festival survival guide
Transcription
festival survival guide
free! FESTIVAL SURVIVAL GUIDE Now with Insider Tips Festival Listings ‘09 WHEN WHO WHERE 5th & 6th May Bob Dylan The 02 20th June Oasis Slane Castle 21st June Kasabian Marquee, Cork 26th, 27th & 28th June Sea Sessions Main Beach, Bundoran 28th June AC/DC Punchestown Racecourse 4th July Josh Ritter Marquee, Cork 10th July Oxegen Punchestown Racecourse 11th July Oxegen Punchestown Racecourse 12th July Oxegen Punchestown Racecourse 11th July Bruce Springsteen RDS Arena 24th July U2 Croke Park 25th July U2 Croke Park 27th July U2 Croke Park 1st Aug Metallica Marley Park 2nd Aug Fatboy Slim Marley Park 1st & 2nd Aug Castle Palooza Charleville Castle, Tullamore 29th & 30th Aug Festival of World Cultures Dún Laoghaire 4th Sept Electric Picnic Stradbally, Co. Laois 5th Sept Electric Picnic Stradbally, Co. Laois 6th Sept Electric Picnic Stradbally, Co. Laois 14th Sept Coldplay Phoenix Park ival t s e F ival v r u S e Guid A good festival should be one of the best experiences of your life, but get it wrong and it can turn into a nightmare. Fionn Davenport, music DJ, radio presenter and travel writer, has some tips to get you through, whether you’re a day tripper or a happy camper… Because you Never Know What you Might Forget... • Bog Roll. The best festival currency: the truly desperate will trade just about anything for a few clean sheets. • Baby Wipes and Hand Cleansing Gel. Baby wipes are the festival equivalent of a bath and a far better option to the smelly queue for the showers. While you’re getting them, pick up some anti-bac hand gel that doesn’t require soap and water. • Toothbrush & Toothpaste. A dodgy set of chops will make condoms totally redundant. • Sun Block. The sun can turn a crowd into a human barbecue, so bring plenty of sun cream and keep lashing it on unless you like being a human lobster. • Tickets. You’d be surprised. • Condoms. If you want to avoid life-changing conversations three months after the festival when the special love you made is but a lingering memory. Insider Tip # 1 Write the time/location of your must-see bands on your hand every day - it’s easy to lose track of time Looking Good? Dressing for festival highfashion will only give you grief! This is no place for your best clobber - think less catwalk and more slosh-pit. • Rain Poncho. Better than the glorified bin liner they (sometimes) give out at the festival. • Socks. Bring plenty. Wet feet are crap. • Sun Hat. Sunstroke is like a really bad hangover and the worst flu you’ll ever get... at the same time. Anything’ll do. (Except for a jester’s hat, which will just look stupid.) • Something Warm. You might be hot during the day, but those nights can get pretty chilly. • Wellies. Best for the mudpit that even a light shower will turn the arena into. Flip flops are just flops when it’s raining. when you’re having fun… and granny trolleys might look silly, but they’re a lifesaver for transporting your gear to the campsite! Lauren Murphy Music Journalist: The Ticket, Hot Press and more. Transport Getting there can be a total pain – an hour long drive at any other time may take half the day at a near crawl. • Exhaustion. Ever sat behind the wheel in slowmoving traffic after three days of camping, gigging and partying? It’s not nearly as much fun as it sounds. Our best advice is don’t bother and rely on public transport. • Behind the Wheel. If you’re used to a car, then a busy road isn’t the best place to try driving a campervan for the first time. Get some practice first! Insider Tip # 2 • Breath-Testing. Random tests are commonplace along the festival routes; failing one isn’t really a good way of celebrating the weekend. • The Morning After the Night Before. Even if you feel fine to drive the following day, you may still be over the legal limit and could get a €5,000 fine or a 6 month sentence (or you could be liable to both). Your body gets rid of alcohol at the average rate of one standard drink – that’s half a pint or a glass of wine or a shot – per hour. Every mobile has a calculator, so do the maths. To blag your way backstage, carry a bag of oranges and a hassled look: tell security that you should have gotten them hours before but where • Information. All of the major festivals’ websites have transport info; otherwise just check out cie.ie for the Iarnród Éireann, Dublin