North Wales today hosts the annual Conwy Honey Fair, a historic harvest festival dating back to the reign of King Edward I.
I was in Conwy last week to preview the event and find out more about the walled city with its Unesco-listed castle.
I also visited the National Beekeeping Centre of Wales [pictured above].
Here’s a sample of my story:
The Fair dates back more than 700 years to the reign of Edward I when local beekeepers were given the right to sell honey, without charge, within the walls of the town for one day only.
Harvest festivals were always part of the church calendar but the right to hold the Honey Fair was formally decreed by the King in the town’s 13th-century Royal Charter.
“It’s an event frozen in time,” says event organiser Peter McFadden, “and still generates a huge sense of community.”
The town also hosts the Gwledd Conwy Feast, a weekend food festival with street food, show-cooking displays and live music from October 25-27.
Read the full article in Telegraph Travel, Is this Britain’s sweetest town?
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