19 Jun 2022 - 19 Jun 2022
About
Enjoy a relaxed Sunday with live music across two stages including Admiral Fallow and Sam Lee, a giant plant giveaway at our afternoon Free For All, plus talks, performances and activities for all ages.
Schedule


Live Music
Join us on Sunday 19th June for a day of live music from a range of fantastic artists including Sam Lee and Admiral Fallow.

Pavilion Stage

13:00 - Baque Luar
15:45 - Sam Lee
Dandelion Stage

14:45 - Fat-Suit
16:45 - Admiral Fallow
Plus performances from our Flower Singers


Talks & Events
A day of inspiration and discussion of everything growing.

The Hothouse
11:10 - Anything Grows, with Neil Butler, Christiana Bissett & Fiona Dalgetty
Chaired by Simon Preston
Anything Grows: Dandelion is an epic creative programme encouraging everyone to ‘sow grow and share’ in 2022. As well as plants, we’re growing ideas, music and community on a large scale - from building Unexpected Gardens all across the country, to engaging more than 450 schools in their own growing experiments. Lead creatives in the project join us for an exploration of how it all began, what’s happening in the Unexpected Gardens, and how Dandelion will be changing the shape of growing, sowing and sharing in 2022.
12:10 - The Future of Growing: Why Vertical Farms? With Fiona Burnett & Derek Stewart
Chaired by Simon Preston
The Future of Growing: why vertical farms? The epic Pavilion of Perpetual Light stage is constructed of multiple ‘controlled growing environment” cubes. Dazzling they may be, but what is their scientific benefit? What can they teach us about the future of growing? As global populations expand and food injustice and security become ever more pressing issues, what are the challenges and opportunities presented by new growing technologies? Oh yes, and can someone remind us when to water the plants?
13:10 - Dig Where You Stand, With Simon Preston & Steve Byrne
Chaired by Fiona Dalgetty
Dig Where You Stand: Traditions and ritual around growing and harvest are as old as time, and every inch of Scotland has a rich and living local history connected to food to be explored. But what does this look like in 2022? What does it mean when ‘the town is the menu’? Join food innovator Simon Preston and creative ethnologist Steve Byrne as we dig up the food traditions – old and new - of contemporary Scotland.


Free for All
We will be giving away free plants to help you on your growing journey.

12:00 – 16:00
Come along to our joyful Free For All giveaway of plants overseen by our towering Flower Singer! A mini-festival of growing, our Free For Alls are giving away thousands of free plant plugs to encourage everyone to have a grow this year. Our friendly Growing Team from Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC) will be on hand to help get you started with tips and info – novice growers especially welcome! All overseen by our Flower Singer – at five metres high, a truly unmissable sight.


The Nursery
Fun and adventure for children of all ages.

What's On
11:00 – 17:00 The Kidding Around Collective
The Kidding Around Collective bring you The Nursery, a dedicated space for 0 – 5-year-olds and their families. Come and rest your weary legs in our sensory Mud Café. Explore your creative side and help us design the perfect garden using mixed media and the Festival for inspiration, come let your imagination run wild, with sensory exploration for even our littlest visitors. Bring your designs to life in our magical fairy garden - create your own peg fairy and use our range of materials to create an interactive playscape and explore the magic beneath our feet in our specially designed tent and garden.
11:30 & 15:00 Emily Dodd Storytelling Adventures
Join Emily Dodd for a Storytelling Adventure! Each session will combine music, dance, science with storytelling in a unique way. Emily is passionate about wildlife, science and books. She is the author of 11 non-fiction science schoolbooks and four picture books about Scottish wildlife, and a screenwriter for CBeebies (Tiny Wonders, Nina and the Neurons).


Theatre & Performance
Joy and delight await!

11:00 - Throughout the day
Megabeast Productions - Treemendous
Meet our loveable lumbering Treemendous Treants. Towering over guests these full detailed costumes are guaranteed to grab attention as well as create perfect photo opportunities. Fully mobile and armed with an arsenal of tree-mendous tree related humour.
Flying Buttresses - What The Tortoise Taught Us
Zelva is the oldest and wisest giant puppet tortoise who plods along with her keeper, encouraging us all to just go a bit slow. All ages will be delighted by Zelva as she always seems to be hungry and can easily be swayed where food is concerned, or simply by a hug. Her human keeper has all the facts about this gentle giant. Hares not welcome!
Mischief La-Bas
on the Pavilion Stage


Street Food
Locally sourced, sustainable food - there's something for everyone.

