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Cold Campsite Cans - Your thoughts?

  • 10-04-2022 3:49pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭


    Hi all - I dropped lordgoat a quick message about my intention to post here seeking opinions and he gave it his blessing, so thanks to him, and also to anyone who shares their thoughts below.

    Anyway I work in refrigeration and I go to festivals. For many years I drank cans in the campsite which were revoltingly warm at worst, and bearably tepid at best.

    During Covid I had the opportunity to develop a solution. It is a machine wich will take batches of mouldy warm tent cans and perfectly chill them in under 90 seconds.

    I am happy with the functionality of the system and I teamed up with a mate who's more into marketing / promotion etc with a view to getting it out there this summer, and now we're thinking about how best to make a go of it.

    Our original plan was to offer ultra rapid can cooling as a paid service to campers at festivals, and we might still do this yet - I am in discussions with some festivals at the moment to take a pitch (nothing finalised yet).

    But I am interested in getting some impartial opinions from unconnected parties who go to festivals. Hence my posting here. Boards will provide brutal truth, if nothing else!!

    Two simple questions for festivalgoers:

    1. Is 90 second on-demand can cooling a service you would consider using? 

    2. If so, how much would you pay for all weekend access for up to 24 cans?

    Anyone who provides me with thoughful input here can make themselves known to me by PM so if I do end up going to some festivals, I'll ensure your campsite beers are cold!

    Thanks all!



«1

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,906 ✭✭✭Stillill42


    Oooooh. Intriguing. I would certainly pay something for that. More details please. Do you mean some sort of pass whereby you show up each time you want one cooled? You hardly mean storing your cans with you for the weekend and collecting them on a piecemeal basis?

    I suppose the trick is convenience. If it's a real trek each time you want to avail of the service, I'd be giving it a swerve. The real earner of course would be inventing a device that punters could buy and operate themselves. But that's probably up there with flying cars and a cure for cancer.

    Anyway, my blessings for a worthy venture, hope it works out for you.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,167 ✭✭✭El Director


    Sounds like a great idea Van Doozy! We only ever manage cool beers on the Friday/Saturday morning but then once your ice is melted, arguably when you need them most, it's nothing but warm beers for the rest of the Saturday and Sunday. I think I'd pay 20 eur for such a service. I'm off to the first Irish festival (I think) since Sept 2019 on the June bank holiday, Wild Roots in Sligo, I'd be happy to trial it there for you 😎



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,098 ✭✭✭Poorside


    Would certainly use it and pay for it, price would be crucial and the problem is keeping the cans cold after that, would nearly need a few areas dotted around campsites, if there's any sort of a queue over 5/10 minutes I think most people would avoid it.

    Great idea and I hope I get to use it at a festival soon.



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Stillill42 thanks for your reply. It's nice to know you'd pay. How much would you be willing to part with.?

    Oooooh. Intriguing. I would certainly pay something for that. More details please. Do you mean some sort of pass whereby you show up each time you want one cooled? 

    Exactly, you got it in one! You buy a wristband. It’s got 24 squares on it. Every time you cool a can a square gets marked. You cool as many cans at a time , when you like, all weekend.

    You hardly mean storing your cans with you for the weekend and collecting them on a piecemeal basis?

    Definitely not. I don’t think me storing cans for people is a good idea for all sorts of reasons. This is why a conventional freezer wont work. It’s just too slow. Per my experiments an ambient can needs minimum 25 minutes in a home freezer before it’s nicely chilled. My machine does it in under 90 seconds so you can cool while you wait. Every time you go for a slash you can bring 2 cans with you or whatever, they're done by the time you've updated your instablog or facegram or whatever it is the youngsters upload these days.

    I suppose the trick is convenience. If it's a real trek each time you want to avail of the service, I'd be giving it a swerve. 

    I agree. I think beside the urinals would be a great (if stinky) location.

    The real earner of course would be inventing a device that punters could buy and operate themselves. 

    I considered this solution first actually. You're right, it's not practical. You got to remember there's no power. The only way to do it without power would be using compressed gas, which would be too heavy to easily carry and contrary to campsite rules. Also dumping large amounts of (for example) propane into the atmosphere would be terrible for the environment!!!

    Anyway, my blessings for a worthy venture, hope it works out for you

    Thanks, appreciated.



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    El Director thanks for your reply. Wild Roots looks like a class festival alright, if we do make it there, I’ll drop you a PM.

