LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, BOYS AND GIRLS... welcome to the big top blog of Douglas McPherson, author of CIRCUS MANIA, the book described by Gerry Cottle as "A passionate and up-to-date look at the circus and its people."
Showing posts with label circus transport. Show all posts
Showing posts with label circus transport. Show all posts

Friday, 23 May 2014

More pictures of Uncle Sam's American Circus trucks in Taverham, Norwich



The star-spangled American trucks of Uncle Sam's Great American Circus always make an impression when they roll into town. Here are some more pictures I snapped of them when the red, white and blue big top pitched up in Taverham on the outskirts of Norwich.




Uncle Sam's Great American Circus
Built up in Taverham, Norwich


Click here for more pictures of Uncle Sam's Great American Circus trucks.





Thursday, 22 May 2014

Uncle Sam's Great American Circus trucks


Over size and over here...
Uncle Sam's American Circus trucks and star-spangled big top
roll up, roll up in Norwich.
Uncle's Sam's Great American Circus may be a British organisation based in Lincolnshire, but its star-spangled selection of American Kenworth and Peterbilt trucks sure look the part the part when they roll into town, as I found when the red white and blue big top pitched up in Norwich last year. Wherever you see them this year, be sure to give them a big "Hey, Y'all!"

Get your kicks
Far from Route 66, Uncle Sam's Yank tanks are are parked
in an eye-catching location at the side of the A1067 Fakenham Road
as you head out of Norwich.
The circus that Peterbilt
The big top won't blow away anchored to that truck 


Red white and blue Kenworth truck
and matching big top
Even Uncle Sam's smaller vehicles
let everyone know the circus is in town
Meanwhile, under star-spangled canvas
the ring and seats are readied for the evening's show

For more on circus transport, click here to read how Ingo Dock moves the Chinese State Circus and click here to see how Pinders Circus did it 100 years ago.

2nd Edition out now!
If you've ever wondered what life is like for those who run away with the circus, read Circus Mania, my behind-the-scenes journey through the world of the big top, talking to showmen, clowns, trapeze artists and tiger trainers about their unique lifestyle, culture, history, superstitions and secrets.
Click here to read the 5-star reviews on Amazon.

















Saturday, 26 April 2014

Circus Ferrel comes to school!

Circus Ferrel at Yaxham Primary School

Following on from my previous post on Circus Starr, which puts on shows for disadvantaged kids (click here to read all about it), I chanced to drive past this afternoon a big top that gives children a chance to star in the spotlit circle, Circus Ferrel.

Circus Ferrel transport
Seen here in the grounds of Yaxham Primary School in Norfolk, Circus Ferrel has a unique business model. Each week it builds up at a school somewhere in East Anglia. During the week they give free circus skills workshops to the children. The keenest kids are then rehearsed for a chance to appear alongside professional performers in the shows that the circus puts on at the weekend.

Circus Ferrel is the brainchild of Martin Taylor, who trained as a teacher and enjoyed a varied career as a TV repairman and steam train driver on a preserved railway before finding his calling as Marty the clown; and his wife Lynette who supervises the show as Grandma the ring-mistress.

The couple became fascinated by the world of the big top after attending a local circus and then getting involved as helpers before deciding to live the dream of setting up their own circus.

If you'd like Circus Ferrel to visit your school, the week-long circus experience includes a circus assembly and ideas for incorporating circus themes into regular classes. It's completely free to the host school and funded by the public shows that the circus puts on at the weekend.

What's in it for the circus? Well, they get a free ground to build up on; the kids promote the circus by putting up posters locally and, best of all, they encourage parents to buy tickets. After all, what mum and dad wouldn't want to attend a show their own children are appearing in?

Sounds like a win-win idea to me. Oh, and if the big top in these pictures looks quiet and deserted beneath that moody sky, don't be fooled. The music coming through the canvas told me there was a performance in full swing, and from the frequent bursts of applause and cheers a full house was lapping it up.

