logo
Music festivals and children: ‘The kids were still going strong at 11pm. I'm on anti-inflammatories'

Music festivals and children: ‘The kids were still going strong at 11pm. I'm on anti-inflammatories'

Irish Times09-07-2025
I have a friend who says when it comes to music festivals and her children, there's a Venn diagram. 'I could never be that parent,' she says. 'The Venn diagram would show us at a festival; them at a festival, but a big empty overlap in the middle: never us and them at a festival together.'
This makes total sense. Music festivals are loud and crowded, there's camping, mud, rain, sun, booze, broken sleep, queuing, expensive food and increasingly unspeakable toilets – why on earth would you bring your kids?
Music festivals are better when you're not responsible for someone else's fun. Go with friends, and you don't need to accompany them to the toilet, or praise their endeavours therein. You don't have to pack snacks, manage naps or (generally) put up with their whingeing.
Surely the draw of a three-day music festival is having no responsibilities? Apart from the big acts, that's kind of what you pay for – admission to this liminal space where for three whole days, you can live without routines, lose track of time, step out of roles and unyoke from responsibilities. You get to drink pints in fields with your mates; have long, uninterrupted conversations; roam between the stages and your biggest decision is who to see next.
READ MORE
Yes, kids at music festivals are all wrong – except at Kaleidoscope, that is, a family music festival, where the kids are all right.
Kaleidoscope. Photograph: Anamaria Meiu
This festival, staged at Russborough House in Co Wicklow last weekend, has been going since 2019. Billed variously as 'Ireland's favourite family music festival' and 'Ireland's favourite family music camping festival', it's fun and a bit of a mash-up. Just don't expect Glastonbury or Electric Picnic.
This looks like a music festival, it sounds like one, and it certainly smells like one, but this time, you're carrying nappy sacks and Calpol. The vibe is relaxed and family-oriented – but hip and edgy it's not. If you were a hardcore music festival aficionado before kids and are still chasing the dragon, you might just hate it. Others here, less haunted by their past, will probably have a better time. Maybe they've never been to a music festival before.
At Kaleidoscope they can cosplay with their kids going to one. For others Kaleidoscope is a straight-up camping festival. They've come with 15 other families. Their friends are in neighbouring tents, and their neighbours are in neighbouring tents, and they will spend two-thirds of their time in the campsite, cooking. They will make a night-time foray to the main stage for the headliner, convening with their tween and teen kids who have had the glorious freedom to roam all day.
I can see by my nine-year-old's face that there's something pretty new and thrilling about this for him too
My husband and I are fresh from Glastonbury. And by that I mean, we ordered takeaways and watched the highlights on BBC from the sofa, as we've done every year since having kids. We used to go to music festivals, but that life seems far in the past, and far in the future.
Kaleidoscope is our first festival since having children, and our first time camping with them. Arriving at the festival site at about 6pm on a rainy Friday, we're grateful for the comfort of a pre-pitched Yippee boutique glamping tent, complete with air mattresses and hotel bedding. This is cheating. We can just drop our stuff and head into the main stage.
Hermitage Green plays soon, but eight and nine year-olds only have eyes for the fun fair, which dominates the main field – we're suckered in by 'the world's biggest bouncy castle'. It's €5 per child for a 10-minute bounce. That's €1 a minute for two kids. You'll get no financial lessons here, mind – they thoroughly enjoyed themselves and we returned three times over the weekend.
The Zozimus tent bings proper festival nostalgia. It's a big, dark tent with a glitter ball, banging tunes, dry ice – and double buggies too. There's no more beautiful vision of Irish motherhood than a mammy here getting her freak on to Daft Punk. Twin toddlers in snug onesies stare up from their buggy, agog at what's come over her. Dad looks on admiringly, sipping a beer.
There's joy right there, and triumph too among parents – hey, we're at a music festival, and for these minutes at least, no one is crying, no one needs anything. That's enough some days. You'll find no surge towards the main stage here, no mosh, but there's dancing and communing over great music.
