The map that keeps Burning Man honest

(not-ship.com)

277 points | by speckx 3 hours ago ago

100 comments

  • ruleryak 2 hours ago

    Last year was tough - it rained for hours 5 nights in a row and the first rain night was accompanied by 70 mile an hour winds that did a massive amount of damage to camp infrastructure throughout the city. The roads in half the city were ruined by emergency traffic that kept on running throughout the storms, and the result was a lumpy nightmare that shook things loose from cars and bikes at a much higher rate than most years. The mud absorbed and hid things and made cleanup a far more grueling process than it usually is. We endured and did our best to still find and remove everything - breaking up mud clumps and raking/sifting through the dirt at the end of the week to find all that embedded trash. There are no public trash cans, no event dumpsters, etc. I can say from having been there almost every year since 07 that this was by far the hardest year for "mooping" - the process of spotting and picking up any item that shouldn't be on the ground - but that the group mindset endured and we somehow still trended downward in terms of overall trash.

    I think the main difference between this and 2023 (the previous "mud burn") was that this time we had all the rain in the first half of the event, and then had relatively great weather for the second half. In 23, it closed out with the mud and people fleeing, leading to a spike.

    • sonzohan 25 minutes ago

      Theme camp based on an area famous for getting hit with hurricanes and other natural disasters here.

      During the rains we were one of the few places still open and where you could party, eat, and grab a solid drink. Being on Esplanade also meant we were a shelter for people to wait out the weather.

      Loads of great moments by doing that.

    • SoleilAbsolu 30 minutes ago

      Hmm, group mindset...or moop grindset? Either way great work to leave no trace!

    • joenot443 an hour ago

      Yeah, last year we were calling it Building Man cause the first three days were just rebuilding the setup from the previous day's storm.

      • quux an hour ago

        We called it "Continuous Improvement Man" because by the 3rd round of building our camp we had the process really dialed in

      • ruleryak an hour ago

        lol, yeah - we got really good at tearing down the public space and getting everything into the container truck and then pulling it back out and building again. Party for whatever portion of the day we could, and then speed-run the teardown when the first drops of rain started coming down.

      • inside_story an hour ago

        *Rebuilding Man

  • Waterluvian 2 hours ago

    I won't pretend I grok the underlying spirit of Burning Man. But I find it deeply fascinating to see the interaction between desires for counterculture, anarchy, free spirit, etc. and the benefit and ultimate necessity of organization, planning, rules... governance, essentially. And where there's those things, there's always maps and data.

    • throwup238 an hour ago

      It’s fun to read everyone's preconceptions about Burning Man. Its ten principles are published [1] and include stuff like “radical inclusion” and “civic responsibility” and “gifting” (the latter of which is taken very literally, there is almost no currency use on the playa and everything is gifted except ice and coffee at center camp).

      Those principles tend to attract the kind of people associated with counterculture and anarchists, but it’s hardly representative, especially when you include the family zone and all the specialized camps.

      [1] https://burningman.org/about-us/10-principles/

      • realo 14 minutes ago

        Don't get me wrong, but on one side you have the gift culture, and on the other side the exception that one of the only things sold the the community in one of the hottest, most arid deserts in the world is ... ice ...

        Got a chuckle out of me there.

        • cyanydeez 5 minutes ago

          It's mostly yuppie culture as far as I can tell with it's hangerons and other cleanup artists, whatever. There's no such purity, but it's definitely not a flat organization.

      • smsm42 6 minutes ago

        > Those principles tend to attract the kind of people associated with counterculture and anarchists

        And Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Elon Musk, Elizabeth Holmes, Sergey Brin, Larry Page, Eric Schmidt... you get the idea.

        https://www.businessinsider.com/tech-ceos-founders-attended-...

      • niwtsol 17 minutes ago

        FYI - Coffee at center camp was canceled as of 2022

    • elif an hour ago

      Trashing the planet is mainstream. Taking care of it is counterculture.

    • quux an hour ago

      The natural tension between chaos and order is one of the things that makes Burning Man so interesting.

    • dizhn an hour ago

      It's actually pretty compatible with "capital a" Anarchy.

      • gghh an hour ago

        Right. "Anarchists are simply people who believe human beings are capable of behaving in a reasonable fashion without having to be forced to. It is really a very simple notion."