Circus Ferrel's Grandma and Marty
...coming to a school near you
For details, go to www.circusferrel.com and click here to read my review in The Stage of a Circus Ferrel show I attended in Suffolk a couple of years ago.

Tuesday, 7 January 2014

Circus cartoons for International Clown Week, August 1 - 7, 2016

Cartoons by Shobba in Truck and  Driver

When I interviewed Ingo Dock, transport manager of the Chinese State Circus in Truck and Driver, the magazine's cartoonist, Shobba, decided to get in on the act with a page of cartoons about circus lorry drivers. Here are a couple of my favourites.


Cartoon by Shobba

Cartoon by Shobba
Animal rights protesters beware?
Cartoon by Shobba


"Gypsies know not to mix it
with the circus!"
- Ingo Dock
, transport manager
of the Chinese State Circus
interviewed in Truck and Driver
For more on moving the Chinese State Circus click here, and read the full story of the UK's most successful travelling circus in Circus Mania - The Ultimate Book For Anyone Who Dreamed of Running Away with the Circus.

Click here to buy Circus Mania from Amazon in paperback or ebook format.




Sunday, 8 December 2013

All the fun of Carter's Steam Fair

Gerry Cottle (left) and Dr Haze (right)
join author Douglas McPherson
at the Circus Mania launch party






Arriving early for the launch party for Circus Mania, I found myself with a little time to spare and wandered outside to the sunny square in front of the former Victorian power station that houses Britain’s premier circus school Circus Space.
Sitting at a table outside the Juggler café, I spied two distinguished gentlemen of the circus - Gerry Cottle and Dr Haze, founder of the Circus of Horrors. Both being of the with it and for it temperament, they were there to help me promote the book and, being a man without pretension, Gerry’s first action was to buy a fresh round of tea for us all.
He then showed me a book of his own which he’d just collected from the printers - a glossy booklet about the vintage rides and lorries of Carter’s Steam Fair, which is run by the lady in his life, Anna Carter.
Fairs have always been closely allied to circuses, so I decided to interview Anna and her son Joby about life on a fairground that winds back time to the rock’n’roll years of the 1950s and even earlier wherever it sets up.


Carter’s Steam Fair Part One: 
Moving the Fair.











“Don’t ask me about lorries,” says Anna Carter, “I hate lorries!”

Yet this is a lady who owns and operates a fleet of more than twenty vintage Scammells, Fodens and Fords dating from the 1960s, 50s, 40s and even 30s. What’s more, she presses even the oldest of them into the sort of hard labour they were built for, hauling around the home counties the collection of beautifully restored dodgems, gallopers, chair-o-planes and other retro rides that comprise Carters Steam Fair.

That’s not to mention a fleet of 1940s showmen’s living wagons in which Anna, her sons and the other fairground workers reside - even when the fair is parked up for the winter on the edge of an airfield in Berkshire.

Until recently, Anna drove the fleet’s flagship, a 1932 Ford Model A that proudly bears the inscription Britain’s oldest working Fairground Lorry above its windscreen.

“I’m not sure which was the more long in the tooth, the lorry or me,” Anna quips. Either way, it was a lack of driver comforts that eventually drove her out of the 78-year-old cab.

“It was agony to drive,” the fairground matriarch winces. But, when she’s not selling candyfloss at the fairground, or sign-writing her immaculately preserved vehicles back at the yard, Anna is quite happy to take her turn behind the wheel of one of the fair’s more modern workhorses. The bulk of them date from the 60s and 70s - and even that was an era when the idea of cosseting lorry drivers had yet to occur to most manufacturers.

As Anna’s son Joby puts it, “They’re hard work on a hot day, or a cold day - any extreme, really. When you get out you really know you‘ve done it, whereas driving a modern lorry is like sitting in your living room, isn‘t it?”

Yet, having grown up in a wagon, and been serenaded in his cot by the sounds of vintage rock’n’roll from the waltzers and octopus, while his parents plied their trade from showground to showground, you’d never tempt Joby to swap his aging AECs and Atkinsons for the luxury of a new Mercedes.