Kaleidoscope 2025. Photograph: Anamaria Meiu
I can see by my nine-year-old's face that there's something pretty new and thrilling about this for him too. The silent disco with the kids is also a hoot. It's wet outside and there's a gale blowing, so we head back to the camp site via the 'Ickle Big Top' – the Minecraft movie is playing to a packed house of children in coats sitting on mats and in camp chairs. It's like the nation's sittingroom where mostly mothers dart in and out at intervals to check their offspring, whisper-shouting: 'Are you warm enough?' 'Do you need a pee?' 'Do you want your water?'
Returning to their camp chairs, which mark the tent's exits, they sit in the drizzle drinking beer, chatting with other parents to the strains of Steve's Lava Chicken.
It's 5am, and I'm woken by a man with a low, gravelly voice: 'Do you need a wee-wee?' This voice is not my husband's. The man's entreaty is gentle, but has a slightly pleading insistence to it. 'Do you need a wee-wee?' he repeats. Who is this man? Why is he in my tent, why is he asking if I need a wee-wee?
'Daddy's going, and Seán is going, do you want to come with us?' This is coming from the tent next door, I realise. With a sheet of canvas between us, I'm reminded that when camping, a neighbour's plight becomes yours.
Whatever about his daughter, next-door-daddy has done a number on me: do I need a wee-wee? A 'just-in-case' one? And so the day begins. Early. There are clean, hot showers in the glamping area too, and a Pamper Tent, complete with mirrors, hair dryers and hair straighteners.
At a family festival, these go unused and unplugged. Instead, there are dads sitting sentinel as teens' devices charge, mums are boiling kettles for their daughters' hot water bottles. I wouldn't be surprised to see a chicken cooking in an air fryer here.
The Hunt kids try out Porridge Party at Kaleidoscope
There's about 20,000 weekend attendees at the festival, organisers say, 1,000 of them are in campervans. Some pitch tents as big as bungalows. It's a damp and cool morning, so we make for a 10am Porridge Party to warm us up.
Is free porridge a problem for the Portaloos? By Saturday night, the system is under strain, but that's every music festival ever. After porridge, I join a 21-person queue for a €4 cappuccino, chatting to Clare Corrigan from nearby Donard. She and a gang of mums and their kids have come every year since 2019. 'It's all the mums of my daughters' friends,' says Corrigan. 'We get the presale tickets, it's good value.'
The mums arrive on Friday morning to pitch their six tents around a central gazebo, then they go home and pick up the kids, she says. 'The dads come after with the beer.' There are 16 in the group, with children aged six to 16. 'They are up there eating pancakes now, happy out,' she says.
'Yesterday, before we went down to the main stage, they all got in one tent and were braiding each other's hair, putting on face paint and glitter, that's what they love doing.' It gets easier as the kids get older, she says. The kids have more freedom to roam and can help with camping logistics. 'It's safe for kids. That's the whole thing.'
A bearded man in shorts with a tattooed calf limps past in the drizzle. He's walking from the Portaloos back to the campsite, a crutch in one hand, a pink plastic potty in the other. Conor Roe from Artane is here with his wife, Laura, and three kids, Isaac (8), Kayla (6) and Lilly (3). It's their first time at Kaleidoscope.
'We're camping with friends – they have all been here several times and they convinced us this year to come,' says Conor. This dad is in pain. 'I woke up on Wednesday and it looks like I have a bulging disk. I have awful pain down through my left leg, but I couldn't not go, the kids were so hyped up. It's their first time.'
They saw Ocean Colour Scene on the main stage last night. 'The kids were going strong until 11pm,' he says. 'I'm getting through this on painkillers and anti-inflammatories.' There are examples of epic parenting everywhere. Parents are doing it for the kids. And to be fair to them, the kids are doing this for the parents too.
Spend your day at the funfair here and the cost can rack up, but the Wonderland area of the festival has lots of free activities, a respite from sensory overload. We spend an hour at the excellent Fighting Words creative writing workshop where a solid crew of about 40 kids is expertly facilitated. Heads down, pencils twitching with ideas, they are in total flow.
