Tuesday, September 5, 2023

'Mudpocalypse' Hits Burning Man, 73,000 Trapped In 'Toxic' Lake Bed In Nevada Desert

 



After everyone quits laughing about this, do recall that it is also potentially dangerous.  Hopefully a number of tractor trailers with bottled water are on the way in case they are needed.  The trucks should be able to use available road access.

Understand though six inches of mud can be nasty and really stick your feet to the ground.  Walking out may well not be easy.

It should still dry up quickly though, although those attendees are certainly likely to run out of sun screen.


'Mudpocalypse' Hits Burning Man, 73,000 Trapped In 'Toxic' Lake Bed In Nevada Desert

BY TYLER DURDEN

SUNDAY, SEP 03, 2023 - 04:25 PM

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/mudpocalypse-hits-burning-man-73-trapped-toxic-lake-bed-nevada-desert?

On Sunday evening, a White House official said President Biden was briefed on the situation at the Burning Man festival located in one of the harshest environments on Earth.



President Biden has been briefed on the situation at the Burning Man festival, according to a White House official... via @CNN— Jim Acosta (@Acosta) September 3, 2023


As of Sunday evening, 73,000 attendees are still trapped in the toxic desert full of alkaline mud after a rainstorm transformed the dried-out lake bed into a swamp. Event organizers said, "The Gate remains closed. Please stay off of Gate Road — rain and mud make it impassable at the moment. We will update you when conditions improve. Stay safe!"



The Gate remains closed. Please stay off of Gate Road — rain and mud make it impassable at the moment. We will update you when conditions improve. Stay safe!— Burning Man Traffic (@bmantraffic) September 3, 2023

It's a muddy hellhole.



Lot of stuck vehicles trapped by mud about a mile out attempting to exit from Burning Man. I just walked by about 30 various RVs and cars that can’t move. pic.twitter.com/cqoUag0dTR— Lee Fang (@lhfang) September 3, 2023



Despite the circumstances, there’s a general sense of calm at #BurningMan

Rain on Sunday *again* delayed the opening of the roads to leave

Some are growing impatient as they run out or short on food & water, getting vehicles stuck in clay-like mud@NBCLA @nbcbayarea @NBCNews pic.twitter.com/yc04TYuDF7— Chase Cain (@ChaseCainNBC) September 3, 2023



๐Ÿ‘€๐Ÿ”ฅBurning Man festival gets hit with torrential rainfall. they have blocked the entrance and the exits everyone’s supposed to shelter in place. they can’t make it in with fuel for all the generators. There’s 6 inches of mud everywhere and they’re expecting more rain tonight. pic.twitter.com/NYW6xTaiYv— Todd Paron๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ท๐ŸŽง๐Ÿ‘ฝ (@tparon) September 3, 2023


* * *

Food and fuel are running low for the tens of thousands of attendees (and tech bros) trapped at the Burning Man festival located in one of the harshest environments on earth (high desert, on a dried-up alkaline lake bed) in the Black Rock Desert in Nevada. The situation deteriorated early Saturday when a rainstorm drenched the lake bed, transforming the area into a 'mudpocalypse.'

Since early Saturday, all entry and exit points of the Burning Man festival remained closed due to the thick, alkaline mud. As of 0900 ET Sunday, event organizers said, "The gate and airport in and out of Black Rock City remain closed. Ingress and egress are halted until further notice. No driving is permitted except emergency vehicles."

Organizers continued to advise the 73,000 attendees to "conserve food and water, and shelter in a warm space."



The gate and airport in and out of Black Rock City remain closed. Ingress and egress are halted until further notice. No driving is permitted except emergency vehicles. If you are in BRC, conserve food and water, and shelter in a warm space. More updates to come. Stay safe!— Burning Man Traffic (@bmantraffic) September 3, 2023

The Independent confirmed local officials had reported at least one death but have not released details on the suspected cause of death. A major concern is that the toxic alkali dust that makes up the lake bed is now three inches of mud, and if attendees aren't wearing socks and closed shoes, it can cause chemical burns called "Playa Foot."



All fun & games until that alkaline rich mud sucks the moisture right out of the skin. Those porta johns are filthy and can’t be emptied. On a sunny day it takes 11hrs to commute into this remote barren lake.
Burning Man 2023 pic.twitter.com/qrwsSQMSH2— Mr. Maverick (@TheMan2Day) September 3, 2023



This person really explained burning man so well..like that is a legit safety hazard.. pic.twitter.com/uWNs7VDBHw— UghGiveRespect ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฉ๐Ÿ‡ฟ๐Ÿ‡ฆ (@KANA9371) September 3, 2023

More footage of the geniuses who decided to party in a toxic dry lakebed only to find out it occasionally rains in the desert.



Burning Man is a mess. Upward of 60,000 people are literally stuck in mud and have been ordered to stay put.

Food and water running low. pic.twitter.com/HKRZSwkTCY— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) September 2, 2023



๐Ÿ”ฅ☔ Mudpocalyptic at Burning Man!

A challenging situation unfolds as the desert festival site turns into a sea of mud due to unexpected rain, leaving Burning Man attendees trapped. Stay safe, resilient, and support one another, Burners! ๐ŸŒ„๐ŸŒง️ #BurningMan #RainyDesertpic.twitter.com/QCVPCeFg3D— FlashFactsHub (@FlashFactsHub) September 3, 2023



⚠️BREAKING: More than 73,000 people are trapped in mud at Burning Man in Nevada due to major flooding pic.twitter.com/t7asFadYnK— Everything you need to know (@Everything65687) September 3, 2023



Not everyone's feeling sorry for all the rich folk stuck in the mud at Burning Man [via @YahooNews] https://t.co/zZi3Cu9ONM pic.twitter.com/9CQsTlSIfN— ลƒasser 1️⃣ Million Tweets ๐Ÿฆ (@nasser_mo3gza) September 3, 2023

And who attends this drug-infested event? The rich tech bros.


... rich white tech bros.



Surely, these 'informed' folks who are now stuck in a swamped toxic lake bed understood it was an El Nino year...


Probably not. They were fixated on the corporate media headlines hyping a non-existent climate crisis (well, that's according to these 1,600 scientists).

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