Away from the the sights and sounds of the platinum jubilee celebrations across the Harrogate district, it’s a fitting day to remember another royal connection from the Ripon area that goes directly to the Queen, via her great great grandmother, Queen Victoria.
It was Derby Day on Epsom Downs and the world’s most famous race grabbed national and international attention, with the easy winner and 5-2 favourite, Desert Crown, trained by Sir Michael, destined to earn a fortune at stud.
On the boundary wall at the Parish Church of St Lawrence in Aldfield — between Ripon and Fountains Abbey — there is a blue plaque recognising that William Powell Frith, the world-renowned painter, whose signature work was called The Derby Day was born in the tiny village on November 2, 1819.

A portrait of William Powell Frith as a young man. Picture: Mary Evans Picture Gallery
His mother Jane, was house steward to Sophia Lawrence of Studley Royal, before the family moved to Harrogate in 1826 to manage the Dragon Hotel.
Nine years later, at the age of 16, Frith decided to take his prodigious artistic talent to London, telling his family that his aim was to make his fortune.
This was no misplaced boast, as he was entered into the Royal Academy and earned the accolade of being one of Queen Victoria’s favourite painters.

The Queen, who is Victoria’s great great grandaughter, has never won the Classic race as either owner or breeder and the nearest she came was in her coronation year , when her horse Aureole finished second in the 1953 running.
Dreams of a fairy-tale win in platinum jubilee year were dashed when her horse Reach for the Moon was withdrawn from today’s race by joint trainers John and Thady Gosden, after the three-year-old colt suffered a training setback.
For only the third time in her 70-year reign, the 96-year-old Queen is also a ‘non-runner’ at Epsom today, with ongoing health issues meaning she will be watching the race on television.
Frith, who lived to the age of 89, died in 1909 assured that his Derby Day work created between 1856 and 1858 had earned him the fortune that he predicted.
His classic painting and other celebrated works – have put him forever in the frame as one of the world’s best known artists
Read More:
- Where you can go for the district’s jubilee celebrations
- Why was it time for a royal tea at Ripon Cathedral?
70 guests representing Queen’s 70 years attend Ripon tea party
Ripon Cathedral has hosted a tea party at which guests represented every year of her Queen’s 70-year reign.
The 70 attendees ranged in age from one-year-old Hugo Krippner to Lynn Gray, who was born in 1952.
Each invitee brought a guest with them and in total, 150 people were present for the event organised by Canon Aisla Newby and supported by a large team of volunteers

At your tea service … the volunteers ensured guests were topped up with tea and buns.
Another canon of the cathedral, Charles Dodgson, had a son, also named Charles, who wrote under the name Lewis Carroll and was the author of the world famous children’s classic Alice in Wonderland, which featured the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party.
Today’s gathering was well-organised in contrast to Carroll’s fictional and chaotic Mad Hatter event and the guests marked the monarch’s reign in an elegant and respectful manner.
Ms Gray who travelled to Ripon from Grassington, told the Stray Ferret:
“It’s an absolute privilege to be here, joining with different generations of people to celebrate the Queen’s jubilee and her incredible service to this country.”
For one-year-old Hugo, whose father Dr Ronny Krippner is Ripon Cathedral’s director of music, high tea was taken in a high chair and today’s get together will be a memory in the family album that he can look back on in future years.
Dr Krippner, whose wife Audrey and three-year-old daughter Sophie also attended, said:
“We are delighted to be part of an occasion which has historic significance for this community and the country.”
Read More:
‘Our lovely Queen has brought us together’, say Burn Bridge party organisers
Organising an official street party with North Yorkshire County Council and closing a road takes a bit of paper work and bureaucracy.
Neighbours Jilly Adams and Angela Palladino in Westminster Grove, Burn Bridge, were undeterred.
Both work for the NHS and thought it was the perfect opportunity to bring their neighbours together post covid.
This afternoon that happened as the cul-de-sac closed and neighbours brought food, drink, tables and chairs to meet and celebrate the jubilee.
Angela said:
“The local community is so important. We’ve lost looking after each other. Covid has highlighted how important it is to look after one another”
Angela Palladino (left) and Jilly Adams (right)
Angela is a relatively new resident of the road, her neighbour Jilly Adams has lived in Westminster Grove for a long time:
“I think a lot of us have forgotten how important the Queen is. I’ve lived here for 18 years and have never done anything like this before.
“It’s taken our lovely, lovely Queen to get us together”
Both neighbours feel the Queen’s example of dedication and care is important for future generations.
Indeed sitting the shade was great grandmother, Margaret Holtby who is 80 years old holding her great grandson, Cooper, who is only two months old (pictured below).
As the sun shone in the afternoon the Stray Ferret left the Westminster Grove party in full swing. S Club 7 was playing loudly on the sound system and the bubbly was in full flow.

