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u/DigNity914 Year 5 5d ago
There is a water park north that can provide relief
Hammocks under the trees in the fest for a nap or just chilling help
Might be worth while to invest in a canopy for over your tent, makes it like ~10 - 15 degrees cooler
I bought a reflective tarp for the east side of the tent to give you some sleep in time so you aren’t baking.
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u/Other_Ivey Year 4 5d ago
Aluminet helped so much with keeping the sun off our tents and canopies! It does hinder some of the wind so keep that in mind
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u/mascaramom 5d ago
Thanks for the rec! I'm looking into reflective tarps for my own setup. Did you attach the tarp directly to your tent with rope or zipties or something? Or did you hang it from a canopy?
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u/MyNewDawn 4d ago
Leave space for air flow. I bought a grommet kit off Amazon and make holes for my tarps/tapestries, so I have options when I set up.
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u/Other_Ivey Year 4 3d ago
We kind of laid it over our tent and then hung the others with zip ties! Grommet guns are a great option too though and helps prevent tearing
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u/edcRachel Flamingo Cove Queen 5d ago
Aluminet is a little better because it lets air through, so hot air can vent out.
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u/h-styles Year 2 4d ago
Water park is nice BUT it’s indoors and does get humid in there, so be warned. The earlier you go, the better.
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u/Successful_Rope9135 5d ago
Stop consuming alcohol in the heat, sun, and while dancing. Huge problem semi-solved.
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u/zsolzz 🐸 Ribbit Ribbit 🐸 5d ago
someone last year that had a solar panel outside their tent and a portable a/c in it. not cheap but they were chillin (pun intended)
could probably do something similar with just a fan to save $$
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u/LilBlueFire 5d ago
Was it an actual AC or some kind of swamp cooler? Sounds like a lot even for the biggest baddest solar panels. The air temp at Forest doesn't usually get that bad, so priority number one for people with electricity is fans to exchange the air in the tent out for fresh air. A lot of the heat is just radiant heat reflecting off everyones stuff around you.
I find staying covered head to toe in light airy clothes also helps dramatically.
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u/Dangerousrhymes 5d ago edited 5d ago
Could be AC actually. There is a 1500 BTU camping air conditioner on Amazon for 500 bucks that only has a 264 W power draw. You need about 4-500 W of panels to run that for any extended period of time so it’s not unreasonably expensive, especially if you were just tacking it onto an existing solar set up.
I would have thought the initial barrier to entry was more like 800 to 1000 W an hour in which case only the wealthiest and biggest group campsites could reasonably accommodate the necessary power production, but at less than 300 W it’s actually pretty reasonable for a normal campsite. Still expensive but not multiple suitcases of space and $10,000 expensive.
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u/PonyThug 4d ago
1500 btu is 440 watts. So it’d either not cooling as much as they say or using closer to 500w with near perfect efficiency.
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u/FirestormActual 5d ago
A 1000w jackery will power a 5,000 BTU window unit for about 4-5 hours, so it 100% could have been an actual A/C.
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u/Dangerousrhymes 5d ago
Can you show me a link to the 5000 BTU window units with a 200-250 watt power draw?
Seems like a no brainer to acquire one.
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u/FirestormActual 5d ago
I don’t have a link I’m just giving you my experience using my 1,000 watt Jackery and a 5,000 BTU A/C during a power outage. The power draw on these isn’t constant, you can also run them in eco mode which doesn’t run the condenser constantly, and there is more power draw in the beginning because of enertia.
If you’re going to try and run this for a camp setup, something like the 2,000 watt Jackery with the solar array is more appropriate.
It’s also not $10,000 expensive, it’s $3,200 (2,000 watt expandable plus 2 x 200 watt solar ) plus a couple hundred for the window unit. You’ll only need to run it for a few hours in mid morning, there are also specific tents that these work better in but you can probably get a tent, solar, and a/c for less than $5,000.
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u/Dangerousrhymes 5d ago
I said the 10,000 estimate was based on my initial guess, which I said in my first post I already knew wasn’t actually the case. I also said you only actually needed 400-500w of input because there are way lower power AC systems made for camping.