        From: "Are You An Anarchist? The Answer May Surprise You!", David Graeber, 2009, https://davidgraeber.org/articles/are-you-an-anarchist-the-a...

        • dizhn a few seconds ago

          Here's another excellent piece. Ignore the site please.

          https://www.lewrockwell.com/2005/03/butler-shaffer/lx-what-i...

          > almost all of your daily behavior is an anarchistic expression. How you deal with your neighbors, coworkers, fellow customers in shopping malls or grocery stores, is often determined by subtle processes of negotiation and cooperation.

        • smsm42 4 minutes ago

          [delayed]

        • hallole 32 minutes ago

          That's one of those definitions that's so broad as to make the word being defined meaningless. It's always silly when one re-phrases their position into something trivial that no one would disagree with.

          • wredcoll 21 minutes ago

            I agree 100%, but it makes a mildly interesting jumping off point.

            My first question is: but what if they don't?

            • gghh 10 minutes ago

              As the person who posted the quote, gonna be direct: no idea.

              I have to say, I don't identify myself as a anarchist (maybe a bit of a sympathizer), yet I'm middle aged and finding myself a little dissatisfied by many things I see around me, so if I see people making the equation anarchist = degenerate, my immediate reaction is "yeah let's slow it down shall we."

            • wccrawford 9 minutes ago

              Exactly. Of course they're capable of it. That doesn't mean they will. They have a lot of incentives to behave badly, and there's no way to eliminate them all.

              • hallole 4 minutes ago

                Even under our decidedly non-anarchic regime, people STILL find reasons to behave poorly. I can't imagine removing the disincentive of state punishment would benefit society very much.

          • gghh 15 minutes ago

            Fair. But I think that statement isn't meant as a strict and precise definition (eg. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy or whatever), more like a "gateway" description directed at those who associate anarchism only with utter chaos and "burn the house down" kinda attitudes.

            Now, I'm aware that when you need to say something is "gateway" that's a bit of a red flag, i.e. "milk before meat" (describing something as friendly and innocent at first, then only later showing the more aggressive indoctrination) is exactly what cults do. Having said that, I'd grant that the late David Graeber is quite the straight shooter so I think he's in the clear here.

        • throwway120385 26 minutes ago

          If we define "leader" as "someone who commands by force or by some other means the obedience of a group of people" then Anarchy is a society without leaders. It doesn't mean a society without order, but it presupposes that people can behave reasonably and that that is enough to ensure order.

          • red_admiral 4 minutes ago

            Your "Other means" could almost be an essay prompt.

            There's distinctions between power and violence (see Hannah Arendt), between social and structural power (see The Tyranny of Structurelessness).

            And then there's this ancient Chinese text that has been slopified for a million management manuals:

            The best leaders are those their people hardly know exist. The next best is a leader who is loved and praised. Next comes the one who is feared. The worst one is the leader that is despised.

            The best leaders value their words, and use them sparingly. When they have accomplished their task, the people say, "Amazing! We did it, all by ourselves!"

          • donkey_brains 19 minutes ago

            That’s a narrow definition of a leader. Seems to me that a leader can be someone who others _choose_ to follow.

          • wredcoll 20 minutes ago

            Whats the difference, from an anarchist perspective, of a leader making a rule or a group voting on a rule?

    • foolfoolz an hour ago

      there’s an interesting side to this that better cell coverage, starlink, and others have made burning man more phone friendly. purists will say don’t bring a phone. or the event only works because no one has phones that work

      but the event isn’t possible to run without internet. DPW has wifi at every station. internet has become a core planning and organization tool

      • borski 32 minutes ago

        It’s obviously possible to run without the internet. They did it for many years.

    • Jarwain an hour ago

      Honestly, that contrast is what draws me in. In the same way ultralight hiking forces you to think about and let go of extraneous weight, going to Burning Man and doing the whole camp thing and seeing the city work showcases the "dead weight" of "making things happen".