Knaresborough tea dance gets all red, white and blue
This afternoon the regulars of Trinity Dancing dressed up in red, white and blue as the organisers put on a special dance for the jubilee.
Around 40 dancers formed a large circle and swirled around what had become the dance floor of Knaresborough Community Centre.
Here are some images and a taste of the dancers’ sartorial elegance:

From L-R : Tom and Maureen Stamford, John and Shirley Thompson and new joiners to the dancing group Christine and Mark Howson

Derek Almack from Ripon and Helen Rogers from Knaresborough — both new to the group

Dance partners Edna Holliday from Harrogate and Bart Blok from Knaresborough (note the little bit of bling on Bart’s shirt)

June Weirs from Bilton WI set up a stand in the corner with knitted craft work done 25 years ago for the Ripley Show that celebrated the history of the Queen.

L-R Lesley Bolton, Gloria Tolson, Enid Shaw and Pam Godsell. Enid is one of the Trinity Dance organisers, Gloria and Lesley help too.
Pam Godsell is on the working group for the town council’s jubilee celebrations and is also involved in the Knaresborough Loins. She said:
“I am really pleased with how many have turned out today. I volunteered to open up the community centre as it would normally have been closed and I’m a key holder. It’s a special day and this dance is a free event.”

The whole dance group (just before a cup of tea)
Union Jack flies high at Newby Hall’s Tractor Fest
After two years away, Tractor Fest returned to Newby Hall to mark the platinum jubilee celebrations in its unique way.
Scattered across the famous gardens were an estimated 1,000 exhibitors, including tractors adorned for the occasion.
Hundreds of people ranging from hardcore enthusiasts and novices, flocked to the stately home near Boroughbridge to enjoy an array of machinery, engines, attractions and even some vintage car displays.
Kevin Watson, organiser of the festival, said he was initially nervous about returning after so long away.
The festival was one of many mainstay events in the Harrogate district which fell victim to the covid pandemic in 2020.

Ian Muir and tractor fest organiser Kevin Watson with a golden painted Queens coronation tractor.
Kevin said:
“It has been a while and we wondered if we had done the right thing in making it a three day event.
“But, in the end it feels like we have never been away.”
The return of the popular festival coincides with the landmark platinum jubilee and it would have been remiss of those regular exhibitors not to mark it in their own way.
Read more:
- Village near Knaresborough creates collage to mark jubilee
- JUBILEE LIVE: Parade in Masham, street opera in Harrogate
Among the thousands of tractors was one special exhibit, which stood out with its golden paint and draped in Union Jack bunting.
The golden coronation tractor which was introduced in 1953 is owned by Northumbrian Ian Muir, who had to rebuild it twice to get it into shape to display at festivals.
Marking the jubilee
Elsewhere, engine enthusiasts were also marking the jubilee in their own way.
Tom and Alison Moffat made the three-hour journey from Ayre in Scotland to be among fellow engine collectors.
Tom’s engine was made in 1939 at the outbreak of the war and was used as an emergency lighting plant for Ballochmyle Hospital in Ayrshire.


Hundreds flocked to Newby Hall for the return of Tractor Fest.
The couple have toured the exhibit around various festivals, but today they decided to flock our their stall in red, white and blue.
After learning they were going to be at Tractor Fest over the jubilee weekend, Alison borrowed some of her parents flags which had also been used as part of the silver jubilee celebrations in 1977.
She said:
“I borrowed them from my parents, who had also used them to celebrate. We felt we had to mark it.”

