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Burning Man 2007

VerbalTruist

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The time has come for me to post a thread on the subject of this years burn. I will start it here in Drug Culture and hopefully with help the wonderful staff that I work for will help me in cycling it through the site so as to give it a wider viewing audience.

I am curious as to who on this site, if anyone, participates in Burning Man. I will be attending the burn for my second trip and I will be taking someone up for their first burn too! Muy excitement!

If you do attend or have attended in the past to what extent did you and/or DO YOU participate in the burn? I am not heavily active in the community due to school... However once I graduate I plan to go fucking hogwild with it.

Also, do you see Burning Man as an oppurtunity to consume lewd amounts of drugs? Do you go sober? If you do take drugs at the event why? If you remain sober why?

Please lets ll have a lighthearted discussion about Burning Man and whatever tickles your fancy about the subject.

Ciao!!
 
euphoricnod said:
I am curious as to who on this site, if anyone, participates in Burning Man. I will be attending the burn for my second trip and I will be taking someone up for their first burn too! Muy excitement!

If you do attend or have attended in the past to what extent did you and/or DO YOU participate in the burn?
i've been to burning man four times but i haven't been since 2002.

i was a founder member of a large theme camp called magicglasses camp. if you're interested in the genesis of our camp, please read: the story of magicglasses
(i'm always interested in feedback on the writing in this story)

we've built magicglasses installations at many other parties including burning man decompression, coachella and others.

if you'd like to see some pictures from in and around various magicglasses camps over the years: http://www.magicglasses.com/pictures/index.html

i miss brc and, if i can get myself sorted out, i plan to return to the playa this year.

euphoricnod said:
Also, do you see Burning Man as an oppurtunity to consume lewd amounts of drugs?
my consumption of drugs always goes up when i get to the playa as burning man is, for me, a very (emotionally) safe environment in which to partake.

the actual pattern of drug intake is different every year - most years i enjoy a number of daylight mushroom trips - cycling around. generally, burning man is a nocturnal event for me and i spend a lot more time out and about at night when mdma is my drug of choice.

alasdair
 
Ive been to burning man 3 times since 2003.

I go to burning man to experience the Art, Fun, Excitement about life. Im a huge festival fan, And i try to go to as many as possible.

From my experience Burning man Is like no other. You cannot compare to anything else what this festival brings. The people you meet. The experiences you share. Especially people from all around the country.

IF YOU EVER GET THE CHANCE JUST GO!!!

dont think about the ticket price just go!

And to the drugs question, I cannot help but to indulge in the marvelous drugs burning man has to offer. Walking forever in the pitch black desert tripping. and then stumbling upon a Huge attraction of fire breathing dragons.. I want to go this year. But i have no ride.
 
If anyone needs a ride and you're situated on the West coast of the US we should really talk. I am certainly willing to give a bluelighter a ride. Although I'm not sure if we'll be able to carry another bike... small car :(
 
Fly into reno and I'll pick you up!

haha.

Does anyone here have an outfit that they wear at the burn? I'm putting together a set of lightweight robes that should protect me from the sun while staying loose enough so that I can be 'free' while tripping!
 
i hope to make it this year, and it'd be my first. I'll hopefully be coming down with seasoned burners from the pacific northwest, but i'm sure there will be other newcomers with me as well.

I'm going mainly to see if it's quite as incredible as everyone tells me. Drugs will more than likely be consumed, but it's not the purpose of my visit. I plan to just experience what it means to be at burningman
 
i have wanted to go for years. this year it falls on a time where my son has an important invite to DC for a leadership program, so we had to dish out money and the time for that so we can't go yet again. i thought this was the year.

i refuse to miss it next year. yall have fun
 
out of curosity, what does the funds for the tickets go towards? getting the organizers stoned?
 
9mmCensor said:
out of curosity, what does the funds for the tickets go towards? getting the organizers stoned?
that's a typical comment from the uninformed. that said, the cost of enabling burning man is often not apparent, even to the average participant.

one item alone - event fees to the blm - cost $710, 404 in '05 - that's about $25 per ticket right there.

other major expenditure includes: fees to other local agencies (e.g. law enforcement); toilets; art funding (through the black rock arts foundation); fire safety and supplies; fuel; insurance; rent; taxes; etc.

safely enabling a huge (> 30,000 participants) event for 10 days or so and further ensuring that, a month after it's done, there's no trace of said event at the location is a major undertaking with significant cost.

as with anything, i would encourage people to look at the value, not the cost...

alasdair
 
ask 10,000 people "what is burning man" and you'll get 10,000 different answers.

the fact that i can't do justice to my burning man experience with words alone both frustrates and delights me.

for those who are interested in an answer to that question, here's one (of many :) ):
burningman.com said:
What is Burning Man?

