More than 70,000 people still trapped at Burning Man festival
People walk off the playa out near the Burning Man site on the Black Rock Desert in northern Nevada on Sunday. | Jason Bean/RGJ/USA TODAY/Reuters
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Roads out of the Burning
Man festival may reopen Monday for the tens of thousands of people
trapped for a third day in the Nevada desert after heavy rains covered the
grounds with ankle-deep mud too thick to drive on and forced organizers to
impose shelter-in-place orders.
Roads leading in and out of the Black Rock Desert event were closed
Saturday, and attendees were told to conserve food, water and fuel after the
deluge made it “virtually impossible” for vehicles to drive on the surface,
authorities said.
The weeklong festival is
scheduled to end Monday, but it’s unclear exactly when attendees will be
allowed to drive out of the area. Organizers were expected to announce road reopening plans
Monday morning.
“Despite afternoon drizzle, the conditions are improving on the playa,”
Burning Man organizers said Sunday night. “The roads in Black Rock City remain
too wet and muddy to officially open them for Exodus on Sunday 9/3.”
Clear skies were expected to return Monday and Burning Man organizers
said they “expect to start Exodus on Monday morning 9/4 as long as the
conditions improve.”
Some people have left the site by trudging out on foot through the thick
mud, but “most of the RVs are stuck in place,” Pershing County Sheriff’s Office
Sgt. Nathan Carmichael told CNN on Sunday.
“Each step felt like we were walking with two big cinder blocks on our
feet,” said Amar Singh Duggal, who managed to leave the festival with his
friends after hiking about 2 miles in the mud.
Among those who hiked miles
through the mud out of the festival was DJ Diplo, who then had to
hitchhike on the back of a pickup truck with comedian Chris Rock, the DJ said
on Instagram.
About 72,000 people remain on site, according to a Sunday night update
from Burning Man organizers.
The burning of the man – the huge totem set on fire at the festival’s
culmination – will now happen on Monday instead of Sunday night because of the
poor weather, organizers said Sunday evening.
The remote area in northwest Nevada was hit with two to three months’
worth of rain – up to 0.8 inches – in just 24 hours between Friday and Saturday
morning.
The heavy rainfall fell on dry desert grounds, whipping up clay-like mud
that some festivalgoers say is so thick they’ve had to tie bags around their
feet to walk through it.
A death at the
festival just ahead of the weekend was “unrelated to the weather,” Burning
Man organizers said Sunday night. Emergency personnel responded to a call for
service regarding a 40-year-old man Friday but could not resuscitate him,
organizers said, without providing further details.
The Pershing County Sheriff’s Office earlier said it is investigating the
death.
Resources have been brought in from
around northern Nevada to help people with medical needs on the event grounds,
the sheriff’s office said.
Organizers also got more four-wheel-drive
vehicles and all-terrain tires to help transport people with medical
and other urgent needs.
Black Rock City, a temporary
metropolis erected annually for the festival, comes complete with emergency,
safety and sanitary infrastructure.
“We have done table-top drills for
events like this,” festival organizers said. “We are engaged full-time on all
aspects of safety and looking ahead to our Exodus as our next priority.”
Festivalgoers – accustomed to
braving the Nevada desert’s extreme heat – have instead contended with rain and
mud, rationing supplies and dealing with connectivity issues.
As roads in and out remain
closed, attendees were stepping up and offering food and shelter to those who
need it, festivalgoer Gillian Bergeron told CNN on Sunday.
“Most of the folks out there that go out somewhat regularly, they
certainly made the best of it,” Bergeron said. “It’s a great community, people
were helping each other offering food and water and shelter to those who needed
it. If anything, I think it probably made the core community stronger.”
Another attendee stuck at the Burning Man, Andrew Hyde, said the weather
has taken the meaning of the event back to its roots.
“You come out here to be in
a harsh climate, and you prepare for that,” Hyde told CNN on Saturday.
Burning Man also described high morale among attendees who were sharing
resources. “There is music playing, camp meals being shared, socializing, and
walking around the playa to look at art and interact as a community,”
organizers said in a Sunday night update.
“People need to go back to their jobs, back to the responsibilities they
have back home,” Hyde said.
“There were certainly some people that were absolutely beside themselves
and that were
asking if their tickets would be reimbursed … they were missing their flights,”
she said. “It kind of just depended on their level of experience out there,
their level of comfort out there and then potentially wherever they had to be
come Monday or Tuesday morning.”
Still, the poor conditions have not stopped the creativity, first-time
attendee Hannah Burhorn said.


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