Desert Bloom: 20th Annual Burning Man, Nevada

Burning Man almost defies description. It’s like trying to tell someone what chocolate tastes like or a color looks like. Every year, it attains cult status as artisans from near and far descend on the desert to hang out, burn stuff, and generally cavort.
A few highlights: 1986: To stave off boredom and meet women, Larry Harvey and his carpenter buddy Jerry James create a human figure out of wood and burn it on SF’s Baker Beach. Their 2-year-old sons tote a wooden “burning dog,” the man’s best friend.
1987-1990: Word of Burning Man spreads through funky flyers in laundromats, punk clubs, and among San Francisco’s clandestine prankster group, the Cacophony Society.
Summer 199o: 800 people attend an event at Baker Beach to watch the 40-foot Burning Man, but cops won’t let Harvey burn it.
Labor Day Weekend 1990: Harvey and 100 miscellaneous souls drive 350 miles to burn stuff and blow up propane tanks.
1991-1995: Burning Man actually becomes a town called Black Rock City with a population of 4,000. Theme towns sprout to offer “residents” cocktails, croquet, fruitcake and eggnog.
1996: Wired Magazine called Burning Man “the new American holiday” and it draws 8,000 souls.
1999: Burning Man gets listed in AAA’s RV guide.
2000: Burning Man attendance blossoms to 25,400.
2002: Burning Man doubles in size to 80 feet while Black Rock City airport accommodates 70 small planes.
2003: Burning Man attracts over 30,000 people.
2005: Burning Man is scheduled for August 29-September 5. All tickets are $250. The Art Theme will be “Psyche: the Conscious, the Subconscious and the Unconscious.”
Burning Man Website, Info & Tickets.
Timeline from SF Chronicle.