    • saltyoldman 35 minutes ago

      Yeah, well it's all fake really. Still filled with people that are terrible, from the organizers to the goers.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0_u1ZvHOu4

      • jamal-kumar 12 minutes ago

        Ah yeah I've seen that video. What blows me away is that in the end all the accused did to get suspected for sexual assault was somehow made contact with her thigh

        Seeing stuff like that makes me glad I left the anglosphere

    • nathan_compton an hour ago

      People think of anarchism as against organizations and rules, but its just against hierarchy. Western people in particular are so used to hierarchical thinking that its difficult to even imagine an organization that isn't hierarchical in nature.

      • simonask an hour ago

        Hierarchy is “Western” now?

        • r14c 8 minutes ago

          Western culture is hierarchical, hierarchy isn't inherently Western. Lots of cultures do it.

      • lukan an hour ago

        And "eastern culture" is largely not hierarchical by heart?

        Also, I have been to quite some anarchist places, but I did not found one without a hierachy. It is usually just informal. (But at times even formal and everyone pretends it is still not hierachy)

  • childofhedgehog 3 hours ago

    So a giant party can clean up after itself, but 4th of July in Tahoe for example is a toxic mess. I wish more people would practice these principles. It’s impressive how well this is cleaned up.

    • phillmv 2 hours ago

      it helps that there's a regulatory agency that verifies the cleanup happened! if the 4th of july might get canceled the following year ppl might be more aggressive around cleaning up.

      • pstuart 2 hours ago

        Participants also have to feel like they are part of the event rather than passive spectators.

    • browningstreet 43 minutes ago

      There are volunteer opportunities to help clean-up after the 4th of July festivities in Tahoe.

  • schindlabua 26 minutes ago

    Austria is a small country but festival-wise it does host a couple superlatives -- Donauinselfest as the largest festival in the world, Novarock being the largest rock festival depending on how you count. And then theres so many great other festivals in austria and the surrounding countries, big and small.

    People keep raving about burning man so I kind of want to go but I wonder whether I'd just be slightly disappointed. Or whether it's an american media influencing europeans thing where expectations become overinflated compared to what we have here.

  • dmarcos 35 minutes ago

    I was part of the temple build last year and cleanup is extremely serious. We spent two days cleaning after the burn with magnetic rakes looking for minute pieces of metal. We take samples of dirt at different spots and count the number of MOOP fragments to measure progress

  • cmiles8 2 hours ago

    My respect for Burning Man just went up a lot.

    These big events usually leave a giant mess behind. Glad to see they take the cleanup and restoration so seriously.

    • quux an hour ago

      To paraphrase Captain Malcom Reynolds: "My days of not taking Burning Man seriously are definitely coming to a middle."

  • topherPedersen an hour ago

    From my experience, people are pretty good about cleaning up. The first year I went I camped solo, so I theoretically could have left a bunch of crap, but I didn't. The second year I camped with a camp, and they were really thorough with check out and break down. We had a formal clean up of certain areas that I participated in where I remember people finding the tiniest things, like little pieces of thread and what not. And then when I personally went to leave, we had someone come and inspect my area and whatnot. So in my opinion, I think people do a pretty good job. And even if people didn't do a good job... we are not talking about a beautiful national park here, it is a desolate wasteland where literally no life can survive. I saw maybe ONE bug while I was out there. Not even bugs can survive out there. It's like the surface of the moon.

    • donkers an hour ago

      There’s a lot of fairy shrimp that live there and wait for the right conditions to come out. I think there’s a camp dedicated to them.

    • theultdev 37 minutes ago

      It's not a wasteland. Plenty of insects live in the mud. Plus the pattern of the playa is special on its own. I honestly hate that burning man ruins the ground. Never the same after so many cars and people drive on it.

  • jobs_throwaway 2 hours ago

    Actually an enormous whitepill on Burning Man. Modest amounts of debris, real accountability, and improvement over time despite overall growth. You really can't ask for much more.

  • justin 15 minutes ago

    What I love about Burning Man is that it is an event where all the programming is created by the attendees. All the art, sound stages, art cars, experiences.. if you want something to exist in Black Rock City, then it is up to you to just go figure out how to bring it, solely for the benefit and joy of those who get to experience it. It is a tremendous amount of work, but the rewarding feeling of seeing your creation manifested into reality is worth it.

