Ever wondered what the festival grounds look like after you’ve packed up and left?
Unless you were away on a retreat somewhere over the weekend, you’ll know that some of the biggest names in music took to the stage at this year’s Glastonbury.
Yes, the popular festival took place at Worthy Farm over the weekend and from the accounts we’ve seen online, it was another amazing year.
However, with 135,000 people in attendance, the site was looking a little worse-for-wear this morning as one picture of a woman walking the grounds was shared across social media.
It takes a few minutes to bag up your rubbish, but takes volunteers weeks and costs thousands. Love the farm #LeaveNoTrace. #Glasto2017 pic.twitter.com/a3L9wH7HR7
— John Peel Stage (@Johnpeel2017) June 26, 2017
#leavenotrace #glastonbury pic.twitter.com/z4OrOuvpCR
— Tariq Taylor (@TeeTeeDawg) June 26, 2017
The festival organisers ran the #LeaveNoTrace campaign this year, asking festival-goers to clean up after themselves sharing the message and hashtag across their social media.
Thank you @GlastoFest for an amazing week. Campsite clear. #LeaveNoTrace pic.twitter.com/OLzOctliFh
— Ben Birchall (@BenBirchallUK) June 26, 2017
We left no trace.#Glastonbury2017 #Glastonbury #leaveNoTrace pic.twitter.com/CcT1mJWxmZ
— Ade (@Bubwal) June 25, 2017
Come on people! There was a big rubbish dump 20 yards from this #Glastonbury #LeaveNoTrace @GlastoWatch @GlastoFest https://t.co/v5meIQusLJ pic.twitter.com/HWjKNfrRXt
— Tristan Cork BPost (@TristanCorkPost) June 26, 2017
While many shared pictures of the their successful camp ground’s clean-up, volunteers still spent hours today picking up rubbish.
Glastonbury rubbish squad Other Stage early shift. pic.twitter.com/dlrcH9590E
— Nick Constable (@ConstableNC) June 25, 2017
This was like a landfill site at midnight. Fabulous work by the litter pickers #Glastonbury2017 #WorthyWarriors #Leavenotrace pic.twitter.com/QErD5KKGh8
— Kev Simmonds (@KevSimmonds) June 25, 2017