Burning Man festival exodus set to begin with muddy desert drying

Thousands of Burning Man attendees readied to make their exodus on Monday as the counter-culture arts festival in the Nevada desert ends in a sea of drying mud instead of a party around its flaming effigy namesake.

Rain over the weekend turned the once hard-packed ground to pudding. One person died at the event in the Black Rock Desert, authorities said on Sunday, providing few details. An investigation is underway.

Organizers posted online that they will make a decision on Monday whether or not the roads are passable across the desert basin and the eight-kilometre trek to the nearest highway. The site is located about 24 kilometres from the nearest town and 177 kilometres north of Reno.

For days, some 70,000 people were ordered not to leave and to conserve food and water as officials closed the roads and exits, ordering all vehicles to stay put lest they got stuck in the mud and blocked traffic.

But the U.S. National Weather Service forecasters said on Monday that the rain was over.

“Yep, the rain cleared out of there,” said Marc Chenard, a forecaster with the weather service’s Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Md. “It’ll be sunny today with temperatures in the 70s [Fahrenheit].”

The grounds of the Burning Man encampment are muddy after a rainstorm.
The Man structure, which is normally burned on Saturday night, is seen on Sunday looming over the Burning Man encampment in Nevada. A rainstorm on Friday left tens of thousands of revellers attending the annual festival stranded in mud. (Trevor Hughes/USA Today Network/Reuters)

The weather service said the general area received between 19 millimetres and 38 millimetres of rain since late Friday.

Some of the festival-goers ignored the order to stay put over the weekend and attempted to walk or drive out to the nearest highway.

Others partied on in the rain.

WATCH | Canadian at Burning Man in good spirits despite ‘muddy mess’

Canadian at Burning Man in good spirits despite ‘muddy mess’

Mark Fromson, one of thousands of attendees stranded by flooding at the Burning Man counter-culture festival in the Nevada desert, credited ‘Burners’ with being well-prepared. ‘We could stay here another week if we had to,’ Fromson told CBC News.

Videos posted to social media showed costumed revellers — including a few children — sliding through the sticky mess, most of them covered from head to toe in wet earth.

“When you get pushed to extremes, that’s when the most fun happens,” said Brian Fraoli, 45, a veteran “burner” who works in finance in New York.

Fraoli said he had tried to drag his luggage through the mud and escape, but he gave up and decided to relax and enjoy the experience. “Overall it was an amazing week and next time we will be more prepared,” he said.

Every year Burning Man brings tens of thousands of people to the Nevada desert to dance, make art and enjoy being part of a self-sufficient, temporary community of like-minded spirits. This year’s version opened on Aug. 27 and was scheduled to run through Monday.

It originated in 1986 as a small gathering on a San Francisco beach and is now attended by celebrities and social media influencers. A regular ticket costs $575.

The festival typically has a penultimate night send-off with the burning of a giant wooden effigy of a man, along with a fireworks show. That has not taken place this year, although organizers said it may still happen on Monday evening.