Wife swapping in Farm
Hot lonely women from Farm search dating canada I love women from Farm who love older men.
.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpeg)

.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)

.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpeg)
See other girls from Ireland: Woman swinger in Youghal, Moorhead sex dates in Ireland, Bbw wives in Farm
By Tom Rawstorne for the Daily Mail. At this time of year in the tiny Welsh village of Trellech, all the talk is normally of plans for the regular summer get-together. Held in mid-July and known as the Big Weekend, it features a dog show, cream teas, skittles and a rural walk followed by a buffet lunch at the Lion Inn. Like the Big Weekend, it too aims to bring people together with action-packed activities. But unlike the village festivities, it involves naked women wrestling in jelly, wife swapping, orgies and bondage.
Called Swingfields, it is dubbed the biggest event in the British swinging calendar. As well as camping, hot tubs, live shows, foam parties and stalls selling adult toys, those attending can indulge their sexual fantasies with other like-minded guests. To simplify matters further, they have even been given different coloured wristbands depending on their sexual preferences. While the organisers insist that the event, which began on Thursday and finishes tomorrow, is private and causes little or no disruption, not everyone would agree.
The peaceful village of Trellech in Wales is hosting a swinger's festival this weekend after a farmer 'diversified' his business. Others, including the local vicar, are known to be deeply unhappy that the event has been given the go-ahead. But fiercer criticism still has come from an altogether less expected source. By coincidence, the Monmouthshire village also boasts a long-established naturist campsite.
Called the Western Sunfolk Naturist Site, its members have angrily complained that people may think it and the sex festival are in some way linked. There is absolutely nothing of a sexual nature about what we do. The same, of course, could not be said of Swingfields. Viewed from afar, the festival resembles a mini-Glastonbury. Around a central marquee stand tents, caravans and campervans.