    Poorside thanks for your reply

    Would certainly use it and pay for it, price would be crucial 

    So how much would you pay for 24 cans?

    and the problem is keeping the cans cold after that, 

    Agreed. But that's why my idea is ‘cool as you drink’ - coz it’s not practical to keep the cans cold once you get back to your tent. That’s why the system had to be fast.

    would nearly need a few areas dotted around campsites,

    You’re not the first person to suggest this, and I believe you are right. I think long term that’s where we’ll go with it but for now I only have just one prototype machine, which cost a lot of money to build, and took a long time. Dotting them around the campsite would be an expensive punt for an unproven concept. Plus I would need to staff them.

    if there's any sort of a queue over 5/10 minutes I think most people would avoid it.

    I totally agree. I spoke to my partner about this exact issue at our last meeting and we decided that in the event that it’s a runaway success we would limit selling passes for the system to avoid p!ssing off people who had paid for rapid can cooling. Oversubscription is a problem I would love to have!

    Great idea and I hope I get to use it at a festival soon.

    I hope so too!



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,906 ✭✭✭Stillill42


    Thanks for the reply Van Doozy. I'd probably go €20 for a weekend pass? Again, all the best with it.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,868 ✭✭✭Alkers


    I've upgraded to a campervan / caravan pass at this stage so have access to a fridge when at festivals but great idea otherwise.

    Are you planning this to be in the campsite as opposed to the venue grounds? Some festivals might not want you to be encouraging people to stay in the campsite more?

    Heineken have had a setup at some EPs where you buy cans from them at an inflated price and they keep them cold for you and you pick them up as you want. They had a few dotted around the campsites.

    If I was camping I'd definitely use it but only if it was near to where I was setup. The distance I'd be willing to walk each time would probably vary with how sunny a day it is!



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Hey Alkers, thanks for your reply - yes I know your name from the motorhomes and campervans forum!

    Yes, if we go ahead with it as planned it will strictly be for the campsite. Perhaps it might be seen as encouraging people to stay in the campsite, but in fairness, if a cold beer is all that’s going to keep them there, then why are they at a festival at all!? You can get cold cans at home. I’d imagine most people at festivals want to go see stuff and listen to music. I would counter that point with the argument that any decent festival SHOULD have a facility for campers to chill their own beers! Then they can get a nice pint of draft when they go into the main arena to hear some bands.

    And yes, I remember well the can fridge setup at EP, and indeed Oxegen prior to that. I would describe it as 'sub optimal', for several reasons. Just my opinion.🤷‍♀️



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,640 ✭✭✭RINO87


    No. Warm cans are the life and soul of a festival, we would be lost without them. People are getting too soft. Plus they make the sub par pints inside the arena all that more palatable!


    I jest, I'd pay 20=25 for this for sure, but as others said access and q'ing times would be crucial - I don't know if 90 seconds even would cut it - Look at the queus for coffee in the mornings at festivals, they can be crazy, and probably have a similar dispensing time - If you are only cooling a couple of cans at a time, people are not going to stand in line for all that long, unless its absolutely roasting.

    You do have a good idea, and with some tweaking you have a great little earner on your hands I would say. Best of luck.



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Rino87 thanks for your input. Yes what festival experience would be authentic without delicious cans of Tent Galahad at 23°C?

    The machine has a sh!tload of capacity for cooling multiple cans simultaneously - much more than a coffee stall that has maybe 2 dispensers.

    But still - if needs be we'll stop selling passes to avoid having people queue for too long. ideally they wouldn't have to queue at all - except maybe for a minute or so at peak times.

    That's something that I guess we wouldn't get a feel for until the actual event.


     



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,640 ✭✭✭RINO87


    The machine has a sh!tload of capacity for cooling multiple cans simultaneously - much more than a coffee stall that has maybe 2 dispensers.

    But still - if needs be we'll stop selling passes to avoid having people queue for too long. ideally they wouldn't have to queue at all - except maybe for a minute or so at peak times.

    Sounds great, you're on to a winner here!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,390 ✭✭✭GiftofGab


    I plan on bringing a cooler back,filling it up with cold water and putting my cans in that.

    I think the cooler system needs to be convenient and price worthy. We're not going to drink 24 cans in the campsite in one day so don't need to cool that many. We may only need to cool 4-6 cans.



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Hi GiftofGab, thanks for your reply

    I plan on bringing a cooler back,filling it up with cold water and putting my cans in that.

    You'll get maybe as low as 12° doing this. If you're lucky. In my opinion it is a clunky solution for that kind of performance. But maybe you're not into freezing cold beer. Maybe you just don't want to be stuck drinking soup. If so, then yours is a perfectly reasonable approach I guess. Some people love their beer cold though.

