How to survive Glastonbury Festival WaterAid-style

By Neil Greenway | Published: Tue 11th Jun 2019

Glastonbury Festival 2019 - The Park
Photo credit: Karen Williams

Glastonbury Festival 2019

Wednesday 26th to Sunday 30th June 2019
Worthy Farm, Pilton, Shepton Mallet, Somerset, BA4 4AZ, England MAP
£248 + £5 booking fee - sold out
Daily capacity: 203,000

Festival season is upon us and that means fun, freedom and funky smelling toilets – or does it? After quarter of a century of partnership with Glastonbury Festival and a presence at five other festivals, WaterAid has learnt a trick or two to about not only surviving but also thriving! From toilets and periods, to water and meeting points – we have it covered!

  • If your greatest festival fear is braving the bogs, WaterAid’s team of plucky Loo Crew volunteers aim to change your mind about festival loos by keeping them clean. Women can transform your festival experience with a visit to WaterAid’s revolutionary female urinals where users are given ShePees. Clean, safe and run by female volunteers means no more hovering precariously over a dubious toilet seat when needing a pee. As an extra bonus, there will be mirrors and biodegradable glitter available. For the first time this year, there will also be a few specially designed private cubicles in the ShePee area near the Pyramid Stage to meet women’s needs, with sanitary disposal facilities, water for washing, a shelf, hook and extra space.
  • If you are on your period, it doesn’t need to be a cause for concern. WaterAid will have a supply of free natural and environmentally friendly tampons and pads in the ShePees for women who are caught short, before they get the chance to stock up their supply from the onsite shops. Women will also have a chance to sign up to WaterAid’s latest subscription service Fempowered and get a monthly pack of organic, chemical, plastic free, biodegradable period products delivered to their door while also supporting WaterAid’s work with women and girls worldwide.
  • Glastonbury has now banned the sale of single-use plastic bottles and is encouraging people to bring and use refillable bottles. Late nights and partying can take a toll on the body, and fingers crossed it will be sunny, but it’ll still be easy to stay hydrated at Glastonbury – just take a trip to one of WaterAid’s water refill stations to top up or buy a bottle at one of WaterAid’s kiosks if you’ve left home without one. If queuing to get on site, there will also be volunteers on hand with water jet backpacks providing a dose of H2O.
  • Do you keep losing your friends? Fear not – WaterAid’s Big Tap will provide the perfect place to meet. A short walk from the Pyramid Stage and towering above the height of a double decker bus, it will not be easy to miss, and there’s also water-themed seating to rest those tired legs.
  • Keep your mind active, discussions open and do your bit to make a difference in the world by finding out more about WaterAid’s Access Denied campaign and its work to bring clean water and decent toilets to all.

WaterAid Special Events Projects Manager Sian Lamprey said:“We love festival season here at WaterAid and we have more than 600 volunteers at Glastonbury alone this year ready and willing to take up the challenge of cleaning over 2,600 loos onsite, keeping the hand sanitiser topped up, keeping festivalgoers hydrated, selling reusable water bottles and running the ShePees. 

We have all experienced that toilet panic moment and the desperate need to drink water after jumping about to music – it’s a daily reality for millions of people around the world. And so our other role at the festivals is to raise awareness of WaterAid’s work to change these injustices and gather support for those who are denied access to these human rights.” 

WaterAid is present at Glastonbury, Latitude, Camp Bestival, Boomtown Fair, Green Man and Shambala to share the joy that is clean toilets, running clean water, natural organic and biodegradable period products, mirrors and refillable water bottles.

WaterAid is working to make clean water, decent toilets and good hygiene normal for everyone, everywhere within a generation. The international not-for-profit organisation works in 28 countries to change the lives of the poorest and most marginalised people. Since 1981, WaterAid has reached 26.4 million people with clean water and 26.3 million people with decent toilets. For more information, visit www.wateraid.org.




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