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places to be at the Summer Solstice Stonehenge Summer Solstice 2007Over 24,000 people celebrated the Summer Solstice 2007 at StonehengeWednesday 20th June found thousands of us wending our way that drizzly evening across the Salisbury Plains, to gather together with Druids, Pagans and King Arthur Pendragon within the mighty megaliths of Stonehenge. The Summer solstice is one day that we can touch the cold towering slabs of stone - no climbing is allowed, but a gentle stoney hug is OK! English Heritage have been allowing 'Open Access' to the circle for 8 years and tonight the fences have been taken down ready for the midsummer celebrations. There was only one rain shower during the solstice vigil and most people had come prepared with capes, various hats, horns, hoods and umbrellas! The music kept going through the night and included a saxophone along with pipes, guitars and rhythmic drumming. The atmosphere was brilliant as always and people who had only just met joined together to celebrate the dawning of the longest day of the year. People come to the Stonehenge Summer Solstice for many reasons - to experience the spiritual atmosphere from within the towering sarsens and to see the sky lightening over the Heel stone as dawn approaches; to enjoy the huge buzz of one of the biggest all night open-air midsummer parties; to be themselves on this magic night and to let their hair down, as our ancestors did as nature's great wheel turned through another season. A bank of cloud descended during the early morning and unfortunately obscured the midsummer sunrise this year. The edge of the clouds had a reddish glow! A happy solstice was still had by all, despite the unpredictable British weather. Many brave souls were planning on continuing the party at Glastonbury Festival. 21st June 2006The solstice celebrations happened around sunrise at 04.58am.It was one of the wettest solstices ever, but most brave souls weathered the downpour from 2am to 3am, and were rewarded with the sun breaking through the cloud to light up Stonehenge and all of us (rain-soaked but happy) waiting to celebrate the beginning of the longest day. The atmosphere and the company was brilliant as ever! To Summer
O thou who passest thro' our valleys in Beneath our thickest shades we oft have heard Our bards are fam'd who strike the silver wire:
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