Archive for the ‘glastonbury’ Category

3 stops and home

Posted 27 Jun 2011 — by admin
Category glastonbury

Endless Pulp

After a few changes I am finally on a train bound for Paddington. I’m attempting to write this here blog entry from my phone seeing as I have access to power and were getting more 3G signal the closer we get to London.

As you might well imagine, if you’ve seen the coverage on TV the festival was awesome as ever. This is now my fourth time (if I’d not mentioned it before). And every experience has been different. This time I was helping out a friend recovering from a broken leg and as I’ve mentioned this afforded me a few perks. In no particular order of preference they were: nice camping field, bus to the other side of the site, clean(ish) toilets, an acceptable level of tent security and last but not least backstage access.
Glastonbury has lots of circuitous routes that take you from A to B via the rest of the alphabet. This is partly due to the two main stages and associated production areas being located in the centre of the site. The backstage access makes it much easier to get from say Spring Ground to The Park without doing your charge any further damage. In theory.
There was a stretch of pathway leading to the entrance for The Other Stage which became known as the gauntlet. No amount of sunshine and heat dried this place out. It lay in the shadow of The Other Stage so received little sun and was also possibly the most trudged path backstage. It was awash with a tasty mix of mud and whatever the dairy heard leave behind. It wasn’t the kind of mud that sucks your boots of, more a watered down version that was between 6 and 10 inches deep. I admit to a little schadenfreude when seeing hurried festival goers land squarely on their arses in a pool of Worthy Farm’s finest, but had to restrain my sniggers until I was on firmer ground!
What turned out to be the biggest bonus was the ability to get a pint of cider and some food and sit at a table to eat. Obviously we didn’t do this all the time but after a days’ trekking it’s a nice little treat (and you get to celeb spot too which is nice).
Just so I don’t forget, the bands/DJs/performers I saw this year included… U2 (probably should have given this a miss), oidPrimal Scream (should have seen them in their entirety instead of U2), Radiohead and Pulp in The Park, Chemical Brother (breathtaking and frightening all in one go), Cassette Boy and DJ Rubbish, Infinite Monkey Cage (Radio 4 at Glasto with Brian Cox, Graham Coxon, Billy Bragg etc…), OKgo (shortened set down at John Peel), Wombles (they still got it), Two Door Cinema Club, Biffy Clyro (mon the bif), Eels (by far and away the best beards on site), BB King, Paul Simon (still crazy after all these years) and Graham Coxon (making a better job of it than Albarn and his Gorrilaz).
Regrets? A few. Missing Craig Charles DJing at the Rabbit Hole, Orbital at Arcadia, seeing the whole of Primal Scream instead of U2 (but that’s what iPlayer is for), Morrissey, taking in a movie at the Pilton Palais and spending more time at the weird end of Glastonbury. But you makes your choices over the festival weekend which is what makes the whole experience so different each time I go.
You have to understand that for one weekend in year te biggest city in the west country (infinite money cage stat) springs up for just one weekend. There is no way ou can see or do even half of what you intended. You may be too far from your destination stage, to tired to walk there or just too chilled out at the Stone Circle to be bothered. I know that I need to be braver with my choices, which I was a little more this time. Even after 4 times there is still too much to see and even Michael Eavis said in a talk on Sunday PM there are places that he hadn’t made it too. This makes me feel a bit better although he’s got 35 years on me.
Who knows if this will be my last visit. Mini me wants to go again in 2013 perhaps and I haven’t managed to drag along any of my home mates yet either. Maybe more challenges at Worthy Farm still await me, but until then all I want is a shower.
Next stop Paddington.

Day 1

Posted 25 Jun 2011 — by admin
Category glastonbury

I’m all for music in the shower. The louder the better. Last night, however, took the biscuit. From about 6.00 the drizzle set in and never quite made it to a full blown storm and there it stayed until the early hours. I heard several mentions of the Peter Kay quote about fine rain that gets you really wet (doesn’t all rain get you wet?) but over the following 7 hours I might have been standing in a shower fully clothes the soaking that I got! To offset the apalling weather and the increasing pools of mud (and whatever else is mixed in with it) there was the music.

First I ventured up to tThe Park to see radiohead. They were a surprise act and rumours were abound that it might be Keane or even Toploader, heaven forbid! It was rammed up there and Radiohead didn’t disappoint. A quick jog back down to the Pyramid via the chip stand and next up was U2. They were OK but not amazing. They trundled through their hits like troopers in the rain. The visuals started out well, looked like they were done by Damien Hurst but these faded out to be replaced by shots of the live show as their set wore on. At least I can say that I’ve seen the live now.