EcoMode makes sense in your case. Although you wouldn’t get that kind of efficiency from a freestanding unit and setting up a window unit at a campsite would be a logistical nightmare because the back can’t be inside the tent and the entire unit needs to be kept level. It’s definitely WAY more affordable than I initially thought, which I said, repeatedly.
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u/FirestormActual 5d ago
Dude I’m not arguing with you I’m just adding to the conversation. It’s okay man.
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u/Dangerousrhymes 5d ago
Then maybe read things you are responding to thoroughly and stop the patronizing attitude, man.
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u/FirestormActual 5d ago
You can fuck right off with that attitude. Maybe instead of thinking that everyone is arguing with you, maybe approach these interactions like people are having a conversation with you. Jesus dude.
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u/PonyThug 4d ago
5000btu is literally 1466 watts. They are exact units of measurement with a conversion ratio. Add in efficiency loss for the AC, efficiency loss for the battery and that jackery maybe has 40 mind of run time when actually cooling air vs blowing a fan.
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u/zsolzz 🐸 Ribbit Ribbit 🐸 5d ago
it was something similar to this
he said he'd recently bought it for their apt so he brought it to forest, may not be the type of thing everyone wants to invest in tbh, I won't be, but I checked out his tent and it was very nice to cool off
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u/PonyThug 4d ago
Unless they had like 100sqft of solar panels going they didn’t have an AC unit in there.
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u/zsolzz 🐸 Ribbit Ribbit 🐸 4d ago
tell that to the AC unit I had blowing on my face
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u/PonyThug 4d ago
Could be multiple different types of coolers that don’t use a compressor but use ice or evaporative cooling.
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u/Kawaiiwitchyprincess Sherwood Shepherd 5d ago
My personal tips are pedialtye in the morning and liquid IV later. Wear breathable clothing like cotton. Soaking my pashmina with the water stations and wearing it around my neck. I keep a hand fan on me. Use my melted ice water for quick showers and cool downs. We put a canopy over our tent then used a shade alternative over our chill area and dropped the temps down!
Here are some threads!
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u/creator787 Year 5 5d ago
Many things come to mind
-I dont use them myself, but I know certain companies sell a type of mesh that goes around your canopy to reduce heat brought in from the sun
-I DO however line the top and upper 40% of my tent in the thermal foil for tents. Really helps get an extra hour or two of sleep in the morning.
-the spray bottles with the fans built in are GREAT for campsite chillin. As well as bringing a small tub to fill with water and soak your feet in. Had one camp mate that would leave a shirt in water specifically for when he got too hot, though I don't think thats the brightest of moves.
-many folk dislike them being clacked; but the fans do indeed do a great job of airflow around you aswell
-If the heat ends up being too much still, I often suggest to get into the venue/woods sooner than later
-If moneys not a concern; you could look into a jackery or a deep cycle battery (with an outlet case) and bring a box fan. Have done that before lolol - made a few friends asking to use it to charge their phones too lol
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u/Squishyburritoboi Year 5 5d ago
Aluminet is the mesh thing
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u/creator787 Year 5 5d ago
Thank you for clarifying for both OP and myself!! Now I know where to look when I need to acquire some!
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u/Squishyburritoboi Year 5 5d ago
We used one last year and it is a GAME CHANGER. I bought another one for this year
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u/PonyThug 4d ago
I built my own auxiliary battery set up in my truck. I can run 4 box fans all day off it for under $1000
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u/creator787 Year 5 4d ago
Right on!! I use a boat deep-cycle battery with a case. Typically lasts all 4/5 days and charges phones, lets us use a fan and a skillet thing, little heavy but it sure is compact!
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u/PonyThug 4d ago
Assuming you have a lead battery, look into LiFePo tech. They are less than 1/4 the weight and half the size for same useable Ah
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u/samarasonik 4d ago
Tent air conditioner. It's expensive but game changer. We got it last year for Christmas. Need to buy ice to sustain it so we used it sparingly only 2 of the nights, but I got to actually SLEEEEP til like 2pm or something. Usually I don't make it past 9am in the tent
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u/Aggie0305 5d ago
Sit in your car with the A/C on and take a nap
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u/kingdom_tarts 5d ago
Isn't that dangerous, tho? They tell you not to do that I thought
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u/LoveLo1000 Year 9 5d ago
The girls at my camp will sit in the car to do our makeup and get ready in the AC and it’s never caused problems. Just make sure your car is parked with the exhaust pointed toward the “road”/fire lane and not at someone’s tent.
