The gossip suggests that the festival has gone beyond being
cost-ineffective and become loss-making in a quite serious way, enough to make
it unsustainable in its current form. Over the years staff perks have been cut
back a bit in an attempt to offset this, but this strikes me as
“biting the
hand that feeds you,” as without the army of volunteers – all of whom are
unpaid, there just wouldn’t be a festival.
I have heard similar reports, most recently from a long-standing
CAMRA member who, at one time was chairman of my local
CAMRA branch. I shan’t
name him, but I bumped into him, a couple of weeks ago in the
Nelson Arms, in
Tonbridge. Despite not having much to do with
West Kent CAMRA these days, this
individual is quite heavily involved with annual,
Spa Valley Railway Beer Festival in
Tunbridge Wells.
During our conversation, he was bemoaning the fact that whilst
CAMRA adopts
stringent financial controls when it comes to beer festivals run by local
branches - quite rightly in my view, they are far more lax when it comes to their
own, national flagship event. A view that certainly ties in with the
haemorrhaging money story that's been doing the rounds.
If these rumours are true, I’ve little doubt that
CAMRA will
have to take a long, hard, and very necessary view of the event, but as
Ben points
out on his blog, a scaled-down half-hearted
GBBF, full of compromises just
wouldn't be the same. I’m sure it wouldn’t, but is the current, bloated,
behemoth of an event what people want in this day and age?
I’ve been an infrequent attendee over the years, and in fact
was present at the very first national beer festival – the
Covent Garden Exhibition,which took place in
1975. This event acted as the precursor to today’s
Great
British Beer Festival, and I’m pleased to say as well as the very first
GBBF,
held a couple of years later, at
London’s Alexandra Palace, I’ve followed the
festival to its other homes at
Brighton, Earls Court and latterly,
Olympia. The
event moved around the country, for several years, with both
Birmingham and
Leeds welcoming the festival, during the
1980’s. For financial reasons, I wasn’t
able to travel to those venues, but I did attend the disastrous, one-off event,
at the
Dockland’s Arena, in the
Isle of Dogs, back in
1991.
Six years ago, I published a rather lengthy, look-back at
four decades of the
Great British Beer Festival, which you can read by clicking
on the above link. I won’t repeat what I wrote then, but I will say that the
following year –
2019, I attended what would be my final
GBBF. COVID obviously put paid
to the festival in
2020 and
2021, but it made a comeback in
2022. The following
year was the one which
Benjamin Nunn worked at as a volunteer, and you can read
about his
experiences here. They certainly provide a useful and valuable
insight into what goes on at
CAMRA’s flagship festival, even though it’s hard
to get a grasp of the scale of what goes on behind the scenes plus the sheer logistics
involved with hosting such an event. The amount of volunteers necessary to
ensure the smooth running of
GBBF, is a problem in itself, especially given the
increasing age of these unsung heroes, and with less and less youngsters to
fill their shoes, the lack of suitable manpower will become a major issue, if
it hasn’t done so already.
This only fuels the speculation in my mind that if GBBF does
return in 2025, it will be as a much scaled down event. After all, is it really
necessary to have 900+ beers on sale? It’s true that the festival does pull in
the punters, but my experience is the two main halls at Olympia, become
unpleasantly crowded as each day draws on, and whilst CAMRA have done their
best by providing a lot more, and much needed additional seating, the event can
be very hard on the feet.
There is also the vexed question of admission charges, as
even with a discounted rate for CAMRA members, visitors can spend quite a bit
of money, even before they’ve had a drink! Munich’s world-famous Oktoberfest
doesn’t charge for admission, and neither does it require a deposit on one’s
glass. Prices for both beer and food, whilst higher than in central Munich,
aren’t much higher, which is surprising given the large contingent of staff
employed to take orders and bring beer and food to the customers’ table.
Even before the pandemic, I’d already decide that
2019's
event was going to be my last, and I know quite a few of my friends also felt
the same way. The fun had gone out of the festival, and with so many different beers
on offer, deciding which to go for was like stabbing in the dark. It was far
easier, back in the early days when my ambition was limited to ticking off
every
British brewery. That goal went out of the window with the dramatic increase
in brewery numbers that occurred during the nineties and noughties!
We shall have to see what happens next year, but I think CAMRA
is going have to be honest with itself, if it thinks it can pick up from where it
left off in 2023.
21 comments:
If you decided four years ago that 2019 was going to be your last GBBF why are you getting your Y-fronts in a wedgie about this ?
I went once and it was horrendous.
Endless pale beers all trying to be Landlord being drunk by mostly obese dull men who you'd deliberately avoid if you encountered them in a real pub.
I did like the pies though.
I once went when some mates invited me. For me it was rubbish. They and everyone else we met just spouted away about beer and hops and stuff. Then they went tizzy when Tim Taylor Boltman won some competition or something. Just a load of boring people all up th own self. Just one great big hall with nowt ter do really. Reet boring it was. Discourages northerners as who would pay £100 for a train ticket. I'm not paying to get in and hire a glass and all that stuff anymore.
I went a few years later and it were same.
Not for me again I'm afraid. It's a goner
Eh, by 'eck tha's reet there.A lot of southern jessies sniffing and holding their glasses 'oop like they knew what a decent pint is.The stuff they drink is normally flatter than a Yorkie's wallet.
'ow much !
