Thrills and spills in Gorey

Friday 19th August 2011, 1:40PM BST.

Will Dulley tackles the yard of ale

THOUSANDS of Islanders enjoyed beach games, sand castle competitions, live music and a spaghetti eating competition as Gorey hosted its annual fete along the pier.

The event, which ended with a 20-minute firework display, also included the long-established yard-of ale-competition, karaoke and beautiful baby competition, which was judged by Miss Battle of Flowers, Alice Cubbage, Miss St Martin, Sophia Wall and Miss Trinity, Anna Ormsby.

Speaking yesterday afternoon, Miss Ormsby said: ‘It is a real party atmosphere down here. Everyone comes together for an end of summer celebration and to celebrate the good weather.’
Miss Wall added: ‘The baby competition was really hard to judge. There is something here for everyone and it is great that everyone comes together.

As well as providing Islanders with a fun day out, the event is also important for the charities on the Island.’

Full story in Friday’s JEP

Click here for more pictures

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8


  1. 1
    Party Animal

    “beach games, sand castle competitions, live music and a spaghetti eating competition”

    Boy they sure know how to party, I had to settle for 10 pints of wifebeater and a kebab. Does getting kebab sauce down my shirt count as a variant on spaghetti eating?

    Report abuse

  2. 2
    Stall holder

    Is a very good fate but found this year it was spoiled by teenages that can not handle there drink, then when asked to leave stalls, they felt the need to use verbal abuse at us it’s such a shame

    Report abuse

  3. 3
    C Le Verdic

    Stall holder
    ‘Is a very good fate’

    I always found it a fate worse than death!

    Report abuse

  4. 4
    Theo

    Another rip-off as you have to pay £4 to get in. And why not have the fete on a weekend instead of a Thursday? Is it a case of ‘we’ve always had the fete on a Thursday for tens of years’? If you want to attract the crowds/raise more money (or don’t they?), then move it to a Sunday.

    Report abuse

  5. 5
    Chris

    I refused to go out of principle because £4.00 to just enter this Fete is disgraceful. I also refused to attend the Fish festival when I found out they wanted £3.00 to get in. People spend automatically when they go to these ‘get-togethers’ so when will the organisers stop trying to rip people off and do something constructive for locals and tourism for a change? I mean what’s the £4.00 for anyway, what are these over-heads I wonder?

    Report abuse

  6. 6
    They're Their There

    2 Stall Holder –
    Is a very good fate but found this year it was spoiled by teenages that can not handle there drink

    They’re an ill educated bunch, many don’t know their there’s from their their’s,there, there, there it will all work out in the end.

    They’re = they are – their = a possessive pronoun relating to an individual – there = refers to a place or point of reference.

    M Le Verdic I suspect your comment has soared over Stall Holder’s head, as undoubtably has mine.

    Report abuse

  7. 7
    Sensible

    They’re Their There – Sad, Saddo, Saddest

    Report abuse

  8. 8
    Day V Lately

    Indignant at paying a few quid that’s going to charity?! Only in Jersey!

    Report abuse

  9. 9
    They're Their There

    7 Sensible ( misnomer surely )
    They’re Their There – Sad, Saddo, Saddest

    Well done, and two of your choices are real words For those of us who went to school I feel it’s important to maintain a minimum grammatical standard. You probably think that a basic grasp of the written form of your native tongue is unimportant. I wonder if you are as happy for bank tellers to be numerically incompetant.

    If this is the standard of education on this island no wonder so many are unemployed, they are unemployable.

    Report abuse

  10. 10
    Sensible

    They’re Their There – “Well done, and two of your choices are real words For those of us who went to school I feel it’s important to maintain a minimum grammatical standard.”

    As do I, thus I feel it would be correct for you to place a full stop between “words” and “For”.

    According to the Oxford Dictionary:
    “Saddo
    noun (plural saddos)
    British informal
    a person perceived as contemptible or pathetically inadequate:
    girly mags were for middle-aged saddos, not for right-on young men.”

    I have said it before, it is pedantic to correct people on their grammar when the flow of their post can be followed.

    Report abuse

  11. 11
    Dave

    No 9. = Troll – Ignore similar comments in future.

    Report abuse

  12. 12
    Crampe des écrivain

    They’re Their There 6.