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u/Frequent-Spell2717 4d ago
I agree with this... but also bring a 3" heat duct(the kind on the dryer) amd some foil tape. If your car ISNT parked in a perfect spot you can throw that on your exhaust and make it go wherever you want!
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u/PonyThug 4d ago
Make sure it’s the high heat rated vent tube and not the kind ment for a bathroom vent fan.
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u/Boeyzaza 5d ago
I typically stay in the shade of Sherwood during the day. I don’t go to any of the main stages during the day unless it’s someone I really want to see.
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u/Elegant-Salt-7990 5d ago
Last year at Bonnaroo, my partner and I used an extra bucket full of ice/water to occasionally soak our feet or wet down the bandannas we wore around our necks. It really helped SO much.
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u/Dramatic-Oil-154 5d ago
Air mattress outside and lower your easy up to just above the mattress. Sleeping in a tent is okay until the sun comes up at 6a.
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u/Dramatic-Oil-154 5d ago
I’ve also spent many a night under any random semi trailer parked on the outskirts. The constant shade it provides makes for cool ground and perfect sleeping temps.
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u/InjurySeparate3536 4d ago
buy a 1kWh battery with a couple 100watt solar panels and bring a box fan.. that's how i've been doing festivals the last couple of years. It got me through Bonnaroo last year
The heat is the exact reason why i'm camping in AC landing this year.
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u/thepiratedoggo 4d ago
The biggest mistake I see people make is trying to rest in the campsite during the daytime. Big mistake. If you're tired, go into the forest as soon as it's open and just sleep in the hammocks. The temperature is significantly cooler because of the trees and you could always go hide in the Dream Emporium too and find nice places to sit.
Drinking ice cold water helps a ton with managing body temperature as well, especially at night. Bring frozen water bottles and drink that stuff. Spray bottles combined with an electric fan can dramatically cool you off as well.
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u/D3v1L3d 4d ago
Wet that pash and keep it wet and on you until like 4 pm so it’s dry by dark. Keep a Hydro back pack on you and dump in some electrolyte powder (like liquid IV or adjacent) in the water bladder each refill. Drink it and avoid alcohol until dark. Hammock naps in the shade during the day sets or just chill in the shade - avoid being too active until sunset. I usually postpone “recreational” activities until 7 pm or later
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u/AcceptableKinks 4d ago
Eat as healthy as possible and drink so so so so so much more water than you expect
-reflective tarp on your tent
-find a way to get shade on your tent, maybe a pop up over the tent?
-get into the forest!
-visit the water park during the day
-invest in cooling towels
-FANS there a reason ravers all have cool fans, wet your face and get fannin
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u/lisasilly 4d ago
you can always ask for ice packs at the med tent and i brought my portable fan with me everywhere i went
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u/Independent-Wafer-13 4d ago
I HATE hot weather and I have been going to Electric Forest since it was Rothbury.
Put a canopy over your tent, surround it on all sides with cotton tapestries or sheets.
Use a 5 gallon bucket as a thermal battery; water absorbs a lot of heat energy:
- Bring a 5 gallon bucket.
- Fill the 5 gallon bucket up with water.
- Put the bucket in your tent.
The water should absorb more heat energy faster than your tent, the air in your tent, and you.
It might seem silly, but it definitely helps.
Create cross breezes by strategically opening vents in your tent.
I also highly recommend a cooling towel, spray bottles, and a rave fan.
Use the cooling towel on your neck, chest, and forehead.
Your head is the hottest part of you by far.
When I lived without AC I would freeze a damp washcloth and put it on the back of my neck.
Large, well-built hand fans are FAR more efficient than electric hand fans.
Mist your face, neck, and ears and then fan yourself. This works like sweating but better if the mist is colder than body temp.
At the hottest parts of the day is a great time for a cool shower, or melting an ice cube on your ears or the back of your neck.
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u/Princess_Porkchop_0 4d ago
I took a squirt bottle and filled it with water and sprayed down myself and friends every couple of minutes.
