


The Hop Festival is a mish-mash of lots of different things. It has beer, but it isn't a beer festival. It has live music, but it isn't a music festival. It has Morris dancing, but it isn't a folk festival. It has children's rides, but it isn't a funfair. It sells food, but it isn't a street market.



Now (surprisingly for me) I haven't been before. I've been meaning to, but life just kept getting in the way. Not this year though; I was fully determined to partake in all the glory that the hop festival had to offer!


















Hops have always played an intrinsic part of British life and there is evidence of Hops in Faversham from as early as 900AD. It's no surprise then that in the last 1100 years we have really grown to know and understand these wonderful little feminine flowers that add such complexity to one of our national drinks. Faversham has been growing and trading in it's own hops since the 1520's and it has become a major part of the Faversham economy ever since. Shepherd Neame was founded in Faversham in 1698, making it the oldest brewer in Britain and their headquarters (and brewery) are still based in the town to this day.
















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