The Martinborough Fair Markets are usually held on the first Saturdays of both 
February and March each year.

But 2022 Market has been postponed to May
The Tauherenikau venue option has been withdrawn
We are now hoping to run the Fair at Martinborough again

The Fair runs from 8:00 am to 4:00 pm each day.

For 2022 the Fair date is now set at:

Sunday 1st May

Please be patient
The world is changing, Covid is changing, our Market and its requirements may yet change - yet again!

Martinborough Fair

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The Martinborough Fair under the COVID Framework

While it was named the 'Martinborough Fair' at inception some 35 years ago, The Martinborough Fair does not fall under the definitions of Community Fair, or an Event under the Framework.

The Martinborough Fair is a collection of retail stalls which sell everything from craft and farm produce to jewelery and wind-chimes - with a bit of face-painting and back massage thrown in. We usually try to include buskers and some other forms of street entertainment, and occasionally an amusement arcade, but essentially the Martinborough Fair is an outdoor Market under the COVID Framework and we believe it is subject to the following rules:

What you need to know


The Market has been now been postponed to May for 2022
This does not mean that it is definitely on yet, just that we are aiming at that date.

The South Wairarapa District Council (SWDC) have decided that no events can be run in Martinborough at the RED Framework setting and have decided to categorise our market as an event under the COVID Framework regulations.

This means that the Fair will either not run at all, or might be relocated elsewhere if we are still at RED

Day remains at
Sunday 1st May

We are also investigating the possibility of a November market.
If we can get over 350 stalls, we will try to run on Saturday 26th of November

Check out the Traffic light settings Red and Orange yourself

Under the Retail  Framework guidelines:
  • All attendees are to observe 1-metre distancing
  • Masks will be mandatory for all (unless exempt)

Stallholders will also require Vaccination passes.
Individual stallholders will also be expected to develop their own COVID readiness plans based on their operation model.


With Omicron in the community, this could all change again!!


Bungy Jumping

See our FAQs

Have a question?
Check out our FAQ's first, you might just find what you are after there. 

Registration

If you want to run a stall at the Fair, and have not yet opened a user account here, please do so using the Register button above. If you already have an account, use the Log In button. Once you are registered and logged in, you will be able to apply for a stall site.

Application

To apply for a market stall, register on this site (Register button above) and then you will be able to log in and access the stall application form from October to February each year.  This will also ensure you are on our mailing list..

Bolli's Roesti stall

Stall Content

We are keen to see a predominance of NZ-made goods - the more local the better. Market stall sites are allocated with that aim in mind.

What's the Martinborough Fair all about?

Every year since 1977, the Rotary Martinborough Country Fair has attracted an increasing number of visitors who swell the population and provide a cash injection to the South Wairarapa estimated to be worth in excess of $8 million per year in immediate benefit and ongoing business and tourism profile.  
The South Wairarapa Rotary Club makes recommendations to the Fair Trust each year for the disbursement of the Fair's profits to causes and projects throughout the Wairarapa.

Earlt Martinborough Fair market day

History

Find out more

The 2-day Martinborough Fair was the brainchild of members of the Greytown Rotary Club, and in 1977 the first Fairs began in Martinborough with just 35 stalls

The Fair today

Find out more

over 500 stall holders come from all over New Zealand to participate in what is regarded as the country's pre-eminent craft market

Directions

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Find Coachlines and tour operator timetables and view a map of the area


How it works

Find out more

Everything from where it is, how to apply, and find your site, to how sites are marked out and how to identify them


The Rotary martinborough Fair

 

The 2-day Martinborough Fair was the brainchild of members of the Greytown Rotary Club, and in 1977 the first Fairs began in Martinborough with just 35 stalls.
In order to attract stallholders the Fairs were promoted in  Manawatu and Wellington.

Today the reputation of the Fairs means demand for stalls exceeds sites available.
More than 25000 people flock to Martinborough from Wellington, Wairarapa,  New Plymouth, Wanganui, Palmerston North and Hawkes Bay.

The basic philosophy and objectives behind the Fairs has changed little since 1977.

The Fairs' objectives are to:
  • give craftspeople a chance to display and sell their wares
  • give Wairarapa charities a chance to raise funds from a wider range of customers that they usually have
  • provide Rotary South Wairarapa with funds to give to charities, especially those in South Wairarapa, and with special emphasis on the provision of opportunities for young people.
The Martinborough Fairs provide a focus to publicise Martinborough, the South Wairarapa, and Rotary.
 
South Wairarapa Rotary, through its Martinborough Fair Trust, holds the management and ownership of the Martinborough Fairs.
The club contracts numerous community groups to assist on Fair days to handle parking, and other operational matters.
 
 
 
 
 
The idea of a country fair came from Bill Fetch, who became a Rotarian in 1972.

