Mellowest Year Ever
- mdmf007
- Moderator
- Posts: 5340
- Joined: Wed Mar 08, 2006 7:32 pm
- Burning Since: 1996
- Camp Name: ESD
- Location: my computer
Mellowest Year Ever
Mellowest year ever -
semes to be the asiest going year in a long time. Temple burn was reverant and peaceful.
semes to be the asiest going year in a long time. Temple burn was reverant and peaceful.
I don't know about mellow but it was certainly different. The larger center ring seemed way too big IMHO. I mean, it was nearly a mile from 9 plaza to 3 plaza. I really hope we go back to the smaller center ring next year.
The art seemed very sparse as well. I assumed that since the center ring was bigger that more art would be placed in that area; it was not the case. Don't get me wrong, there were some fantastic pieces out there but compared to previous years, it seemed lacking.
Was it the theme? Are we reaching the bitter end? Have the candy kids finally taken over and forgone the whole art thing for rave camps?
The art seemed very sparse as well. I assumed that since the center ring was bigger that more art would be placed in that area; it was not the case. Don't get me wrong, there were some fantastic pieces out there but compared to previous years, it seemed lacking.
Was it the theme? Are we reaching the bitter end? Have the candy kids finally taken over and forgone the whole art thing for rave camps?
Camp FuckIt + MT - 7:15 & D (maybe)
- poisenloaf
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Tue May 27, 2008 5:32 pm
- Location: San Diego, CA
This was my first year so I cannot really compare but a few people in my camp who have been several burns commented that the art was sparse as well. Plenty of great sound camps though and we danced most nights away with Robot Heart, the rubber duck, Opulent, Green Gorilla, etc. I don't know about energy levels but by Wednesday night it seemed to really pick up and by Friday it was insane on the Esplanade..too crowded IMO. The burn for me was perfect (glad the all day whiteout finally ended too)..very emotional for me to spend with all of my remaining friends that had not left early.
- EB
- Posts: 492
- Joined: Wed Jul 14, 2004 3:36 pm
- Burning Since: 2000
- Camp Name: Camp Obelix (2:45 & A)
- Contact:
The all-day windstorm on Monday seemed to take a lot of starch out of the city. We were next to a couple and their parents who simply threw up their hands and bailed.
The weather turned beautiful for the next four days and the energy seemed to come back but then the nightly playa "spinning class" was another ball buster. So it goes. What was interesting was how the choppy playa forced bikes, art cars and peds alike to take certain "highways" across the playa, creating traffic tie-ups and detours.
It was like being back in LA!
The weather turned beautiful for the next four days and the energy seemed to come back but then the nightly playa "spinning class" was another ball buster. So it goes. What was interesting was how the choppy playa forced bikes, art cars and peds alike to take certain "highways" across the playa, creating traffic tie-ups and detours.
It was like being back in LA!
Irony. You're soaking in it.
- poisenloaf
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Tue May 27, 2008 5:32 pm
- Location: San Diego, CA
Yeah, so my first year right? and Monday was an all-day whiteout. I remember thinking to myself if this is what it is like every day, I'm not coming back no matter how cool it is. but then the sun goes down forcing the wind to calm and things improve dramatically.. weather was perfect Tue-Fri with another whiteout on Saturday.. Boy, those really sap your will to live and I was even in an air conditioned RV on those days. We just drank and played board games, socialized with campmates, etc to pass the time.
also bikes were practically useless.. if it was not the dunes, it was the ruts that started forming on most of the roads towards the latter half of the week. I just prefered walking everywhere even though it took longer.
also bikes were practically useless.. if it was not the dunes, it was the ruts that started forming on most of the roads towards the latter half of the week. I just prefered walking everywhere even though it took longer.
Yeah I totally agree that the early dust storms took some of the energy out of the city. Those things do indeed sap you of all you've got.EB wrote:The all-day windstorm on Monday seemed to take a lot of starch out of the city. We were next to a couple and their parents who simply threw up their hands and bailed.
The weather turned beautiful for the next four days and the energy seemed to come back but then the nightly playa "spinning class" was another ball buster. So it goes. What was interesting was how the choppy playa forced bikes, art cars and peds alike to take certain "highways" across the playa, creating traffic tie-ups and detours.
It was like being back in LA!
I noticed those highways too. It was actually kind of funny to watch everyone try to ride in the same truck track.
Camp FuckIt + MT - 7:15 & D (maybe)
- chiefdanfox
- Posts: 786
- Joined: Sun Mar 19, 2006 11:14 pm
- Burning Since: 1986
- Location: Bodega Bay, CA
I danced like a maniac at the Deep End with this group of beautiful dusty folks (tell that beautiful girl that she had a good vibe too!), for hours, drank hot red wine from a giant man in a sarong, and never felt more alive. It was like we were all from Pompeii, dancing as Vesuvius buried us into the geologic record.poisenloaf wrote: another whiteout on Saturday.. Boy, those really sap your will to live and I was even in an air conditioned RV on those days.
- unjonharley
- Posts: 10434
- Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2003 11:05 am
- Burning Since: 2001
- Camp Name: Elliot's naked bycycel repair
- Location: Salem Or.
skibear wrote:Perhaps DPW needs to think up a way to shovel/vacuum
up dust ridges on the main streets. A Zamboni machine for dust!
Then haul it downwind in dump trucks.
In 07 the 9:00 radial had large dust swales.
change shovel/vacuum to large array of leaf blowers
change downwind to upwind
add large swales to every intersection and a 3 foot high dune surrounding the man
This account has been closed as demanded by Wedeliver.
- ZaphodBurner
- Posts: 1339
- Joined: Fri Jun 17, 2005 3:05 pm
- Burning Since: 2004
- Camp Name: The Green Hour 2012 - 9:00 & D
- Location: Portland, OR
- Contact:
Yep. For me, the dust brings back a little of the ruggedness and toughness that is experienced earlier in the week, when everybody has been busting ass and building things. When it's too easy, the yahoos are out standing around taking pictures and getting in the way of everything.chiefdanfox wrote: I danced like a maniac at the Deep End with this group of beautiful dusty folks (tell that beautiful girl that she had a good vibe too!), for hours, drank hot red wine from a giant man in a sarong, and never felt more alive. It was like we were all from Pompeii, dancing as Vesuvius buried us into the geologic record.
The art was sparse this year, definitely, especially during the day. I kept thinking "this is it, the city has gotten too big." But even if it had been a smaller city, the dust drifts and the weather would have dampened things. I don't blame anybody in Black Rock; the playa conditions were tough. I only saw two or three real smacktards.
Other than a couple of wildly-annoying newbies (one guy interrupting a couples seminar at the Orgasmateria asking to take a picture got a pretty brutal response), it seemed like a really peaceful and asshat-free year. Maybe in that way the dust worked to our advantage.
-c
"The Red Baron is smart.. He never spends the whole night dancing and drinking root beer.. "-The WWI Flying Ace