Reluctant to pick a favourite from the venerable fleet, he says emphatically, “They’re all lovely. Every one has its own distinct character.”

Despite their age, the trucks also appear to be more than up to the job of moving the fair from site to site each week.

All the lorries are finished in Carters distinctive two-tone maroon and red livery and many, such as a 1944 Scammell, bear the slogan British & Best... & Still Going Strong. In fact, the fleet’s motto is perhaps encapsulated in a two-word sign bolted to the Scammell’s radiator grille: Why not?

Living the dream
The founders of Carter's Steam Fair live in
wagons to match their rides and lorries
“It’s good old stock,” says Joby. “It’s built to last.”

Of course, like any vehicles of their age, the lorries have their foibles and have to be treated with respect.

“Sometimes I’ll go off to book a showground,” says Anna, “I’ll come back from the site meeting and go, ’Oh, my God, there’s a hell of a hill.’ Because on a long drawn out hill the engines do get hot. The only thing you can do is pull in as quickly as you can and let the engine cool down.”

“You can’t put any driver into these vehicles,” Joby adds. “They have to know what they’re doing.”

But, when breakdowns do occur, Joby and his brother Seth are more than up to fixing them. Having grown up around dismantled engines and grease, they spend their ‘days off’ from moving and running the fair restoring to their prime lorries that others would find fit only for the scrap yard.

As a biplane buzzes like an angry gnat above the airfield Carters Steam Fair calls home, Joby reveals that he’s just painted the number 23 on his latest restoration, and he’s about to start work on another four that, after a bit of tender loving care, will be “coming into service soon.”

“My sons always liked Meccano,” Anna says proudly. “They can look at a pile of scrap and think, oh yeah, that can be done; we can restore that. They see it as a challenge.”

Click here for Part Two of the Carter’s Steam Fair story, in which we’ll look at how it all began.

And for a fictional look at life on a travelling fair, read the Fairground Girl and Other Attractions by Julia Douglas. Click here to but from Amazon.

Carter's Steam Fair Part Two: How it all Started

Carter's Steam Fair
in full swing









Many fairground families have been in the business for generations. But although Carter's Steam Fair operates probably the oldest rides in the country, as showmen and women they are new kids on the block.

The fair began in the 70s, when Anna Carter’s late husband John brought home a derelict set of gallopers dating from 1895.

At the time, the couple were promoting steam rallies, military vehicle rallies and collectors fairs. But John was a passionate collector in his own right.

“He collected everything, really,” Anna recalls. “American cars, gramophones, enamel signs. If it was old or interesting, he collected it.”

The purchase of the Tidman-built gallopers, however, was to be the beginning of a new passion that eclipsed all John’s many others.

Gallopers, incidentally, is the correct British name for what the uninitiated might call a merry-go-round - the kind where the horses go up and down on poles as it turns. According to Anna, the other commonly misapplied name, carousel, is what the Americans call them - and you can tell the difference because the American roundabouts rotate in an anti-clockwise direction while the British fairground horses always gallop clockwise.

A taste of the 50s
the Rock'n'roll Burger Bar
For months, the couple stripped, painted and restored the countless individual parts of the gallopers in a shanty town of sheds they constructed in the back garden of their rented farmhouse.

By luck they located the original steam engine that had powered the ride and, in the winter of 1976/77, they built up the huge elaborate fairground ride in their front garden.

As the smoke belched, the rows of multi-coloured light-bulbs glowed and the carved wooden horses rose and fell in time to the music, the ornately decorated rounding boards at the top of the mighty contraption missed the gutter of the house by inches.

Initially taking the gallopers to weekend shows, the couple quickly realised that the takings from one ride wouldn’t support their growing family. So, throughout the 80s, they added more and more vintage rides - a set of chair-o-planes from the 1920s,  a 1930s ‘ark,’ and a stomach-churning 1945 dive bomber first owned by circus showman Billy Smart.

The fairground today looks like a living film set, every brightly painted truck, ride, wagon, sign, slot machine, burger bar and ice cream van restored to its original period appearance.

