Home Entertainment Burning Man attendees told to conserve food, water after harsh weather

Burning Man attendees told to conserve food, water after harsh weather

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Burning Man attendees told to conserve food, water after harsh weather

More than 70,000 Burning Man attendees are unable to drive to or leave the event in Black Rock City, Nev., after hours of wind and rain turned the festival’s desert campgrounds into sticky mud.

“Due to heavy rain, the gate and airport in and out of Black Rock City at the Burning Man event will remain closed,” the Burning Man Project said in a statement Saturday morning. “No driving is permitted until the playa surface dries up, with the exception of emergency vehicles. Participants are encouraged to conserve food, water, and fuel, and shelter in a warm, safe space. We will keep the community informed on a regular basis.” The gate was still shut early Sunday morning, organizers said.

Local authorities are also looking into a death at the event. In an emailed statement late Saturday, Pershing County Sheriff Jerry Allen said the sheriff’s office was “currently investigating a death which occurred during this rain event,” adding that the family had been notified.

“As this death is still under investigation, there is no further information available at this time,” the statement said.

Earlier on Saturday evening, the Bureau of Land Management and one of the local sheriff’s offices closed the entrance to Burning Man for the rest of the event, and the state’s Department of Transportation closed nearby roads because of flooding.

Representatives for the Burning Man Project haven’t said when they expect event access to be reopened, but according to weather forecasts, the rain is expected to clear Sunday evening.

Organizers temporarily closed Burning Man’s gates a few days before the event’s official start date of Aug. 27 to allow the playa to dry from Hurricane Hilary’s rains. The event began on time, but as of Saturday night, organizers had postponed all scheduled art burns, including the well-known burning of the Man statue, because of the weather. The event is set to end on Monday.

Despite the shelter-in-place order, some attendees, such as Chris Rock and Diplo, have attempted to escape.

“Just walked 5 miles in the mud out of burning man with chris rock and a fan picked us up,” Diplo tweeted, along with a video of him lifting his goggles to reveal shimmery gold face paint.

Each year since 1986, tens of thousands of Burning Man participants, called Burners, gather in Black Rock City, a temporary desert city that is built and torn down on a dry lake bed that was once Lake Lahontan in northern Nevada. Burners are expected to be self-sustaining, which means they must supply their own food, water and shelter for the event.

At the event, Burners walk or bike around the grounds, visiting camps with art pieces and DJ sets while practicing the 10 Burning Man principles, including decommodification — emphasizing gifting over transactional interactions — radical self-reliance to provide needed resources, communal effort and leaving no trace on the environment. Black Rock City also has limited WiFi and phone service, causing spotty communication for eventgoers.

Kalli Martin, a 29-year-old engineer in San Francisco, said she had been enjoying the event, before the rain made the area “crazy muddy.” Some people have had to walk the campgrounds barefoot and wash their feet with buckets of water after their shoes fell apart, she said.

“We have shade structures above our tents that are tarps supported by poles, but they started filling with water, and were at risk of collapsing on our tents,” said Martin, a first-time attendee. “We had to figure out how to pump water out of them with a hose and push the water out with broom handles from underneath.”

Eventgoers are trying to make the best of their situation “doing disaster preparation in their party clothes,” Martin said. At times, people in her camp, Bao Chicka Wow Wow, have sung karaoke, played cards and cooked while they wait for the weather to improve. Martin said her camp mates predict they might be stuck until Monday or Tuesday.

Rohan Thadani, a 32-year-old Brooklyn entrepreneur who’s been part of the Burning Man community for 12 years, said that spirits were high at his camp, Burners Without Borders.

“Roughly 70,000 people are in several inches of sticky, slippery mud, embracing the reality that Burning Man is both over and will continue well into next week,” he said. “Conditions are absolutely crazy here but there is not a better group of people apt to deal with this.”

Burning Man rangers are on the grounds trying to help in Black Rock City, but their capabilities have mostly been limited to stopping people who have tried to drive out and helping people who have gotten stuck in the roads, Martin said.

Organizers have also communicated with Burners through on-site announcements, a Google spreadsheet, the Burning Man radio station and on social media.

“Check on your camp mates and neighbors to make sure they’re okay and help them as needed,” Burning Man organizers said in an announcement. “And take advantage of a moment of calm to connect with camp mates and hunker down. Stay safe out there, Black Rock City!”

Lyric Li contributed to this report.



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