In Search of Black Rock City - Part 1 steemCreated with Sketch.

in WORLD OF XPILAR4 years ago (edited)

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I live in Nevada, not far from the Black Rock Desert Wilderness/High Rock Canyon Emigrant Trails National Conservation Area where Burning Man has been held since 1990. September 2020 would have been Black Rock City’s 30th Anniversary. https://burningman.org/


Last March, I was finalizing a contract to work for the medical clinic at Burning Man 2020. Working at the clinic had been a dream since my first burn in 2010 and my last burn in 2013 when I was a patient in the clinic. However, the world shut down, and The Burning Man Organization canceled the event in April. The Bureau of Land Management did not shut down access to the Black Rock Desert, so I took a trip to the playa because I could. 

https://www.blm.gov/visit/black-rock-desert-wilderness


I feel the need to put out a disclaimer now - the route I took to get on to the Black Rock Desert is NOT safe, and I do not recommend this route and trip unless you have a local guide plus a long list of survival gear including a personal locator beacon. This area is remote with no services, no cell service, and very few people. People die out there - no joke. So why did I do this as a solo trip? Because I am very familiar with the area, I have been doing solo trips for many years and I had a person whom I trusted to send out help if I did not return by a certain time. https://blackrockdesert.org/camping-in-the-nca/

Jungo Road and The Hycroft Mine

Gone are the days of tunnel mining, now it is strip mining. Remove the mountain, crush it down, leach out the minerals.Gone are the days of tunnel mining, now it is strip mining. Remove the mountain, crush it down, leach out the minerals.

The first 64 miles/103 km of Jungo Road is used to access a massive gold & silver mine owned by Hycroft Mining. This road has a reputation for eating tires, and you encounter large mine busses moving fast. Sometimes it is blacktop pavement, and sometimes it is gravel. The mine is the town of “Jungo, Nevada.”

The land yacht and the road to Black Rock City.The land yacht and the road to Black Rock City. A ”leaching pond”.A "leaching pond".  The ”unofficial” Burning Man sign. This sign has been here for years.The "unofficial" Burning Man sign. This sign has been here for years.

The Ghost Town

Following the unofficial, Burning Man sign, I arrived in the ghost town of Sulphur, Nevada. Nothing remaining but the roof to the old bar and old home. It is another 25 miles/40 km to where I plan to enter the Black Rock Desert playa.

Old Bar RoofOld Bar Roof Root CellarRoot Cellar Old HomeOld Home

Where The Streets Have No Name

Jungo Road runs parallel with a railroad track, and there are only a few places where you cross the track to access the playa. These crossovers are called “sidings.” These roads require high clearance, 4x4 vehicles with good tires. (Trust me, you do not want to blow a tire out here.)

I watch my GPS for the turnoff that will take me to an entrance north of Black Rock City. I find my road, put the truck into 4x4, and head to the playa. The road is surrounded by overgrown sagebrush. It scrapes the truck as I move slowly, carefully navigating through the rutted & sandy road. The anticipation builds as I see the vast expanse of the playa in front of me. I have seen no one since I left the mine. Will there even be a Black Rock City this year? So many questions fill my head as I creep along.

When I reach the playa, again, I see no one. The playa is a seasonal lake that has been baking in the 100-degree sun all summer and is rock hard. I take the truck out of 4x4 and into Land Yacht mode, taking her up to 70 mph/113 kph on the open lake bed, leaving a huge plume of dust.

As I move south, small outcrops of humanity begin to manifest. A single RV here, a group of campers there. I begin to slow down as more camps appear. I roll down my window and the bumping base of a sound camp fills my ears. I smile, I am home. To be continued...

A Black Rock on the Black Rock PlayaA Black Rock on the Black Rock Playa

https://odysee.com/@EIAFP:9/BlackRockDesertNevada:6?r=HJYLufHhwbTF8YxB1hbt2jsuvjJKzuPa


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 4 years ago 

Wow! Awesome post :) I have heard of the Burning Man but I had no clue about where the event took place and there is this unsafe route that if you venture to it you may not get any help.

The feel I get after seeing the video is the same feeling I get when I'm doing a "bottomless" dive on a place that I never explored. The horizon just seems infinite and what keeps you from not getting lost is you're navigation skills and experience

Thank you for that awesome analogy! :D

BM Org has something about Jungo Rd. on their site telling people not to take that route. My first time out there was with someone who grew up in the area.

Excellent story

Thank you @eiafp

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Thank you, it was such a fun adventure.

 4 years ago 

You are a brave woman. Not every even an experienced traveler will dare to take such a step :)
Great post!
A small technical recommendation. Make a space (empty line) between the text and the photo following it. It will look better that way.
And in terms of content, everything is excellent, a good start for the program!

Thank you so much. There is a fine line between brave and crazy. :D

Great suggestion, will do on tomorrow's post.

 4 years ago 

Yes, there is ... :) I understand what you are talking about
But not many even have the courage :)

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