I've been to Burning Man with my teardrop going on eight years now and it's incredible. (Hi Randy!) It's my second home and is FAR more than the sum of its rumors. Where else in the world can you stay up all night, dance at a blues club with a guy wearing an alligator costume, watch bad French films at 3:00 a.m. while eating popcorn from the Midnight Popcorn Palace, follow a clan of luminous jellyfish or go to a club that plays Johnny Cash all night?
Intrigued? There will be two more ticket sales in the future: the STEP sale where pre-purchased tickets are sold and the OMG sale where another 2,000 or so tickets will be sold. The prices are high, but once you are there, you won't even remember how much you paid.
My teardrop does just fine out there. I don't spend the entire day inside of it. We have a large canopy shelter we set up for shade and dust protection. The dust just gets into everything, you can't help it, but it's part of the experience. There's a badge of honor that comes with having that soft, pale dust all over you. I'vebeen able to keep much of the dust out of the interior by just keeping the doors closed.
If you are interested, I've covered Burning Man in several posts on my blog:
http://tinyyellowteardrop.blogspot.com/ ... g-man.htmlhttp://tinyyellowteardrop.blogspot.com/ ... op-to.htmlI also write about the tiny houses of Black Rock City for the Tiny House Blog. This gives you an idea of how brilliant people are out there. Not everyone is a drugged out hippie. I've met engineers, doctors, scientists and teachers and people are super normal.
http://tinyhouseblog.com/yourstory/tiny ... argo-cult/