A Worthy Farm camping trip isnât quite Glasto, but itâs the best weâll get this year
T here are some things every Glastonbury festivalgoer is guaranteed to experience. Youâll lose yourself in the endless fields and pathways (and your tent at least once). You will plot the perfect itinerary to take in your favourite artists and each area of the site, but only see a fraction of it all. And it will definitely rain.
This year, though, thanks to Covid, the Glasto experience is rather different. A mini online-only version of the festival ran in June (last year was cancelled), but owner Michael Eavis and family are welcoming people to Worthy Farm this summer by, for the first time, opening it as a campsite. For six weeks, visitors can stay in one of 750 pre-erected tents dotted across the site. Thereâs room for a total of 3,500 visitors at any one time â a smattering compared with the 200,000 of a festival weekend. Gone are the shoulder-to-shoulder crowds, the music and the welly-stealing mud. Instead, there are resident cows (itâs a working farm), free childrenâs activities and a vibe so relaxed you could actually get some sleep, even with little ones.
Kate Leahy and family with their tent at Worthy PasturesHome to the Eavis family for two centuries, Worthy Farm lies on the edge of Pilton village, a 15-minute drive from the hippy, historic town of Glastonbury. It has hosted the festival for 50 years, starting in 1970. Iâve bagged tickets to the last five festivals, embracing the mayhem with my partner, Jonjo. And, despite my home being 20 minutesâ drive from the site, itâs always as if for those five days nowhere else exists. Iâve often spotted revellers brave (or foolhardy) enough to have their kids in tow, quite sure Iâd never do the same. But this time as we drive along the A361, our three-month-old twins, Ted and George, are asleep in the back, en route to their first ever âGlastonburyâ. It feels like a safer test run than the full throng of a festival, but there is a chance we, too, are being foolhardy.
We spent time climbing on hay bales and taking photos with one of the worldâs most famous stages in the backgroundThe quiet country roads are a far cry from the usual festival weekend, when you can spend hours inching towards the car park, but the hi-vis wearing staff are just as kind and helpful. As turn down the dirt track to the check-in hut â in the shadow of the Pyramid stage frame, a permanent feature at the farm â it feels eerie yet lovely not to have to dodge thousands of festivalgoers lugging bags, bedding and booze. Instead, thereâs a slow ebb of families unpacking cars while children excitedly chase each other, kick footballs or ride their bikes along the stony tracks. The festivalsâ flags are at full mast.
The site is simple: plots by the entrance for campervans, colourful pre-erected tents spread out over a chunk of the site, and a central âvillage greenâ where the popular Williamâs Green stage, named after Michaelâs grandfather, normally lies. There are trucks serving pizza, pasta, burgers, toasties and vegan dishes, and more will be introduced over the summer, according to Poppy Handy, the site coordinator. Thereâs also a general store, information and merchandise tent.
The pizza stand at Worthy PasturesApart from the bar set up in the festival crew block, the entertainment is largely geared towards kids. Thereâs a giant pink castle in the Kidzfield, a play ship called Cadmus, and amassive stone dragon water feature hidden among trees, as well as bedtime stories, crafts, games and workshops. Thereâs lots of space for little legs to run around too, with the site spread out across a few large fields, much like the festival.
Itâs most definitely not Glastonbury by another name but there is a strong sense of the festival all aroundAnd, after two forced fallow years, thereâs plenty of opportunity to see the rejuvenated wildlife, including tawny and little owls, kingfishers and, come nightfall, glow worms. Families can picnic in the Pyramid field but we, along with other visitors, spent the time joyously climbing on the hay bales and taking photos with one of the worldâs most famous stages in the background.
The tents are not equipped, so campers need to bring the basics. After a sunny day, in true Glastonbury style, it lashed it down at night and turned cold â so come prepared. Most campers kept their noise levels low for the sake of the families, but a few groups of hardened festivalgoers came with sound systems and sat up late chatting.
Itâs important to note that Worthy Pastures isnât trying to be a miniature festival. Handy said: âItâs a camping experience. Somewhere people can relive memories and meet like-minded people who either share experience of the farm or maybe, if youâve never been, see it as a great opportunity to get a sense of the space.â
Kate Leahy and family with Michael EavisAnd thatâs exactly what people are doing. We see visitors pointing out areas of the festival, reliving moments and getting excited for when the festival is back. And we do the same. The morning we leave, we bump into Michael Eavis on the Village Green. âIs it nice to have people back on the farm?â I ask. âOh yesâ, he says, beaming.
For campers wanting to explore beyond the site, thereâs the real Glastonbury, with its tor, ruined abbey and surrounding Levels, all good for learning more of the areaâs history, myths and legends. Cheddar Gorge and Wookey Hole caves, Avalon Marshes and one of the UKâs smallest cities, Wells, are all relatively nearby.
Itâs most definitely not Glastonbury by another name but there is a strong sense of the festival all around. We ventured up to the Stone Circle for sunset and could almost hear the crowd. Almost. For now though, this is a great way to explore the fields that have created â and will, hopefully, continue to create â many a treasured memory. Next time, though, I might leave the little ones at home.
Ridge tent sleeping two adults and two children from £195 for three nights, larger tents available. Campervan pitches from £150, worthypastures.com