Traders

Enjoy a delicious range of locally-sourced street food from our Festival traders, all chosen for their commitment to sustainability, including venison burgers from Screaming Peacock, Mangiamo Pizza, poutine from Down the Hatch, Woodburns Stand Bahn Mi, Mrs Falafel, coffee and crepes from Hector and Harriet and Fotheringham’s ice-cream van. A fully-licensed bar will be available with a wide selection of Scottish craft ales and beers, wine and soft drinks.


Potting Sheds
Visit our Potting Sheds, dotted around the site hosting artists, performers and community organisations.

What's On
Amble Skuse and Olga Uzikaeva
Musican and composer Amble Skuse and dancer Olga Uzikaeva present their participatory music and movement performance, “Chop Chop”. Participants will be invited to prepare fresh fruits for a community salad. Microphones are connected from the kitchen equipment to Amble’s laptop and software, allowing them to mix the sounds in real time. Olga will then create dance improvisation inspired by the sounds of fruits whilst wearing Mimu gloves which track her movements. The fruit salad will then be eaten together with participants, with leftover food being donated to a food bank.
Free Wheel North
Free Wheel North is working with Boomerang Woodwork, a non-profit wood workshop in Maryhill that supports marginalised and excluded groups through therapeutic woodwork programmes. For their potting shed, they will be holding planter-making activities using pre-cut scrap wood as a “DIY Kit” for growing your own herbs or small plants at home. Workshoppers will also be learning transferable DIY skills and learning about reusing waste to create value. For passers-by, there will be a “contribution planter” where visitors can decorate and attach a plank of wood to a planter that will then be displayed in Maryhill for the community to enjoy.
ESTD
ESTD will be hosting multiple workshops across the festival. Morven Mulgrew will be teaching participants to “Make Your Own Avocado Seed Starter” kit using slab-building techniques and stoneware clay. ESTD will fire your work and it will be available for collection two weeks later in Glasgow, along with a seed of your own to grow. Jemima Damsey-Wright will be hosting a print workshop using potatoes, allowing you to bring home a poster that can teach you how to grow at home. Finally, Saskia Pomeroy will be holding a seed bomb and plant seed tray workshop, consisting of easy fruit and vegetable plants for smaller spaces.
Sacro
Sacro will be hosting a Poetry Potting Shed, inviting participants to have a go at writing nature-related haikus on two large blackboards. Sacro’s own Garden Projects in Tollcross Allotments and Park and in Bellahouston Demonstration Garden have their own Potting Shed Poetry Society and the poems that their members have written will be exhibited and given away throughout the festival. Sacro will also have a microphone set up in front of their shed for poetry readings.
Connect Community Trust
Connect’s Potting Sheds programme will bring together allotment staff to highlight how fun growing and sowing can be and how STEAM can work with nature and food production. A wealth of inspiring and unusual activities is on offer. Join Connect to make seed bombs, understand the greenhouse effect, try out VR headsets, build your own wind generator and make scarecrows from crisp packets.
Paragon
Over three days, Paragon’s groove artists will engage with participants in ‘Grow Your Groove’ - accessible and inclusive musical improvisation sessions, live jams, and soundscape creation using found sounds and food. Their shed will have various vegetables and plants connected to MIDI controllers, turning them into sample pads and allowing people to play them as if they were instruments. No musical experience is necessary to take part in “growing” a new piece of original music.
P Ploy and Iga Sobieraj
P Ploy (Noppawan Bunluesilp) and Iga Sobieraj create interactive experiences in virtual reality and animation. In their project, “The Goodness of Weeds”, participants will be able to scan a QR code and find an animated character guiding them through information and facts about weeds using augmented reality on their mobile phones. Infamous weeds such as sticky willies, ground elders, nettles, and – of course - dandelions are not only vital to our environment, but can be delicious as well. Learn which weeds can be eaten and how to cook them using pop-up recipes and videos inspired by Thai and Polish backgrounds.
Stravaig Theatre
Theatre-makers Scott Thomas and Emma McNeill will be producing a community-made multi-media performance, expressing themes of nature, growth, and sustainability in a theatrical and physical way. Participants take part in a “Lucky Dip Script”, picking out lines taken from a pre-written piece, recording their line into a microphone at the shed, and playing around with audio filters, speed, volume, and tone. Infrared elements reflect climate change and the earth’s continued overheating; potting shedders can also help create a mood board using photos, recycled materials, and natural items which will be available on the Dandelion website at the end of the Glasgow festival.