Joanne Hunt and her family at Kaleidoscope
Throughout the weekend there are experiments with Mark, the Science Guy, a chance to pilot robots with Munster Technological University and a reptile rendezvous. The Sports Field is a big draw for our kids, too, where on a pitch edged with straw bales, a rolling football match runs all weekend. Like a kind of neighbourhood game from the 1980s, players aged four to 14 drop in and out all day. Old-school fun.
Nearby, School Fitness Ireland holds hurdles, boxing and dance competitions. For the sack race, the dads don't need to be asked twice to compete. Anyone for the mums' sack race? Anyone who has given birth will know that this can be a risky business. A urogynaecologist could have cleaned up here.
Dads taking part in the sack race
By the time Jerry Fish is on the main stage, with circus performers adding visual spectacle for the kids, the sun is shining and warm. Before Texas headlines later, we head to the campsite for some downtime. The kids loll in the tent with the iPad and sort out football cards. For the sleep-loving, schedule-abiding parents we have become, this return to festivals is going pretty well. Sitting outside on camp chairs in the warm evening sun with a ham, cheese and crisp sandwich and a beer, and the Riptide Movement playing in the distance, it's all working out.
We head back to the main stage for the Saturday headliner. Beside us, Des McCarthy from Bandon deftly unpacks miniature camping chairs for his children, Evie (5) and Ruairí (3), and serves them a takeaway pizza. With the kids occupied, he starts assembling chairs with complicated telescopic parts for himself and wife, Danielle, who is getting more food.
Indeed, everywhere you look, there are women getting things, holding things – wipes, water, sun cream, snacks, nappies, babies, beer. The men are doing it too. With the reflexes of a cat, or a multitasking parent at a music festival, McCarthy dives to rescue the pizza box, just before it slides off Evie's knees on to the grass. Sharleen Spiteri delivers her stonking set, to a chilled-out audience on picnic blankets and camping chairs.
'It's our first time coming, it's very good. It's brilliant,' says McCarthy. 'The kids love it. I think there is enough going on that has their interest.' He hasn't been to a music festival since becoming a dad. 'Just now, we are beginning to venture out in the world again,' he says. 'It's a bit scary, but it's good.'
Family-friendly festivals
Fancy a family-friendly music festival? Some this year are already sold-out, but there's always next year, and your kids will be a year older.
Forest Fest: Franz Ferdinand. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP via Getty
Forest Fest
Emo Village, Co Laois
July 25th-27th, tickets available
Who's playing
Franz Ferdinard, Manic Street Preachers, Travis
Why go?
Music and arts festival, intimate setting, craft beers. Kids circus skills workshop and Viking house excavation. Kids under 12 go free, single parent family pricing options.
All Together Now: Fontaines DC. Photograph: Tom Honan
All Together Now
Curraghmore Estate, Waterford
Dates
Thursday 31 July – Sunday 3
August
Who's playing
Nelly Furtado, Fontaines DC, CMAT, London Grammar
Why go?
Boutique festival fusing music, art and food in a glorious setting.
Two children aged 12 and under attend free of charge, accompanied by a parent with a family ticket.
Dedicated family campsite.
Tickets for 2026 on sale now.
Chappell Roan
Electric Picnic
Stradbally Hall, Laois
Friday 29th-Sunday 31st, August SOLD OUT
Who's playing
: Kings of Leon, Hozier, Sam Fender, Fatboy Slim, Chappell Roan
Why go?
Ireland's biggest and one of the longest running music festivals. Dedicated family campsite for children under 12, limited to two children per adult.
Tickets for 2026 available spring 2026
Night and Day Festival. Photograph: Marek Petrovic
Night and Day Festival
Lough Key Forest Park
May 29th-June 1st, 2026, tickets on sale now
Why go?