    So much of our daily lives in society is consuming experiences that other people create: the jobs we work are defined by other people, we buy products created by other people, we eat food made by other people. For me, Burning Man is a reminder for the rest of the year to be the creator of my own experience in the world.

  • john_strinlai 2 hours ago
  • perarneng an hour ago

    70,000 people during a week. It would be interesting to compare this with some other kind of event with the same duration and similar amount of people or perhaps make a

    grams of garbage per humanhour unit

  • charles_f 2 hours ago

    > its release inevitably fuels a bit of public finger-pointing

    Is this what's helping with that?

    > the most striking trend is that the community has steadily improved at Leave No Trace

    Probably not only? But shame and avoidance of shame can be good motivation

  • swerner 2 hours ago

    If you think that’s dedication: I met Dominic (DA) who they interviewed in this article almost 20 years ago in the Spanish desert, where taught us Euroburners the art of MOOP cleanup. He’s been at it for a long time now.

    • 4ggr0 an hour ago

      i've always felt like going to Burning Man, something just attracts me to it. but i'm a eurodude, going to the US just for a festival sounds idiotic and i currently don't want to visit the US anyways.

      are there similar events in europe? you sound like an experienced oldhead :)

      • cosmojg 15 minutes ago

        Look up whatever regional burns[1] exist in your country or neighboring countries, and attend one of those. Ideally, join whatever online community exists around it first, and then reach out to some of the camps that interest you about joining and helping with whatever it is they like to do. I love Burning Man, but I can honestly say that I've had a lot more fun at my local regional burns than I've had at the big burn.

        [1] https://burnerguides.com/europe-burner-events

      • swerner 44 minutes ago
  • fontain 2 hours ago

    > In 2025, lag bolts were by far the biggest problem. They anchor tents, art pieces, and other infrastructure into the ground, and can easily disappear beneath the dust.

    I thought of a few potential solutions but then clicked through to the journal entry for last year and it turns out they're way ahead, the journal article is very interesting with some ideas: https://journal.burningman.org/2026/03/black-rock-city/leavi...

    • Jarwain 2 hours ago

      My camp, while doing our moop sweep in 2023, found lag bolts from prior years!

      2023 was a weird one, because of the heavy rain and so many people not being used to it.

      But it also seriously churned the Playa, revealing what was hidden for a whiiile

    • s0rce 2 hours ago

      Marking whiskers, as mentioned, seem like a good solution if you can keep them attached. They are designed to be easily visible on the ground.

  • rdl 2 hours ago

    If the issue are tent stakes/lag bolts which get buried under surface, clear solution would be metal detectors available to borrow/rent (or brought by each camp). Also probably could do a drone or ground robot with a metal detecting loop on the bottom.

    • wffurr 2 hours ago

      Or just count them before and after. Know how many you're supposed to bring home.

    • raldi an hour ago

      The best solution I know of is to get three-link segments of chain and put one on each screw as it goes into the ground. That not only marks the spot, it also gives you a flexible attachment point which is useful in all sorts of situations. (Two links would be pinned in a stationary fashion.)

      Biggest problem is it’s a pain in the ass to chop up all that chain, and nobody sells them in pre-cut lengths.

    • Jarwain an hour ago

      The problem isn't that there aren't solutions, the problem is getting everyone on board

  • exabrial an hour ago

    Burning man is the biggest recurring environmental disaster purportated by humans in the name of entertainment. A place of pristine nature is literally destroyed by humans with zero fks given, in a manner where it can never be recovered from.

    • gleenn 42 minutes ago

      That seems pretty harsh. Have you been? If you go out after the rain has washed the playa flat again to hide the bike tracks through the soft powder, it looks like there has never been an event. As per the article, they do a fantastic job cleaning, unlike any event I've ever been too. Hardly "zero fks given", in fact quite a few were given and that's why we get to keep doing it.

    • pkcoskfiwjfj 21 minutes ago

      Now this is some next-level “I didn’t read the article, have no context, and understand little to nothing about the subject matter” type of comment. I’m actually impressed.

    • IanGabes an hour ago

      this is so far from the truth its baffling.

      in a year where the world cup is taking place, counter-examples are readily available in numbers. I doubt FIFA will be releasing environmental impact datasets...

    • paintbox 29 minutes ago

      Read the posted article before commenting.