The result is that the fair attracts a more genteel clientele than the typical modern funfair.

“We‘re much more family orientated,” says Anna. “I think everyone gets some yobs nowadays, but we don’t get so many, because the families swamp them out, and the music we play - 40s big band music and 50s rock’n’roll - doesn’t attract them. If we do get any yobs in we put Cliff Richard on. That soon drives them away.”

Click here for Part Three of the Carter’s Steam Fair Story, in which we’ll look at the hard work behind the fun of the fair.

And for a fictional look at life on a travelling fair, read the Fairground Girl and Other Attractions by Julia Douglas. Click here to but fro

Carter's Steam Fair Part Three: Life on the Road






For all the fun of the fair, running Carter’s Steam Fair is far from cushy.

Pulling down and packing away the fair begins on Sunday night and continues all through Monday, with around 20 workers involved. On Tuesday, the fair travels to the next town. Typically, the fair has 16 or 17 lorries in operation at any one time, but even with that many vehicles moving in convoy, there are so many loads to move that Joby and Seth often make three or four trips back and forth.

Wednesday, Thursday and Friday morning are spent putting the rides back together, after which the fair is open all weekend, from noon until 11pm.

The fairground season extends from March to October, with additional shows at Christmas and, apart from the sheer heavy lifting and long hours, the weather is a constant enemy.

“The worst thing is high winds,” says Anna Carter. “We dread that, because it can do so much damage.”

Rain is another problem, turning grassy showgrounds into muddy quagmires.

A taste of the 50s
“We try hard not to damage the ground,” says Anna. “I’d like to say we lay down a state of the art roadway, but we can’t run to that, because they’re about £25,000. Hiring in tracking is also expensive, because when the weather’s bad everyone wants to hire it.

“So when the ground’s wet and muddy, we put down plywood boards to make a length of road and move the lorry and the load along that. The plywood doesn’t last very long, and there’s only so much we can carry. So you have to keep taking it up from behind the load and keep moving it to the front. It’s unbelievably hard work, and if its raining, it’s really miserable.”

In one respect, though, Carters’ vintage rides and lorries have a big advantage over their 21st century counterparts.

“Modern machines are unbelievably heavy,” says Joby. “Show them a bit of mud and they sink beyond recognition.”

Carters rides are much lighter. Many of them, after all, were designed to be moved when the only transport was horse-drawn.

In addition to their permanent staff, the fair attracts a wealth of volunteer labour.

“There’s something about the fairground business where people want to be involved,” says Anna. “They love the atmosphere... and they probably think we’re so mad they want to help us.”

For her own part, Anna says, “The best thing about this life is we’re doing something very different - it’s a bit off the wall, isn’t it? The fair is completely unique and I’m very proud of what we’ve all achieved.

“There’s also a lot of camaraderie. We all socialise and have fun together and if anything goes wrong you can always rely on everyone else to help.”

With no thoughts of retirement in mind, Anna concludes, “I’ll probably be doing this until I die.”

Joby feels the same, adding, “It’s a hard life, but if I didn’t love it, I wouldn’t do it.”

Like his father before him, Joby’s a born collector and for the future he plans to add yet more rides - and lorries - to the family’s ever growing collection.

“I can’t help myself,” he grins. “It would probably be better if we stopped and just travelled what we already have. But the thrill of it is there’s still old equipment around that other people have given up on. So suddenly you think, yes, I’d love to have a ghost train!”


For more information on Carters Steam Fair visit www.carterssteamfair.co.uk or call 01628 822221.


Roll Up, Roll Up for a Great Circus Read.

If you like fairgrounds and circuses, you might enjoy Douglas McPherson’s book, Circus Mania - The Ultimate Book For Anyone Who Dreamed Of Running Away With The Circus.

Described by the great showman Gerry Cottle as “A passionate and up-to-date look at the circus and its people,“ Circus Mania can be ordered direct from: Peter Owen Publishers on 020 8350 1775

Or from Amazon by clicking here.





