The Warminster Garrison Fireworks are set to go off with a bang at the Land Warfare Centre tonight.

The display, at the centre in Imber Road, starts at 6pm. Tickets are £3 in advance from the Tourist Information Centre, or £3.50 on the gate, although entry for under-fours is free.

Westbury Junior School will also hold its annual firework display tonight, between 6.15pm and 9pm.

Tickets can be bought from the school office. A family of four ticket is £8, adults £3, children and OAPs £2.50 in advance.

Tomorrow, Bradford on Avon stages a fireworks display and bonfire in aid of Bradford on Avon schools.

The event, at the Beehive Field, Trowbridge Road, promises a fantastic night of fun and is a big fundraising project for St Laurence, Fitzmaurice and Christ Church schools.

Gates open at 5.30pm and attractions include a barbecue, a hog roast, a beer tent with real ales and mulled wine, candy floss, popcorn and live music.

Local groups will also be performing from 5.45pm and, for children, there will be an inflatable assault course and a bouncy castle.

Fireworks start at 7pm and advance tickets are available from the Murco Service Station in Woolley Street, the Castle Inn, Made In Bradford in Lamb Yard, Hartley Farm in Winsley, ANP Stores in Trowbridge Road and Fitzmaurice and Christ Church schools.

Advance tickets are £5 for adults, £2.50 for children (5-17) but on the night will be £7 for adults and £3 for children.

Tomorrow is also the night for the Neston fireworks display, on the outskirts of Corsham. Gates open at 5pm on the village recreation ground, with the bonfire lit at 6pm.

The fireworks are due to start at 6.45pm and the organisers hope to make this year’s event even bigger than last year’s record-breaking spectacle.

Poor weather could not stop the annual fireworks display in Broughton Gifford, which went ahead on Saturday in torrential raind and high winds, which preventing the lighting of the bonfire.

Organiser Michael Bailey said: “I think everybody enjoyed the fireworks. They were as good as I have seen. It’s just a shame the weather was so bad.

“The numbers were substantially down. We had about 1,000 people in the end, but I think we have made our money back.

“In the end, we lit the bonfire on Wednesday as we just had to get rid of it.

“I am sure if it was held just a day later it would have been a different story.”