If you’ve spent any amount of time around Hattiesburg in the fall or spring, you already know: tailgating isn’t a warmup for the game. It’s the main event. The game is the closer. The four to six hours leading up to it are where the real social calendar lives.
Here’s how locals actually do it โ what to bring, when to arrive, and how to avoid the rookie mistakes.
Where to set up
The lots near the stadium fill up faster than you’d think on a big home weekend. Different lots have different vibes โ some are family-heavy, some are more raucous, some are the same exact group of people every single weekend who’ve been doing it for twenty years. Once you find your people, you find your lot.
If you don’t have a regular crew yet:
- The grass lots are the friendliest entry point โ people set up tents, play music, and you’ll usually be invited over before you finish unloading.
- The paved lots are quicker โ easier to roll in late, easier to park, but you’ve got less room to spread out.
- The intramural fields and overflow areas get used on the busiest weekends. Cheap, flat, and you’ll meet whoever pulls in next to you.
Pro tip: walk the lot once before you commit a spot. Find shade, note where the closest portable bathroom is, and check that you’re not setting up directly under a flag pole or behind a truck that’s going to leave at halftime and box you in.
When to arrive
The honest answer for a noon game: get there by 8 AM. You think that’s early. It’s not. The early arrivals are the ones with shade, the ones who got the corner spot, and the ones who claimed the prime real estate next to a power pole for their string lights.
For a 6 PM game, plan to be set up by 1 PM. You’re not just there to drink and grill โ you’re there to host. People drift through, kids run around, somebody’s cousin shows up with a smoker. The longer you’ve been there, the better the food.
What to bring
Tailgate veterans have a kit they refine over years. Here’s the short version:
- Cooler. Two if you can. One for drinks, one for food. Iced and rotated.
- Folding chairs. Plural. Someone always shows up without one.
- Pop-up tent or canopy. Shade is currency. Especially in early-season heat.
- Speaker. Bluetooth, charged. Music is the difference between hanging out and just sitting there.
- Trash bags. Tied to a chair leg. Locals pack out clean โ don’t be the people who leave a mess.
- Power source / portable battery. Phones die during long days. So do speakers.
- Sunscreen, paper towels, hand sanitizer, a roll of toilet paper. The unsexy heroes.
- Koozies. One per person, then six more for the friends who show up empty-handed. There will always be friends who show up empty-handed.
The food question
You’ve got three modes:
- Smoker / grill mode. The real ones bring portable smokers and start at 6 AM. If you’re going this route, you already know what you’re doing.
- Catered / picked-up mode. Pick up barbecue, breakfast biscuits, or wings on the way in. Hattiesburg has plenty of options that’ll have a tray ready at 9 AM if you call the day before.
- Snacks-and-finger-food mode. Charcuterie, dips, queso, sandwiches. Easier to share, no cleanup required.
Most locals do a hybrid โ one hot item, three or four sides, and whatever the neighbors brought.
What we’d wear
Tailgating gear has its own dress code. Looking like you tried (a little) goes a long way. Light fabrics, good hat, a koozie that doesn’t fall apart by halftime.
- BASEBURG Henley โ looks like you put effort in. Pairs with shorts in early season, jeans late.
- The Roost Granite Pocket Tee โ comfort colors, light, breathable, and tucks into the look without screaming “fan.”
- BASEBURG Snapback โ keeps the sun off, holds up to a long day.
- BASEBURG Koozies โ six-pack of designs, $5 each. Bring extras.
That’s it. Show up early, bring the right gear, claim your shade, and don’t be the people who leave a mess. Stock up before next Saturday.