logo
EXCLUSIVE Every year hundreds of travellers tie up their horses outside my house to sell them - I can't move my car but I LOVE it!

EXCLUSIVE Every year hundreds of travellers tie up their horses outside my house to sell them - I can't move my car but I LOVE it!

Daily Mail​18-05-2025

Some residents living in a sleepy Hampshire village claim they have taken to locking their doors and shutting their blinds on the same day every year when a notorious traveller festival descends on their tiny community.
For generations, the Wickham Horse Fair has taken place in the village which has a population of just over 2000 people.
The fair takes place every year and is an opportunity for the travelling community to sell and trade horses and meet up with family and friends.
However in recent years it has been met with criticism due to the treatment of the horses who race down the streets - with some having to be put down following the event.
It began when Roger De Syres obtained a royal charter from King Henry III to have a weekly market in Wickham's town square in the 13th century and is now held 'every year' on May 20, unless that date falls on a Sunday.
However residents say the revelry brings their neighbourhood to a standstill every year.
Like clockwork, the day before the festival, roads, shops and pubs are all closed in preparation for the event and quiet streets are swarmed by animals, horse boxes and caravans.
Fun fairs, burger vans and other stalls also set up shop to cash in on the historic day that has been celebrated 'every year' with no signs of stopping.
It's not just isolated to Wickham either.
Earlier this week, surrounding villages flagged that travellers looking to attend the fair had already arrived and set up make shift camps on public land.
What is the Wickham Horse Fair
Wickham Horse Fair has been held in The Square in the Hampshire town's square since 1269.
Members of the Gypsy, Roma and Traveller communities gather to trade horses, as well as meeting family and friends.
It was first devised as a weekly fair after Roger De Syres obtained a royal charter from King Henry III before it evolved into the annual event it is now.
It is held every year on May 20, unless that falls on a Sunday.
2022 saw it's official return following Covid lockdown restrictions blocking it in 2020 and 2021.
However, a gathering still took place in 2021 as up to 150 people were understood to have turned up to buy, sell and admire ponies and horses.
At least 21 caravans arrived at Greta Park in Hedge End, around six miles from where the historic event will take place.
A council worker alleged that four padlocks were broken in order for the group to gain access to the park area.
Police swiftly moved them on but more have arrived in the surrounding area since.
When MailOnline visited the sleepy idyll earlier this week the central square was a hub of activity ahead of the two day shut down.
Traditionally the local butchers has been one of the only shops to remain open, serving hot snacks to the thronging crowds, however even they say they will close this year.
Manager Ben said: 'We're not opening this year no. We just don't have the staff and it isn't really worth the effort. We would if we could, there hasn't been trouble for years.'
The few shops that do remain open make a roaring trade' selling cans of lager and hot food to the crowd, however none of the three village pubs are brave enough to open their doors.
Newly opened Woody's is situated at the heart of the fair circuit.
On the day of the fair, dozens of ponies are tied up on a fence around the pub's outdoor seating area before they are sold.
Manager Nicola Lang revealed: 'Ít is what it is.. It's an old tradition that comes with the territory of the area.
'The police advise us to close, for safety. They aren't able to be here if anything was to happen. We're missing out on a Monday and Tuesday this year so it softens the blow.
If we were to miss the weekend it would be considerably more, the police and the council don't compensate us.
'But it would be silly to open.'
Eric Ryan recently moved into a property close to Woody's in the heart of the action.
On fair days, he has to move his car and if he is to leave his house will have to navigate dozens of horses and traders.
But he told the MailOnline he loved the event.
'It's been here for hundreds of years!', 'he said, We normally go away for it, prior to that we've been in the thick of it.
'But I enjoy watching it, yes I have to move my car, but that's fine. Yes you occasionally get a few unsavoury characters turning up, but that's by the by.
'They've always been good to me!'
Others in the village are less positive however.
Rob Owen told us he dreaded the event.
'Í don't like it and I don't go. I just stay in and shut my doors and windows. I seal in for it. They shut down everything.
'It's getting smaller thankfully, we just avoid it, it's not something I want to be involved in. People have things go missing afterwards apparently but who knows if that's connected.
'Anyway places are closed for a reason.'
The publican of the nearby Square Fox also expressed frustration that police seemed uninterested in helping them trade during the festival.
'It's not supported by the police, if there's a problem we're by themselves. They police the beer tent, but not us.
'Í have been tempted to try and do a service from the door, but I'm not allowed.
'We lose turnover definitely.'
Traditionally, the launch of the event is met with a number of horses being raced down the streets of Wickham while others are paraded through the town, including small ponies.
There will also be more officers on the ground to engage with visitors and respond to any issues which may arise.
Aside from horses, visitors at the event this year often sell clothes, bedding and cleaning products.
Sadly, in the past some of the horses at the event have had to be put down,
Members of the RSPCA have often been seen amongst the crowds.
In 2020 and 2021, the event was banned due as lockdown was imposed on the country.
However, in the latter of those years, up to 150 people were understood to have turned up, in a move slammed by police and angry business owners.
The agreed plan had been to hold a small, symbolic event involving 'one or two horses' to maintain the tradition of the festival.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lionel Richie, O2 Arena: a glorified karaoke show, and you'd be mad not to sing along
Lionel Richie, O2 Arena: a glorified karaoke show, and you'd be mad not to sing along

