The Mail on Sunday

Festive light shows at their sparkling best

HOLIDAY HERO

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EVERY week our Holiday Hero

NEIL SIMPSON takes an in-depth look at a brilliant holiday topic, doing all the legwork so you don’t have to. This week: the country’s best festivals of light.

THE nights might be drawing in but the country is about to light up with some amazing illuminati­ons. Here’s our countdown to six of the most dazzling seasonal displays.

Switching on: November 14

The biggest free light show of all will be the first to open, beginning on Thursday. Durham started the trend for city-wide winter illuminati­ons when its cathedral was bathed in a rainbow of colour a decade ago. It has since sent its best lighting rigs on tour – but this week the show returns home bigger, brighter and more immersive than ever. For four days Durham will be transforme­d into a glittering outdoor art gallery with 40 exhibits including a shimmering ‘fog sculpture’, a pink neon snowdome in the heart of town and a giant luminous ‘slinky’ tumbling down the city streets. lumiere-festival.com

Switching on: November 22

A series of mile-long festive light trails open at seven sites round the UK, including the Bedgebury Pinetum in Kent, Oxfordshir­e’s Blenheim Palace and the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh. Each display is different, but most include tunnels of light, laser displays and scented ‘Fire Gardens’ with virtual flames. At Bedgebury, ribbons of light guide you to a shimmering lake where coloured lights dance on hundreds of tiny boats. Each venue plays Christmas classics as you drink mulled wine or hot chocolate, and there are fire pits to toast marshmallo­ws. Most are open until January, with family tickets from £52. mychristma­strails.co.uk

Switching on: November 28

Lights will shine across Plymouth to mark America’s Thanksgivi­ng night – and the approach of the 400th anniversar­y of the Mayflower’s departure for the New World. The city’s free, four-day light festival is growing fast and this year expands from its old Royal William Yard hub into the city’s Barbican and Mount Edgcumbe Park areas. illuminate-festival.co.uk

Switching on: November 29

Follow this year’s new illuminate­d trail (and the smell of roast chestnuts) t hrough t he Westonbirt Arboretum in Gloucester­shire and you’re set to see a host of woodland characters dancing amid the trees – bathed in every colour of the rainbow. The trail is open for the next four weekends and ends in a classic Christmas village. It’s popular and booking is essential. It’s £15 for adults, £7.50 for children. forestryen­gland.uk/westonbirt

Switching on: November 30

The giant biomes of the Eden

Project in Cornwall are lit up in reds, purples, blues and golds for a month as guests explore the ‘rainforest by night’ and walk down an avenue of lights and lanterns towards the glowing globe Gaia, a floating replica of Planet Earth based on Nasa images. An ice rink, Father Christmas and seasonal stalls add to t he atmosphere. Family tickets from £67. edenprojec­t.com

Switching on: December 14

For something a little more oldfashion­ed, head to the pictureper­fect fishing town of Mousehole in Cornwall. Volunteers have strung coloured lights around the harbour for 56 years (missing just one year amid the power cuts of the 1970s). This year there will be some 7,000 bulbs. Local choirs will sing at the big switch-on, and the nightly display lasts until January 4.

 ??  ?? BRIGHT SPOTS: An illuminate­d Blenheim Palace, left, where there will also be a light trail, and, above, a ‘cloud’ exhibit at Durham’s annual festival
BRIGHT SPOTS: An illuminate­d Blenheim Palace, left, where there will also be a light trail, and, above, a ‘cloud’ exhibit at Durham’s annual festival
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