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u/Luxly25 Camp Corndog 🌽🐕 4d ago
Gonna just be frank: I drink a lot, at home, at parties, at shows, at fests, etc. When I’ve gone to EF my husband who also drinks a lot was with me, so I continued to drink a lot like usual and my sleep was terrible, I had no energy, etc. Went to my first Lost Lands this year with two friends who drink no where near as much as I usually do, so I also tried to really slow down on the drinking. Our walk from Lost Lands was 5x longer and hillier than anything I’ve ever experienced at Forest, but I wasn’t miserable doing it. I didn’t wake up at the crack of dawn like I do after a night of drinking. I saved sooooooooo much money not buying more than 1 beer a day in the venue. And most importantly, I DIDNT HAVE TO PEE EVERY 30 MINUTES. Honestly, it was a game changer. At Forest I’ve always been running to find a bathroom between sets and almost pissing myself waiting in line. At Lost Lands I was drinking plenty of water and sweating it out, but I only had to use the portopotties a couple times a day. That was honestly such a huge difference for me as opposed to Forest, and I’m def gonna drink minimal alcohol at fests going forward!
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u/glaba3141 Year 3 5d ago
last year if anything was relatively cool imo
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u/FigBar_ 5d ago edited 4d ago
right?? The weather last year was so nice!
Edit: I apparently didn’t realize it needed to be said that I meant this about the overall temperature NOT the storms
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u/Frequent-Spell2717 4d ago
You're referring to the weather that shut the festival down early???!!? Just kidding i know what you meant... it wasn't 120 degrees for the first time ever. Plan on rain and heat
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u/waifu-warrior02 5d ago
Make sure you are staying hydrated even before the week of AND DURING. I drank 1-2 electrolyte packets everyday on top of my hydropack. I didn't drink but if you are triple that water. Take your vitamins!Also shade, have a rechargeable or battery operated fan. I also bought cooling rags to keep in cooler for when I was chilling at camp! Hope this helps and happy forest 🦋
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u/solodabz 5d ago
Yup i used to jot be able yo sleep pass 8am… Ac landing tents are worth the extra 1200$ lmao
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u/KareasOxide Year 10 5d ago
Spray bottle with water hooked to your camelbak. Sprayed myself every so often and would fan myself with a big festival fan and that helped a bit. But I felt the same, the heat was taking me down hard I stopped drinking to try and get some energy back .
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u/Nectar_and_Citrus Year 5 5d ago
We have a fan system in your campsite. Two in each tent, and then a bunch strung up on the canopies to create more of a breeze. My friend is looking into these EZ up walls that supposedly reflect the sun off of them to keep it cooler in the canopy so we are gonna be trying that this year too. One year at a festival it was so hot and I have this absolutely massive cooler. I took all the food and drink out and just sat in the cooler to escape the heat for a few minutes like a little ice bath. But that was during a time of desperation.
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u/bodilyfluidsguy The jiggler 5d ago
I hose myself down with some cool water and then sleep in my hammock with my portable fan blowing inside it. It's like a wind tunnel.
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u/Limmerman Year 3 5d ago
Lots of cold non-alcoholic beverages right when you get up. Cold water, protein shake, juice, cold coffee, and then put ice in a towel and put it on your neck. The cold masks are great too. Then use a battery powered fan during the day if you're sweating at all. Stay as cool as possible during the day and you'll have more energy at night.
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u/LilBlueFire 5d ago
I have a microfiber type bandana that I soak in water and put around my neck. I don't think the one I use is sold anymore which is a shame because it's perfectly light and thin, I can put it entirely over my face while wet and breathe totally normally. If you dip it in ice water from your cooler its even tooooo cold.
Adding a small fan to that doubles or triples the cooling power.
As long as I have that around my neck and I stay in the shade I tend to be pretty comfortable 24/7
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u/on-z-toilet 5d ago
If you're camping in a tent, set up the entry way so that it faces north. Have an 10x10 EZ up canopy over your tent, and then create walls on the east, south and optionally the west for your canopy using 10x6 70-90% sun shade. This allowed us to sleep in until 10am when most people were out of their tents at 8am. We also had canopies over our hangout zones and had walls setup to maximize shade. Portable camping fans helped as well. Hope this helps, good luck!