Bus and Bus Éireann sites. the hell can you get fresh oranges on a festival site at a moment’s notice? Or be really good-looking and nonchalant. I generally go with the oranges. Fionn Davenport Hungry? Long gone are the days when festival-goers only option was a burger and chips. Whether you’re a fan of traditional Irish fare or have more exotic tastes, you’ll be spoilt for choice. Even veggies and sweet teeth are catered for. Whether bringing your own food or indulging in festival fare remember to keep it dry and keep it green. Insider Tip # 3 • Dry Foods. Better something that won’t go off, get mushy or grow green stuff; so no meats, bananas or cheese. • Cleaning Up. In a greenfield site? Help keep it that way. Clean up after yourself and take everything with you – including your rubbish. Check met.ie for the weather and dress accordingly, lots of layers so you’re prepared for Thirsty? Of course most people will have a drink – it’s all part of the festival atmosphere and alcohol can add to the fun by helping you relax. • Water. Bring as much of it as you can. Alcohol will seriously dehydrate you and even a clouded sun will make it worse. • Drink at Least One Litre Per Day. There are plenty of top-up taps, but do so at night – the morning queues are horrendous. • No Glass. The amount of liquids confiscated at the gates could quench the thirst of a small town. Bring plastic containers and bottles. the (hopefully) warm days and the inevitably cold nights! • Pace Yourself. Drink water or a soft drink every few drinks. You will feel better, look better and have a better chance of lasting the course! • Eat Something. Nothing will make drinking a disaster more than an empty stomach. Eat before you drink. • Wrecked? Getting pissed isn’t pretty or smart. You’ll just wreck the weekend for your mates if they have to look after you when you’re the worse for wear. Remember: over-doing it will do nothing for your looks either – you’re dropdead gorgeous until you drop down drunk. Susanna Lagan Organiser, Castle Palooza • Hair of the Dog. It won’t beat your hangover, it just prolongs the agony. • The Secret to Sobering Up? Time. Yeah, time! Whether sitting in a tent or standing in a field, it’ll take roughly two hours for your body to break down one pint of booze. Nothing – not tea, energy drinks, burgers and chips or an ice cold shower – can speed up this process. One ard stand k drin •= • Beer Goggles. Want a weekend to regret? Then let the booze do the chatting up for you. • No Strange Mixers! Don’t accept a drink from a stranger or leave yours unattended – you never know what you’re getting or what could have been put in it. • Go Online. There’s plenty of info about drinking and alcohol consumption at drinkaware.ie •= A glass of stout/lager/cider (284ml) A small glass of wine (100ml) A pub measure of spirit (35.5ml) Insider Tip # 4 Because the phone networks go into meltdown, send texts to your jealous friends about how great a time you are And remember, it takes your body about an hour to get rid of the alcohol from 1 standard drink having three weeks before the festival even starts to ensure that they get them. Oh and an inflatable periscope is a must. Cormac Battle 2fm Happy Campers The ‘wherever I lay my hat’ approach to a good night’s kip will seem a bad idea halfway through the first rainy night, so plan your sleeping arrangements with care. A good tip: turn up early to pick your spot. • Tent. So long as it’s waterproof, any old tent will do. There’s a chance it may get damaged, so don’t bother with a fancy one. • Location, Location, Location. Pitch it in open ground, at the top of a hill and far, far away from the communal toilets. • Pitch it when you Arrive. You don’t want to test your tent-pitching skills in the dark so peg it down before you start dancing and drinking. Insider Tip # 5 Socks, socks, socks! A wise man (Ray Mears) once said that as long as your feet are dry, you can combat any • Bring a Torch. Here’s a fun game: try finding your tent amongst thousands like it in the dark. • Snuggle Up. A black bin liner may have limited uses at home, but it’s the perfect ready-made waterproof cover for your sleeping bag. • Flag It. That’s right, a flag: “it’s a green pup tent” just isn’t enough of a description when looking for your tent at day’s end, so why not mark it with something distinctive (and there’ll