What should i take to glastonbury festival




















I use them to reflect heat off my tent and save it from feeling like a sauna in the mornings. Use the duct tape see! Foil blankets are also great to sit on or to wrap around you if you get cold and are much lighter to carry than a blanket. However, the option to have a brew in the morning and a cup a soup in the evening makes taking a small stove worthwhile.

Also, taking a few staples like tea bags and cup a soups, will save you money. For basic cooking, I take a tiny folding pot set, for making my morning porridge and for any other basic staple I might cook. My folding stove tucks away inside it too. Camping gear has come a long way, especially with the use of silicone and the ability to make a large item fold down.

A collapsible kettle is very light, takes up very little space and boils water quickly. For me, therefore, a thermal leak-proof mug is essential. A thermal mug means I can enjoy a brew throughout the day and carry it easily. Most of the hot drink vendors on site are happy to fill up your own cup as long as its clean.

Yes, I do take the kitchen sink! My collapsible sink allows me to wash up a few things, and also to treat myself to a face and pit wash. Sometimes baby wipes just are not enough! It is a good idea to keep some snacks in the tent and some basics to cook with your cook kit. Having a few staples means you can save yourself a bit of dosh and replenish your energy quickly when you are back at the tent. You will need a suitable bag to keep essentials in during the day.

A small rucksack is ideal. A small rucksack will allow you to carry your wet gear, should it pour down, a bottle of water and a couple of snacks too. Take cash with you. Although there are cash machine the queue for them is often very long. Use the lock ups to store excess cash safely. To avoid having to buy water all the time, bring a reusable water bottle to fill up at the many available water points.

Glastonbury has many places providing free cold water too. A collapsible water bottle is a great idea, light to pack and easy to store. Staring up at a stage when the sun is behind it can be uncomfortable after a while, so pack sunglasses. Perhaps I am showing my age now, but I really cannot cope at a festival now without a chair! It is just nice to have somewhere to rest your back after a long trek between stages!

I have used many chairs over the years but my favourite by far is a folding sit mat chair. Its clever design means the straps support you whilst you sit. They are so light and easy to strap to the back of your day bag, I have used a fair few different brands and they have each survived rigorous mistreatment at a few festivals!

My ultimate favorite folding chair is the Crazy Creek version. Its the same concept but instead of folding, it also rolls up, this makes it even lighter and easier to carry. A sleep mask. There is nothing brighter or hotter than a tent with the sun beating down on it.

A sleep mask might help you get a few extra Zs. Bin bags. So useful. If your tent breaches and leaks, stick your stuff in a bin bag. On a muddy day, take one out with you to sit on for some sweet feet relief. A mirror. Also: think layers, things with zips, items that are easy to remove, light items that fold up small. You can take as much as you can carry — but no glass is allowed on site. Glasto is a gourmet paradise, but food can be pricey and you can take in as much as you like.

Carry a hand-held torch it in your backpack during the day for finding the tent at night while trying to navigate through a swarm of tents in pitch black. Multi-tasking is the name of the game. You could also take an extra torch and hang it in your tent. Duct Tape. If anything goes wrong with the tent, airbed or just about anything else rips, tears or leaks. Of course, if and when dust turns to mud, then be sure to have your trusty wellies at the ready.

We know you might find this hard to believe but, these do not have to be Hunter made. Do not go for the mid-calf ones — when worst comes to shove, and the glorious green grass turns into one big pile of brown, the mud will be deeper than the mid-calfs and that is somewhat of a depressing situation to find yourself in.

Welly-socks and plain old socks. Because welly-rub is your enemy. The tops of wellies will rub against your calves and if they are wet this is double uncomfortable — you will be grateful for long welly-socks, these will have your back, or should we say… feet.

Warm jumper. The quirkier, the better. Bikini Top. Variety of freeze-dried foodstuffs. This is a vital part of Glastonbury survival — rebounding back to your tent, charging up with some munch food and taking stock.

This is precisely where the cereal bars really shine. A pack of plasters — you never know when you might need one. Duct tape fixes all these things. This might sound like an incredibly dramatic addition to your kit list, but hear us out. While an inflatable mattress itself is worth double its weight in gold, they take a lot of time and energy to pump up.

For a fiver, one of the many camping market stalls on the site will fill it for you in seconds. A flower crown is so … and always ends up caked in mud and dry shampoo. Have you got your Glastonbury wardrobe sorted yet? Get one as small — and as light — as you can bear to sleep in. We and our partners use cookies to better understand your needs, improve performance and provide you with personalised content and advertisements.

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