Once the music ends, the t-shirts are sold, and campers pack up their tents, what’s left is a massive amount of trash. That’s certainly the case for Worthy Farm, the site of Glastonbury, where 175,000 attendees have left the festival grounds looking like a scene out of Walking Dead.

According to the Mirror, it will take six weeks (or 38 more days than the length of the actual festival) to fully clean up the site and return it to a fully functional farm for grazing cattle. A cleanup crew of 800 will be tasked with the job of removing 200 metric tons of waste, including 54 tons of cans and battles, 45 tons of cardboard, and 11 tons of clothing and camping gear.



Below, check out scenes of the destruction:

How much mess? It's expected to take cleaners weeks to clear @GlastoFest rubbish http://t.co/nPXToNO1Ob pic.twitter.com/1m3uANuAXj — Daily Mirror (@DailyMirror) June 30, 2014

PICTURES: Glastonbury, the aftermath. Now the fun has ended the big cleanup begins http://t.co/KgPOwE98gh pic.twitter.com/sHFU4tJOfd — Daily Express (@Daily_Express) June 30, 2014

Was it really necessary to leave this much mess at Glastonbury? pic.twitter.com/EhwZ5Bf6yB — Leah Benzie (@leahbenzie) June 30, 2014

Glastonbury looks like a scene from a zombie movie this morning pic.twitter.com/uCgiQdIdVU — Elliot Wagland (@elliotwagland) June 30, 2014

GALLERY: The clean up operation begins, at the Glastonbury Festival. Somerset.http://t.co/TnILI6LUXh pic.twitter.com/Ps4D4fqYMw — Irish Examiner Photo (@ExaminerPhotos) June 30, 2014

Glastonbury clean up or is it ope on a Monday morning hard to tell pic.twitter.com/8haYIj1jmB — hullman67 (@Kay86U) June 30, 2014