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Somerset festival invites locals to embrace 'Mud Month' inspired by Saxon Solmōnaþ
Summary
A community-run 'Month of Mud' in the Quantock Hills draws on the Anglo-Saxon Solmōnaþ tradition to offer muddy walks, art sessions and storytelling aimed at reconnecting people with the landscape.
Content
A misty, rainy day in the Quantock Hills framed the start of a community event that celebrates mud. Organisers say the Month of Mud in February is inspired by the Anglo-Saxon name Solmōnaþ and aims to reconnect people with the landscape and seasonal rhythms. Activities include squelchy walks, art sessions using the red-hued soil and storytelling about earthy traditions. The programme is intended to be accessible to different abilities and levels of waterproof footwear.
What we know:
- The event is being run by the Quantock Hills landscape team and community organiser Jon Barrett.
- The festival is inspired by the Anglo-Saxon term Solmōnaþ, often translated as "mud month."
- Planned activities include muddy hikes, art sessions mixing local mud with honey for paint, and storytelling sessions.
- Organisers offer walks with different "welly" ratings so some routes avoid deep mud while others embrace it.
- The region has been unusually wet in February, with repeated rainfall and Met Office alerts affecting parts of the south-west.
Summary:
The festival frames mud as part of seasonal renewal and aims to draw people outdoors despite wet conditions. Organisers say the events will run through February with a mix of low- and high-mud activities to suit different participants.
