Dusty this year?
This year I am modifying my dome coverings so that instead of a completely sealed lower level (it's three stacked domes), the lower and largest dome will be solidly-tarped around the bottom five feet or so, and mesh-tarped above. Then about a third of the interior space, like a big slice o' pie, will be a completely enclosed "dust shelter" space for sleeping and food prep. I'll probably bring enough tarps to cover up the entire lower dome if it gets particularly dusty and blustery, but it's hard to test a playa-resistant system here in Michigan! Maybe I can take a trip down to the TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority) test facility and borrow their simulated Lunar surface......
The upper sections will be alternating panels of mesh and silver tarp, cut to fit....I've found that little, separate panels will enable particularly strong blasts of wind to blow around and through the structure without wrenching off the tarps or knocking the structure over!
The upper sections will be alternating panels of mesh and silver tarp, cut to fit....I've found that little, separate panels will enable particularly strong blasts of wind to blow around and through the structure without wrenching off the tarps or knocking the structure over!
Howdy From Kalamazoo
Recipe for playa dust cakes.
XS's playa-cake recipe:
Into a standard mixing bowl:
add heaping handfuls of playa dust
several ounces of bodily fluid of your choice (enough to moisten mixture)
two eggs (egg whites if your cholesterol conscious)
if no eggs are available you can subsitute sunscreen, prefereably 45 SPF or higher
mix all ingredients together until you get an oatmeal like consistency
now form the dough into biscuits and set on the hood of your car to bake until golden brown.
Serve with grey water tea as a refreshing afternoon pick-me-up.
You can thin out the mixture to make pancakes for breaky as well.
Yummm!
Into a standard mixing bowl:
add heaping handfuls of playa dust
several ounces of bodily fluid of your choice (enough to moisten mixture)
two eggs (egg whites if your cholesterol conscious)
if no eggs are available you can subsitute sunscreen, prefereably 45 SPF or higher
mix all ingredients together until you get an oatmeal like consistency
now form the dough into biscuits and set on the hood of your car to bake until golden brown.
Serve with grey water tea as a refreshing afternoon pick-me-up.
You can thin out the mixture to make pancakes for breaky as well.
Yummm!
Too much is never enough.
Recipe for playa dust cakes.
XS's playa-cake recipe:
Into a standard mixing bowl:
add heaping handfuls of playa dust
several ounces of bodily fluid of your choice (enough to moisten mixture)
two eggs (egg whites if your cholesterol conscious)
if no eggs are available you can subsitute sunscreen, prefereably 45 SPF or higher
mix all ingredients together until you get an oatmeal like consistency
now form the dough into biscuits and set on the hood of your car to bake until golden brown.
Serve with grey water tea as a refreshing afternoon pick-me-up.
You can thin out the mixture to make pancakes for breaky as well.
Yummm!
Into a standard mixing bowl:
add heaping handfuls of playa dust
several ounces of bodily fluid of your choice (enough to moisten mixture)
two eggs (egg whites if your cholesterol conscious)
if no eggs are available you can subsitute sunscreen, prefereably 45 SPF or higher
mix all ingredients together until you get an oatmeal like consistency
now form the dough into biscuits and set on the hood of your car to bake until golden brown.
Serve with grey water tea as a refreshing afternoon pick-me-up.
You can thin out the mixture to make pancakes for breaky as well.
Yummm!
Too much is never enough.
Just got back from the playa ...
(I'm probably the 'rocket person' Maya's original post came from - friends had reported that the playa hadn't been completely covered with water this year and I had suggested that that might mean that that could mean a fluffier surface - due to frost expansion while the surface was exposed but wet as we've seen in past years)
I just got back from a long weekend on the playa flying rockets (we got shut down when the FAA pulled our waiver because Bush was campaigning in Reno on Friday) - the area where we hold the burn is nice and hard there's an area north of it which is very soft and fluffy (have to get down into 3rd to drive on it) - it was like this last year but not IMHO quite as soft. Wind storms from the north will probably be brutal ...
Great news is that most of the really big playa serpents north of BM that were squished by DPW last year (thanks guys!) seem to have not come back nearly as badly as last year (I'm talking about those wavy dunes that are caused by the dust raised by BM and appearwhich downwind as hard bumps that can be dangerous to drive into at speed, esp. at night - they also appear downwind of the various 'roads' that form on the playa - they look like little sea-serpents late in the day when the sun is low and they cast shadows.)