Dance workshops, circus skills, foraging for kids. Children 14 and under go free when accompanied by a ticket-holding guardian.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘My voice is gone' – Listen to ecstatic Radio Kerry commentary of David Clifford's best All-Ireland final moments
‘My voice is gone' – Listen to ecstatic Radio Kerry commentary of David Clifford's best All-Ireland final moments

The Irish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

‘My voice is gone' – Listen to ecstatic Radio Kerry commentary of David Clifford's best All-Ireland final moments

DAVID Clifford was a joy to watch on Sunday and Radio Kerry's commentary was almost as enjoyable to listen to. The Fossa phenom may not have been on the ball much for he was deadly accurate in making his touches county as Advertisement 2 Tim Moynihan embodies why local commentary is so often the best form of the art Credit: @radiokerrysport 2 Clifford scored three two-pointers to help fire them to their 39th crown Radio Kerry have released a near five-minute highlights package of their commentary duo Tim Moynihan and Ambrose O'Donovan calling the action from The whole video flies by with our personal favourite line describing the Kingdom's frenzied press being akin to "like wasps on cowdung". A close second is him branding the 26-year-old a mixture of a ballerina and a warrior owing to his balance as he rapidly sidestepped two despairing Donegal men before firing over with his right foot. There's also a nice additional bit of colour provided by Moynihan noting that Clifford's two-pointer on the cusp of half-time left Off the Ball double-act Paddy Andrews and Advertisement Read More On GAA For as much as the soon to be three-time Footballer of the Year was in God mode on the pitch, there was an amusing example of him still Paudie Clifford may have to look up to make eye contact with David but he very much lives up to the older brother stereotype. The older Clifford is the more verbose of the two and drove most of their Burlington Hotel interview Some of the highlights included him noting that they were on the same teams growing up despite the age gap as their community of Fossa is so small that playing numbers were often tight. Advertisement Most read in GAA Football The playmaker also joked about his 76 possessions over the course of Harking back to the widely lauded Football Review Committee, he quipped: "Jim Gavin and Eamon Fitzmaurice probably didn't envision me soloing the ball on the spot about 100 times when they drew up the new rules!" Paudie Clifford teases David over childhood nickname during hilarious RTE interview after All-Ireland heroics The best moment, however, was a classic case of a big brother slagging his younger sibling. Asked if they'd always had an innate on-pitch chemistry, Paudie shot back: "The chemistry wasn't great now, we fought every day for about two years straight! Advertisement "Mom was just sick of of dealing with David crying every two minutes. They actually used to call him 'Watery eyes' because he used to cry so much! So that was the chemistry now." AT THE RIGHT PITCH While Paudie was all smiles and in relaxed form by that stage of the day, his immediate post-match interview He vented: "I suppose as a team, we would feel disrespected because we were in three of the last four All-Irelands and we've won two of them now. "And to be called a one-man team when I see myself some of the work that our lads put in… Advertisement 'Like, Joe O'Connor, the turnovers, winning balls, scoring, Jason Foley, Brian Ó Beaglaioch, Gavin White – I'm only naming a few. I see the work that they put in every day. 'To be called a one-man team then, it's nearly like it's disrespectful. It's kind of personal. I suppose that's the angle we were coming from. 'We were close against Armagh last year and we'd be our own worst critics as well. We admitted that we've under-performed definitely as a team over some of the years. 'But I suppose with the work we put in and the players we have there, for them things to be said, it's not nice to hear it." Advertisement