Mervyn Hoyle with his vintage car at Newby Hall.
Those who brought vintage cars to the festival were also in on the celebrations.
Mervyn Hoyle bought his 1933 Austin Seven deluxe saloon 42 years ago and prided himself on keeping it in good condition ever since.
He and his sister draped the car in red, white and blue for the occasion and his fellow collectors even set up a picnic table for the weekend.
To top off the day’s entertainment, a Hawker Hurricane took to the skies above Newby Hall.
While people filled the streets and bunting adorned buildings across the Harrogate district, the Tractor Fest marked the occasion in its own way.
‘I chatted to the Queen in the back of a Range Rover’: Her Majesty’s many visits to the districtThe links between the Queen and the Harrogate district stretch back decades, including a visit in 1952 before her coronation.
From her appearances at the Great Yorkshire Show in Harrogate to her trips to Ripon, including her 2004 visit for another important anniversary – 400 years since the granting of the city’s Royal Charter.
Former director of the Great Yorkshire Show, Bill Cowling, described chaperoning the Queen’s during her last visit in 2008 as one of the highlights of his career.
Royal visit
He told the Stray Ferret:
“The show makes requests for royal visits, sometimes more than a year in advance. It was agreed that the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh would come to the show to mark its 150th anniversary.
“Everything was going ahead, plans were progressing. Then an MP called David Davies fell out with the Conservative party, so he resigned his seat and a by-election was called.
“After attending the show in the morning, the Queen and the Duke were then meant to be going to Hull to open a hospital. But due to protocol, the by-election meant the Monarch could not go into an area where this was taking place.
“We thought this meant we had lost our royal visit. But after a week or so, we got a phone call from the palace to say they had been talking it over and they wondered if the Queen and Duke could stop for longer at the Great Yorkshire Show. So in the end the royal visit was for more than five hours!”

HM The Queen arriving in Harrogate for the Great Yorkshire Show in 1957.
Mr Cowling remembered that as the Queen was getting older, it was decided that they would drive to the far end of the showground and walk back.
‘An absolute expert’
He said:
“I never thought I would be sat in the back of a Range Rover with the Queen. You don’t think these things are going to happen.
“She is an absolute expert and makes people who are meeting her comfortable and at home and relaxed.
“One of the things we spoke about was that they had had a garden party at the palace the day before. She said the wet weather had made a bit of a mess of the lawn. She was very down to earth.”

The Queen at the Great Yorkshire Show in 1957.
Mr Cowling said on the walk back she spoke to lots of people at the event.
He said:
“She always gives everybody the full treatment as it were. Everyone will feel like they are the most important person on that visit. That is why she is so expert at putting people at their ease and showing an interest in what they are showing or doing.
“On the way back she also laid the foundation stone for Fodder, which was being built at that time.”

The Queen unveiling a plaque to commemorate the start of work on the Regional Agricultural Centre in 2008.
Mr Cowling said many things stood out about her visit, but he remembered one particular conversation.
The most wonderful visit
He said:
“We stayed for lunch at the show in the president’s pavilion, which is upstairs. The carpet is quite a light colour. The ground conditions were quite muddy and there were a few muddy footprints on the carpet and she turned to me and said “don’t worry it will vac out” It was absolutely out of the blue and so natural.
“It was the most wonderful visit and we were so lucky. In the end we were thanking David Davies for calling a by-election!”
Mr Cowling said he had to “pinch himself” when he saw her on TV after spending so much time with her.
He said:
“It’s a huge honour for the Harrogate region that she comes and shows such an interest.
“We will definitely be raising a glass or two to her this weekend.”
Harrogate Conference Centre
Other visits from the Queen, include the Harrogate Conference Centre in the mid 1980s, where she was the guest of honour at a gala concert in aid of Y Care.
Performers included AHA, Rory Bremner and Wayne Sleep. Terry Waite, who was prominent in the Anglican Church, was also present on behalf of Y Care.
On Thursday, April 4,1985, the Queen and Prince Philip visited Harrogate on the Royal Train and did a 20-minute walkabout in front of the station, where they met members of the public and various charities, including St George’s Home, on Otley Road.
Read more:
They then went on in a royal convey to Ripon Cathedral where the Queen gave out Maundy Money to local parishioners and church volunteers.
Sun Pavilion
In 1998 the Queen re-opened the Sun Pavilion in Harrogate following its restoration. The Sun Pavilion and Colonnade has recently been given Grade II listed status as part of the Queen’s platinum jubilee.
Ripon
On May 27, 2004, the Queen and Prince Philip visited Ripon to mark the 400th anniversary of the city’s Royal Charter, granted by James I in 1604.
As well as visiting Ripon Town Hall, where they stood on the balcony to wave to the mass crowds, they also did a walkabout in Ripon Market Square and spoke with local residents and visitors.

