Festival Déjà Vu: Packing Optimism and Leaving the Wellies Behind

Reflecting on last year’s sunny festival whilst contemplating this weekend’s adventures.

A cheerful cartoon-style illustration of the Isle of Wight Music Festival on a sunny day. A lively band performs on a colourful stage labelled "Isle of Wight Music Festival" while a large, enthusiastic crowd cheers with hands raised. The audience includes people in summer clothes and hats, all enjoying the bright, sunny atmosphere with a clear blue sky and playful details like a smiling sun and striped tent in the background. The image captures the joyful, communal spirit of a summer music festival without depicting any specific bands or individuals.
Cheerful crowds at the Isle of Wight Festival. Image created by ChatGPT.

Can you believe it’s almost time again? Last year’s festival was special. We lucked out with the temperature; all that careful planning for wet weather gear was wasted, thankfully. Am I tempting fate if I look out the window and think this heatwave might hang around for the weekend?

Last year, The Bootleg Beatles set the tone nicely at the start with lots of sing-alongs, and hindsight makes those long walks between stages — and battling the crowd to get out — feel more like an adventure than a chore. Will I say the same on Monday?

Looking back, it was a real lesson in festival strategy. Preserving energy is my takeaway: knowing when to retreat before the very end paid off, ensuring a smoother bus ride back to Ryde. Striking a balance: wanting to be right up close for some acts but accepting that hanging back and relying on the video screens is sometimes a better move, except perhaps when The Pet Shop Boys were on stage.

So here we are, a year on, and my internal buzz is building despite feeling a little unwell. I’m already thinking about the bus tickets and the first coffee runs, hoping we find that sweet spot near the main stage where you can soak it all in and, hopefully, not be too squashed. I suspect there will be another morning hunt for the festival’s best bacon bun.

Fingers crossed, the weather holds out as beautifully as it did last year – all those wet-weather clothes can definitely stay in Ryde again! There’s something exciting about getting back into that festival routine, the journey, the crowd, the long walk to the main stage, and just seeing what surprises the lineup holds this time around. I wonder if I’ll write another festival diary?