Well it has been quite while since I last blogged! Here is my experiences of my first Download Festival.
Okay I normally go to Sonisphere, which i had tickets to, but is sadly cancelled this year. Well This year we were going to go to three festivals as our alternative honeymoon. We used the refund from Sonisphere to go to Belgium and Luxembourg, which incidentally was the last thing I blogged about. I think.
So Download. We chose download because of Soundgarden's presence, and we were quite looking forward to the festival.
I
have been a little under the weather and decided to decorate the inside of the
car the evening before we drove to Derby for Download Festival. So I was
banished to my bed for the rest of the evening and I had to leave the packing
to Martin and John, which I wasn't happy about because I normally pack with
German skill and efficiency. Lucky, my greatest fears were soon gone as I
discovered that nothing had been forgotten, phew! (Last year John forgot his
sleeping bag.) Download festival is a five day long music festival, well the
bands only play for 3 days. The weather man threatened rain, but it was fairly
dry most of the 3 hour drive, I slept through most of it as I was still
nauseous. (I forgot to mention that the only air freshener for the car that the
boys could find was a horribly sickly sweet vanilla scent. Yuck.) That didn't
really help me feel better. We got to the makeshift car park/field and the
heavens opened, so we forgot to check the location of our car. We decided to
take the most important equipment first and return for the other items once we
had pitched our tent. The walk to the camp site was a 2 mile trek, with copious
amounts of baggage and gravel paths, and a flipping road bridge with steep
stairs. We got to the camp site managed to find just enough room for us to
pitch our tent near some friendly geordies. I was still feeling pretty ill and
didn't want to sit about so John and I walked the 2 miles back to the car.
Except we must have walked lots more as we spend 2 hours wandering around the
car park as we had lost our bright red hyundai. The heavens decided that this
wasn't enough and opened again. As you can imagine, the first and last days of
festivals are where relationships amongst friends and loved ones are really
tested and emotions run high. The physical stress of carrying a lot of
equipment and being herded like cattle is not fun. We had our bucket barbie
confiscated, even though they were supposedly permitted on the camp site. I got
a bit annoyed at the steward, because we had loads of sausages and burgers that
we now could not cook, what a jobsworth he was! By the end of the first day we
were wet, cold and hungry and the mud had already been trampled on by thousands
of people and everyone was a bit cheesed off.
What that steward didn't know is that we had got 5KG of coal through the
barrier and a wok, so I cooked our food in a makeshift wok, coal cooker
thing. I did feel like taking the wok to the back of the steward"s head,
if I am honest!
Sleeping was okay, but it is always hard to adjust to the level of noise at
festivals from thousands of people drunkenly gibbering away. We were camped
right underneath the take-off and landing paths of East Midlands Airport. The
planes landing were not a problem, but the take-offs made you wake up feeling
as if you were under siege!
Day two was just sitting about in our tent
waiting for the rain to pass, this wasn't just rain as we brits know it, it was
serious torrential down pour. Due to the rain and cold temperatures our clothes
didn't dry out at all! Luckily the boys had packed a sensible amount of
changes, and we were putting the wet clothes on in the porch before going
outside.
Day 3 was the first day of music so it was a bit better, but I think
everyone was quite fed up. The stages opened 2 hours late, you know everything
in Britain stops for *bad weather*. I think this was some serious bad planning on the organiser's part. The first few bands couldn't get into things with half the stage area closed. John went to see Slash who put on a fantastic show, and we went to see The Prodigy, which were equally as good, but I couldn't really get into them, as I was cemented into the mud!
Day four Martin picked up some norovirus
and was unpleasantly unwell, so we had to trudge through the mud with a very
pale and unhappy Martin to the welfare tent. They couldn't really help and just
asked for a sample from Martin which as he couldn't wash his hands due to being
in a field, he didn't bother with! I can't say I blame him. John and I were
thankfully okay, and the portable toilets were not too bad, I have seen worse. we all made sure we had seperate drinking bottles, and took great advantage of the on site drinking water taps.
We decided then to pack up our tents the next morning and leave on Sunday night
after the last band, as we had just had enough and really didn't want to stay
an extra night. Metallica headlined and were excellent as usual. The played the Black album in it's entirety, the only bad point of that show, was the drugged up loopy miss dancing in front of me the whole show.
Day 5 was quite nice and the mud which was up to our knees had
started to dry out, which was slightly harder to wade through. I don't have any
pictures but you can imagine. I am surprised that we all managed to keep our
feet dry as I can guess that a few people probably contracted trench foot. The
way back to the car which we had now found visual reference points for was
quite hard and we did it in two trips again. All that walking! It was 16 miles
over five days to and from the car (we went two trips twice) and the stages
were a good 3 miles from the camp site, so that was 6 miles for the last three
days, through thick mud. I think we walked about 34 miles! We drove through the
night after Black Sabbath's show (which was very, very good) and it took us an
hour to leave the car park, because some muppet decided to have a crash just
outside. (How inconsiderate). It took us 3 hours, which the two of us switching
to avoid falling asleep at the wheel and we finally got in at 4 am and just in
time for sunrise! I can't say it was an overly bad experience, but it would
have been an awful camping holiday without the bands.
I am not the biggest fan of camping. Although I do love the outdoors. Peculiar.