Sean Wai Keung
Writer and food-artist, Sean Wai Keung, will be leading an installation titled Fortunes for Us, giving people the opportunity to write their own ‘fortune’ and place them inside fortune cookies across their potting shed. In return for giving their fortunes, participants will be able to take a cookie with another written fortune away with them. Their installation aims to highlight the accessibility of food sharing and community engagement across cultures.
Glasgow Food Policy Partnership
Working with the Glasgow Food Policy Partnership (GFPP), Thalia Groucott will be facilitating collage zine-making workshops based on the six themes of the GFPP: Food and the Environment, Food Economy, Children and Young People, Food Procurement and Catering, Community Food, and Food Poverty – Fair Food for All. Participants will have access to pre-cut images, news articles, and secondhand magazines and they will be “Collaging the World We Want to See”. The resulting pages will be scanned and compiled into an artistic and collaborative zine that highlights the GFPP and Dandelion’s aim to start a conversation on how we value the food we eat and to raise awareness of food poverty and the environmental consequences of how we currently produce our food.
Wind&Bones
Wind&Bones will be creating a home-grown and home-cooked shared feast of food and stories. Wind&Bones will also be hosting a virtual potting shed as an online stories garden, where stories from the festival will be uploaded so people can view them on their phone and tablet.
Donna Rutherford
How did your mum or dad make their soup? Artist Donna Rutherford will be posing this question to festival goers. Their stories will be edited and played through a small speaker over the next three days to create a joyful participatory experience exploring our emotional and cultural connections to food. Share your food stories, leading to the creation of a cookbook combining the stories of Glasgow’s international residents.
Edinburgh Science Festival
Earth is the only home we know but the idea of life off planet is no longer the realm of science fiction and one day we may look off planet for our next ‘home’. With Mars the most habitable destination in our solar system we’re starting there but need your help to build a sustainable colony.
Get thinking, make use of the LEGO tools at your disposal and let your imagination run wild to build farms, homes, labs, vehicles – or anything else you think humans might need to live on another planet – and add them to our Mars landscape.
Tamara Hedderwick
Tamara Hedderwick will be hosting natural “crop protection” mandala-making workshops, inspired by her own experiences growing seedlings and keeping slugs and pests away from her own plants by using sand, eggshells, and salt. The mandalas we’ll be making at the potting shed will be based on patterns that form through Tamara’s experiments in tie-dying cotton using beetroot and onion skins. Tamara will also be giving away posters from Greenspace Scotland of “Our Growing Community”, as well as displaying seeds and information from the Glasgow Seed Library (some of which will be material used in the mandala-making throughout the festival!).
Propagate
Propagate will be introducing participants to all the elements that make food production possible. Their Soil and Soul exhibit will allow participants to play with soil, try their hand at making seed-bombs, and get up close to their Worms at Work display. They’ll also talk about Regenerative Farming, with an agroecological jigsaw with the voices of farmers telling stories about why they do what they do. Propagate will also be giving practical advice on growing in small spaces, square meter gardening, and identifying whether insects and animals are friends or foes.
SRUC – Scotland's Rural College - Plant Clinic
SRUC’s Plant Clinic will offer support to visitors who want to discuss their gardening growing issues and present fun facts about what people can do to help Scotland’s plant health and achieve our net zero targets. Come along for some friendly advice and to explore the careers and courses available for young people in the vibrant growing sector.
Dandelion
From Unexpected Gardens to total controlled environment growing to musicians composing from the perspective of plants, come to our very own Dandelion Potting Shed to learn the full Dandelion story in technicolour - a beautiful collision of science, art, community and heart!
Line Up

Baque Luar
Baque Luar (‘Moonlit Beat’) is a collective of female and non-binary vocalists and percussionists united by their love of Brazilian and Afro-Brazilian roots music. Their music focuses on honouring feminine power and creativity, acknowledging struggles against oppression and praising nature – all while blending vibrant rhythms and styles from across Brazil.