Telegraph

time25 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Lionel Richie, O2 Arena: a glorified karaoke show, and you'd be mad not to sing along

'I am not the show,' Lionel Richie declared to the O2 Arena. 'The show is the audience.' That might have sounded a tad rich coming from a Grammy-winning R&B hitmaker in a fancy jacket on a gloss-black stage, accompanied by an even glossier grand piano and regular bouts of dry ice. But in a way, he was right. A Lionel Richie show isn't just a chance to salute the legacy of a household name. It's also an enjoyably glorified karaoke night, and from the first song 'Hello' – the obvious opener, after the affable balladeer had risen majestically from beneath the thrust stage – the crowd were in fine singing fettle. 'When you come to my show, the last person you'll hear singing is me,' he later jested. Particularly so when that show is part of a greatest hits tour, as this was. An opening montage charted the career of the Alabamian tennis scholarship kid who joined a college R&B band eventually called the Commodores, made a few multi-platinum hits with them, then even more as a solo artist. His music has had half a century to marinate in people's lives, becoming part of culture's common parlance. It would almost be insulting not to sing along. His own voice sometimes lost out not only to the audience but to his band, who beefed up the songs and moves, often flanking him like unconventional bodyguards. Despite the occasional fluffed line, though – unlike fellow 75-year-old Bruce Springsteen, Richie doesn't rely on an autocue – for almost two age-defying hours he breezed through his discography: immortal songs built on the sturdy foundations of Motown. There was the familiar solace of Easy and Say You, Say Me, the exquisite country undercurrents of Sail On, as well as a slightly less gratifying medley of Commodores' party funk tracks including Sweet Love and Lady. Richie is an old-school showman who knows that audience interaction is as important as the music for making an arena feel intimate. He cracked jokes, grumbled about the weather, and broadcasted someone's video call to their mother on the big screen – all part of the shtick, but charming nonetheless. 'When you see me jumping and running, sliding, running up stairs, running down stairs, I want you all to know one thing: I'm in pain,' he quipped. A greatest hits show can seem as though it's operating on autopilot – especially when your hits include Dancing On The Ceiling, We Are The World (written, famously, with Michael Jackson), and All Night Long – but there was nothing impersonal about these songs, nor their singer: the night was a warm celebration of music that has meant so much to so many over the last fifty years.

Jonathan Bailey says Wicked sequel is ‘darker' and will ‘go there politically'
Jonathan Bailey says Wicked sequel is ‘darker' and will ‘go there politically'

BreakingNews.ie

time30 minutes ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Jonathan Bailey says Wicked sequel is ‘darker' and will ‘go there politically'

