
What we’re about
Are you looking to:
· Enhance your social calendar with a variety of activities?
· Embrace Cambridge and surrounding towns and villages?
· Make new friends with similar interests?
· Share your own interests with others?
Well, Cambridgeshire IVC might be perfect for you!
We are a vibrant club where there’s always something happening…from bridge to boating, parties to pub nights and theatre to National Trust visits. We organise major events too, including BBQs and parties!
Key benefits of membership are:
· Access to more than 200 social events during the year, many of which are not listed on Meetup (to see them all, join us at CambsIVC.com). Enjoy the opportunity to meet new people and spend time with familiar faces.
· Be part of a national network of 30+ social event clubs with around 2,200 members – our local group was established over 50 years ago as part of this network, allowing you to attend other IVC groups when out of our area.
· Have the opportunity to introduce new events and build interest in the activities you love, with the support of like-minded members and a hard-working committee.
· Make new friends in a safe environment – all of our members go through our application process before any information is shared, or they are allowed to attend private events.
Upcoming events (4+)
See all- ADC Theatre visit - Cold Comfort FarmADC Theatre, Cambridge
Join Ros and Sue at the ADC where there is sure to be "something nasty in the woodshed!" in this theatre adaptation of Stella Gibbons's comic masterpiece, Cold Comfort Farm.
Please buy your ticket/s from the ADC website or box office, cost £16.00 (concessions £14; student/U16s £12.00):
https://www.adctheatre.com/whats-on/play/cold-comfort-farm/
We have tickets H13 and H14.
Venue: ADC Theatre, Park Street, Cambridge CB5 8AS
Meeting point: in the bar from 7.15pmAbout the production
Flora Poste, an orphaned relative and modern town girl, is thrust by necessity into the spectacularly chaotic setting of a dysfunctional farm in the 1930s. Flora is lively, bossy and interfering, and wades into the surreal squalor armed only with common sense and the absolute conviction that she will haul the extraordinary cast of characters she finds there into the 20th century. Added spice comes from the clash of cultures, the lure of the cinema and a lunatic religious cult, and the whole concoction results in a fast-moving comedy that resembles something that the “Fast Show” might devise if let loose on the “Archers”. Often described as one of the great English comic novels.