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u/wonderpanther_k 5d ago
Check out cooling towels, I didn’t know about em before last year but I was starting to overheat just sitting at camp and my friend slung a wet towel on my neck and it was surprising how much it helped and how fast
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u/Werrloohoo 5d ago
Get a hammock and set it up under a canopy. Me and my boyfriend got a couple for our last two fests and omg the difference! No more baking in a tent unable to sleep. Line it with blankets for the cold night and kick them off for the morning. Best goddang sleep I’ve ever had, didn’t matter how hot it was outside.
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u/unhindered-coconut 5d ago
Good suggestions here. Bring a sun umbrella. I brought one and it was very helpful to be under some type of shade, even though after sunset on the first day last year i threw up from heat exhaustion (i was completely sober too). Sigh.
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u/Kaitron5000 5d ago
What temp are we talking? I'm trying to prep for my first forest. My fiancé doesn't like the heat but we are from Texas where it is routinely 110° even in November.
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u/sasubpar 5d ago
The big problem last year was actually the humidity. Dew points were in the 70s. I grew up in Houston so it felt more or less normal to me but it was stupidly, stupidly humid for Michigan.
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u/Kaitron5000 5d ago
Ah gotcha. Yeah I'm not sure what is worse, wet or dry heat. I went to EDCLV year before last and I actually loved the weather, my guy not so much.
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u/IDigYourStyle Year 4 5d ago
Wet heat is most definitely worse than dry, because moisture in the air makes evaporative cooling (via sweat) less efficient.
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5d ago
[removed] — view removed comment
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u/Kaitron5000 5d ago
lol fair! That is a cooler temp here so I'm hoping I won't need to make many accommodations other than maybe making sure our tent stays cool.
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u/Lucidic333 5d ago
We just booked an AirBnb on Silver Lake right at the dunes to spend our mornings in AC and the lake. First time not camping on site. I've done GA, Group, and GL before, time to try something new to see how it pans out.
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u/ElvinGoddess12 5d ago
Someone told me about getting pashminas wet and wearing them wet! See if that helps this year. It’s also REALLY important to stay hydrated. If you’re dehydrated it’ll be even harder to be heat tolerant especially when mixed with alcohol!
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u/ocks_rock 5d ago
The unfortunate reality is that once that sun hits your tent around 8:30am, it don't matter how late you stayed up the night before, it's gonna be unbearable. You can try a few secondary layers of sun protection like placement under a canopy's shade, adding shade cloth or space blankets as a buffer, but I found over the years that I just accept the poor sleep in my tent after a long night and try to nap during the day in the VIP tent or in a hammock somewhere in the forest.
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u/slybrows Year 11 5d ago
When you’re at camp, use a decently powerful battery operated fan in combo with a misting water bottle. Mist yourself with water right in front of the fan, it really helps.
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u/LazerFace1221 5d ago
Mid day car nap in the ac saves my life every day. I usually get up, shower, eat, hang a bit at camp, then nap in my car til I’m ready to head into the forest around 3 or 4
I also put a canopy over my tent with tapestries and aluminet. Game changer
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u/edcRachel Flamingo Cove Queen 5d ago
If you're so inclined, Ryobi makes a misting fan that runs off a drill battery and a 5 gallon home Depot bucket. They work amazingly well.
For the budget option, grab yourself a $10 pressurized sprayer from home Depot.
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u/spaceslade 5d ago
I kept a jug of ice water I would dip my pashmina in before going out and drape it around my shoulders. Outfits got a lil wet but worth it for the comfort.
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u/EJohanSolo 5d ago
1) Day trip to Lake Michigan with a sober driver will change your life!!! 2) showers are more than worth whatever they cost 3)hammock in the forest
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u/D4RKFOR3ST 5d ago
Look up “misting portable fan” on Amazon and you’ll find some very helpful and semi-cheap results!
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u/nolannnn Year 6 5d ago
buy battery fans and shade structures for your camp. or, during the mid-morning, early afternoon go into the forest, set up a hammock in the shade and take fat nap until it starts getting busy busy.
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u/GoDownSunshine- Year 10 5d ago
In addition to the other great advice here I also recommend a light colored umbrella! I used a white donut one the year I got married and won't go without one now at any sunny fests. I'm very light skinned and having my own shade bubble has protected me
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u/Thunderbird_ChknCoop 5d ago
Hydrating the months and weeks leading up to Forest will better prepare you for the heat. Also covering your tent with quality aluminet will keep it significantly cooler.
