
Wychwood Festival is an annual music festival held at Cheltenham racecourse in Gloucestershire, UK.
The festival began in 2005, and features mostly indie, folk and world music. The festival is known for its family friendly feel, big range of music on offer, plus a lot of other activities including 100 workshops for all ages, comedy, cinema and much more. The event has a very laid back vibe, and you can drive onto the campsite to unload all your gear. It has been nominated Best Family Festival in the UK Festival Awards every year.
As well as music, the family-friendly three-day festival includes workshops, comedy, the Children’s Literature Festival, and a Headphone Disco. The festival consists of four stages.
The festival has been described as “Britain’s most popular family festival”, by the Sunday Mirror, and as “an excellent hybrid of The Big Chill, WOMAD and The Cambridge Folk Festival.” by Time Out magazine. The festival has also been called a “bijou Glastonbury” and a “safe, fun place to take the family but also rock ‘n’ roll enough for the most hardened of music fans”.

Cheltenham Racecourse at Prestbury Park, near Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England, hosts National Hunt horse racing. Racing at Cheltenham took place in 1815, but comprised only minor flat races on Nottingham Hill. The first racing on Cleeve Hill was on Tuesday 25 August 1818 when the opening race was won by Miss Tidmarsh, owned by Mr E Jones. It was a year later when the results were printed in the Racing Calendar when a programme of flat racing was watched by the Duke of Gloucester who donated 100 Guineas to the prize fund. By 1831 races were being staged at Prestbury, although not on the present day course. In 1834 the Grand Annual Steeplechase was run for the first time.
In 1839 Lottery won the Grand Annual having previously won the first Aintree Grand National. In 1840 the meeting transferred to Andoversford for a brief period, only to return to Prestbury in 1847. 1902 was a notable year in that racing moved to the present course at Prestbury Park. The new stands were completed in 1914 and the present day Festival races, as we know them, began to take shape. The Cheltenham Gold Cup, over 3 ¼ miles, was run for the first time in 1924, with the Champion Hurdle following in 1927.