Actor Jonathan Bailey has said the Wicked sequel is 'darker' and is 'going to go there politically as well'. The Bridgerton star, 37, plays Prince Fiyero in the films, also starring Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande, which are adapted from the musical of the same name. Advertisement 'Being slightly off the M1 in Munchkinland, with Ari singing a beautiful mezzo soprano, and then seeing cars pulling up on the hard shoulder trying to record it, and then seeing men in the sky, (which) turned out to be microlights and drones, it was like Independence Day,' he told British GQ. View this post on Instagram A post shared by British GQ (@britishgq) He added: 'I remember having four hours to learn how to do a dance move. I did it with Ari, headbutted her, and was like, 'Gotta go!'. 'I think she might have even headbutted me, but it was a meeting of minds, literally.' Wicked's next instalment will arrive in cinemas in Ireland and the UK from November 21st and will cover the years after Elphaba, played by Erivo, parted ways with her friend Glinda (Grande). Advertisement Wicked: For Good will also show Elphaba being demonised by those in Oz, and transformed into The Wicked Witch Of The West. The films have been adapted from the musical, which was based on Gregory Maguire's 1995 novel – which was in turn inspired by the story first told in L Frank Baum's 1900 children's novel, later adapted into the 1939 film starring Judy Garland as Dorothy Gale. Bailey said: 'It's darker, and I've got a sense it's going to go there politically as well. 'Fiyero's arc really kicks off and he literally is transformed by the end.' Advertisement Other stars of Wicked include Malaysian actress Michelle Yeoh as Madame Morrible, and US actor Jeff Goldblum as the Wizard. View this post on Instagram A post shared by British GQ (@britishgq) Both Bailey and Goldblum are part of the Jurassic Park franchise. Goldblum played Dr Ian Malcolm in the original 1993 adventure/sci-fi while Bailey stars as Dr Henry Loomis in Jurassic World: Rebirth, which is yet to be released. 'We'll see how it goes, but there might be a few films down the line where me and him can appear in Jurassic together,' Bailey said. Advertisement He added: 'Dr Ian Malcolm and Dr Henry Loomis on a night out.' Bailey stars on the cover of the summer Heroes issue of British GQ and will be speaking at the GQ Heroes conference, taking place at Soho Farmhouse, Oxfordshire from July 2nd to 4th. The Heroes Issue of British GQ is available via digital download and on newsstands on June 10th.

‘People don't know this' – Michael Owen breaks silence on ‘well done he's 13' meme 26 years on from humiliating teenager
‘People don't know this' – Michael Owen breaks silence on ‘well done he's 13' meme 26 years on from humiliating teenager

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

‘People don't know this' – Michael Owen breaks silence on ‘well done he's 13' meme 26 years on from humiliating teenager

IT IS probably the cringiest moment from Michael Owen's long list. But now he has broken his silence on the infamous "well done, he's 13" gag from Neville Southall. 6 6 Owen featured in a Michael Owen Soccer Skills video in 1999 where he faced a young goalkeeper at an empty Stoke City stadium. The former England striker did his best to humiliate the 13-year-old Jamie Hutchinson, who was given goalkeeping tips from Southall. To his credit, Hutchinson did make some saves. But the video is remembered for Owen chipping, rounding and firing past the helpless child between the sticks - before shamelessly celebrating each finish. The laughing ex-Liverpool man clenched his fists, ran away with his arms aloft, mocked the goalkeeper for nutmegging him and pointed to his name on the back of his shirt. But it was his embarrassing shout of "get in there - game, set and match, Owen" that triggered Southall's brilliant quip. Southall said: "Well done, he's 13," a comment which remains a viral sensation and etched into British football heritage. But now, 26 years on, Owen has opened up on the clip - and revealed not all was quite as it seemed because he was told to play up for the cameras. He told talkSPORT: "I was only a couple of years older than him myself!. It's probably funny now. 'I got back from the World Cup in 98 and there were loads of commercial opportunities, things like that. Virgil van Dijk 'destroys' Michael Owen with brutal 13-word put-down on live TV after Liverpool beat Everton 'I was asked to do a soccer skills video and a soccer skills book. So I had to explain, talk through finishing, volleying, heading, whatever the skill was. Inevitably, you need a goalkeeper there. 'I never picked them and so I turned up to do the show and to talk through how I see scoring a goal and what I think in certain scenarios and whatever. 'There was a kid in goal that I had to score past and when I scored they're like, 'Come on, no, you need to show a bit more animation. Like celebrate when you score, this is going on a video.'" talkSPORT host Andy Goldstein clarified: "So people don't know this, right?" And Owen continued: "People just laugh at you no matter what. Then they take a little extract of anything. 'There's loads of things like that on the internet on me.' 'NOT EXACTLY IDEAL' Hutchinson spoke about the viral video in 2016 and admitted he knew it would not come out too well for him. He said: 'Being the goalkeeper on a programme headlined by a striker wasn't exactly ideal for me. 'It was made clear that it wouldn't make good filming if the goalkeeper was saving all the shots taken by the other kids after they had been coached by Michael.' And even Southall himself did defend Owen's actions earlier this year. The 92-cap Wales goalkeeper - who reunited with Hutchinson a few years ago - added: "I think he was being ironic to be fair, but I think he was enjoying himself and being ironic. 'But the poor kid, he scored a squillion goals past him and I was thinking 'give him a break'. 'On the day, Michael was okay and he's always okay. 'People judge him on that and that's not him." 6 6 6

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store