Tips & Hints
1. Plan Ahead and Prepare
You’re off to a good start already by reading
this page! Also check out the other pages
in the Environment section and the Survival
Guide. For each item that you’re bringing
to the playa, think through how you’re going
to dispose of it. Have your camp tear-down
well planned and practiced. Plan to send
trash off the playa with campmates who are
leaving earlier.
2. Reduce Your Packaging
Bringing less in means having less to bring
out. Leave unnecessary packaging at home.
Food items are a likely target with their
many layers of plastic and cardboard, but
also consider the toys and camping gear
that you’re bringing. Unpacking them before
you get home will spare you the hassle of
bringing back styrofoam packingand shrinkwrap.
Choose cans over bottles, and reusable containers
over both. Read more in our Garbage, Precycle/Reduce,
Reuse, Recycle section.
3. Rethink Your Food Portions
Prepare food in sensible quantities that
your group can finish at a single sitting
-- leftovers will quickly become a liability.
Coordinate with your campmates as far as
what you’re bringing so that you minimize
your group’s waste. If you’ve found yourself
with a giant pot of chili and not enough
campmates, invite the neighbors over rather
than creating a wet, heavy bag that has
to be packed into someone’s trunk.
4. Don’t Rush Your Pack-Up
Don't stress to hurry home on Sunday. Recognize
that long-term exposure to the playa will
fatigue your body and impair decision powers.
Also, when under pressure, we are all likely
to make rushed decisions, miss details and
leave things behind. If half of your campmates
will have left already by Sunday, the folks
left behind are going to have a lot more
work to do. If someone has to catch a plane,
make sure to start packing up even earlier
than you think you have to, so that you
aren’t tempted to leave before fully clearing
your site. See more hints from Recycle camp.
5. Moop Sweeps
As you’re packing out your camp, have campmates
walk repeatedly around your site picking
up anything and everything that’s not part
of the playa. Doing this periodically, through
the week, will make it easier.
6. Do Not Use the Playa as Your Toilet
It’s unacceptable, unsanitary, and just
plain gross the morning after.
7. Take Your Bikes Home
Do not leave behind your old bikes behind
for us. We still have to dispose of them
if you don't, and that's an expensive and
time-consuming effort. Read more at (hyperlink
to future article on bikes).
8. Be Aware of Very Small Items
No Trace really does mean no trace. Be
conscious of spare nails or smaller trash
particles that may be dismissed as too small
for trash including: hair, matches, cigarette
butts, feathers, plastic tie wraps. Remember
that food waste such as peanut shells, orange
peels and egg shells are also trash. While
you're walking around the playa, make an
effort to pocket all trash, including cigarette
butts, and then empty your pockets into
a trash bag later. After you pick up your
trash to carry home, do a last-minute check
of your site for cigarette butts, gum wrappers,
etc. because many of those will be hidden
under tarps, tents and vehicles.
9. Do Not Pour Leftover Gas on the Playa
This is toxic! You wouldn't do this in
your backyard, so don't do it in ours.
10. Minimize Fire Impacts
Deserts like Black Rock are susceptible
to “burn scars” which last a long time and
are not easily cleared. Avoid creating a
burn scar by not burning directly on the
ground. Use a raised fire pit, or use fire
shields to protect playa surface (hyperlink
to info on fireblankets available at wholesale).
Keep in mind that most non-natural materials
(rugs, polyester, plastic, treated wood)
are toxic when burned (hyperlink to burn
page).
11. Minimize Playa Scars
Never ditch or build trenches around your
tent because they can start soil erosion
and create lasting scars. Make an effort
to restore holes that were dug for tent
stakes and anchors.
12. Do Not Claim Potential Artifacts
Artifacts should be turned into the Lost
and Found in Center Camp with an EXACT location
of where it was discovered. Many historical
and archeological sites are found throughout
Bureau of Land Management areas. Federal
law prohibits disturbing historical and
archeological sites or removing any objects
from them.
13. Respect Wildlife
Do not harass or shoot any wildlife. Remember,
the Burning Man event is not a place for
dogs or other pets (hyperlink to dog article).
If you do bring a pet to the playa outside
of the Burning Man event, make certain to
remove their waste just as you would your
own.
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