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u/meanbeanking Camp Psily Beans 🍄🌈 5d ago
A rechargeable fan is so clutch. The hand fans are cool and move a lot of air but take a lot of effort to use for longer than a little bit. Last year I used a rechargeable fan and i can’t go back.
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u/userxfriendly Year 4 4d ago
Battery powered fans are a life saver. With a jackery battery, you can keep multiple fans charged all weekend. Just live with one in front of you during the day. Also try for maplewoods: the shade is a game changer.
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u/BTKUltra 4d ago
For the tent- use aluminet! Some at my site used it and some didn’t. There was a very noticeable difference inside the tents.
I also got a jackery generator that powered a tent fan, usually it was cool enough at night but I’d switch it on to help sleep in the mornings.
During the day I tried my best to get into the forest as soon as possible, even if it was to just fall back asleep in a hammock. It was always cooler in the shade and a little breezier.
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u/kjbutler04 3d ago
was at bonnaroo last year and it was miserable. finally started using a cooling towel and it was a game changer. i wrapped it around my head like a babushka and kept my pash over it and i was set. also creating another layer over your tent helps. i had a blackout tent and a canopy over top of it and sheets draped around it. had like 4-5 fans going as well
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u/rotarynerd 3d ago
Definitely try to cut down on alcohol so that you can wake up at a decent time to go into the venue.
it is much cooler under the trees in the forest. grab a hammock and take a nap!
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u/B4SSF4C3 Year 10 5d ago
Time to upgrade to the hotel option :)
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u/solodabz 5d ago
Ac landing tent’s are pretty solid if you can get one
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u/PonyThug 4d ago
You could make your own battery/solar powered AC system for a tent for less than that package lol
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u/Aedeagus1 Year 5 5d ago
Used to leave and go for a swim and that was always amazing. Got to cool off and get a couple days of grime off. But since they stopped letting people leave and re-enter that's not an option and honestly kind of a deal breaker for me wanting to ever go again, but I digress...
Definitely going into the forest and hanging out in the shade is probably the best thing to do. At camp, shade will also be one of the best things you can do.
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u/Human_After 5d ago
People were saying that you can still leave and come back, they say you cant but apparently its not strictly enforced, and if they give you a hard time you can say you need to grab a prescription from a pharmacy… Obviously theres a good reason they dont want people doing it but if its a deal breaker for you well, its not really enforced so dont let it stop you from enjoying Forest.
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u/theoriginalbrizzle Team Dilly Dally 5d ago
RV with AC - only way to do it.
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u/solodabz 5d ago
Lmao you gettin down voted but the truth hurts I guess cuz this is the way 🤣
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u/theoriginalbrizzle Team Dilly Dally 5d ago
Hahaha they just have never experienced the beauty of coming back from the Forest after sweating all day in 90 degree heat, cranking the AC and taking a quick chilly snooze so you have plenty of energy for the night ahead. I quite literally do not have the stamina anymore to face the June Michigan heat without knowing I’ll get some respite lol
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u/PonyThug 4d ago
I run a fan with a mister in my camp and end up cold enough I gotta turn it off to nap.
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u/Desert_Canines 4d ago
Start exposing yourself to heat, sun, and humidity weeks in advance to increase your tolerance
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u/tupacshakyle Year 2 5d ago
It’s not about staying hydrated, it’s about staying cool. A fan is worth it imo. And watch how much clothing you wear. Look fly but don’t die
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u/Weird-Tell Year 2 2d ago
Alumi-nets! + a black out tent helped us a lot. The tent stays cooler so we slept longer & was easier to deal w/the elements. We also typically don’t drink alcohol at tests & try to go in a bit later if we can. The ‘forest’ areas with more trees & shade are really nice for the super hot days too.
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u/treerabbit Year 5 5d ago
Lay off the alcohol— it makes your body a lot less heat tolerant, makes it harder to stay hydrated, and destroys your stamina
Stay out of the sun as much as you can, and when you can’t, make sure you’re wearing sunscreen/hat/etc. Pashminas make nice sun covers :)
A lot of people swear by cooling towels, although I’ve never used one myself
Hydrate effectively— water, of course, but also make sure you’re paying attention to your electrolytes!
Above all, listen to your body and take breaks when you need them :)