Bill had travelled to Germany for an operation and was much taken with the village markets there.
He felt that the Martinborough town square, with its open space and lovely shade trees would make an ideal venue for a similar fair. He believed that Rotarians could provide the organisational framework to allow craftspeople to sell their wares. Bill wanted any profits made by the Club to be given to local South Wairarapa charities -especially those connected with youth.

At first Club members were opposed to the idea. In September 1975, the Directors voted against it. “It will cost the club money - the idea wouldn’t take on," people said. The whole matter was of such little importance that it didn’t rate a mention in the minutes. Finally, in October 1976 the Directors (Athol Ross, President) with some dissent, gave their approval. The Community Service committee chaired by Doug Banks would supervise the project.
 
Three club members unofficially offered, if necessary, to meet any loss to the club.

As the fair required the closing of the square and the eight roads leading into it. Bill had to get the local council’s buy-in and Mayor-Dawson Wright on his side. At a meeting of the Rotary Club in Martinborough earlier in the year, Dawson had seen the potential of the fair to lift the image of Martinborough - but he also felt that the fair would enable local charity groups to help themselves. Dawson soon had his Council on side. From then on, his support never wavered, always ready to help in crises. The Rotary Club honoured this support by awarding Dawson Wright a Paul Harris Fellowship in 1993.

Bill Fetch was determined, dogmatic and intolerant. People gave in to him in self-defence: but he was keenly interested in young people.
 
He eventually cajoled reluctant members into supporting the first Martinborough Fair.

In 1993, the Club honoured him by placing a memorial plaque to him in the square in Martinborough.

The first fairs were organised by the community service committee of the Rotary Club. This group consisted of: Doug Banks (Chairman), Bill Fetch (Convenor), Gordon Wills-Johnson, Jim Gaskin, Athol Ross (Club President), and a newcomer to the Club, Doug Palmer. Cecily Palmer acted as secretary. The driving force, of course, was Bill Fetch.

As organisation for the first fair got under way, applications for stall sites came in slowly, but finally, on 12 February there were 35 stalls - at $20 a site.

As the first fair day dawned, the Committee was on the job early, ready for a 10.00am start. Athol Ross remembers looking down Kitchener Street as he stood in the square - not a single car in sight - but by start time a good crowd had arrived. Dawson Wright turned to the committee and said: “It’s a success!"

The Club Directors had been worried that little money would be made -and therefore organised its own stall to help raise funds. Doug Banks sold helium-filled balloons to children, Brian Haigh sold coloured wool fleeces to spinners, and goods were sold on commission. Apples and vegetables were bought from Greytown and on-sold at the Fairs.
The total profit of that first fair was $509, but the surplus was due mainly to the Rotary stall — the actual fair organisation showed a small loss.
The basic philosophy behind the Martinborough Fair has changed little over the years. The organisers hope to:

(1) Give Craftspeople a chance to display and sell their wares.
(2) Give local charities a chance to raise funds from a wider range of customers than is usually available.
(3) Provide the Rotary Club with funds to give to charities, especially those in South Wairarapa. In accordance with Bill Fetch’ s wishes, special funds have always been set aside for young people.
(4) Publicise Martinborough, South Wairarapa and the Rotary

Within two years a special committee was running the fairs. A year or two later it had a separate bank account. By 1989, it ran its own affairs, returning all profits to the Club Directors each June. In 1990, the board decided that the chairman would automatically become a Director. This helped maintain contact between Club members and the committee.

As the popularity of the fairs grew, the committee found that it didn’t need to persuade stallholders to come - they queued up. Increasing demand meant that the square had to be surveyed (by Doug Williamson) and marked out carefully in sites measuring 20ft by 12ft. This was done to make the setting up more orderly on fair mornings - and to prevent stallholders camping out on select sites on the Friday evening.

Bill Fetch ran the fairs until his death in June 1980, then John Jacobson and Tony Sim did a year each. From 1983 to 1988 Athol Ross ran the show, and from 1988 to 1993 the job fell to Peter Werry. Lindsay Wall became the chairman in l994. The club owes these men a great debt of gratitude for their efforts.

Local charities found that the best way to make money was to sell food - sandwiches, hot dogs, paua fritters, cakes, ethnic food, hangis, etc. It was certainly hard work but profits from $2000 to $2500 were frequent. The Martinborough Squash Club, for example, paid all maintenance costs on its building from fair income and the Martinborough Anglican church raised enough to pay its mission quota each year.

Martinborough shops and other Wairarapa retailers all benefit from the fairs. Lotto does well in Pain & Kershaw, Greytown orchardists report increased turnover and Featherston Gas station puts on extra staff. Hotels, motels, and camping grounds are mostly full, and many private homes overflow with out-of-town visitors.

Thanks to the hard work of Rotarians, Lions and many support groups, and especially the conveners and their committees, the Martinborough Country Fair is now well established as the premier weekend attraction in Wairarapa’s annual calendar of events.

 mantage1 s