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Everything you need to know ahead of Great Knaresborough Bed Race 2023

Everything you need to know ahead of Great Knaresborough Bed Race 2023

Our Great Knaresborough Bed Race coverage is sponsored by Verity Frearson Estate Agents.

The Great Knaresborough Bed Race is back and is set to provide its usual pageant of decorated beds, passengers and runners.

90 teams are preparing to hit the streets of Knaresborough on Saturday (10th June), and this year’s theme is ‘That’s Entertainment.’

So ahead of its return, here’s everything you need to know about the Great Knaresborough Bed Race…

Great Knaresborough Bed Race is back this weekend.

When does it start?

The days starts in the morning at Knaresborough Castle where the teams gather, decorate their beds and don their fancy dress.

Judging of the ‘Best Dressed Bed’ starts at 10:30am and will be announced at around 12:30pm.

From 1pm, they parade through the town led by the winner of the Best Dressed Award and follow the route to Conyngham Hall field.

There, the decorations come off and the teams strip down to racing trim for the Race itself which sets off at 3pm.

Crowds gather for the Great Knaresborough Bed Race.

The Course

Teams set off from the start line at roughly 10-second intervals and embark on the arduous course. This takes them up the grassy bank, through Conyngham parkland, across Bond End and onto Waterside.

They progress through the Nidd Gorge before ascending the very steep Castle Ings. They do a circuit of the market place before descending High Street and the quickest stretch of the course down Bond End.

This time they cross High Bridge to the Mother Shipton side and enjoy the rustic charms of McIntosh Park. After a few hundred yards they arrive at the river, but on the far side to where they started the race.

The final act is to swim the 40 yards to the Conyngham bank – runners, passengers, beds and all. The River Nidd has steep banks and one thing is certain – it’s always icy for Bed Race Day!

Beds dressed ahead of the Great Knaresborough Bed Race.

How long does it take?

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The fastest teams complete the course in under 13 minutes as a rule, with the slowest coming in at about twice that time.

Course conditions and the depth of water in the river will have a bearing on the final outcome, but fitness and competitiveness will win out on the day.

Speak to anyone who has taken part and they will assure you that this is one of the most gruelling athletic challenges they will have faced. Despite and probably because of this, many regulars have competed in Bed Race for years and years. Some for decades.

The Great Knaresborough Bed Race is a mighty annual pageant.

How did it begin?

The Great Knaresborough Bed Race was started in 1966 by the Knaresborough Round Table. The idea was to raise money for charity while putting on a great event for participants and a superb spectacle for the crowds of people who came to watch.

It has maintained its popularity over the years and has spawned other bed races in the UK, Europe, the USA, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.

Media coverage of what is a thoroughly picturesque event spans the globe. China TV aired footage of last year’s race.

Four teams entered in its first year, all by invitation and all military. By 1970, the race field had grown to 50 and more.

Reflecting the times, the teams at first were all male and the passengers were female. But by 1990 all-female teams were entering and young males were on board. Entries by female and mixed teams have increased every year since.

Today, 90 teams compete on the day and often many more enter. The final race field is usually selected by lottery.

The parade for the Great Knaresborough Bed Race.

Who organises the race?

The Round Table struggled to attract sufficient members so brought in the Knaresborough Lions Club to organise the event alongside them.

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By the end of the 1990s and ever since, the Lions have been the sole manager of Bed Race, but rely on large numbers of volunteers to help.

Lions are a charity and are comprised of volunteers who give up their time to organise fundraising events and make donations to charities and worthy causes, mostly local.

The Great Knaresborough Bed Race.

Volunteers on the day

On Bed Race Day, more than 250 other people come along to help. They marshal the race route, judge the Best Dressed beds, man the entry gates, help prepare the course and clean up afterwards.

With 90 teams, there are 630 runners and passengers. Dance groups and marching bands add spice to the Parade, and many helpers and children join their teams too in marching to Conyngham Hall.

Altogether with those who build and decorate the beds, and stich and sew the costumes, it is believed that more than 2,000 are directly involved.

Over many years going back to the 1960s, huge crowds turn up to watch, numbering anything up to and beyond 30,000 people.

90 teams compete in the Great Knaresborough Bed Race.

Costs and Amenities

Access to Conyngham Hall field where the race starts and finishes, and from where the river crossing can be viewed on the Big Screen or live is £3 per adult. Children 16 and under enter free.

All proceeds go to pay expenses in putting on the event. Surplus funds go to local charities and good causes.

It costs about £30,000 for the event to be staged, which involves road closures, traffic management, crowd barriers, licenses, printing, signage, hire of equipment and materials.

Lions look to cover these costs through sponsorship, advertising in and sale of a printed event Programme, team entry fees, and income from spectators entering Conyngham Hall field, plus other charitable contributions.

The River Nidd crossing at the Great Knaresborough Bed Race.

The finish line

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In Conyngham Hall there are bars, food stalls and attractions for children. The Big Screen shows live footage from the day, especially the iconic river crossing, plus results and footage from previous years.

Your Harrogate is Bed Race’s media partner and will count down to the start of the race.

Our presenters will commentate on the day and will relay important community and safety news. Music will be played for the entertainment of fans from the stage, and the trophies will be presented on the stage.

Thousands turn out for the Great Knaresborough Bed Race.

Getting to Knaresborough and Road Closures

Free park-and-ride services will run on the day of Bed Race between Knaresborough Technology Park on Manse Lane and just around the corner at ALM Manufacturing on Grimbald Crag Close. Bus stops will be marked.

The parking premises will open in the morning and will close at 6pm in the evening.

It is important that people move their cars before this time as the premises will be locked. Like the bus service, parking is free.

King James School will offer all-day parking for £5.

Roads in and around Knaresborough are closed to traffic from 12:30pm until around 6pm.

The Market, Castlegate and Silver Street, are closed from 10:30am, and the main roads of the High Street, Bond End, part of Boroughbridge Road and Harrogate Road from 12:30pm.

There are closures, too, affecting Cheapside, Castlegate, part of Brewerton Street, Fisher Street, High Bond End, Castle Ings and Waterside from Castle Mills to High Bridge.

Parking is suspended all around the course on waterside, Castle Ings, Market Place, High Street and Bond End. Conyngham Hall field parking is closed for the day.

Verity Frearson at Great Knaresborough Bed Race.

Public transport

Buses running up York Road and Briggate will continue to operate, and there will be train services all day long from York and Harrogate into Knaresborough station.

Want to find out more information? Check out the Bed Race website here.

  • June 9, 2023