All Together Now music festival 2025: Stage line-ups and times, ticket information, how to get there and more
All Together Now music festival 2025: Stage line-ups and times, ticket information, how to get there and more

Irish Times

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Times

All Together Now music festival 2025: Stage line-ups and times, ticket information, how to get there and more

All Together Now , the festival-shaped brainchild of the man who founded Electric Picnic in 2004 only to leave 10 years later, is back for its six year and taking place over the August bank holiday from August 1st to August 3rd inclusive. Across an area of natural amphitheatres, gentle hills and hidden forests, All Together Now boasts several stages of music, spoken word, comedy, workshops, wellness activities and whatever other New-Age artsy things are in vogue today. With more than 25,000 expected to descend on the Co Waterford estate for the festival, a bit of planning can do no harm. So what do you need to know? All Together Now 2022 festival When and where is it on? READ MORE The Festival is on from Friday, August 1st, to Sunday August 3rd at the Curraghmore Estate in Co Waterford. Early entry is available on Thursday July 31st. Are there any tickets left? Tickets for All Together Now 2025 are officially sold out. The organisers have strongly advised festival goers to avoid purchasing tickets or camper van passes from unauthorised sellers. They have received a significant number of messages from people who have been scammed when trying to buy tickets through unofficial channels, particularly through a Facebook group claiming to resell tickets for their events. They are advising people to only buy tickets through official channels listed on their website , avoid social media ticket resales altogether and report any suspicious pages or posts. Make sure to add your tickets to your phone's wallet before you leave home to keep it handy and as on-site signal might be limited. Who is performing and when? With a variety of acts scheduled to perform over the weekend, festivalgoers are spoiled for choice. Headliners this year include Fontaines DC , London Grammar, CMAT , Wet Leg , Primal Scream . Michael Kiwanuka was due to appear on the Main Stage on Monday, but his performance has been cancelled on the advice of doctors due to an illness. As with headliners there is no shortage of Irish music acts lined across other stages, including Bricknasty, Landless, Muireann Bradley, Le Boom and Pigbaby, to name a few. At the Belonging Bandstand you won't want to miss Tony Cantwell and January Winters, plus, there are several spots for special guests across the different stages. Check out the line-up or see the festival's app for more details. CMAT performs on Later with Jools Holland. Photograph: Michael Leckie/BBC Studios Thursday, July 31st The festival organisers have announced that in addition to live music there will be other surprises around the site on Thursday. Max Zaska. Photograph: Aaron Corr The Well Telebox – 6.30pm-7pm T.A Narrative – 7.30pm-8pm Affection to Rent – 8.30pm-9.40pm Delivery Service – 11pm-12am Bandstand Arena Zaska – 8pm-9.15pm Marcus O'Laoire – 9.30pm-10.45pm Le Boom – 11pm-12.30am Friday August 1st Hester Chambers and Rhian Teasdale of Wet Leg. Photograph: Alan Betson Main Stage Trinity Orchestra – 5pm-6pm Lisa O'Neill – 7pm-8pm Wet Leg – 8.30pm-9.45pm Fontaines D.C. – 10.30pm-12am Lovely Days Avenue 68 – 2pm-3pm Don West 3.45pm-4.45pm Hinds – 5.15pm-6.15pm Arc De Soleil – 6.45pm-7.45pm Darren Kiely – 8.30pm-9.30pm Parra For Cuva – 10pm-11.15pm Nia Archives 12am-1am ATRIP – 1am-3am Bandstand Arena Taylor Byrne – 2pm-3pm Sexy Tadhg – 3.30pm-4.30pm Toucan – 5pm-6pm Cooks But We're Chefs – 6.30pm-7.30pm MYD (DJ) – 8.30pm-10.30pm SX2 – 10.30pm-12am Carlita – 12am-1.30am Flight Facilities (DJ) – 1.30am-3.30am Something Kind of Wonderful Florence Road – 4.15pm-5.15pm Bricknasty – 6pm-7pm Geordie Greep – 7.45pm-8.45pm Baxter Drury – 9.30pm-10.30pm Leftfield (Live) – 12am-1.30pm Flourish Bold Love – 2.15pm-3pm Girlband! – 3.30pm-4.15pm Cliffords – 4.45pm-5.30pm Heartworms – 6pm-7pm BBY – 7.45pm-8.30pm Skinner – 9.45pm-10.45pm Makeshift Arts Bar – 12am-1am Immerse Away from Dave – 6.30pm-8pm HAAi – 8pm-10pm Aika Mal – 10pm-12.15am Saoirse – 12.15am-2am Courtesy – 2am-3.30am The Circle Alice Ugbah – 4.30pm-6.30pm God Knows – 7pm-7.45pm Kofi Stone – 8.15pm-9pm Frankie Stew & Harvey Gunn - 9.