More brass than sense as well.They reckon six quid is not bad for a pint of stale beer down local and cream their knackers with excitement when the landlord calls 'em by their first name.
And guess this. They think Aunt Bessie is a real bird. I kid thee not. Brains of a rocking horse most of them.
I dont know much about GBBF, but I do find it surprising that it makes a loss. However, if it follows the same model as the branch events of charging for admission and then price per beer related to the ABV then I am less surprised.
The event looks massively popular, so why not see how they can monetize it? My suggestion would be to sell corporate packages at £200/head (or whatever would be enough to turn a tidy profit). Get the sponsors along to a session where they can get free run at the beer and the food and do some proper business networking.
In case this link works this is what we do at the Ilkley Beer Festival (non-CAMRA) and it makes lots of money for local good causes in Yorkshire.
https://youtu.be/5aNJM8jbMbg
Paul,
Just five months after being on t'committee my first was Stafford and Stone Branch's "firkin festival" of October 1974, one of the first in the country and nearly fifty years ago now.
I loved Covent Garden for its 5am to 9am market pubs but with that all gone in 1974 I didn't bother with the Beer Exhibition there the next year.
I did get to a GBBF at Ally Pally but have hardly been to any in the capital since.
The three GBBFs I worked at were Brighton in 1985 and '86 and Leeds in 1989.
I've no idea why GBBFs out of London haven't occurred for ages and apparently never will.
I can't really be doing with beer festivals at our age but did go to Stafford's for a few hours last year, and there was thought to be odd with drinking pints instead of piddling little halves or thirds.
I picked up a fella once at the beer festival in London. He was a bit portly with a big belly and smelly beard. Full of Pipers crisps it was. He was a summer nuance for a month or two. Love to get it up north and see what the beer guys up there perform like.
Thanks anonymous, apart from reporting on the facts, as I see them, I am not getting anything in a twist, although I agree there are far too many identi-kit, pale beers.
Thanks to the pandemic there has only been one GBBF, since I made my decision not to attend any more. However, having invested significant amounts of time, as well as cash, in the festival, over the years, I am intrigued to find out what happens next. I'm not trying to be the spectre at the feast, but I do feel GBBF has run its course.
Same as above, although I'm not convinced you're a real person, let alone a proper Northerner!
So, another fictional northerner with a chip on his shoulder, and a grudge against the south. This is where the real money's made, pal, which is why we can afford £6 pints!
Disappointed (not) to learn that Aunt Bessie isn't real!!
Thanks Robin, for the link to the Ilkley Beer Festival. It looks like a good event, even though it's not that dissimilar to a CAMRA run festival.
I'm not sure about sponsorship, especially at £200 per head, although it's CAMRA you need to convince, not me! I'm not even a member of the campaign, any more.
I was at the two Brighton GBBF's, Paul. The Metropole Hotel wasn't the nicest of venues, but in the days before all day opening, it was good to have a wander along the seafront during the compulsory afternoon break.
Like you, and many others that I know, I much prefer pubs, and long may this continue!
Fictional ?
I'll have you know I've just come in from bedding down the pigeons for the night, served the whippet with his tripe and onions and had t'bath in front of coal fire. The bairns are queing up now for their turn in me scummy water.
Are thee really that proud to be paying six quid for t'pint ? I'd be embarrassed at shelling out that brass for a pint of flat shite.
Once a soft southerner always a soft southerner.
( Bloomin'g whippet has just left off the greasiest fart you could imagine. I immediately blamed t'missus and beat her about the head with a rolled-up copy of the Yorkshire Post. The dog gave me that guilty look which immediatly established I'd made a big mistake. So I patted t'missus on the 'ed and slapped her arse and ordered into the kitchen for a pot of Yorkshire Gold and * spits on the floor * her favourite Eccles cake as a way of apology.
We only have one way of making love Veronica.
All day.
Except for Wednesday, when it's the meat draw at the social.
It's generally a small chicken from Lidl, a pound of pink sausages, some pork belly, four pork chops and some pork with extra crackling.
We do like our pork 'oop North if thee catches my drift.
Hi Veronica, why not take a trip up north and find out for yourself, what the local lads are like? I doubt you'll find them any better than us southerners!
Paul,
Yes, I like Brighton - the seafront, elm trees and Harvey''s beer.
I first knew it from a week camping with school friends fifty years ago and stayed in the former Royal York Hotel during 2019 and last year.
You don't half attract the common sense folks, Paul. You need to spice it up to attract the nutters.
Thanks Peter! The question posed by the post was simple enough, so what on earth prompted all these bizarre comments?
Benjamin Nunn didn't attract the nutters either, yet he was the person concerned the most about the future of GBBF.
It won't be happening ever again. In the days of the £7 pint, maybe £9 next year attendance will be way down. Lets say even those that have 4 pints only have 3 then that's a lot of wasted beer. Not worth the risk anymore.
Also it's against CAMRAs equality and diversity agenda. Just too many aged men for it to look right in this day and age.
Hey, make sure I can a trip there like Rishi did. I'm your Trot in Chief so you CAMRA lefties should be able to get me in there. Big shout out to Veronica. Keeping it large for the Beerists in Camden. Smash the gangs, Smash the gangs!!!
Definitely too many aged men, Gloria - including me!!
Sorry to disappoint Kier's Beers, but I'm not a CAMRA member. You'll have to buy your own ticket, and pay for your own beers!
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