A Journey Through Glasto's Green Fields

Photographer:Katy Carr
Crossing the tracks into the Green Fields is like breathing a sigh of relief. You leave behind the vans
of hog roast and hot dogs, the brands and the logos, and perhaps most importantly this year, the mud and chaos. Glastonbury
is way too big to be considered as one event and the Green Fields are but a part of what makes this festival of festivals
so extraordinary.
The Greenfields are, in essence and ethos, the foundation stone of all that the festival has prided itself on over
the years. The tenets of compassion, tolerance and mutual respect that are written through Glastonbury like words in a stick
of rock have their basis in the Green Fields. Atop the hill, they watch over the festival, guarding it's spirit, tempering
it's worst excesses and giving everyone a place to go after the main attractions have got back on the tour bus.
What is so impressive about The Greenfields is the sheer amount of effort, often from volunteers, that goes into
the planning and execution of it. Glastonbury Festival is a full-bloodied effort to provide the most comprehensive performing
arts festival in the world, The Green Fields offer any number of energy initiatives, alternative lifestyle choices, therapies,
ways of living and outright crackpot schemes.
Organisations devoted to saving, preserving or sustaining the planet are ready with their info packs, stickers
and leaflets, and people who have devoted their lives to resisting the rampant march of corporate capitalism are ready to
chat, discuss or argue. There's a huge mish-mash of ideals, ideologies, therapies, performances and designed spaces, all with
one aim, to be the biggest chill-out area of any festival. This year, it's much needed.
Split into no less than 7 clearly defined spaces, culminating at the top with the Sacred Space and stone circle
of the King's Meadow, the Green Fields are made up of the Healing Field, The Craft Field, the Avalon Field, the Tipi
Field, Green Futures, The Green Roadshow and The Green Kids/Greenpeace Field. The newly acquired
Lost Vagueness and the Circus and Cabaret fields are close by, but are separate spaces in
all but geography.
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