The Queen and Prince Philip pictured in Ripon in 2004 when Cllr Stuart Martin and his wife April, were the mayor and mayoress of the city
In her long 70 year reign the Queen has touched many hearts in the district. The memories of those who have met her on those very special occasions will stay with them forever.

The Queen at the Great Yorkshire Show in 1977.
Knaresborough Castle, a once mighty fortress for medieval kings, was lit in red, white and blue last night as around 800 people gathered to watch the lighting of a jubilee beacon.
Minutes before the beacon was lit on the dot of 9.45pm, the town crier, Roger Hewitt, made a proclamation of loyalty to the Queen. The crowd cheered as he called out “God Save The Queen”.
The Mayor of Knaresborough, Kathryn Davies, then lit the beacon which was one of 3,500 across the world. You can watch the historic moment in this video.
Cllr Davies said it was wonderful to be a part of the event:
“It is an absolutely unique privilege and great honour in my first term as councillor and mayor.
“Having been to the Platinum Jubilee service at Ripon Cathedral this morning on behalf of the people of Knaresborough, it was a great pleasure to do something with the people themselves here tonight.”
Ripon too saw a big turnout for the lighting of its beacon with an estimated two and a half thousand people in Market Square.

Above: The stage is set for the jubilee beacon to be lit

Above: Bagpipe player, Graham Hall, plays as a prelude to the lighting of the beacon
The beacon was lit by the Deputy Lord Lieutenant of North Yorkshire, Dean John Dobson who was accompanied by the Mayor Ripon councillor Sid Hawke — pictured below.
Ripon’s beacon had a burner head in the shape of a globe, representing the countries of the Commonwealth, surrounded by a crown.

These two historic venues were not the only places across the district to light a beacon.
Please send us your pictures of these other beacon lightings and of any jubilee festivities to contact@thestrayferret.co.uk

Above Knaresborough Castle resplendent in red, white and blue and below the crowd get into the spirit of the weekend

Five of today’s jubilee highlights in the Harrogate district
The first day of the Queen’s platinum jubilee has been blessed with warm, sunny weather in the Harrogate district..
There were cakes to judge, events to attend and lots of opportunities to chill with family and friends.
It isn’t over yet — tonight will see beacons lit across the district at 9.45pm as part of a national initiative. But here are five highlights so far.
Our live blog will be back tomorrow with more rolling jubilee coverage. Send us your photos to contact@thestrayferret.co.uk and we will include them in our coverage.
1 Dignitaries turn out in force in Ripon

The city’s cathedral hosted North Yorkshire’s service to honour the Queen. Among those attending were The Archbishop of York, Ripon MP Julian Smith, Grantley Hall owner Valeria Sykes and former Look North presenter Harry Gration, who is also a deputy Lord Lieutenant of North Yorkshire.
2 Bilton’s Party on the Pitch is a big hit

Bilton Cricket Club’s Party on the Pitch attracted a huge turnout of families. It showed there is a big appetite in Bilton for a community event and how much the area misses the annual Bilton Gala.
3 The first street parties get underway

Sunday is the main day for street parties but residents of Castle Hill Glade in Pannal Ash decided they didn’t want to wait that long and got cracking today.
4 Ripon mum wins Bettys Jubilee Bake Off

The moment Lori (centre) found out she had won.
Lori Hendry’s Victoria sponge beat three other shortlisted entries in the Bettys Jubilee Bake Off.
Three judges deliberated for half an hour before deciding the Ripon mum’s delicious offering was number one.
5 Children flock to Harrogate’s Valley Gardens

The offer of free activities and facepainting was always likely to be a surefire hit with families and that proved the case as families descended on Harrogate’s Valley Gardens today.
There was also the opportunity to watch the BBC’s coverage of Trooping the Colour on a big screen on the Stray.
Read more:
- Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones MP named as Tory ‘rebel’
- JUBILEE LIVE: Dignitaries attend Ripon Cathedral for county service
A cake fit for a Queen: Ripon mum wins Bettys Jubilee Bake Off
A Ripon mum has baked a cake judged to be fit for a Queen as part of the Bettys Jubilee Bake Off.
Lori Hendry beat three other shortlisted bakers with a Victoria sponge decorated with red, white and blue icing adorned with a crown and Union Jack flags.
Ann Hedges, food and nutrition teacher at St Aidan’s, Paul Farr, food and drink director at Bettys, and Lisa Benninson, development chef and Bettys Cookery School teacher, judged the final on Wednesday, June 1.
Ms Benninson thanked the shortlist of Lori Hendry, Irene Threadgold, Louise Winter and Edward Lee for baking their cakes and said it was tough to pick out an overall winner.

