
National Picnic Week takes place this June across the UK, so grab your blankets and baskets out of the cupboards and get out to the great outdoors for a good old fashioned picnic. Pop into The Village Kitchen and fill your basket with our takeaway food and enjoy a picnic.
Head to the National Picnic Week website and VOTE FOR YOUR FAVOURITE PICNIC SPOT
As a national pastime every summer, National Picnic Week aims to provide picnic tips, picnic hotspots, and everything surrounding picnics to help the nation roll out their picnic rugs and embrace British summertime wherever you are.
SUPRISING PICNIC FACTS YOU MIGHT NOT KNOW
Picnics are on the rise in the UK, with more people choosing to spend time away from phones and other devices, and spending some quality time with friends or family instead.
It’s proven that getting some fresh air and sunlight is good for you, and enjoying some healthy home cooked food is the perfect way to relax without breaking the budget. With haute cuisine on the rise, more people are enjoying cooking a meal that not only delicious, but beautiful too. Then it can be enjoyed in a setting as breathtaking as the food.
Here are our top ten facts about picnics to get you inspired:
- The average person picnics at least three times a year, that’s 94 million picnics per year
- The average family spends £26 per picnic totalling £2,479,720,000.
- Originally, a picnic was a fashionable social event to which each guest contributed some food.
- The French started the modern fashion for picnics when they opened their royal parks to the public after the revolution of 1789.
- The use of the phrase “no picnic” to describe something difficult dates back to 1884.
- The most popular picnic snack fifty years ago was the humble cheese sandwich. Now, it’s a bag of crisps.
- The most popular day for picnics in the US is the 4th of July. In Italy it’s Easter Monday. In France, it’s Bastille Day. In the UK, it’s (weather dependent) rapidly becoming National Picnic Week.
- Fortnum & Mason, the London department store, claims to have invented the Scotch egg in 1738. They still sell them today.
Source : National Picnic Week