Frostburn

Dec 01, 2010 15:04

I am going to Frostburn!

It is a Burning-Man-related camping event, taking place over a weekend in February.

Are any of you going? If so, want to camp together? :-)

------------------------------------------------Unrelated postscript: I have a bunch of topics in mind I've been meaning to write about. This seems like a good place to publish such ( Read more... )

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Comments 14

platypuslord December 1 2010, 20:14:37 UTC
I -- I guess I'm not sure why "harsh conditions" are required to have an awesome event.

Maybe one rationale would be that it serves as a filter to keep all the lame-ass tourists out, so you get a higher density of people that really care?

At any rate I qualify as a lame-ass tourist; I'm not going to any event that requires active preparation to not be killed by the environment. ^_^;

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gwillen December 1 2010, 20:26:41 UTC
I think the tourist-filter definitely plays a part. Other factors include:
1) Many of the people who go to these things actively enjoy harsh and challenging conditions;
2) The conditions are not anywhere near as challenging as they sound (this is the "if _gwillen_ can manage it..." theory);
3) Once an event develops a good community / good set of people, due to e.g. the tourist-filter, it becomes worth going to just for that.

In support of (2), I'll point out that the main harsh conditions at Burning Man are:
a) You get very dusty.
b) You have to bring your own food and water.

(a) is mostly annoying, more than anything else. (b) is true of any week-long camping trip.

As for Frostburn, the main harsh condition will be "it's fucking cold", which I plan to mitigate by using the _on-site electricity_ to run a space heater, just like many other people there do. I'm not crazy. ;-)

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aleffert December 1 2010, 20:37:16 UTC
Electricity? Weeeeeak!

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platypuslord December 2 2010, 06:56:05 UTC
As I understand it (and I have not been though dozens of my friends have), the harshness is a little more complex than that.

You get very dusty. The dust is alkaline and a mild skin irritant; as a general rule, you need to put lotion on your feet and lower legs, change your socks regularly, and _never let your bare feet touch the playa_. (It is also very hard on electronic equipment, but that's another story.)

It is bone dry. The temperature varies wildly from very-hot-sunny during the day to fucking-cold-due-to-radiant-heat-lost-to-space at night.

Oh, and there are dust storms ("white outs"). Wheeee!

But! There is no native flora or fauna, sweating is extraordinarily efficient due to the 0% humidity, things do not generally rot quickly and there are no flies to attract anyway.

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masqueradestar December 1 2010, 23:15:51 UTC
:OOO I might be interested. Going to read up on it but it sounds awesome.

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gwillen December 2 2010, 02:49:21 UTC
Well it is both way cheaper and way closer than Burning Man. But also way the fuck colder.

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aleffert December 2 2010, 00:14:33 UTC
Do you burn the snow man?

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roseandsigil December 2 2010, 00:30:54 UTC
They can burn it tall, or they can burn it not-so-tall.

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anonymous December 2 2010, 07:00:44 UTC
I have been to cold weather burns and small regional burns and they are fun! Central Texas even has one in January, called Freezerburn.

For all reading, I highly encourage going to this. The cold is only really a problem in two circumstances:

1) You want to sleep. It can be pretty sucky to sleep in the cold.
2) You have ingested some kind of psychotropic substance that impairs your body's homeostatic temperature regulation. That just requires caution & not stripping naked in the snow. :D

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whitemage December 2 2010, 07:01:33 UTC
^ also me! :-)

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gwillen December 2 2010, 16:06:45 UTC
Well, I do not anticipate doing (2), but I do anticipate doing (1). But I am paying for electric, which means I can take a space heater, so I will be ok. ;-)

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