I just got back from a long weekend on the playa flying rockets (we got shut down when the FAA pulled our waiver because Bush was campaigning in Reno on Friday) - the area where we hold the burn is nice and hard there's an area north of it which is very soft and fluffy (have to get down into 3rd to drive on it) - it was like this last year but not IMHO quite as soft. Wind storms from the north will probably be brutal ...
Great news is that most of the really big playa serpents north of BM that were squished by DPW last year (thanks guys!) seem to have not come back nearly as badly as last year (I'm talking about those wavy dunes that are caused by the dust raised by BM and appearwhich downwind as hard bumps that can be dangerous to drive into at speed, esp. at night - they also appear downwind of the various 'roads' that form on the playa - they look like little sea-serpents late in the day when the sun is low and they cast shadows.)
A way to wash away dust?
While I've never been to BM, a Burner passed along the following tip to me:
***
When you pack for burning man, pick yourself up some white vinegar. When you get to the playa, you will find beaucoup white playa dust, which is alkaline in nature. Just mix the white vinegar with water, or use it full strength, and it will cut the playa dust off of anything, I'm talking human bodies, hair, or camping gear. I found out about it and when I got home I used it to clean my entire tent. The deal is that water just makes playa dust playa mud, and then you have to get it off anyway.
***
Like I said, I've never been to BM so I don't know if this works. But I am bringing several bottles of white vinegar just in case . . .
***
When you pack for burning man, pick yourself up some white vinegar. When you get to the playa, you will find beaucoup white playa dust, which is alkaline in nature. Just mix the white vinegar with water, or use it full strength, and it will cut the playa dust off of anything, I'm talking human bodies, hair, or camping gear. I found out about it and when I got home I used it to clean my entire tent. The deal is that water just makes playa dust playa mud, and then you have to get it off anyway.
***
Like I said, I've never been to BM so I don't know if this works. But I am bringing several bottles of white vinegar just in case . . .
- Apollonaris Zeus
- Posts: 3716
- Joined: Sun Sep 14, 2003 11:17 am
Re: A way to wash away dust?
Buy it by the gallon!Rendrag wrote:While I've never been to BM, a Burner passed along the following tip to me:
***
When you pack for burning man, pick yourself up some white vinegar. When you get to the playa, you will find beaucoup white playa dust, which is alkaline in nature. Just mix the white vinegar with water, or use it full strength, and it will cut the playa dust off of anything, I'm talking human bodies, hair, or camping gear. I found out about it and when I got home I used it to clean my entire tent. The deal is that water just makes playa dust playa mud, and then you have to get it off anyway.
***
Like I said, I've never been to BM so I don't know if this works. But I am bringing several bottles of white vinegar just in case . . .
for feet and hands especially!
Weather Report predicts it will be dusty again this year!
A II Z
- naga brain
- Posts: 70
- Joined: Tue Sep 02, 2003 9:23 am
- Burning Since: 2003
- Camp Name: The Perpetual Dome Builders
- Location: The Inner Reaches...of your Wankle Rotary Engine?
- Contact:
Anything that is mildly acidic should work. Lemons definitely smell better than vinegar.I seem to recall reading somewhere that lemon juice also works. Is that correct? Does one work better than the other? (I like the smell of lemons better than vinegar....)
It's about beer O'clock guys....where's my riot?
dust and such
I have been very blessed the past 2 years with amazing hard packed playa, I have not experienced the soft fluffy playa.
Do you think it would work to build a small "playa plow" for the front of my bike? have it hover about 2 inches above the playa and push large dunes away...
or is this a dumb idea?
Do you think it would work to build a small "playa plow" for the front of my bike? have it hover about 2 inches above the playa and push large dunes away...
or is this a dumb idea?
Buddha wasn't a Christian, but Jesus would have made a good Buddhist
Shaman
Shaman
I am bringing some Kerasal as well (think that is how it spelled). A water based foot product that I have used now for 2 weeks and my feet are so soft and smooth now I plan to keep them that way.
This is my first year - but I suggest you start taking care of your feet now so they do well through a dry and dusty playa.
This is my first year - but I suggest you start taking care of your feet now so they do well through a dry and dusty playa.
Juicy Fruit Jim
The Information Fairy
Fairyland - by Playa Fairies
San Francisco, CA
www.playafairies.com
www.ohranje.com
2004 First Burn
The Information Fairy
Fairyland - by Playa Fairies
San Francisco, CA
www.playafairies.com
www.ohranje.com
2004 First Burn
Fat tires
Thanks for the advice on the playa plow stuart...looked good on paper.
