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Bodmin Wassail 2026

In Brief

Name: Bodmin Wassail 2026
Date: 6 January 2026 (mostly in the afternoon and evening)
Type: Traditional singing and charity fundraising event.
Suitable for: Anyone and everyone, especially lovers of tradition and fundraising
Locations: Across Bodmin (see the official website for the exact locations the gentlemen will visit)
Price: Free. Unless you want a pint at The Weavers or The Hole in the Wall, that is…

THE BODMIN WASSAIL TAKES PLACE ON THE TWELVTH DAY AND NIGHT AFTER CHRISTMAS DAY IN THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING. IT IS A 400 YEAR OLD TRADITION AND YOU’RE ALL INVITED TO ENJOY SOME FINE SINGING AND FUNDRAISING FOR CHARITY

Cornwall is packed full of traditional events throughout the year but few traditions are as old and as cherished as the Bodmin Wassail. That’s right. This traditional Cornish event will have been going for over 400 YEARS. That should be even more reason for you to head out on that frosty (let’s hope not too frosty…) January day to support this important cultural event.

The Bodmin Wassail falls, as it always does, on the 12th day and night after Christmas Day. The organisers tell us that it’s ‘an ancient custom first recorded in Bodmin in 1624′. In fact, the organisers are known as ‘wassailers’ and they make their way around the Cornish town bidding people ‘wassail’ in local residential homes, shops, pubs and other venues like the Bodmin Town Council offices.

And for the uninitiated, what does ‘wassail’ mean? Well, the word is thought to have derived from the Anglo-Saxon phrase ‘waes hael’, which means to wish someone or some people to ‘be in good health’. The whole wassailing tradition, in fact, is likely to be rooted in Anglo-Saxon customs, meaning that this edition of the tradition could be more like its 1,000th edition… maybe…

In reality, as with all traditions, all sorts of influences have shaped the wassail over hundreds of years. These days, the gentlemen wassailers don top hat and tails – much of which has been handed down from one wassailer to another over the years – and raise cash for charity as they visit the local venues and sing their hearts out.

The wassail songs themselves are an important part of the tradition. There are three used by the Bodmin gentlemen, with the first being sung on arrival to a venue, the second being crooned during ‘the eating, drinking, storytelling, fundraising and singing that goes on at each stop’ and the last being sung as the wassailers leave to thank their hosts for their kind hospitality.

Of course, we are not telling you any of these songs because you should catch the performances for yourself as the gentlemen head out around town. The wassailers will be making house calls, singing their hearts out in the town and ‘wishing the people of Bodmin a year of good health’.

Anyone who wants to witness this extraordinary 400-year-old Cornish tradition and give generously to charity can catch the wassailers singing in the town centre on the afternoon of 6 January before the above pubs in the evening. For more details of their whereabouts, check out their official Facebook page or click on the ‘Website’ link above.

Enjoy a fabulous Bodmin Wassail. All that’s left for us to say now is: “So now we must be gone to seek for more good cheer…” If you know, you know…