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Entertainment
Sophie McLaughlin

Swamp Festival set to take place in Belfast for first time

The first-ever ‘Swamp Festival’ in Belfast is coming to the Bog Meadows Nature Reserve in Belfast next weekend.

A unique and free fusion of music, arts and crafts, storytelling, nature walks and cultural workshops, the festival will celebrate the return of the African sedge warblers, willow warblers, house martins and swallows to Bog Meadows.

Belfast City Council and Ulster Wildlife have joined forces with ArtsEkta to put in place this special Swamp Festival for all the family as part of the £5.1million EU PEACE IV-funded Forth Meadow Community Greenway project.

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With African music from Magwere, traditional Irish music and local folk band The Doone Brothers on stage throughout the afternoon, the day starts at 6am on May 14 with a special Dawn Chorus and finishes with the Forth Meadow Greenway Duck Derby at 4pm.

Nisha Tandon, Founder and CEO of ArtsEkta, said : “We are delighted to present the first ever Swamp Festival on this island on behalf of Belfast City Council, following our inaugural Greenway Luminate Festival in March. We look forward to putting on more events throughout the Summer to bring the Forth Meadow Community Greenway to life this year.”

Tickets are free but must be pre-booked via ArtsEkta’s website, which contains the full programme of activities for the festival.

Artist Wilson Magwere who will be performing African music and storyteller Louise Conaghan who will be engaging families with her wonderful nature stories on the day (Press Eye)

Rose Crozier, Director of City and Neighbourhood Services, Belfast City Council said: “We attracted a tremendous crowd for our first Greenway cultural event in March, with the Luminate Festival, so we’re hoping more and more families will join us on Saturday 14 May for this amazing Swamp Festival to enjoy this wonderful new space being created in the heart of the city to bring people from all communities together.”

The Greenway is being delivered through Belfast City Council’s PEACE IV, Local Authority Action Plan. This Action Plan has been funded through the EU’s PEACE IV Programme, which is managed by The Special EU Programmes Body.

Match-funding has been provided by the Executive Office in Northern Ireland and the Department of Rural and Community Development in Ireland.

Deborah McLaughlin, Community Engagement Officer with Ulster Wildlife said: “Every year hundreds of feathered visitors flock to Bog Meadows from Africa to rear their young. This amazing green space, right in the heart of West Belfast, is a fantastic asset, not only for wildlife but for local people to enjoy and we look forward to showcasing it at the Swamp Festival.”

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