An impromptu two-day music festival last month at Love Field that caused a minor kerfuffle got a follow-up discussion at the Point Reyes Station Village Association meeting last week, where board members, locals who helped bring the event to town and others discussed how to best handle large events in the future. The Woodsist festival was supposed to take place on July 26 and 27 in Big Sur, but the dangerous wildfire that destroyed dozens of homes spurred FolkYeah!, the organization in charge of the event, to reach out to friends and contacts in West Marin which led to an announcement that it was moving the music fest to town just one day before it kicked off. In a recent letter to the editor, Karen Gray, the village association’s president, wrote of concerns regarding the absence of permitting and the lack of notice to first responders about a large event with camping. Pamela Bridges, a board member, said that the group’s duty was to protect the town, but that the response may have frustrated some people. “I think it kind of created some bad vibes,” she said. (Ms. Gray was not present at the meeting.) But the locals involved in bringing the event to Love Field said they wish the association had contacted them about the concerns, adding that they believed the fest proceeded pretty smoothly. “It was a safe, clean event,” said Gabe Korty, the 26-year-old Point Reyes native who constructed the tent-like parachute on the field that served both an album release party in June and Woodsist. Another woman who lives across from the field said it was relatively quiet. “There wasn’t really that much music,” she said. The emergency move was a one-off event unlikely to be repeated. But meeting attendees agreed that in the future, coordination and planning, as well as nailing down the permitting process, were key. “Group hug!” Ms. Bridges said near the end of the gathering. And for many, there was one clear silver lining to the debate: it enticed five or so people in their 20s and 30s to come to a village association meeting, a rarity these days. They were encouraged, many times, to keep attending.