Festival tips
If you don't want to be the person that annoys everyone at a festival follow The Mix's short, sharp, essential list for part-time field dwellers.
Stuff to keep with you at all times:
- Money (cold hard cash if you can. Guard credit cards with your life)
- Sun-block (it might help urge the rain away)
- Plastic bag (useful should rain hat/pillow/shoe protector things get muddy)
- Condoms
- Mobile phone
- Anything else valuable you can put in festival lock-ups
Camping tips:
- Decorate your tent so that you don’t accidentally stumble into someone else’s when you’re strolling up the hill utterly wasted
- Pitch up-hill so if it rains you don’t get flooded
- Camp near enough to the toilets that you won’t end up wetting yourself and far enough not to smell them
- Don’t camp under a tree as you don’t want to be struck by lightning or have it fall on you in the night
- Camp away from the path where there’s more chance of having stuff nicked and having drunk people fall over you
- Don’t bother with padlocks on your tent, it suggests to thieves you have something valuable and if they want it that much they’ll just slash your tent anyway
- Take your mud-caked shoes off before stepping into your tent to keep it clean and dry
- Make sure you take everything listed in our packing for a festival article
Festival food:
- Remember to eat and don’t go on a purely liquid diet – if you’re just drinking alcohol you’ll just end up sick and feeling lousy
- Drink plenty of water or a combination of sun and alcohol will leave you feeling dehydrated
- Have something sugary, like coca cola, to combat your hangover and give you a quick boost, then eat something carb-y and starch-y for lasting energy
- Have small, light meals that are easy to digest when you’re feeling poorly.
- Take a camping stove and pan to cook for yourself so you don’t have to shell out for ridiculously expensive food from festival vans
- Pack things which are easy to cook, like tins of beans and noodles
- Take muesli bars and dried fruit, which are full of goodness and energy
- Don’t bother taking anything that will go off really quickly
Signs that you’ve overdone it:
- You’re naked and covered in body paint from the ankles up
- People start calling you ‘Moon of Orion’ and you love it
- You mix the dance tent up with your own tent and camp down for the night next to a massive speaker stack
- You arrange to meet friends outside the recovery tent
- You’re in there shouting ‘More maestro!’ when anyone leaves the stage
Signs that you’re under-doing it:
- You’re up at day-break, clear-headed and hungry
- After the final act, you head for your tent and tuck up
- Friends keep asking you to look after their valuables
- You spend more time under the showers than in front of the stage
- You keep phoning home just to find out how things are
Festivalgoers to avoid:
- People who don’t blink, ever
- People who reek of patchouli, including their children
- People with dark glasses and earpieces
- People in Take That T-shirts
- People who stride about shouting: “Jesus says this is all wrong!”
Festivalgoers to seek out:
- Naked mud wrestlers (because it isn’t big or clever, unless someone else is doing it)
- Your mates (six hours wandering by yourself can get lonely)
- People who live in tepees (from a distance. Don’t go in, you’ll never come out)
- Bar staff that recognise your thirst and like you
- Backstage security that look the other way for the price of a pint
Ways to ensure people think you’re a twat:
- Wear a jester’s hat (Do we even need to mention this?)
- Sling handfuls of mud at passers-by
- Rope off a 20 metre-squared area round your tent for “privacy” reasons
- Smile smugly from the VIP area at the great unwashed
- Talk ridiculously loudly into your phone about how you’ve just been hanging out with your mate Rob da Bank/Nick Grimshaw/Jamie xx etc
Next Steps
- Chat about this subject on our Discussion Boards.
By
Updated on 29-Sep-2015
Photo of festival by Shutterstock
No featured article