–0pm – 10.15pm Onai – 10.45pm-12.30am Jehnny Beth (DJ) – 12.30am-2am Arcadia Dylan Fogarty – 10.30pm-12am Funk Assault – 12am-2am KI/KI – 2am-3.30am Saturday August 2nd Hannah Reid of London Grammar. Photograph: Alan Betson Main Stage Sing Along Social – 4pm-5pm Seun Kuti & Egypt 80 - 6.–5pm-7.30pm CMAT – 8.30pm-9.45pm London Grammar – 10.15pm-11.30pm BICEP present CHROMA (AV DJ Set) – 12am-1.30am Lovely Days Aaron Rowe – 2.20pm-3pm Morgana – 3.30pm-4.30pm Biig Piig – 5pm-6pm Everything is Recorded – 8pm-9.15pm Gurriers – 9.45pm-10.45pm Fat Dog – 11.15pm-12.30am Shee – 1.30am-3.30am Something Kind of Wonderful Tommy Tiernan – 12pm-1pm Lewis Doyle Singer – 1.30pm-2pm Landless – 3pm-4pm Arooj Aftab – 5pm-6.15pm John Grant – 7pm-8pm 49th & Main - 8.–5pm – 10pm Georgia – 10.45pm-12am Bonobo (DJ) – 1.30am-3am Flourish Bonya – 1pm-1.145pm Madra Salach – 2.15pm-3pm Bren Berry – 3.30pm-4.15pm Pan Amsterdam – 4.45pm-5.30pm Chloe Qisha – 6pm-7pm Search Results – 8pm-9pm The Altered Hours – 9.45pm-10.45pm Immerse Marion Hawkes – 3.30pm-5.30pm CAIT – 5.30pm-7.30pm The Trip – 7.30pm-9.30pm Max Cooper – 9.45pm-11.45pm Clouds – 11.45pm-1.30am Blawan DJ – 1.30am-3.30am The Circle Mabfield Live Podcast – 1.30pm-3pm Asha Ari – 3pm-3.30pm DUG – 4pm-4.45pm Huartan – 5.15pm-6pm Rois – 6.45pm-7.30pm Enola Gay – 8.15pm-9pm Dry Cleaning – 9.45pm-10.30pm David Holmes – 11pm-12.30am Shampain – 12.30am-2am Arcadia JWY – 10.30pm-12am EMA – 12am-2am Special Request – 2am-4am Sunday August 3rd Blindboy Main Stage Bueno Vista All Stars – 3pm-4pm BIIRD – 4.30pm-5.30pm Primal Scream – 6.30pm-7.30pm TBC – 8.15pm-9.20pm Nelly Furtado – 10.15pm-11.30pm Something Kind of Wonderful Blindboy -12pm-1pm Kean Kavanagh – 3.15pm-4.15pm The Boomtown Rats – 4.45pm-5.45pm Bob Vylan – 6pm-7pm English Teacher – 7.15pm-8.15pm The Voidz – 8.45pm-9.45pm Ben Bohmer (Live) – 10.30pm-12am Folamour – 12.30am-2am Lovely Day Muireann Bradley – 3.45pm-4.45pm Infinity Song – 5.15pm-6.15pm Nilufer Yanya – 6.45pm-7.45pm A Lazarus Soul – 8.30pm-9.30pm Mura Masa – 12am-1.30am Tara Kumar – 1.30am-3.30am Flourish The Awning – 1pm-1.45pm pigbaby – 2.15pm-3pm Martin Luke Brown – 3.30pm-4.15pm Ishmael Ensemble – 4.45pm-5.30pm Antony Szmierek – 6pm-7pm Radio Free Alice – 8pm-9pm Shark School – 9.45pm-10.30pm The Null Club – 12am-1am Bandstand Arena Glasshouse Perform Sigur Ros – 12.30pm-1.30pm Playback Presents: Bob Dylan '65 – 3.15pm-4.15pm Papa Romeo – 4.45pm-5.30pm Fizzy Orange – 6pm-7.30pm New Jackson – 9pm-10.15pm Matador b2b LRB – 12am-1.30am Deep Dish – 1.30am-3.30am IMMERSE Rhyzine – 3.30pm-5.30pm Puzzy Wrangler – 5.30pm-7.30pm CC:DISCO! – 7.30pm-9.30pm In2stellar – 9.30pm-11.30pm Surusinghe – 11.30pm-1.30pm Shanti Celeste – 1.30pm-3.30pm The Circle Mabfield Live Podcast – 2pm-3.30pm Divil – 3.45pm-4.15pm Adore – 5pm-5.45pm Curtisy – 7.45pm-8.30pm Maria Somerville – 9pm-10pm Sloucho – 12am-2am Arcadia Collie – 10.30pm-12am Sally C – 12am-2am Yousuke Yukimatsu – 2am-4am What else is there to see and do? Like most music festivals, All Together Now's website has a section advertising the various 'experiences' on offer. As well as music scheduled each day festivalgoers will have access to panel discussions, monologues, spoken word, comedy, storytelling, yoga, saunas, hot tubs, live food demos, arcade games, magic shows, circus and craft workshops, sensory play areas for kids, football competitions, music bingo and more. At the Greencrafts Village, an 'eco-conscious crafting hub', you can take