some seeing eye wrote:
(Somebody should make a BM planning and prep video)

some seeing eye wrote:
(Somebody should make a BM planning and prep video)

Do you know something I don't? Unless ere are plans to build some new roads, or relocate the event, I can't picture the event permit allowing for much more, if any, growth.Eric wrote:...as we get bigger and better known in general terms...
So I guess that makes you a plug and pay burner by someone's definition then, wouldn't it?graidawg wrote:As a foreign burner, i asked exactly those questions - coming from abroad I didn't want to have to find Everything, in a day, in a strange town, in shops i didn't know the name of or where they are.
when I was nominated for BDC&WB i asked Doc pyro what was provided, in terms of shelter, food, etc etc etc. At that point I had not heard of "plug n play" I simply wanted to know if i could avoid the stress of trying to find a tent (you know american tents are radically different from european tents right?) that would stand up to playa conditions. Then make shade for it. get food, water, alcohol and everything else needed for a week camping, let alone in desert (no deserts I am aware of in europe)
so having someone get that stuff for me would make it a hell of a lot easier - plus i wouldn't have to work out how to get rid of it. guess who offered to help me out on that score?
as it turned out my own personal nurse offered me a place and a ride etc, so all i have ever had to do is get booze
NOTE: This comment isn't directed at Captain Goddammit, he just summarized the thread the most suscintly.Captain Goddammit wrote:
Maybe if you can't provide for yourself in a remote desert, this isn't the vacation for you.
pretty much JK. i do other stuff and stuff within the camp, but most PnP camps require some sort of participation. In fact my first year someone else paid my camp dues so it was more just plug and play.jkisha wrote:So I guess that makes you a plug and pay burner by someone's definition then, wouldn't it?graidawg wrote:As a foreign burner, i asked exactly those questions - coming from abroad I didn't want to have to find Everything, in a day, in a strange town, in shops i didn't know the name of or where they are.
when I was nominated for BDC&WB i asked Doc pyro what was provided, in terms of shelter, food, etc etc etc. At that point I had not heard of "plug n play" I simply wanted to know if i could avoid the stress of trying to find a tent (you know american tents are radically different from european tents right?) that would stand up to playa conditions. Then make shade for it. get food, water, alcohol and everything else needed for a week camping, let alone in desert (no deserts I am aware of in europe)
so having someone get that stuff for me would make it a hell of a lot easier - plus i wouldn't have to work out how to get rid of it. guess who offered to help me out on that score?
as it turned out my own personal nurse offered me a place and a ride etc, so all i have ever had to do is get booze
Jealousy? HA! Don't read too far into people you only know online.Frankly, the only reason I can see to objecting to the later is jealousy wrapped in a burnier than though attitude.
Sig-worthy.. . . 35 days til we leave this hell hole for a much NICER hell hole . . .
More fools they. I'd love to be in your camp.AntiM wrote:I often take in overseas virgins, as their travel can be arduous. However, when I describe our tiny camp, and we barely make the minimum number of warm bodies... most of them look elsewhere. I've only had a couple inquiries. Last one was a couple French ladies who sounded quite interesting, but they have not gotten back to me. I think we're too small and offer little more than shade, a tent, use of a dry kitchen, and no showers.
It's true. No one can fill my shoes.CornMan wrote:Who's going to fill our shoes when the people here now won't even wear them?lemur wrote:
brainwashing is surely the best way to put it.. but im not sure if its the prospective campers that are the brainwashed ones.
its you!
you bought the whole burning man 'core values' stuff hook line and sinker!
those 10 principles are only there as a way to advertise the whole thing and package it up and ship it out across the world.. ..do they really represent what this thing is to everyone? not really..
they arent rules.
must so much of this shit always end up in "burning man means this.. and this is the core meaning of burning man.. and if you arent doing this then you shouldnt be there"
one might be proud of fending forthemselves out there but theres no real value in it..
not everyone goes to this event to play home maker and relive the white settling of the west.
some people go to enjoy the stuff that doesnt happen in camp!
