More than 1,000 Glastonbury festival-goers have been injured after torrential rain turned the site into a mud-soaked obstacle course.
Around 1,200 became casualties and 32 needed hospital treatment after being caught out by the slippery conditions.
Most suffered minor cuts and bruises or sprains through losing their footing.
One man is also fighting for his life in hospital after a suspected drug overdose.
The 26-year-old, from the Midlands, is being treated in Yeovil District Hospital after being found unconscious at the Park Farm area of the festival site.
His next of kin have been informed.
A series of downpours has turned the event into a giant quagmire, recalling the chaos of 2005 when hundreds of tents were washed away by flash floods.
Afterwards, organiser Michael Eavis spent £750,000 on flood prevention measures, which so far seem to be working.
"There's ground water, which has made the site muddy, but it's nothing like the situation in 2005 when camping areas flooded," a festival spokesman said.
"We're hoping this is the last day of heavy rain. Everyone seems to be having a good time and it's not washed out the spirit."
Festival debutantes Arctic Monkeys' headline gig on the Pyramid Stage attracted more than 100,000 people.
There has been a "slight" increase in crime compared with 2005's figures, police said.
They have received reports of 163 crimes, the majority of which were drug offences, and 28 tent thefts.