part in craft-making activities and, most importantly, you get to take what you make home to show off. What time should I arrive? Access to the campsite will open from 4pm with last entry at 10pm on Thursday 31st July. Thursday the venue will open from 4pm with last entry at 9pm. Friday 1st August the venue opens at 9am with last entry at 9pm. Saturday 2nd August the venue will open at 9am with last entry at 8pm. Sunday 3rd August the venue will open at 10am with last entry at 4pm. How do I get there? As with many festivals held in remote rural locations, it takes some planning to get there. By bike: A bike rack will be located next to car park 4, please follow the directions of staff once you enter the site. E-scooters and e-bikes Bike racks available. No charging e-scooters or e-bikes at bike racks. By bus: There will be direct non-stop services from Dublin city centre and Cork city bus station (Parnell Place) which will operate to the festival on Thursday 31st July and Friday 1st August with return journeys on Monday 4th August. There will be a regular service from Waterford Bus Station to Curraghmore House each day from Friday 1st August with return journeys on Monday 4th August. The organisers have advised that they believe this to be the best option for festival goers. Expressway have set up a page for people who are looking to arrive at All Together Now by bus with all the relevant information on when and where the services will run and how to book. All private buses will be directed to Gate 4 regardless of their route origin and no private hire coaches are permitted to stay on site. By car: First and foremost, festival organisers have advised not to follow directions on a sat nav or Google Maps as it will not get you all the way to the festival site. Instead follow festival signs as soon as you see those. Other key points to remember if travelling by car are: Do not travel to the festival via Carrick-on-Suir; presumably the town would become a traffic choke point if thousands of cars piled through in short succession Organisers have advised that the quietest time to arrive will be between 9am and 1pm, Car parking will be available from 2pm on Thursday, July 31st, and from 9am on Friday, August 1st. There are six car parks on the festival grounds which can be seen on this interactive map . Drop-off or pickup on the event site by taxi is prohibited on Friday and Monday. Ticket holders arriving to the festival on Friday by taxi or getting dropped off by private vehicles will be directed to the designated drop-off zone in Highfield Business Park, Portlaw; accessed from the N25 Kilmeaden Interchange. Ticket holders will then get the free shuttle bus to the festival (Operating Friday (9am-9.30pm) and returning Monday (8am – 1pm only). To avoid festival traffic the organisers have advised the best drop off at the Waterford City bus Terminus where Bus Éireann festival shuttle will operate a regular service to the festival site. The festival organisers have advised that if you are leaving the festival site each night and being picked up by taxi / private car you should tell your drive to come to Gate 4. Once in Gate 4, the festival's team will direct them to the bus drop off / taxi pick up area. The organisers are urging people to not arrange to be dropped or picked up elsewhere near the estate as this can cause delays and disrupt traffic flow. To get to the pickup/drop off area you go back through the main entrance, take a left and then you will see the bus drop-off/pick up area. If you need to avail of access parking you must email access@ and receive confirmation from the access team. Regular Traffic updates will be available on Garda X account , local radio stations WLR 95.1FM and Beat 102FM as well as the festival's app and X feed By train: Waterford Plunkett Station is under five minutes walking distance to Bus Éireann Terminus, which will be running a regular festival shuttle to the festival. Waterford Plunkett Station has direct trains to Limerick, Kildare