    I think the cooler system needs to be convenient and price worthy.

    I agree. The system IS convenient. I know that. Whether it's price worthy depends on how people value it i guess. I would be interested in what you would pay for such a service? Any thoughts?

    It means you would have access to ice cold cans on demand - much colder than you would get with your cooler, which you wouldn't have to carry all the way in and out.

    We're not going to drink 24 cans in the campsite in one day so don't need to cool that many. We may only need to cool 4-6 cans.

    Yes but the pass gets you weekend access. Most people would put a fair oul dint in a 24 slab over a 3 day festival. Again, maybe you're not a big drinker...



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,167 ✭✭✭El Director


    Do you have festivals earmarked for trialling this summer @Van Doozy?



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,098 ✭✭✭Poorside


    A weekend pass for 24 cans at about €20 would have my money no problem.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,719 ✭✭✭StupidLikeAFox


    To start would you try partner with some company looking for a unique marketing gimmick, (I'm thinking somebody like paddy Power would be all over it). Then you could focus on providing the service and let them worry about getting it out there.

    You get paid for providing a service and they would see it as a marketing cost so probably wouldn't care about profitability too much. It would let you test the market if you wanted to set up down the line also



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,067 ✭✭✭sully123


    If I were you I'd consider not charging, but teaming up with a promo group who would pay you directly, and pay for your concession at the festival. Good idea overall tho



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,767 ✭✭✭✭looksee


    The machine has a sh!tload of capacity for cooling multiple cans simultaneously 

    You would need some sort of a token system going otherwise you have a dozen people each with a couple of cans in the machine, standing around in a cluster waiting, then claiming they handed in 4! Then how do you differentiate between who handed in the good stuff or the cheap stuff?



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Yes I do, But like I said above we have nothing finalised yet so can’t say anything just yet I'm afraid!

    I am in dialogue with a couple, and some events have fairly standardised online application processes which you just fill out and then they select traders who they feel will be a good fit for their 'vibe'.

    There are some I’d prefer to get more than others for all sorts of reasons. And one or two I'd love to be at! Then it comes down to cost…

    Edit: I am actually trialling it at an event this weekend, but for use behind the bar (customer's can't BYOB to this one)



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Good suggestion. I would have thought more drinks companies but you could be dead right about the likes of a seemingly unrelated business like PaddyPower who would like the quirky / novelty aspect to it.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,019 ✭✭✭kg703


    Hey! I come from this as a regular festival goer and am also now involved with them this year.

    Sounds like a great idea. I'd love to bring down some of my fancy white hags and have them chilled in seconds ha! I think you would definitely need multiple spots or youre going to end up with the queue issue or the issue its too far to walk to chill two cans because by the time you get back and drink them, any more would be warm.

    Trial runs are key here so that you know your business model, know exactly how many you can process, how many people and how much time it'll take.

    My advice is to link in with one of the smaller camping festivals & offer your services for a nominal fee e.g. the cost of transport and your time for the weekend. Then dont charge and gauge interest, have someone there recording the numbers, timing people, troubleshooting issues, seeing what common complaints may be and preparing the solutions.

    I would not pay for set yourself up at the likes of Electric Picnic without knowing all of this because if you charge people and the service is not what they expect or is poorly organised and run, word of mouth will kill you and people will say 'that was crap last year, not paying the money for that again'. Same before you go looking for a possible sponsor as someone mentioned - they will want all the critical info before giving you any money and proof it works. They wont associate their brand with something unless you can show what you can do.



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Yes, good suggestion, and we are also working this angle. That approach has a lot of advantages. The system is not proven in the field (pardon pun) yet though so it is hard to get buy in from promo groups without them standing on front of the machine seeing it work its magic!



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Its self service. They look after their own cans.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,251 ✭✭✭Juwwi


    Sounds like a great idea ,, how cold does it get the cans ?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,251 ✭✭✭Juwwi





  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Hey KG703 many thanks for taking the time to respond. I agree with what you're saying re the smaller festival approach alright.

    Hey! I come from this as a regular festival goer and am also now involved with them this year. 

    Sounds like a great idea. I'd love to bring down some of my fancy white hags and have them chilled in seconds ha! 

    How much would you pay for the weekend?

    Funnily enough a part of how this started was a conversation I had at ATN 19 - some whippersnapper was laughing at the p!sswater I was drinking. I told him we'd do the pepsi challenge of my bargain lager versus his hand crafted double IPA when the tent he was keeping it in got up to 25 degrees in the afternoon sun.