The moment Lori (centre) found out she had won.
The three judges deliberated for around half an hour and assessed each cake against the criteria Bettys uses to test all of its new products.
Delighted with the win and prize of a course of her choice at Bettys Cookery School, Ms Hendry told the Stray Ferret:
“I am feeling shocked to be honest, really shocked. I didn’t expect to win it at all. I am very chuffed.
“I first got into baking because I started baking for the kids really. When you have three kids you always need a cake on the go!”
Read more:
- Harrogate district jubilee celebrations begin
- Carnival coming to Harrogate as part of summer programme
Paul Farr, food and drink director at Bettys, said:
“I’ve been in the industry for nearly 40 years but when you are judging you need to be able to pull on all of your experience and your honest appraisal on products.
“There was a high standard so it comes down to those fine points of difference that makes a cake stand out from being really good to being the winner.”

(Left to right) Louise Winter, Irene Threadgold and Lori Hendry. Edward Lee could not make it but his cake is second in from the left.
Ann Hedges, food and nutrition teacher at St Aidans, said:
“It was a real privilege to be part of the judging process. With so many potential winners, I think everybody brought something slightly different to the competition.
“For me it was fantastic to see people’s skill level. We had the cake making, meringue making, the piping. All of those skills are an art at the end of the day. We were very lucky to be able to judge that art.”
Lisa Benninson, development chef and Bettys Cookery School teacher, said:
“I thought it was really great. As chefs and bakers it is always a treat when somebody else makes a cake. It was a really nice thing to do to judge a cake competition fit for a Queen on the Platinum Jubilee.
“We had lots of different flavour combinations. We had a rose and pistachio, lots of Victoria sponges. There was a close finish but it was about attention to detail in the end – and that’s Bettys motto.”
The shortlisted cakes

Lori Hendry’s winning cake (Left) with Edward Lee’s cake.

Louise Winter’s cake (Left) with Irene Threadgold’s cake.
We are just weeks away from celebrating HRH Queen Elizabeth’s Platinum Jubilee, making her the country’s longest-reigning monarch.
Her Majesty actually succeeded the throne from her father, King George VI, on February 6, 1952, but as her jubilee would also mark the date of his death, it has always been celebrated four months later on June 3.
Events are being planned across the Harrogate district in celebration, but many will want to enjoy the occasion more privately with friends and family at home.
We spoke to seven Harrogate food and drink businesses to find out how they are celebrating and got some tips on what to include in good old-fashioned British spread:
Mama Doreen’s Emporium

The 1950s-inspired Jubilee afternoon tea at Mama Doreen’s
Jessica Wyatt, owner of Mama Doreen’s, said:
“We are doing a 1950s-inspired afternoon tea. We are taking the most popular puddings from around that decade and including them in our afternoon tea. It’s something a little bit different and a little bit special. You’ve got the cherries Jubilee, English trifle, Victoria sponge butterfly buns, shortbread, Coronation chicken sandwich and even a cucumber sandwich.
“My favourite afternoon tea item is butterfly buns because that’s what my grandma used to make. I think a lot of people have that same nostalgia.”
“For the actual Bank Holiday weekend we’re going to dress up in 1950s outfits, we’ve got singers performing throughout the day. We are going above and beyond with the balloons outside. We are also doing the Jubilee afternoon teas to take away and we can deliver to the Stray.
“We are really trying to push the street parties and get communities together. So we have put everything for a street party on our website, from the bunting down to the hats.
“I’m really looking forward to just feeling the buzz around Harrogate. Loads of people will be visiting and all the locals will be out and hopefully the weather will be lovely as well. I just think after the last couple of years it’s what the community needs. “
Spirit of Harrogate, producer of Slingsby Gin