and Dublin. You can get to Waterford Plunkett from Galway, Cork and Belfast with one change. See Irish Rail's summer events page for more information. What if I'm camping? When it comes to camping at All Together Now, there's no shortage of boutique options for those looking for more than a flimsy tent among the chaotic masses. Fancy paying more for accommodation? There are Podpads, Yippee tents and Silk Road tents, all at varying levels of modest luxury, and you can find out more here. Toilets are dotted around the festival grounds and showers will be located in the campsites and available for use at specific times throughout the weekend. Campfires and disposable barbecues are not permitted on site, and campers have been asked not to smoke in their tents for safety reasons. What's the security? You must be aged 21 or over to gain access to All Together Now, with the exception of children aged 12 or below, who must be accompanied by a paying adult. There is a maximum limit of two children aged 12 and under per adult. People aged between 13 and 20 will not be allowed entry. Festival organisers have suggested if you don't need an item, don't bring it. It's a cashless festival so no need to bring any cash. Stringent searches will be conducted upon entry to the festival grounds. Items not allowed include: fireworks, illicit drugs, glass, animals (except guide dogs), weapons, petrol generators, barbecues, gazebos, flag poles, garden furniture, laser pens, professional photographic equipment, selfie sticks, drones, umbrellas, megaphones and air horns, high-vis clothing, bicycles and sound systems. Each person with a weekend camping ticket can bring alcohol at their first time of entry. They can bring either: 24 cans or 1 litre of spirits or 1.5 litre of wine for personal consumption. No glass bottles are allowed. Pre-packaged and cooked food is allowed to be brought to the campsite and no cooking is allowed. There will be food stalls and a supermarket at the festival. Fans have been asked to report any crimes to on-site gardaí as soon as possible and anybody participating in antisocial behaviour will be liable for eviction from the festival without re-entry. The Garda station at Portlaw can be contacted on 051 387 105. What should I pack? The festival organisers have shared a list of essentials that they suggest people bring: Photo ID & tickets Reusable water bottle Tent, sleeping bag, toiletries, loo roll Card for cashless payments Layers, rain gear, sun cream & wellies – prepare for all weather! Anything else? There will be phone charging facilities on site, but no harm ensuring your phone is fully charged when you're leaving the house. The festival bars are cashless and accept card and contactless payments – that means if your phone is your card, best make sure it's charged. At music festivals, power banks are your friends. For all things All Together Now, you can download the festival app (download from App Store or Google Play) and keep up to date with things throughout the weekend. What's the weather looking like? Met Éireann has said that Thursday will have a cloudy start with a few showers gradually clearing too. Sunny spells will develop across southern and eastern counties but it will remain cloudy elsewhere. Dry for much of the afternoon with highest temperatures of 18 to 21 degrees and northwesterly breezes. Thursday night will have a mix of cloud and clear spells. The best of the dry weather will be in the south and east. A little cooler too with lowest temperatures of 9 to 13 degrees in a light northwesterly breeze. Friday will be a largely bright day with plenty of sunshine and just a few isolated showers. Highest temperatures of 15 to 18 degrees and moderate northwesterly breezes. The weekend will be very unsettled with a band of rain moving over the festival on Saturday, turning heavy at times followed by scattered showers for Sunday. Temperatures staying in the mid to high teens.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store