JANUARY DIARY 2010
The main story of January at Badminton as everywhere else was of
course the weather! On two or three days the
village was pretty well cut off and we couldn’t get in to
the office and to add to our woes this coincided with the opening
of the Box Office and lots of teething troubles with our new
ticketing system. As I write at the end of the month things seem to
be going more smoothly but we are very grateful for the cheerful
acceptance of the difficulties our customers
experienced.
The heavy frosts actually made one aspect of the coursebuilding
easier when we transported some huge tree trunks across the frozen
ground, doing no damage in the process. Alan Willis and his team
have now finished the preparation of all the fixed fences and will
go off to other courses for February – then in early March will
return to start putting out the portables, pinning the frangibles
and building up to the event.
Finalising plans with all our contractors has continued, with some
quite exciting changes afoot. In particular we are really enthused
about our new waste disposal arrangements – not normally the most
exciting of topics – with locally based M.J. Church taking on the
contract with a mission to recycle the vast majority of our waste.
The recycling
‘pods’
will be highly visible and we fully expect our eco-conscious
visitors to put their rubbish in the right containers.
Just before Christmas we had the very bad news, as it then seemed,
that our regular final day military band, the Band of H.M. Royal
Marines, Commandos, could not come in 2010 – the, so far, only
major casualty of our date change. They have been good friends to
Badminton and much appreciated by the main arena audience for well
over 20 years. Happily now we are going to be entertained by The
Light Cavalry Band, http://www.army.mod.uk/music/corps-band/418.aspxh,
which while based at Bovington in Dorset has wide connections
locally to Badminton as the band of the Royal Gloucestershire
Hussars was amalgamated into it in 2006.
By the end of the month the tradestand layout should have been
finalised. It is quite a tricky jigsaw puzzle and this year we have
seen very few exhibitors drop out. A few stands reduce in size,
others enlarge and some want to move to another avenue – not always
possible! We will have a few new faces but not very many as a
percentage of the total. Occasionally other changes we make have a
knock on effect – for example this year we are expanding Relish’s
Deli next to the Scoreboard into a much bigger Wine Bar with plenty
of seating, so the British Horse Society stand has had to move ...
and so it goes on.
Our catering offering will change in other
exciting ways, to include a new pub and a Badminton party – watch
out for an announcement soon!
The basic administration of the event has to
be put to bed very soon now, so all the ‘briefs’ – the written
instructions for every official or activity – have to be updated,
with all of us trying to remember to put ‘Sunday’ instead of
‘Saturday’ everywhere. We are quite certain that something with the
wrong day of the week will leave the office this year.
The highlight of the last month for the Event
Director has been to survive a formal VAT Inspection unscathed!
While these are only routine and while the inspector himself was
absolutely charming, no business looks forward to these and we can
hardly believe that we have not made any major errors over the past
two or three years. It calls for a glass of champagne – but not of
course claiming back the VAT on it!