      It's literally written to refute your point.

  • yieldcrv 20 minutes ago

    This is one principle and shared ethos done really well

    Burning Man would get a lot less criticism if they dropped their 22 year old principles out of its 40 year run

    Being part of a camp is the least inclusive social chore I’ve seen of any similar event, it is optional while making the “radically inclusive” trek a lot easier. Its a fairly high bar if you don't know the people

    “Radical Self Reliance” can be interpreted in completely opposite ways when convenient. The person mooching off of everyone may call that self reliance to themselves, not realizing they are just attractive, while the person “gifting” resources to be around the attractive person can withhold it under the edict of expecting radical self reliance. Its a desert, are people really more or less prepared because that principle is taking up space on a list of commandments?

    Larry Harvey didn’t expect people to make these things their whole identity. He was just having fun pontificating some guidelines in 2004.

    The guidelines-now-principles are also outdated. Many “Regional burns” that have been inspired by Burning Man have added additional principles more relevant to the times, such as ones focusing on consent and shared consent frameworks.

    Time for a new arc

  • zootboy 2 hours ago

    Sounds to me like there ought to be a MOOP cleanup deposit charged upfront, that only gets returned after this inspection. If the cleanup crew has to clean your site, you forfeit part or all of your deposit. Repeat offenders get charged increased deposits each time. Repeat inoffenders(?) get their deposit reduced.

    • sonzohan an hour ago

      This would lead to less compliance.

      There are lots of people out there who would happily pay fines or not get deposits back if they didn't have to do the less glamorous parts of the event. You have to take something away that they actually care about.

      If a camp does a really bad job at moop cleanup, Burning Man organization talks to leads to understand what happened. Frequently what they will take away is the camp's placement in the event, or sometimes even the ability to attend the event as that camp at all.

      For reference: I am one of the leads for a fairly large and famous Burning Man camp. We camp on Esplanade most years. We do exactly what you proposed: We have deposits, and the more people put into the camp before, during, and after the event, determines if we offer them a refund and an invitation to camp with us next year. One of the factors is if you help us during setup and strike.

      An invitation to camp with us guarantees them a ticket at one of the cheaper tiers. We have plenty of campers that come in, pay the dues, do nothing for the camp, are generally useless during the event, and bail out leaving a huge mess.

      Conversely, we have a very small (10-20%) team of highly dedicated individuals who stay past the event and pick every piece of string, fuzz, fluff, lag bolt, rebar, and debris out of the dust and take it out. These people get nearly their entire camp dues back. If they attend next year, the social capital that they've built doing so compounds into them becoming increasingly popular and famous on Playa.

      If there's one thing that Burning Man has taught me, it is that very few people are motivated by financial incentive. If you really want to motivate someone, figure out what they genuinely desire. It's rarely money.

    • 0xbadcafebee 2 hours ago

      This results in affluent people leaving all of their moop because they don't care about the deposit, which creates so much trash it requires a lot more staff and time to clean up. Existing system works: you clean up your moop because you're a good community member, shamed on Reddit if you don't, and if you're a problem multiple times, out you go.

      • zootboy an hour ago

        > ...affluent people leaving all of their moop because they don't care about the deposit

        This is why I suggested an increasing deposit for repeat offenders. Leave a huge pile of trash? Next year's deposit is $100k. Do it several years in a row? $10MM deposit.

        • sonzohan an hour ago

          This is how camps known as "Plug n Plays" work. Charge exorbitant camp dues, provide everything for your campers, and let them lead the most privileged lifestyle out there.

          Many camps did this, and were actually turning a profit at Burning Man by taking advantage of the community of volunteers.

          A few years ago the Burning Man organization put a stop to this by decreasing or eliminating camps considered to be Luxury or Plug N Play. Not just because they were antithetical to the event, but because they became famous for a slew of problems.

          White Ocean is one of the more famous camps in this domain. A luxury camp that charged exorbitant fees for extremely wealthy individuals to come and party without any responsibility. They had loads of sexual assaults, dosing incidents, and campers generally being shitty people. The leads also refused to pay the hired help. This led to a now-infamous vandalism incident.

          White Ocean basically has a permanent ban on attending now.

          You cannot incentivize people out there with money. You have to take something away that they actually care about.