    Re: “their = a possessive pronoun relating to an individual”

    If you must correct the grammar and spelling of others, do it with grace and respect…oh, and get things right!

    “Their” is not a possessive pronoun, it’s a possessive adjective (also known as possessive determiner).

    You were obviously off school the day the teacher explained the difference between the two.

    Report abuse

  13. 13
    David

    Crampe, it can be both, but he is also wrong in stating that it relates to an individual. “their finest hour”

    So he can’t punctuate properly,(missing full stop) he has a limited vocabulary (doesn’t think saddo is a word) and doesn’t know the definition of the word their!

    Report abuse

  14. 14
    OMG

    Seriously guys? Who cares? Get a grip.

    Anyway, Gorey Fete was awful, full of young drunk teens, never going again!

    Report abuse

  15. 15
    Crampe des écrivain

    David 13.

    In grammar, the main syntactic role of an adjective is to qualify a noun or noun phrase and thus provide information about the noun.

    Therefore, I think you will find that my, his, her, its, our, your and their are considered possessive adjectives; whereas, mine, his, hers, its (rarely used), ours, yours and theirs are considered possessive pronouns.

    Furthermore, possessive adjectives/determiners cannot stand alone and require a noun if they are to qualify possession, for example, my pen, their hats, etc.

    Possessive pronouns, on the other hand, can stand alone and still qualify possession, for example, it’s theirs, they’re mine (no noun needed).

    Borin’init! ;)

    Report abuse

  16. 16
    Crampe Le Verdic

    ‘Crampe des écrivain’ looks horribly wrong to me!

    For a start there should be an ‘s’ on the end of écrivain if you mean ‘writers’cramp’. If you mean ‘writer’s cramp’ then ‘des’ is wrong.

    Report abuse

  17. 17
    Fete hate

    Gorey fete has been awful for years.

    Went down about 5 years ago with my wife and mother, we got jostled around, sworn at and couldn’t find a seat for love nor money. It was just an excuse for the Gorey locals to get on the drink early and stumble around drunk.

    St Clements fete was the last one this year I hear, it seems these things are too close together or need updating.

    Walking around getting p*ssed, smoking and shouting isn’t my idea of fun.

    As for the teenagers, A level results, summer holidays, what else are they going to do? Of course they are going to be there, when I last went they were not the main problem, the 30 somethings stumbling around blind drunk were!!

    Report abuse

  18. 18
    David

    Crampe, Yes yours is the most common view but not the only one.

    Their and theirs are also classed by some as possessive pronouns, more specifically their is a weak posessive pronoun and theirs is a strong or absolute posessive pronoun.

    Report abuse

  19. 19
    Crampe des écrivains

    Well spotted CLV, an ‘s’ is missing. Next time I’ll use ‘Le spasme du scribe’…far more suitable!

    By the way, you should never say something/someone is wrong. Nice people (and I am sure you are nice) say: “I think you will find that…” (as per my post 13); or “that is not quite right” – both forms are understood to be graceful, even generous ways of drawing a person’s attention to errors. ;)

    Report abuse

  20. 20
    Crampe des écrivains

    Well David, I suspect that most English grammarians would tell me to fight you on this one, but it’s time for bed so, Goodnight, God bless you…mmm…the subjunctive mood…even more borin dan’dem pronouns! ;)

    Report abuse

  21. 21
    C Le Verdic

    Sorry Crampe! I should have said ‘incorrect’. That’s nicer than ‘wrong’.

    Please bear in mind that I was christened ‘C Le Verdic’, not ‘Polite Attention Drawer’!

    Report abuse

  22. 22
    Norman Conquest

    I feel sorry for all you sad people who have nothing better to do than slag people of about they’re/their/there spelling.

    Report abuse

  23. 23
    jerseygirlcapetown

    BY the looks of the photos it was stuff your face and drink til you drop! most look like they are going to vomit, the winner is eating with hands not fork like the rest !!!
    Can all this on fri/sat night in St Helier !!!
    Where are the photos of sand castles etc..

    Report abuse

KIT 4 CLUBS

Win a share of £10,000 Win a share of £10,000

2012 is the year of the London Olympics and to celebrate this great event the Jersey Evening Post, in association with sponsors Ogier is giving all sporting clubs a chance to win a share of £10,000.