So what qualifies as "Fat Tires?" My bike is a recumbent that runs tires about 1 1/2 inches wide with a mild tread (not knobby)
Just trying to see if I need a second set oof tires...would suck to be bikeless in case of sand dunes or mud.
So what qualifies as "Fat Tires?" My bike is a recumbent that runs tires about 1 1/2 inches wide with a mild tread (not knobby)
Just trying to see if I need a second set oof tires...would suck to be bikeless in case of sand dunes or mud.
Buddha wasn't a Christian, but Jesus would have made a good Buddhist
Shaman
Shaman
Re: Fat tires
Honestly you are going to be "bikeless" in playa-mud anyway ... just imagine biking through extra sticky porridge ... if it rains best is to go bare foot or not at all - just lay up somewhere comfortable and wait for the sun to come out - unless it rains for a day the surface will dry up within a couple of hours of most rain squallstheshaman wrote:Just trying to see if I need a second set oof tires...would suck to be bikeless in case of sand dunes or mud.
Let a wee bit of air out for added traction, the wider the better.
I've been through 2 h****y playa cruisers in the two years I've gone. The first, after hanging for 11 month and 2 weeks had a catastrophic tire burst when I tried to inflate the tires It bent the rim. It was cheaper to get a new bike! Then on the last day, the second bike was crushed under a merciless SUV.
This year I'm thinking bikeless is the way to go. I may not consume as much art, but I won't have a chapped butt either.
I've been through 2 h****y playa cruisers in the two years I've gone. The first, after hanging for 11 month and 2 weeks had a catastrophic tire burst when I tried to inflate the tires It bent the rim. It was cheaper to get a new bike! Then on the last day, the second bike was crushed under a merciless SUV.
This year I'm thinking bikeless is the way to go. I may not consume as much art, but I won't have a chapped butt either.
Fight for the fifth freedom!
Just a quick question, if there is a higher amount of dust will this be harder on people with asthma and weak lungs? I didnt use a dust mask at all last year, should i bring extra this year also?
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Tears 2003, 2004
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The Ties That Bind Me Hold My Soul
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Tears 2003, 2004
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The Ties That Bind Me Hold My Soul
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- Tiahaar
- Posts: 1142
- Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2003 9:13 pm
- Burning Since: 2003
- Camp Name: Starship Palomino
- Location: Mojave Desert, CA (also Forever via Pandora)
The nightly weather shows scattered thundershowers over northwestern Nevada these days, is the playa surface still able to harden up with showers/drying cycles hopefully? Last year I remember being stopped in traffic waiting for an accident to clear not far from BRC and walking out off the roadside to take pictures and sinking several inches into the powdery dirt with each step...and thinking wow what have I got into going camping on this stuff?? Fortunately the playa was really nice and hard-solid and now I'm spoiled.
Burning Man 2003-25; Desert Carillon, HypnoHorse, Ulaume's Chimes, Iron Native, Black Rock Solar, Portal Collective, Center Camp Café Stage and Sound Tech, 747 Project
Starship Palomino
Starship Palomino
small rain squalls passing over the playa in summer are quite common ... during the day the surface dries out really quickly (an hour or so - faster if there's wind) ...Tiahaar wrote:The nightly weather shows scattered thundershowers over northwestern Nevada these days, is the playa surface still able to harden up with showers/drying cycles hopefully? Last year I remember being stopped in traffic waiting for an accident to clear not far from BRC and walking out off the roadside to take pictures and sinking several inches into the powdery dirt with each step...and thinking wow what have I got into going camping on this stuff?? Fortunately the playa was really nice and hard-solid and now I'm spoiled.
Normally the playa surface is softer at the edges (it's easier to get a vehicle stuck there) - it's because they get a lot more run off from the hills around
- Tancorix
- Posts: 956
- Joined: Sun Dec 21, 2003 6:56 pm
- Location: Not here, not there. I'm somewhere though.
This is second hand info that was sent out by Lohr on the St. Louis Burning Arch announce list, I thought it might be of interest here:
"Having just returned I'll chime in on this one.
>
> I hit 4th of JuPlaya site which was a bit on the soft/ crumbly side -
> it is close to the event site - near the dunes out by Frog Pond.
> Conditions not as bad as 6 inches of dust but not perfect either. We
> had a few little dusty moments - I did have a rough time with my tent
> stakes when setting up in the wind.
>
> Playa in general was soft and crumbly - up near black rock was deeper
> and squishier than event site area.
