After
                Burning Man 2002
                Bruce
                and Galen's Account of Surviving a Condition Alpha Blow
              We survived
                what was described as the worst blow in the history of Burning
                Man which began in the late morning of September 3rd, 2002. The
                following is a recounting of this experience by four members of
                WOW Camp, Frank Schwartz, Kitty Wells, Galen Brandt and your photographer,
                Bruce Damer.
              See our
                recommended Condition Alpha Survival
                Guide here.
              The
                following are scenes from WOW and one if its members, Kush Camp,
                during the Sept 3rd 100 MPH continuous blow which destroyed much
                of Burning Man.
              
                Before: Kush Camp approximately one hour before the blow commenced
                at 11:30am
              A different
                kind of blow
              When the
                blow hit at 11:30am we were in our tiny Provan Tiger motor home.
                I felt this was something different as the wind was so violent
                that it rocked the motor home back and forth, even though we faced
                the vehicle directly into the wind. We had sealed up all the windows
                and hatches and yet fine gypsum dust squirted in through every
                crack it could find, even through the undercarriage and engine.
                We lost sight of Kitty and Frank's camp only 200 feet away and
                assumed they had packed up and left. We were wrong.
              Kitty
                and Frank's not so excellent adventure
              Our
                dear friends Kitty and Frank were in terribly trouble. The blow
                had caught them in the most vulnerable position, with their camp
                half taken down. We could not see them at all but they set out
                to seek help from us but instead got lost, finding another friend
                hunkered down about 300 feet from us. He pointed them in the direction
                of our RV and they managed to find us. We heard a knock on the
                door and were very happy to see them and invited them in to our
                lifeboat. This was the worst Kitty and Frank had ever seen and
                they have been coming to the Playa since 1991.
              
              
                Frank said that DPW/Rangers had come by told them that this was
                an emergency Condition Alpha and to help rescue anyone
                in need and under no circumstances attempt to drive on or off
                of the Playa as the road was closed in any case. 
              
                After: Kush Camp!
                During and momentary clearing, driving to the wreckage of Kush
                Camp with streaks of dust on the windshield
              To
                the rescue of Kush
              After
                giving Kitty and Frank water I decided to drive our vehicle carefully
                forward during a momentary clearing to scout Kush Camp. As it
                appeared through the whiteout I wondered how anyone could have
                survived working outside in this for hours. I parked the motorhome
                in the windward side of Kush providing a sort of windbreak and
                allowing us to get in and out and work as a team. 
              
                View of Kitty and Frank trying to take down Kush Camp in the storm,
                we gave up on this up until hours later.
              We
                donned our dust masks and goggles and worked for another hour
                trying to pack up Kush. It was pretty fruitless work and I realized
                there was no way we could safely pack the trailer during this
                kind of wind. One gust of wind catching a tarp and our work would
                be undone. One misstep into a hunk of sharp rebar invisible under
                a sand dune and we would have a serious injury. I encouraged the
                team to repair to the RV and attack this again when I assumed
                the winds would die down, as they often can at dusk. We made ourselves
                a wonderful meal and Galen offered sponge baths for those with
                skin peppered by high speed dust grains.
              I
                noticed that dusk was fast coming on and that if we did not move
                back outside and finish the job we would have to stay another
                night on the Playa, with the possibility of another serious storm.
                I encouraged everyone to cut the dinner short and we worked highly
                effectively as a team unloading hundreds of pounds of sand dunes
                from the remnants of Kitty and Frank's camp and packing an impossible
                amount of stuff on their trailer. We finished with just enough
                light left and jointly pulled out, making it to Fernley where
                Frank and Kitty really needed to crash (in the last hotel room
                in town). Galen and I went on to Reno to a much appreciated hotel
                room and bed.
              How
                dangerous is Condition Alpha?
              Remember
                that on our Burning Mand tickets it says "you risk bodily injury
                or death by attending this event". Well, Burning Man dodged a
                bullet this year. If this had happened two days earlier we would
                have had a real emergency on the playa. At one point Galen saw
                a huge meta framework traveling down the Playa at about 20 miles
                per hour. Someone told us that while seeking cover in their collapsed
                tent they heard the beat of a large metal drum, probably a burn
                barrel, pounding its way down the playa and lo and behold, it
                clobbered them where they lay. Greeters and other volunteers were
                urgently called back to the Playa to help and some drove a full
                12 hours from Seattle. If you were exposed to 100 MPH flows of
                gypsum and other flying debris, you could be seriously injured.
                Skin would be punctured to bleeding. The only objects that stayed
                down were the banks of porta potties (sometimes it helps to be
                full of shit). 
              Center
                Camp's huge tent survived the blow but everything else was wrecked
                or covered with heavy dunes. Being next to center camp must have
                been a hazardous place as art pieces, bits of the cafe and other
                matter out of place was speeding through. The blow fence must
                be a single dune 4 miles long filled with MOOP and a real pain
                for the cleanup crews to deal with (would need heavy equipment).
                
              We
                look relaxed in these pictures but this is an illusion, people
                were happy and relieved to be alive and together in the lifeboat
                of Bruce and Galen's Tiger RV. 
              See our
                recommended Condition Alpha Survival
                Guide here.
              For
                great writing about this event see Jim
                Mason's Letter From Burning Man: Dust Up.
              
                Frank and Kitty, truly brave playanauts