Site icon Go Cotswolds

Cheltenham Festival 2016

Image: Magic Foundry, via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

…and they’re off! The 2016 Cheltenham Festival of horse racing started yesterday, which means it’s a busy, busy time in the Cotswolds right now!

The Cotswolds capital of Cheltenham Spa (or “Cheltn’m” to its friends) plays host to a number of festivals throughout the year – Jazz, Science, MusicLiterature – but the biggest and most famous of them all is *the* Cheltenham Festival of horse racing, held each March.

Over the course of four days of racing action, more than 200,000 people flock to Cheltenham Racecourse to lend their voices to the ‘Cheltenham Roar’ – the infamously deafening cheer that accompanies the start of each race. Many more people come to Cheltenham even if they didn’t manage to get a ticket to the races, just to soak up the lively atmosphere in the pubs and bars around the town.

The Cheltenham Festival kicks off with Champion Day, during which the most important hurdle race of the year is contested: the Stan James Champion Hurdle. Wednesday of ‘Cheltenham Week’ is always Ladies Day, where as well as the horses and jockeys competing for prizes, women dressed up to the nines also seem to compete for biggest, fanciest and most elaborate hat!

‘Cheltenham Week’ usually coincides with St. Patrick’s Day, the national day of Ireland. This, combined with the enormous popularity of horse racing in Ireland, means that Cheltenham Festival is particularly popular with our neighbours across the Irish sea. In fact, of the 200,000 festival ticketholders throughout the week, it is estimated that around 8,000 of them are Irish – that’s a busy Aer Lingus flight!

But the really hot ticket of the week is always the Friday – Gold Cup Day, which sells out long before the rest of the festival tickets. This grade I steeplechase has the biggest prize money pot of any horse race in the UK except the Grand National – as well as the inevitable fame that comes with winning the Gold Cup, a whopping £575,000 is up for grabs this year!

We’re not big gamblers, so we don’t have any racing tips I’m afraid, but if you’re planning to visit Stratford-upon-Avon or the Cotswolds this week, or around St. Patrick’s Day in future years, here are a few tips of the tourism variety!

Exit mobile version