Won’t be long til summer time is through
This is probably a bit self-indulgent of me, but I've had a long day at work, so I thought I'd pop up some more photos from the weekend to cheer myself up a bit.
This lake is just off to one side of the Pyramid Stage, and you pretty much needed to wade through it if you wanted to get out to the stage. It's around here that they had the canoe out, I think, although I didn't see it myself. Good to see that the burger vans still seem to be doing some decent trade, eh?
This was just below the field where we were camped, and you can see where the river ran out and down into the rest of the site. Some of those people are probably still looking for their tents.
Now that's a depressing sight - that's at least 4 foot deep, I think, and is about 10m away from the tipped up toilets. We had to wade across this lake to get down to the stages. At this point I was still wearing my walking boots and was eyeing up the distinctly unappetising prospect of wading though raw sewage. I needn't have worried. Lord Bargain waded across, and then took off his wellies and stood on a piece of plastic as C. ferried the wellies back across to me so that I could pop them on and wade across. Now that's friendship, and I salute you!
We had a gazebo pitched up with our tents, and it was really useful for standing under whilst we waited for the rain to stop on Friday morning. I don't think it would have offered us much protection against a lake though.
C. & Jamie ponder their view of the Other Stage on Saturday. You might not think it to look at this picture, but it is already considerably drier underfoot by now, although that mud is pretty sticky.
And then the sun came out..... The Pollstar and Statue John enjoy Brian Wilson on Sunday afternoon. That slightly forced grin the Pollstar has (on the left) is what happens to you when you spend two whole days tramping around in wellies 2 sizes too small for your feet.
Emma C gets down and boogies as Brian Wilson (rather bizarrely, it has to be said) plays "Little Saint Nick", and my decision to carry around a Santa hat for three days pays a joyous dividend.
----
A massive electrical storm has just started in Nottingham, and it's pouring with rain. Oddly, instead of being glad that I'm indoors and waiting for my pizza to cook, I'm a little bit nostalgic for my tent in Somerset......
Roll on 2007.
This lake is just off to one side of the Pyramid Stage, and you pretty much needed to wade through it if you wanted to get out to the stage. It's around here that they had the canoe out, I think, although I didn't see it myself. Good to see that the burger vans still seem to be doing some decent trade, eh?
This was just below the field where we were camped, and you can see where the river ran out and down into the rest of the site. Some of those people are probably still looking for their tents.
Now that's a depressing sight - that's at least 4 foot deep, I think, and is about 10m away from the tipped up toilets. We had to wade across this lake to get down to the stages. At this point I was still wearing my walking boots and was eyeing up the distinctly unappetising prospect of wading though raw sewage. I needn't have worried. Lord Bargain waded across, and then took off his wellies and stood on a piece of plastic as C. ferried the wellies back across to me so that I could pop them on and wade across. Now that's friendship, and I salute you!
We had a gazebo pitched up with our tents, and it was really useful for standing under whilst we waited for the rain to stop on Friday morning. I don't think it would have offered us much protection against a lake though.
C. & Jamie ponder their view of the Other Stage on Saturday. You might not think it to look at this picture, but it is already considerably drier underfoot by now, although that mud is pretty sticky.
And then the sun came out..... The Pollstar and Statue John enjoy Brian Wilson on Sunday afternoon. That slightly forced grin the Pollstar has (on the left) is what happens to you when you spend two whole days tramping around in wellies 2 sizes too small for your feet.
Emma C gets down and boogies as Brian Wilson (rather bizarrely, it has to be said) plays "Little Saint Nick", and my decision to carry around a Santa hat for three days pays a joyous dividend.
----
A massive electrical storm has just started in Nottingham, and it's pouring with rain. Oddly, instead of being glad that I'm indoors and waiting for my pizza to cook, I'm a little bit nostalgic for my tent in Somerset......
Roll on 2007.
12 Comments:
At 10:20 pm, Anonymous said…
As that very same electrical storm has killed off my tv satellite signal - I'm sitting here watching/listening to some of the Glastonbury Highlights that I recorded at the weekend....and catching up with your weekend's antics.
Looks like it was jolly good fun - pleased to see the rain didn't dampen your spirits (and that you found time to clean your fingernails before you returned to the office today...).
I'm still jealous - but to continue a theme: by being at home in front of my tv I was able to see Rufus and Martha Wainwright do a lovely little acoustic duet backstage. If I'd been paying attention to the song - rather than Rufus's tight shorts and brilliant-white legs - I'd be able to tell you what it was. But I can't remember. Sorry.
At 10:40 pm, swisslet said…
you do know he's gay, right?
At 11:24 pm, LB said…
my f*cking Sky Plus box seems to have spectacularly failed to record any of the 25 odd hours coverage on BBC3.
great.
At 11:24 pm, Damo said…
Yep, where I live (20 miles from the Glastonbury Festival site), we too have just had another storm to rival the Friday one in terms of intensity, although not length. I live on a hill and a river is running down the street. Nice.
At 1:34 pm, Anonymous said…
SwissToni said...
you do know he's gay, right?
....and what's to stop me looking? Eh?
It's not that I'm ever going to get close enough to 'touch' him or ask him to 'change' for me now, is it?
hmmmmm....then again.....
At 3:58 pm, Anonymous said…
By the way, Lord Bargain, I have one last highlights show (beeb three on Sunday night)sitting on my Sky+ box. Could transfer it to ye olde video tapes for you, if you like?
At 4:28 pm, HistoryGeek said…
Oh, how I wish for a good thunderstorm. We don't get those too often here and I miss them. I don't however miss flooding rains (which is winter weather here)...they lead to landslides.
The pictures are great - too bad there's no sound!
At 6:47 pm, Aravis said…
As I read spinsterwitch's comment, thunder and lightning crash over my head, causing my house to shake.
If it's any consolation, spinsterwitch, my dog wishes this storm was in California, too! *G*
At 12:40 pm, Damo said…
You wait years for one incredibly nasty thunderstorm, then two come along at once...
At 1:34 pm, Jenni said…
Incredible photos. Although I could have done without having to think about raw sewage first thing in the morning ;)
At 5:03 pm, red one said…
Shared wellies, now that's what I call solidarity. I salute him too!
From the comfort of a nice dry sofa, but anyway.
RedOne
At 12:56 pm, Anonymous said…
I caught Rufus and Martha doing an acoustic duet last night on either channel 4 or bbc four - I can't remember! I'd had a little too much to drink, and can't for the life of me remember what song they sang - anyone know what it was, or even a tiny bit of the lyrics??
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