be lots of tricolours, so go for something else). • Plastic Bags and Tape. Plastic bags make the best shoes and seats around. weather conditions and your body will stay happy. Bring more pairs of socks than you do cans of booze... Scott Hutchison Frightened Rabbit Stay Safe, Stay Free Festivals are usually heavily policed, with a huge number of undercover Gardaí milling around. Don’t give them a reason to interfere with your weekend. • Drugs. Even aside from the health risks, just don’t bother – the Gardaí will happily bust you for even the slightest infraction. • Human Pyramids, Moshing and Stage Diving. They sound like a great idea, but they’re not, and can end up with you hurt or arrested and the event being more heavily policed next year – which means tickets will be even more expensive. And that will be all thanks to you, you free-flying fool. Insider Tip # 6 • Valuables. Why bring any? Cash and a mobile phone are the only things you’ll need. Leave the rest at home. • Cash. Bring enough but spread it about your body. Back and shallow front pockets are useless – you may as well give it away. A money pouch or bound in a small plastic bag stuffed into the toe of your shoe is good. • Minding Your Stuff. Make friends with the occupants of the tents around you and they’ll keep an eye on your gear. Turn off your phone and roam free, waiting for people in fields is well overrated! DJ Tu-Ki Giveaways Win tickets to the best gigs of the summer! Go to drinkaware.ie for your chance to win. You don’t need to buy anything from us to enter, but you do need to be over 18. Different tickets are up for grabs all summer on the competitions page, so keep checking back. More info and links to festival websites with full line-ups can be found at drinkaware.ie Insider Tip # 7 Take plenty of sweets, nothing breaks the ice with new friends like a wine gum or toffee as the sun goes down. Matt Williams MTV Ireland Europe’s Favourite Rock and Roll Weekend lives up to its reputation with Kings Of Leon, The Killers, Blur, Snow Patrol, Jane’s Addiction, Nine Inch Nails, Lady Gaga, Bloc Party, Razorlight, Lily Allen and tonnes more acts rockin’ Punchestown this July. And thanks to our pals at MCD we have six pairs of day tickets to Oxegen to give away. Go to drinkaware.ie to enter the draw. One of the fastest selling concerts of the summer, Oasis at Slane will be electric. Supported by Kasabian and The Prodigy this is a gig not to be missed and thanks to MCD we have three pairs of tickets to give away to this SOLD OUT gig – supernova! Log on to drinkaware.ie for your chance to win. Dublin ‘got loud’ last summer when Metallica rocked Marlay Park and they’re gonna do it again on August 1st! We’ve teamed up with MCD (yet again!) to give away three pairs of tickets. Only genuine metal heads need apply…. Simply log on to drinkaware.ie to enter. Marlay Park will become the biggest beat boutique on August 2nd when Fatboy Slim comes to town. Joining Fatboy live will be Burns, Fake Blood, Dizzee Rascal and loads more brilliant acts. And we have three pairs of tickets to give away courtesy of MCD. Go to drinkaware.ie to enter the draw. Just when you thought all the summer gigs were over Coldplay will play the Phoenix Park on September 14th and thanks to the lovely MCD we have three pairs of tickets up for grabs. Visit drinkaware.ie to win. With limited ticket numbers, indoor toilets and hot showers we’re delighted to offer you a pair of weekend camping tickets to Castle Palooza courtesy of Cherry Cool. Log on to drinkaware.ie Checklist Tickets (no, really, you’d be surprised) ash and mobile – and somewhere smart C to keep them Extra layers for warming up and cooling down ain poncho, sunblock & sunhat R (cos you never know) And if you’re staying over..... ent (before you leave check the pack for T pegs and poles) Plastic bags, tape and bin liners Clothes and footwear for every weather A flag A torch Bog roll Wipes and hand gel Toothbrush and paste Grub and water Condoms (once again, you never know) Oh yeah, one last thing... Have a great time. drinkaware.ie was developed by MEAS (Mature Enjoyment of Alcohol in Society Limited) Merrion House, 1-3 Fitzwilliam Street Lower, Dublin 2. Contact: 01 6114811 or info@drinkaware.ie Registered in Ireland Registered Number 360798 Charity Number CHY 15913
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