I found a use for the backstage access. Running from The Pyramid to The Other Stage to see Primal Scream. This is where I should have been. They were awesome. A good half hour of jumping about  like a loon followed by the muddy walk back to the tent to dry off and attempt sleep.

Who knows what today will hold…

Wet(ish)

Posted 24 Jun 2011 — by admin
Category glastonbury

I was up at 4.30 this morning. Once again I feel cheated out of the 15 minutes sleep I should have had before the alarm went off. There are karma points to be had though, because the alarm didn’t go off and I didn’t wake the whole snappy household. That would have made me one popular Daddy!

The karma bank must have paid out though. The train that I got from Paddington was meant to stop and Westbury where we should have changed on to another train to Castle Cary. Joy of joys, it went straight through, no change, no wait and an early arrival at Castle Cary where the fleet of downtrodden coaches awaited to whisk me off to Worthy Farm.

You may not believe this but as I arrived at Glastonbury the sun was shining and the mud was bearable. My boots were christened in mud almost immeadiately after alighting the bus. Now it’s coulded over somewhat and a free orange poncho from Orange, no less, is order of the day.

I met up with a friend who is hobbling around on an achey leg. I’m acting as the Lou to her Andy (although I’m sure she’s not faking it!).I get to wear a pass that says ‘Personal Assistant’ and have got access to some pretty nifty shortcuts and some backstage areas. We still haven’t figured out how best to take advantage of this but I’m sure we’ll figure it out in time!!

After a traditional site walkabout I headed back to the Pyramid Stage to watch Two Door Cinema Club who did not disappoint and am now typing furiously in the Orange Chill and Charge West. The ruour is that Radiohead are the surprise act in The Park at 8.00 so I might have to ditch Morrissey in their favour. The rest of the weekends entertainment is as yet undecided.

We’re getting yelled at to move on now. Apparently I’ hogging the PC (yuk).

It should be a long night.

It’s nearly time to say goodbye…

Posted 27 Jun 2010 — by admin
Category glastonbury

No one would believe that the sun shone down on Glastonbury’s 40th birthday party. Come 2011 things will be back to normal and the place will be a quagmire and the scorcher that was this fine year will be a dim and distant memory. With every upside there is always a downside. Dust, not as in the lowest calorie food favoured by Mrs Marjorie Dawes but the dust that comes with 175,000 walking along sun-baked paths.

There have been a few firsts this year. Having a shower, as I’ve mentioned, was one of them (I just had another one by the way and it was FANTASTIC!). The other was the Glastonbury twister. It only spun it’s magic by the Cider Bus momentarily but there is was, reaching 30 or 40ft into the sky. The dust, you see, is everywhere. It’s in the air, as demonstrated by the American style twister, but it’s on the tents and cars and vans to the delight of amateur graffiti artists who must have come from Harrow, honestly – I wish my bird was as dirty as this van – is that all they could think of! People are scrawling in the dust on tents too! The answer to the dust was welcomed in some quarters. Before the earliest of early birds arose and the latest of partyers were yet in their way home the Glastonbury behind the scenes army were spraying the main pathways with water. Throughout the day this did it’s job and kept all of the dust down but it did have a rather pleasant side effect. It generated a very small amount of that rare Glastonbury commodity, mud.

And there it was, and everyone who saw it wanted to jump in it, and I did. You know what? It was good, it was very good, I got some of that special smelling mud up the back of my legs and I felt that after 2 days on Worthy Farm I’d finally arrived. I’d arrived at the Chill ‘n Charge again, just in time to have a sneaky last minute shower and a change of clothes before I put my brilliant exit plan into action.

Procrastination has been the order of the day. My tent was in such a spectacular location, overlooking the Pyramid stage, with it’s fantastic sound system, that moving from that spot was all the more tricky each morning. By the time I’d dragged myself from my sleeping bag it took nearly all of my morning energy to drag myself through my morning rituals and back to the tent so I could sit in my neighbours chair, cos he wouldn’t be rising til the afternoon. The view, as I mentioned was fantastic. Staring across the site, The Pyramid stage and onwards to Glastonbury Tor is one that you would not sniff at if met by it each and every morning. So as you can imagine, dragging my arse away from that each day has become something to find an excuse not to do.

This morning, though, I hatched a cunning plan that would hasten my exit from the site and hopefully allow me to get home as quickly as possible without missing any last minute Glastonbury fun. The plan was to pack the tent after Slash and while listening to Ray Davis in the legends slot, then in the gap before Jack Johnson carry my stuff over to the lock up by the bus station (yes there’s a bus station here, it’s a must for every temporary town). Cunningly all I have now is a backpack to carry around until I need to head for the bus at 3.oo tomorrow morning. The only downside is that I’ve got nowhere to sleep tonight so I’ll have to fill my final hours on Worthy Farm with  a variety of musical delights that will start very soon with Faithless, followed by Stevie Wonder, and tailed with the festival-tastic Levellers. I’m sure there will be a few sound systems that I can while away the remaining hours at til it’s time to get the bus back to Castle Cary and when Glastonbury 2010 will finally draw to a close.

