How about we bring some extra slats of wood, some spray paint, a stencil, and a sign that reads, "for your thefting pleasure, extra street signs have been provided below". Consider it a playa gift.
-Gadg
Not sure about details of the pre-1996 layout, other than that the Man was at the center. The 1996 layout featured four "quadrants" -- Black northward, Red westward, Yellow southward, and White eastward toward the Man -- radiating out from Center Camp. There were linear roads north, west, and south, with the quadrants roughly defined as the camping areas along these lanes; eastward, the "keyway" area fanned out so as to provide a more open vista framing out the Man, with the low sandy area of the Quinn River outwash and the mountains around Sulphur in the distance. "Rave Camp" was two miles north. Most of the major theme camps and installations were along the Center Camp circle, the "ring road" about 200 feet out from the Center Camp circle, and the sides of the keyway, with a few around the outer perimeter.theCryptofishist wrote:My understanding. No streets, no city planning at all. people just camped whereever and drove between camps on art cars. All ended never to return when a man on a motorcycle drove over someone in his very own tent. Streets are a responce to that first festival death. At that time (96) participents numbered in the 100s not the 10s of 1000s. Big difference.
Better make it a notepad with tear-off sheets, all printed with a "gift". A few hundred sheets per sign should do it! (could even print a message on the back explaining how foul they are for stealing the street signs)Gadget wrote:How about we bring some extra slats of wood, some spray paint, a stencil, and a sign that reads, "for your thefting pleasure, extra street signs have been provided below". Consider it a playa gift.-Gadg
Oh JesusFuck. Not that the sonofabitch that would do such a thing should'nt be lined up against a wall and shot - but, yeah, the term "radical self-reliance" could be translated into kiddie-speak as "don't take candy from strangers."universalspirit wrote:screw the person that said for us to have self reliance in this situation. i was drugged by someone else and needed those damn signs!
The thing I was most worried about as a BM virgin was getting lost and not being able to find my tent. I'm directionally challenged in the default world and always need maps to find my way around strange places. I didn't know the street signs were going to disappear after the burn. It wasn't fun for me... it was scary, but not debilitatingly so, I dealt with it. At the time I thought it was very inconsiderate of people to steal the signs. I was thankful to the people who replaced the signs with homemade versions.mars wrote:Hmmm...the PROBLEM of vanishing street signs...the PROBLEM...I didn't know it was a problem--I thought it was FUN--.
You didn't use the Black Rock City map handed out at Greeters?XYL wrote:....I'm directionally challenged in the default world and always need maps to find my way around strange places. I didn't know the street signs were going to disappear after the burn. It wasn't fun for me...
There's some garbled info in this quote. The first "official" death was a man riding a motorcycle (Michael Furey). Early Monday morning of that same year, two people were seriously injured when a man drove a car through their tent--both lived, and the driver was arrested.All ended never to return when a man on a motorcycle drove over someone in his very own tent. Streets are a responce to that first festival death. At that time (96) participents numbered in the 100s not the 10s of 1000s.
How's this for an idea, somebody should just hand write the street names onto the wood polls that signs are on. DWP could do it when the put the permanent signs up. It's a simple solution.Sensei wrote:I had the same notion. A little cardboard, a Sharpie and a killer stapler and you're in business. Thousands would thank you.Ivy wrote:I actually thought about making replacement signs and putting them up after the originals had been taken as a possible personal project next year.
Nobody has to do anything, however because they are already there putting up the permanent signs it would be the most efficient resolution of the issue. We're talking adding 30 seconds to a minute to the process of putting the permanent placards onto the wooden street post. It might also cost DPW $20 extra in permanent markers.Ivy wrote:If it's so simple, why does DPW have to do it?How's this for an idea, somebody should just hand write the street names onto the wood polls that signs are on. DWP could do it when the put the permanent signs up. It's a simple solution.
I'd imagine one of you "burners" would still simply break off the taped-on 2x2s as souvenirs or stove fuel, leaving the metal post for some near-sighted speeding bicyclist to slam into. Again... how about carrying a theme camp map around?MoisturePup wrote:How's this for an idea, somebody should just hand write the street names onto the wood polls that signs are on. DWP could do it when the put the permanent signs up. It's a simple solution.