And many tautologies are redundant.trilobyte wrote:and many of the uninitiated don't know the first thing about it.
Practical, gentle Savannah scores again...Savannah wrote:What if BB&B had something like this on the splash page under their title. A kickass bar camp based out of the Midwest serving the best Bloody Marys in town for the Nth year. No dues, modest frills--experienced campers and stealth virgins welcome. Or whatever is better. Anything that emphasizes 1) your mission as a camp, & 2) an anti-pampering mindset. Then just tighten up the info in the links . . .
* Be explicit about the important items you do provide: Placement, purpose, dinner.
* Fill in some gaps. Is there a big group shade? Are there Showers? A Burn Barrel?
* Be explicit about the major items you do not provide under any circumstances: tents, bikes, water, group trash/recycling, transportation from Reno.
Nix grey areas. If there is a communal shower structure but campers need to provide their own shower bag (or haul their water afterward) it has to be said. If 1 bottle of vodka + 1 bottle of mixer is sufficient as their contribution, but more is fantastic, list it. If there are to be future monetary donations that are not genuinely optional but simply yet to be determined, the approximate amount and what it's going to be used for may prevent unpleasant surprises.
Just happens that there has been a lot of back story regarding some of these people I only know online. None of it anything I would want in my resume.TomServo wrote:Jealousy? HA! Don't read too far into people you only know online.Frankly, the only reason I can see to objecting to the later is jealousy wrapped in a burnier than though attitude.
Oh poo poooh! how about in your portfolio?jkisha wrote:Just happens that there has been a lot of back story regarding some of these people I only know online. None of it anything I would want in my resume.TomServo wrote:Jealousy? HA! Don't read too far into people you only know online.Frankly, the only reason I can see to objecting to the later is jealousy wrapped in a burnier than though attitude.
Full quote:jkisha wrote:Do you know something I don't? Unless ere are plans to build some new roads, or relocate the event, I can't picture the event permit allowing for much more, if any, growth.Eric wrote:...as we get bigger and better known in general terms...
I may not have been clear enough, but by "bigger and better known" I was speaking about the reach of people knowing about Burning Man, not necessarily the size of the actual event (I thought that was clarified in the next part of the sentence, but through the joys of language what can be clear to me can be mud to the next person - just ask my boyfriend...). I don't think that it's the fault of plug 'n play camps, I think that we're just presented as a really cool party-thing for the bucket list, and the specifics about it being a camping trip in hell is left out.Eric wrote:I don't think it's at epic proportions yet, but as we get bigger and better known in general terms, there seems to be less knowledge about the specifics of what Burning Man is, and what it involves. I don't just see that as a problem of the plug 'n play camps, I see that as a problem with the media in general. Lord knows the Org tries to make it clear enough.
Nice! My kind of playground!Simon of the Playa wrote:i'll give you hell...
![]()
Y'know, I can get behind this statement for the most part. I think some basic guidelines (or... principles) are good, but not if they become The Law. The event is changing, there is no way to avoid it. As it becomes more known, change will happen - the choice is to either work to help guide the change, or to be like the old person screaming "get off my lawn".lemur wrote:some people still cling on to 1950s america too... they seem pretty damned out of touch today, talking about how it was, about their sanctity and their culture and their ethos.. and other junk.
Eric wrote:Y'know, I can get behind this statement for the most part. I think some basic guidelines (or... principles) are good, but not if they become The Law. The event is changing, there is no way to avoid it. As it becomes more known, change will happen - the choice is to either work to help guide the change, or to be like the old person screaming "get off my lawn".lemur wrote:some people still cling on to 1950s america too... they seem pretty damned out of touch today, talking about how it was, about their sanctity and their culture and their ethos.. and other junk.
Things to think about, for me as much as anybody else...
Roberto Dobbisano wrote:"SCHNEERSON!"