The over arching discussion of the weekend is whether this year will be my last. One of my Glasto buddies thinks that at the youthful age of 41, maybe it’s time to think about whether a week under canvas is still the way to go. I said that it would be worth it to start saving now for the Winnebago for Glasto’s 50th in 2020! I certainly will never rule out another trip to Pilton. As grubby and messy and exhausting as it is, nothing beats it and it’s worth every single penny (thanks Mrs K for the birthday tickets this year!).

This will, no doubt, be my last wittering from Glastonbury this year so there are a few people who deserve a mention; first and foremost is my best friend in the world, my good lady wife. Not only did she buy my ticket, she’s let me spend the weekend away and looked after the kids and for that she deserves nothing but my undying respect and love, which she has already :) The mini crew here, Alexa for taking my tent and attempting to put it up but getting me the perfect pitch for the weekend and Steve C for turning up randomly in a crowd of 175,000 people at various points across the weekend always holding a can of cider. You are a legend! Penultimately, @conorfromorange for letting me utterly take the piss with the shower, charging and PC (not Mac I might add!) facilities in the Orange Chill ‘n Charge tent. Never have 4 drinks tokens lasted so long. Finally the biggest shout out goes to Mr Michael Eavis and of course Emily for putting on the greatest show on early. Barnum ain’t got nothing on you guys.

While I still feel clean I think it’s time to begin the final sprint of Glastonbury 2010, and so, I bid you a fond farewell from Worthy Farm. Thanks for putting up with this crap. Maybe we’ll do it again next year.

Preparations

Posted 09 Jun 2010 — by admin
Category 40th, blog, glastonbury

Only a couple of weeks to go now. I’ve finally managed to get the WordPress app working on my iPhone. So batteries permitting I’m all set to be blogging from my tent.

Homeward bound

Posted 24 Jun 2007 — by admin
Category bath, drugs, glastonbury, home, mud, police, rain, train

The nice man at Castle Cary station put a call in and got the 11.30 train to london to pick up us mud monsters. We were joined on the platform by a couple of friendly policemen and their drug sniffing spaniel! Not sure if any one was caught but we were glad when the train arrived. Now we are looking forward to getting picked up at paddington and going home for a nice hot bath.

Stone circles and bog circles

Posted 23 Jun 2007 — by admin
Category crepe, face paint, glastonbury, home, kidz field, Lily Allen, mud, Paul Weller, pizza, rain

Limited as i am to words from my phone I’ll skip through today’s activities. Tried showers and failed. Walked to stone and bog circles to show mini me the view. Crepes for brekkie. Kids field was ace despite the rain. Faces painted again! Spuds and pizza for lunch. Lily Allen and Weller both rocked and we’ve retired to the tent so we can get up early to get the bus back to castle cary tomorrow morning. Tonight I’ll be listening to The Killers from the comfort of my tent. It’s been a fab few days for us.

Mud, mud and more mud.

Posted 22 Jun 2007 — by admin
Category 2007, face paint, glastonbury, kidz field, mud, rain, sun

Back in the tent now. I can hear the Arctic Monkeys headline set and the crowd are loving it. Today has been taken over by torrents of rain and mud, lots of it. At one point we managed to take refuge in our tent which then started to leak! Thankfully by late afternoon the sun fought through and we were able to hang out our mud sodden clothes to dry (a little!) The other highlight of the day was our visit to the kidz field. It was so fantastic I even had my face painted! Mini me wanted me to take it off!

Journey

Posted 21 Jun 2007 — by admin
Category 2007, festival, glastonbury, mobile, music

Well we’ve arrived at worthy farm and we only took 4 trains, 2 and a half hours and a bus journey. Mini me is finally asleep, our tent is ur and our flag is flying! We managed to get one of the last remaining spots it the family field and the dull roar is a little quieter here than 2005′s backstage experience, although we are just behind the massive cinema screen! Enough bloging from my phone, I need to sleep… Glasto 2007 here we come!

Mobile

Posted 19 Jun 2007 — by admin
Category blog, glastonbury, mobile, post, wordpress

I’ve just discovered that I can post to here from my mobile via http://m.wordpress.com. It’s all set up and ready for the weekend. S’pose I’d better test it at some point too!