Hiking in scotland would be a great way to ignore it all yknow. I've hiked the West highland way and the Speyside way in the last few years, and its been great - book up the accommodation well in advance, plot your route so you're not undertaking ridiculous distances, and its a brilliant way to spend a week.
Start each day with a fryup, bit of hiking through some amazing countryside, about six hours a day/15 miles ish so room for afternoon nappage and a couple of pints with dinner somewhere, and then b&b/little hotel/pub rooms for a wonderful night's sleep and ready to do it all again the next day. Perhaps a little whisky here and there to aid your feet too!
If i were avoiding a glastonbury, thats precisely what i would do
I missed out last year and one of my dad’s favourite bands played. I asked a load of people here to raise a glass for him as he sadly died a couple of years ago during a particular song and had a lovely video a friend filmed for me of some people raising glasses to him. I’m hoping to get back to the farm one year to plant something for him there (apparently there’s a place in the green fields that lets you do it)
Yea, not sure why it gets a negative press. I know people may just want tents with bands, but I like it. Very unique to have a Pier in a field and no other festival as something like this. The little band area is great, love the feel of a pier with sticks of rock and nowt like being a little blasted and playing pinball.
Arcadia isn’t by the other stage anymore, it’s up by the park in its own field. A lot of the great food stalls have gone, Ghandis flip flop was a personal fave but I couldn’t find it last time I went. The camping has changed a bit and some of the public camping is how hospitality and staff
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