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    It depends on a couple of variables - mainly how warm they are and how long you want to wait.

    Room temperature to standard domestic fridge temperature (4 degrees) takes approx 60 seconds, we say 90 because they're probably going to be warmer than room temp in a tent. If you had them in the dashboard of your car in July and want them absolutely ice cold you'd be looking at about 2 mins.



  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Music Moderators Posts: 10,686 Mod ✭✭✭✭melekalikimaka


    Hey Van,


    Work in the area myslef, with concessions a number of times and in a few other areas.


    Heineken did something similar, it was so so. problem is the high cost of concession space, insurance, staffing, equipment and the sheer number of locations you will need, you will also have to handle competing with the festivals main drinks supplier, not sure how they would feel about their exclusive ability to serve the only cold drinks at the show.


    You could go down the sponsorship route but this then requires branding.


    The whole industry is all over the shop now so there is windows to step in gaps


    Best of luck



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Hi melekalikimaka, thanks for your reply

    ya I am familiar with what has been done in the past alright, I believe what we're doing offers distinct advantages over that approach. Mainly convienence and speed. But you're dead right about those other factors too. 

    It's all in the mix!

    The bottom line about all this is that there is are a lot of elements to this that I simply won't fully understand until we go and do it.

    I have been working on this project for over 2 years - the machine itself took nearly a year to develop - and now that holding festivals is suddenly a reality the possibility that we might soon be in front of paying customers with what was once a pipe dream of mine has suddently become very real!!!

    I got good feedback from friends and contacts but I felt posting here would give me honest feedback from festival goers who have no skin in the game before we make the final call to march forward with it!

    It's been pretty positive, so thanks all for that, I'll keep you up to date.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,019 ✭✭✭kg703


    Me personally, I'd pay a tenner. But I only ever bring about 6-8 cans with me and drink spirits for the weekend. Plus I'd only pay if it was literally a walk up and walk away system. I'd sacrifice cold cans for avoiding any type of queue. The heineken one as mentioned above (I know yours is different) - a friend put their cans in there at EP and had to queue an hour to get them back. Wasn't worth anything. Queue management is your big issue here and you need to have a management system in place to make sure the 90 second aspect works.

    You mentioned above that you only have one machine. That'll limit you to who you are offering to as the walk between campsites is long enough, you dont want to be walking 15 mins just to get a couple of cans cooled down.

    There are tons of new small festivals this year who are dipping their toes in the water - I really think trying to link in with one of them is your best bet.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,719 ✭✭✭StupidLikeAFox


    Just another thought - you seem to have a great technology here - have you thought about other cases?

    For example, a smaller festival or sports club could use your technology to chill cans on demand, and could use it as an alternative to draught systems or using banks of coolers to keep things cold -depending on the energy profile of your machine it could be more environmentally friendly also



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    You're on the ball - certainly not living up to your username.😉

    I have a trial run at an event doing this exact thing this coming weekend.

    It eliminates the need for cold storage, bottle fridges, single use plastic cups and cube ice in one fell swoop.

    I don't really see it replacing draught - at least not for a 'backbone' bar at an event but in my opinion has a lot to offer say... a popup bar, or a satellite bar located away from the main bar, or maybe a bar serving craft beers or premixed shorts - because of the tiny footprint of the system and major flexibility.



  • Registered Users Posts: 685 ✭✭✭Housefree


    Might be more money selling the machine/solution & maintenance to others.

    I remember years ago at Oxygen thinking buckets of ice would make a fortune, then one year a pitch arrived selling it but the weekend turned out Baltic cold, doubt they made a penny



  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Music Moderators Posts: 10,686 Mod ✭✭✭✭melekalikimaka


    its a great idea, customer services is an area that irish festivals lack and there is such a market when irish punters and the expendable income they bring to the table at irish shows. A few of the smallers ones would be eager to get you onboard I imagine given the benefit it does offer to customers.


    As a suggestion, if you are looking to test the waters. It would be something I would consider for stages, its quite costly and difficult to have fridges side stage or in backstage green rooms at tents, this is something that would add value to the area greatly, artists would be inclined to want stuff cold before and after stage



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,268 ✭✭✭✭Sleepy


    Not sure if you decided to go ahead with this but a nice sideline to this could be selling small beer cooler bags: ones that could take 4 to 6 cans that a customer had just cooled with your machine. It'd have the added advantage for the customer that they wouldn't need to return as frequently and for you that it should reduce queueing over having people do 2 cans at a time...



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,964 ✭✭✭Andrea B.


