Woodstock Muddies
11:58:00 AM 10.02.09

By the Time I got to Woodstock

On the first of “four days of peace, love and music,” we packed ourselves into a Dodge Dart and drove from New Paltz to Bethel. OK, somewhere NEAR Bethel -- we got to within nine miles of the festival. After an immobile hour or two, my Dart-borne companions were ready to turn back.

Not about to miss this historical event, I climbed out, hoisted a sleeping bag onto my shoulder, and started walking past the endless line of stopped cars. After walking FOREVER in the August heat -- when I was perhaps half-way to the festival site -- heaven smiled on this weary traveler. It began to rain -- no mere sprinkle, but a hippie-soaking downpour.

Imagine the scene: thousands upon thousands of wet, tired, hippies (many with wet tired dogs) along a twenty-mile long parking lot. Somewhere in the middle of this fragrant jamboree, a tall skinny guy, wearing white bell-bottoms, a shiny magenta rayon shirt (with puffy sleeves—good lord, what was I thinking?), trudged along, somewhat stooped under the weight of a water-logged sleeping bag.

Did that pony-tailed guy give up? No freakin’ way!

Not then, at least -- the next morning was a different story.

I had spent the night cuddling up against someone I should NEVER have been with, in that very wet sleeping bag. Did I mention that it was lined with some cheesy yellow-dyed flannel -- and that, at the first sign of moisture, it released that yellow dye all over the enclosed hippies? Did I mention that the sleeping bag was, itself, half submerged in the re-hydrated fecal matter of generations of Max Yasgur’s dairy cows?

Enough was enough. I shuffled back down that same highway, and -- when I reached some traffic that was moving -- hitched a ride to New Paltz.

The white bell-bottoms, stained by god-knows-what-all was living in the mud of peace, love and music, were never white again. No amount of bleach was to have any effect on them. I had to dye them a nearly fluorescent shade of magenta.

What can I say—It was 1969, and it seemed like a good thing to do at the time.

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Comments

1 Comments
Lawren January 15, 2014, 7:28 pm
Hi, I really enjoyed your story, and was interested in reading your perspective on your experiences at Woodstock. I know you posted this a couple of years ago, but I'm currently working on an interactive editorial for a senior project at my university and would love it if you would want to contribute by having an interview through email with me about your experiences. If you're interested, please contact me at lawren.hunter@gmail.com. Thank you for your time.

Lawren

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