A hot bank holiday, for once, and we decided to stay local, and go to the
Brixton Windmill Bread and Beer festival, which is held in Windmill Gardens, about 15 minutes' walk from where we live. I hadn't been to Windmill Gardens for six or seven years - I think we took The Boy there once when he was still in a pushchair, and now he is nearly 8, but the Swan Whisperer says he walks past it on his way down to church.
The gardens were rammed when we arrived! The main bread stall, the
Old Post Office Bakery, was totally sold out and deserted, and there were very long queues for beer stalls (not surprised - it was hot!). There was a van from a local coffee shop, but that was not so popular. The
Friends of Windmill Gardens had a colourful stall, too.
Any maypole dancing was obviously over when we arrived.
but the Morris Dancing was still going on very happily:
There was also a sound stage, and you could queue to go inside the Windmill itself, but we didn't do that. We did, however, spend some time reading posters about the history of the mill.
It's not the first time, obviously, that we have visited it - I think it closed to the public in 1990, but we certainly visited it on an Open Day before then, when the Daughter was little. It's good that there is still a working mill in Brixton, even though the flour is now ground by electricity rather than wind power - it hasn't done that for a very long time. The sails do turn, but are in poor condition and need to be repaired, which I think is the next thing the Friends are hoping to do.
We were surprised by the crowds - not the numbers, that was not surprising on a lovely day. But the demographic was primarily white, middle-class young families; more Walthamstow than Brixton! Whether the demographic has changed this much without our noticing, or whether people came from further afield and local people didn't bother, we didn't see anybody we knew. But it was a pleasant interlude in a busy day!