Sam Lee
Sam plays a unique role in the British music scene. He’s an acclaimed, award-winning inventive singer, a folksong collector, conservationist and promoter of live events as founder/director of The Nest Collective who’ve helped shake up the music scene and injected life back into the folk trad and world acoustic scene.
His 1st release, ‘Ground Of Its Own’ in 2012, was short-listed for a Mercury Music Prize. His sophomore release saw lead track 'Lovely Molly' win a BBC Radio 2 Folk Award for Best Traditional Track. Sam was named Artist of the Year at the 2016 Songlines Magazine Awards, the year in which he wrote and performed the lead song for Guy Ritchie’s Hollywood film ‘King Arthur: Legend of the Sword’.

Fat-Suit
This multi disciplined collective of musicians from jazz, folk, rock, and electronic worlds embrace a seamless mix of musical styles, with the priority being to evoke maximum joy through energetic live performance. Their most recent album ’Waifs & Strays’ was recorded live in Glasgow’s Drygate Brewery and took them on a release tour across the UK culminating in a sold out headline show at Celtic Connections.

Admiral Fallow
Louis Abbott and his much-loved Glaswegian gang returned in 2021 with fantastic fourth album The Idea of You – nine captivating tales of friendship and carefree adventure. You can hear tracks from it live in Kelvingrove Park – alongside anthemic favourites from Boots Met My Face, Tree Bursts in Snow and the glorious Tiny Rewards.
What's On
Venue Information
Travel
Kelvingrove Park is a public park located on the River Kelvin in the West End of the city of Glasgow, Scotland, containing the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum.
The closest subway station is Kelvinhall which is which is 0.4 miles from the Park. Journey time from Glasgow City Centre is approximately 9 minutes and trains run every 4 - 7 minutes. It is a 10 minute walk from the station to the Park. The nearest train station is Partick, which is a 15-20 minute walk to the Park.
Number 2 and 3 bus services leave Bothwell Street and Number 77 leaves from West Nile Street - journey time is approximately 20 minutes.
Before travelling, remember to double-check all travel arrangements and for the most up to date information check out your journey on the day on www.travelinescotland.com
Toilets
There are Accessible and Gender Neutral Toilets on site. These are located adjacent to the Orchard Stage, in the Food and Drink Area next to the Fountain, in the Pavilion Stage site and on the pathway leading from Clifton Street/La Belle Place to the Festival.
There is also a permanent toilet block with accessible toilets and baby changing facilities located beside the Kelvingrove Bandstand within Kelvingrove Park, just off Kelvin Way.
Parking
There is metered on street car parking available in the Park Area and in the side streets south of Sauchiehall Street/Argyle Street.
The Pick Up and Drop Off point for disabled visitors is at the Main Gate, Royal Terrace.
There is local access only for cars in the streets between Argyle Street/Sauchiehall Street and the Park.
All disabled parking pay & display bays for blue badge holders are free of charge and have no time restriction. Anyone displaying a valid blue badge may park in a ‘limited waiting’ bay without time restriction.
Access
There are five main entrances to the Festival site:
On Kelvin Way opposite the entrance to Kelvingrove Art Gallery & Museum;
On the Bridge leading from Kelvin Way adjacent to the south side of the Bandstand; At the Main Gate on Royal Terrace; At the Gate leading from Clifton Street/La Belle Place; and on the Picnic Hill Path leading from Gibson Street/Eldon Street.
These entrance points will be stewarded. All stewards will be wearing hi vis vests and have been trained to work with children, young people and vulnerable adults.
Access to the Festival site is level and paved. Most of the paths in the park are asphalt and smooth.
Assistance dogs, and well behaved pet dogs are welcome and fresh drinking water will be provided.
There are two Information Points: at the Main Gate at Royal Terrace and on the Picnic Hill Path leading from Gibson Street/Eldon Street.
BSL interpretation will be provided throughout the Festival.
There is also a Chill Out Zone for visitors between the Fountain and Skatepark.
There is a viewing platform in the Dandelion Stage area for visitors - it is possible to pre-book a space before your arrival on site. Please contact Caroline Thompson - [email protected]
Kelvingrove Park
Kelvingrove Park,Kelvin Way,
Glasgow,
G12 8LU
- Dementia Friendly
- Disabled Toilets
- Facilities for Assistance Dogs
- Large Print Info
- Safe/Quiet space available
- Sensory Spaces
- Sign language interpretation
- Viewing Platform