>
> Make sure to bring yer goggles this year."
"Having just returned I'll chime in on this one.
>
> I hit 4th of JuPlaya site which was a bit on the soft/ crumbly side -
> it is close to the event site - near the dunes out by Frog Pond.
> Conditions not as bad as 6 inches of dust but not perfect either. We
> had a few little dusty moments - I did have a rough time with my tent
> stakes when setting up in the wind.
>
> Playa in general was soft and crumbly - up near black rock was deeper
> and squishier than event site area.
>
> Make sure to bring yer goggles this year."
- diane o'thirst
- Posts: 2092
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Tears — I'd bring serious dust maskage in any case, just as basic equipment. This year, I'm getting a heavy-duty one from the surplus store and damn the complainers!
(Actually I might decorate it with a wolf muzzle...)
Elvinagre7: No oil on the Playa, but bring some anyway. And put it on yourself. Olive oil, coconut oil, definitely orange oil (cuts alkali), palm oil. Just hit an Indian grocery store and buy a bunch of palm and coconut oil.
After slathering on the oil, scrape it off. Nothing fancy, a horse sweat scraper or one of those plastic bowl scrapers from the kitchen specialty store should be plenty. The oil emulsifies the gunk and grime and just scrapes right off.
Nice lady whose Mom is coming out (welcome!
) for the Burn — tell her it's going to be dusty as hell and that means "nasty." If she wants to back out, no harm no foul, no blames. If she still wants to come, all respect
We had a screen house in '01 and covered it with Indian bedspreads. They faded, of course, but cleaned up nicely. I had the Costco canopy as a shade shelter that year, tipped over on its shoulder and broadside to windward. Got unspeakably dusty in there and the canopy's supposed to be the best short of woodframed structure. Screenhouse will get dusty. Just deal with it and at least this year we have some fore-warning.
Nice thing to do...take a couple hours in the afternoon, hide in the shade, wash with the cooler ice water, take care of the skin.
Lemon juice vs. vinegar — personal aroma preference. If you like smelling like PAAS Easter egg dye, go with the latter and knock yourself out. Myself, I just scored a 10 oz. bottle of lime juice for $1.
You put de lime in de coconut sladda 'em togedda/Put de lime in de coconut den you feel beddah...Dok-tah! Id dere nuttin' I can take/I said DOK-TAH! To relieve dis Playa-ache...
Elvinagre7: No oil on the Playa, but bring some anyway. And put it on yourself. Olive oil, coconut oil, definitely orange oil (cuts alkali), palm oil. Just hit an Indian grocery store and buy a bunch of palm and coconut oil.
After slathering on the oil, scrape it off. Nothing fancy, a horse sweat scraper or one of those plastic bowl scrapers from the kitchen specialty store should be plenty. The oil emulsifies the gunk and grime and just scrapes right off.
Nice lady whose Mom is coming out (welcome!
Nice thing to do...take a couple hours in the afternoon, hide in the shade, wash with the cooler ice water, take care of the skin.
Lemon juice vs. vinegar — personal aroma preference. If you like smelling like PAAS Easter egg dye, go with the latter and knock yourself out. Myself, I just scored a 10 oz. bottle of lime juice for $1.
You put de lime in de coconut sladda 'em togedda/Put de lime in de coconut den you feel beddah...Dok-tah! Id dere nuttin' I can take/I said DOK-TAH! To relieve dis Playa-ache...
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- Bob
- Posts: 6747
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Ahem.
It's dusty, okay?
It's dusty, okay?
Amazing desert structures & stuff: http://sites.google.com/site/potatotrap/
"Let us say I suggest you may be human." -- Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
"Let us say I suggest you may be human." -- Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
Just returned from the playa 1.5 hours ago (Sunday, 11 July)
Weather was great 85-90 degrees.
Partly cloudy with large lenticular clouds (rare for the playa) punctuated with several higher sirrostratus clouds and AMAZING sunsets.
Light winds out of the SW with gusts of 35 mph.
Little to no vehicular traffic (rare for a summer weekend).
Mayfield is still sober.
Dust is gonna CHOKE your ASS folks. Be prepared.
Over.
Weather was great 85-90 degrees.
Partly cloudy with large lenticular clouds (rare for the playa) punctuated with several higher sirrostratus clouds and AMAZING sunsets.
Light winds out of the SW with gusts of 35 mph.
Little to no vehicular traffic (rare for a summer weekend).
Mayfield is still sober.
Dust is gonna CHOKE your ASS folks. Be prepared.
Over.