Martin 'Zippo' Burton
- interviewed here
on Tuesday.
Click here to read an interview with Zippos' owner Martin Burton, looking back on a "tremendous" year.

And if you'd like to buy a circus of your own, click here!







 



Wednesday, 19 June 2013

Russells International Circus putting up the big top



A massive poster campaign announced the first visit of Russells International Circus to Wymondham in Norfolk at the beginning of June. They had a glorious sunny, windless day to put up the big top in a corner of Kett’s Park, beside the leisure centre, as I found when I dropped by to take these pictures.

With the four king poles standing, the fixed-shape uppermost part of the tent, the cupola, waits on the back of a truck while the tent men hammer in the surrounding stakes.




With the tent attached to the cupola, the big top is slowly winched aloft, by hand.



           
 
  In the sunshine of a warm Monday evening, the circus stands built... and waiting. The show doesn’t open until Wednesday. The queues, music and hoopla are two days away and an almost eerie stillness hangs over the lorries, caravans and tent. The circus - indeed the whole park - appears deserted and silent. But not quite silent. From behind the big top a generator rumbles quietly, like a sleeping heartbeat. Beside one of the caravans, a man sits tending a barbeque, the tang of charcoal scenting the air with the promise of the hotdog stand aroma to come. And in the dry and dusty empty car park a young man in a red t-shirt circles restlessly in the sunshine... atop a unicycle.
     
Russells International Circus - For latest dates and showtimes visit www.russellscircus.co.uk





Read about my backstage visits to, and interviews with the showmen and stars of top British circuses including the Circus of Horrors, Chinese State Circus, Great British Circus and Great Yarmouth Hippodrome in Circus Mania - The Ultimate Book For Anyone Who Dreamed of Running Away with the Circus.
Click here to buy Circus Mania from Amazon.

"Circus Mania is a brilliant account of a vanishing art form." - Mail on Sunday.



"Gypsies know better than to mix it with the circus..."

- For more on circus transport, read Ingo Dock's account of moving the Chinese State Circus.

Thursday, 12 November 2009

Moving the Chinese State Circus

"Gypsies know not to mix it
with the circus," warns
Chinese State Circus
transport manager
Ingo Dock
as featured in
Truck and Driver magazine


Ingo Dock reveals the secrets of Britain's biggest Chinese takeaway


Moving a circus is a big deal - 13 drivers, 20 trucks and 22 loads of a big deal in the case of the Chinese State Circus. The man in charge of the operation is 34-year-old Ingo Dock, who has been a circus man all his life. He grew up on Uncle Sam’s American Circus where his father drove the lorries before him.

I spoke to Ingo recently for a feature that appeared in the April issue of Truck and Driver magazine to coincide with the publication of Circus Mania, and he told me all about life on the road, from the hazards of waterlogged grounds to travellers who have taken over a site before the circus arrives.

“It happens about once a year,” Ingo sighed, “But on the whole the Gypsies know not to mix it with the circus because we‘ve got forklifts to get them off...”

I also talked about circus transport, this time in days gone by, with retired ringmaster George Pinder, who’s family have been circus for around 200 years (Click here for pictures of the Pinder circus from yesteryear).

The Chinese State Circus
- between shows they travel in lorries...
George is full of amazing stories about the introduction of steam generated electricity in the big top in the 1890s, and the move from horse-drawn transport to lorries between the two World Wars. He supplied some great pictures which will hopefully be in Best of British magazine in the New Year also. There’s even a poster for his great-great-great-grandfather Thomas Ord’s circus, in 1817, which appears in Circus Mania.

George, incidentally, is the uncle of Carol and Gracie, the sisters who run Circus Mondao.



New edition for 2018
For the full story of the Chinese State Circus, Circus Mondao and the 200 years in the circus of Britain's oldest circus family, read Circus Mania - The Ultimate Book For Anyone Who Dreamed of Running Away With The Circus.

Click here to buy Circus Mania from Amazon.







Click here to see the trucks of Uncle Sam's American Circus.