By Molly Steenson


Hurtling down the road to the Black Rock Desert, the colors paint themselves like a spice cabinet — sage, dust, slate gray. Maybe you're in your trusty car, the one that takes you to and from work every day. Perhaps you've got a spacious RV, your Motel 6 on wheels for the next days in the desert. Or you're driving your glittering art car, complete with poker chips and mirroring to do a disco ball proud.

The two-lane highway turns off onto a new road. You drive slowly onto the playa, the 400 square mile expanse known as the Black Rock Desert. And there you've touched the terrain of what feels like another planet. You're at the end — and the beginning — of your journey to Burning Man.

You belong here and you participate. You're not the weirdest kid in the classroom — there's always somebody there who's thought up something you never even considered. You're there to breathe art. Imagine an ice sculpture emitting glacial music — in the desert. Imagine the man, greeting you, neon and benevolence, watching over the community. You're here to build a community that needs you and relies on you.

You're here to survive. What happens to your brain and body when exposed to 107 degree heat, moisture wicking off your body and dehydrating you within minutes? You know and watch yourself. You drink water constantly and piss clear. You'll want to reconsider drinking that alcohol (or taking those other substances) you brought with you — the mind-altering experience of Burning Man is its own drug. You slather yourself in sunblock before the sun's rays turn up full blast. You bring enough food, water, and shelter because the elements of the new planet are harsh, and you will find no vending.

You're here to create. Since nobody at Burning Man is a spectator, you're here to build your own new world. You've built an egg for shelter, a suit made of light sticks, a car that looks like a shark's fin. You've covered yourself in silver, you're wearing a straw hat and a string of pearls, or maybe a skirt for the first time. You're broadcasting Radio Free Burning Man — or another radio station.

You're here to experience. Ride your bike in the expanse of nothingness with your eyes closed. Meet the theme camp — enjoy Irrational Geographic, relax at Bianca's Smut Shack and eat a grilled cheese sandwich. Find your love and understand each other as you walk slowly under a parasol. Wander under the veils of dust at night on the playa.

You're here to celebrate. On Saturday night, we'll burn the Man. As the procession starts, the circle forms, and the man ignites, you experience something personal, something new to yourself, something you've never felt before. It's an epiphany, it's primal, it's newborn. And it's completely individual.

You'll leave as you came. When you depart from Burning Man, you leave no trace. Everything you built, you dismantle. The waste you make and the objects you consume leave with you. Volunteers will stay for weeks to return the Black Rock Desert to its pristine condition.

But you'll take the world you built with you. When you drive back down the dusty roads toward home, you slowly reintegrate to the world you came from. You feel in tune with the other dust-covered vehicles that shared the same community. Over time, vivid images still dance in your brain, floating back to you when the weather changes. The Burning Man community, whether your friends, your new acquaintances, or the Burning Man project, embraces you. At the end, though your journey to and from Burning Man are finished, you embark on a different journey — forever.
alasdair
 
alasdairm said:
that's a typical comment from the uninformed. that said, the cost of enabling burning man is often not apparent, even to the average participant.

one item alone - event fees to the blm - cost $710, 404 in '05 - that's about $25 per ticket right there.

other major expenditure includes: fees to other local agencies (e.g. law enforcement); toilets; art funding (through the black rock arts foundation); fire safety and supplies; fuel; insurance; rent; taxes; etc.

safely enabling a huge (> 30,000 participants) event for 10 days or so and further ensuring that, a month after it's done, there's no trace of said event at the location is a major undertaking with significant cost.

as with anything, i would encourage people to look at the value, not the cost...

alasdair
A QUESTION of the uninformed.

thanks for the info, i didn't realize it was so organized and legit. I though people just showed up in the desert and burnt shit.
 
delta_9 said:
man you guys are lucky I've been wanting to go so bad this year but I lost my fucking job.
dude if its losts, its probably the last place you left it. did you try looking at the office for it?
 
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