    • ceejayoz 2 hours ago

      Seems likely this would result in a lot of disputes over windblown debris and neighbors dumping their stuff on your spot after you leave.

      • lkbm 2 hours ago

        This is definitely a concern. We've pretty much always been green, but it's hard to police after you leave, and usually we're gone before Temple Burn. (One year two of our camp mates stayed for Temple Burn and they ended up having to pack out two extra bikes that got dumped, in addition to having to deal with multiple people trying to camp in our empty spot. Maybe those people would've been fine, but given that they didn't understand the open camping situation, I'm unsure they understood LNT either.)

    • zdragnar an hour ago

      If people pay for something, they feel entitled to take advantage of it. I've literally seen people fail to clean up after themselves and explain it as "that's what janitors are paid for".

      Requiring a clean-up deposit up front will encourage people who were already inclined to clean up to do so, and encourage people disinclined to do so to leave trash behind.

      The communal honor / shame culture that is in place is much more effective- people tend to care more about their reputation than they do money they've already spent.

    • Jarwain an hour ago

      This penalizes honest mistakes, or moop from prior years resurfacing, or wind blowing trash into camp, or any number of things that are outside of a given camp's control

      The moop map, and community holding itself accountable, seems to be a decently functioning system.

      Not to mention the administrative overhead, at the org level and at the camp level.

      Frankly being a camp of 100+ people, not just taking dues but also handling this Deposit, and distributing the cost fairly?

      Running a camp is enough of a pain in the ass without adding on this kind of thing.

      Monetary incentive systems like what you're suggesting are just a way of enforcing culture. If culture spreads organically, why bother with the overhead of bringing money into the picture?

  • gorfian_robot 2 hours ago

    the moop map used to be a analog creation with pics of it uploaded every day of the resto(ration) process. some years ago they switched to digital tools and now they don't release it for several months after the event. huh.

    • actionfromafar 2 hours ago

      I want to know more about this analog upload! :-)

    • dekdrop 2 hours ago

      what sort of tool they use?

  • Worf 2 hours ago

    Is "plant matter" weed?

    • mrWiz 2 hours ago

      Mostly no. Dead leaves that were just lying on a trailer without getting cleaned in advance and bits of decorative plants that broke off are probably the worst offenders.

      • quux 2 hours ago

        Worth noting: Plants, living or dead, are banned from Burning Man because they turn into moop really easily, but some always end up there anyway

    • ceejayoz 2 hours ago

      You think they’re leaving any of that behind?

    • Jarwain an hour ago

      If it was that'd be an absurd amount of weed being left behind to make a mark on the map.

  • soared 2 hours ago

    Imagine if environmental regulation, pollution, etc looked like this.

    • ceejayoz 2 hours ago

      This is an environmental regulatory requirement by the Federal Bureau of Land Management.

      • Jarwain 2 hours ago

        They aren't referring to the regulatory requirement, but the response, I think?

        Like if people can put in this much time and effort in a remote desert environment to meet regulatory requirements, and document their efforts so thoroughly, why can't corpos?

      • john_strinlai 2 hours ago

        for the curios or those that skipped over it:

        "Black Rock City is only allowed to return to the playa each year if it passes a strict post-event inspection from the Bureau of Land Management (BLM): No more than one square foot of debris can remain per acre (0.23 m²/ha)."

        • Scoundreller 2 hours ago

          K, but what’s a square foot in metric? And percent would be better here. Or per Mille to be annoying.

          • Sardtok 2 hours ago

            Read it again, it says right there in square metres.

            • hk__2 an hour ago

              Isn’t it strange to mesure this in surface rather than volume?

              • 0xbadcafebee an hour ago

                The authorities are saying they don't want to see any trash at all, regardless of volume. Imagine 100 sheets of paper vs 100 AA batteries. The batteries have much more volume, but the sheets of paper cover a much larger area so there's much more visible trash.

              • Jarwain an hour ago

                Not much difference between a 12" and a 18" lag bolt for the purpose of "how much trash is visible and impacts terrain".

                Surface feels a bit fairer in that sense. Or at least, easier to measure.

    • MattGaiser 2 hours ago

      This is driven in part by regulatory pressure.