A Slingsby Gin Platinum Punch cocktail.
Beth Gordon, digital copywriter at Spirit of Harrogate, said:
“A party isn’t a party without some amazing drinks, and for the Jubilee it should definitely be the Queen’s favourite spirit; gin.
“If you’re thinking of serving Slingsby Gin, make sure you have everything you need for our signature serves. This means our perfect pairing of tonic and garnishes that guarantee an amazing gin and tonic every time. For example, you’ll need Elderflower tonic for your Yorkshire Rhubarb gin and Mediterranean for Gooseberry.
“A Jubilee party is the perfect excuse to get the pitchers and jugs out and fill them with cocktails. You could even fill up some Kilner jars with the pre-made mixtures so that your guests can help themselves. Our Platinum Punch is a delicious cocktail, as well as our Slingsby Sangria with London Dry gin. Don’t forget to accommodate your guests who aren’t drinking alcohol too – and make sure you have lots of garnishes alongside ice so that people can help themselves and add extra flavour (and aesthetics) to their cocktails.”
Weetons

Weeton’s Jubilee picnic hamper
Thomas Lonsdale, restaurant supervisor at Weetons, said:
“It’s only right that you should have strawberries and cream for your picnic or with your afternoon tea. I’d also choose choose sausage rolls, pork pies, salads, baguettes, cheese, olives and wine. We’ve actually got some cans of mixers coming in, which will be really good.
“I’ll be getting into the spirit of the weekend on the Stray or at a street party.
“We have luxury Jubilee hampers available, which are perfect for just picking up and carrying across the road to the Stray.”
Fodder

Iced shortbread biscuits and a cup of Yorkshire tea at Fodder.
Jo Francisco, PR manager at Fodder, said ready-made picnics would be available at the food hall.
Jo said:
“People can book their Jubilee picnic at Fodder with pies, quiches, cheese boxes, meat packs and barbecue packs all available to pre-order ready for the Jubilee celebrations.
“Throughout the Jubilee week, there will be a Jubilee-themed afternoon tea on offer in Fodder café, as well as stunning cakes from the Cake Lady Harrogate. These will include Champagne truffle chocolate cake, raspberry blueberry and white chocolate cake and Victoria sponge cupcakes.”
Read more:
- Princess Anne to visit Harrogate’s Great Yorkshire Show
- Timetable of Platinum Jubilee celebrations in Valley Gardens
All of Fodder’s profits help to fund the work of the Yorkshire Agricultural Society, a registered charity which supports and promotes the farming industry.

Former CEO of Yorkshire Agricultural Society, Nigel Pulling, meets HM The Queen in Harrogate in 2008.
West Park Hotel

The Classic Dubonnet Cocktail.
Anthony Blundell, hotel commercial manager, said:
“We are doing a Jubilee cocktail, which is going to be a ‘Classic Dubonnet Cocktail’ – her Majesty’s favourite. It includes Dubonnet, Tanquery Gin and Angustura Orange Bitters with a flavour profile of fig, red berries, orange and junipers, which is elegant yet strong – quite like her Royal Highness.”
Thug Sandwich Company

Edward Lee with a ‘pig in a blanket’ at Thug Sandwich.
Edward Lee, barista at Thug Sandwich, said you can’t beat a good sausage roll or scotch egg when it comes to the perfect accompaniment for your Jubilee picnic.
He added:
“When it comes to sandwiches, I’d recommend a good old fashioned Ploughmans, as it includes popular British ingredients and you can’t go wrong.
“This should all be washed down with a good sessionable pale ale.
“Having great food and drink is important. However, it’s not all about the occasion, but about the people you spend it with.”
Whittaker’s Gin

The Jubilee edition Whitaker’s Gin.
Jane Whittaker, co-founder of Whittaker’s Gin, which is based in Dacre Banks, said:
“We are releasing a Jubilee Edition gin.
“We have based the recipe on our existing Summer Solstice Gin, but tweaked the amount of grapefruit in the distillation and have added natural colouring to the liquid.
“We have changed all our gold foiling to silver to match the with Platinum theme and added an additional commemorative label.
“We thought this would not only be pleasing to the eye because of the colouring on the official Palace Jubilee roundel, but also our Summer Solstice is so popular, especially at this time of year.”