    Guess it was yourself, but there was a unit/stall at Body & Soul doing it at €1 a can. Didn't notice a queue at time I passed it, but a great idea and initiave!!



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Never much of a queue when you can get through several customers in 90 seconds!

    Thanks for the comments - it went well. And we won an award from B & S which we're chuffed about as well!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,868 ✭✭✭Alkers




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,262 ✭✭✭sprucemoose


    its a good idea but........

    .......id say the portable chiller machines you can get on amazon for cheap would have you out of business fairly quickly im afraid



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,687 ✭✭✭Signore Fancy Pants


    Id say this could be viable but also limited.

    Firstly, yes I'd use it from a campsite perspective. However, it would need to be convenient as in less than a 3 minute walk, but thats me!

    Need to examine it from the punters View and the providers view. Speaking for me, i'd normally bring a slab for a weekend event and still not finish them. If they were cold, I probably would have.

    Provider: How many cans can I chill at the same time? How long does it take a can to lose its chill? How much does it cost me per can? What is the maximum amount of cabs I can chill in 1 hour. Consider a premium 'can exchange' method too for people that don't want to wait/don't have a pass. I would ideally have it close to food/toilets. This may negate frustrations for people queuing, i.e 2 birds with 1 stone kind of thing.

    Punter: Is it close? Is it quick? Is it worth it? If it is cheapish (€5 per day) you will have people buying a pass "on the off chance" of using it but may not. Money in your pocket anyway.

    I don't know what it will cost you per can, so cannot really advise. I would have a pricing structure something similar to this:

    Single Day Pass €5 for a day event to a maximum of 15 cans (great value). Theoretically that's 22.5 minutes of operating time. If you can chill 15 or more at the same time, its only 1.5 minutes operating time.

    Single Multi-day Pass: €20 for a 2-3 day event to a maximum of 40 cans.

    Depending on your capacity, consider Group Day Pass and Group Weekend Pass.

    (Requires small refrigerated storage) For people who do not have a pass, consider a straight swap for €1 per can. You take in a warm can and €1, immediately give the punter a cold can from your own inventory. Trial your inventory with 5 slabs of the 10 most popular drinks. You then have a rolling inventory, 1 in 1 out, €1 in pocket. That could be a serious money maker.

    I'd pay €1 to swap a warm for a cold can. The beauty of this is, there may be hundreds of people who will do it once as a novelty.



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  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    Very interesting post SFP - good insight, thanks.



    The ones that need bags of ice and electricity to use?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,640 ✭✭✭RINO87


    Any more festivals lined up this summer? Would be great to see you at ATN.



  • Registered Users Posts: 218 ✭✭Van Doozy


    We've lots planned, but can't say much until things are finalised somewhat!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,262 ✭✭✭sprucemoose


    battery powered but you do need ice yeah. only got to use mine at one festival because of the lack of them over the last while, bag of ice lasted for two days with a cooler bag and i just picked up another on the last day

    not trying to be a dick or anything btw, just want to give you my experience with alternatives



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,906 ✭✭✭Stillill42


    Great to see you up and running, @Van Doozy Anyone on here that used the service and wants to comment?



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,282 ✭✭✭Le Bruise


    Second that, would be awesome for ATN! Two of my mates used the service at Wild Roots (and had a good chat with @Van Doozy), said it was brilliant and well worth it.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,687 ✭✭✭Signore Fancy Pants


    Sorry Van, didnt realise this is an old thread. Congrats with B&S, hope the biz continues!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,641 ✭✭✭✭bodhrandude


    Yep I was at both Wild Roots and B&S and I have to say the turbo chiller was a godsend also Van and the wife/girlfriend and business partner are interesting characters to stop and have a chat with. Like I said before Van if you are at EP try and choose a campsite that doesn't have Heineken Cold Rooms in it as they may not like lack of customers. But I think its a fantastic idea and you should maybe approach the Dragon's Den at some point for further investment as its a really innovative idea to use at camping festivals. Maybe you will try it at the Willie Clancy week and the Fleadh Cheoill at Mullingar in the camping areas too.

    If you want to get into it, you got to get out of it. (Hawkwind 1982)



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 525 ✭✭✭llatsni


    Interesting idea. But I’ve never had an issue with warm cans. There was still ice in my cooler on the way home from Beyond the Pale 72+hrs later. I guess there’s plenty of people who couldn’t be bothered bringing a cooler though.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,491 ✭✭✭The Davestator


    Its a while ago, but I dont think Heineken cold rooms were there for the last EP.

    EDIT; https://twitter.com/heineken_ie/status/1164899333633990657



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