Black Rock without the City

Gerlach without Burning Man is a bespoke surreal performance piece, an dance of endurance between man and environment.  Missing the crowds & rules of Burning Man, Gerlach is still a remote and desolate outpost filled with the sorts of people who you would expect to find in a remote and desolate outpost, or perhaps in San Francisco.

In preparation for this year’s Particle Camp project, our head scientist Dr. Lunden needs baseline measurements of the ‘typical’ air quality of the Black Rock Desert. This means a road trip, hauling a carload of high-tech measuring instruments out to the desert for a day’s worth of science.

We leave Berkeley and drive eastwards, through the Sierra Nevada, down to Reno, and then north. We stop on the edge of the massive Pyramid Lake, in the heart of the Pyramid Lake Paiute Reservation. This massive lake is an anomaly, the remains of a ancient Lake Lahontan that used to cover a large part of Nevada. (The Black Rock desert is another remnant of this ancient lake.)

The lake is pollocked white with massive numbers of seagulls and pelicans. They slowly drift with the wind across the lake surface, and then the leading edge of the flock flies into the air and relocates back to where they began, with the relocation rippling backwards across the group. The fluttering white cloud continiously ripples across the deep blue lake, surprising against the rugged desert landscape.

seagulls on pyramid lake / nevada

dock / pyramid lake, nevada

Heading north we finally reach Gerlach at 8pm, just as the sun is setting behind the Sierra to our west.

We stay at Bruno’s Country Club, a combined name for the town’s only restaurant & motel, and one of the town’s three bars. We ask about food and are told that the restaurant has closed, but they might be able to make us a few sandwiches. “Yes, please” we say, and a beer or two later the sandwiches arrive, hand-carved turkey and roast beef on rolls with a random bag of chips as a side. Yum.

bruno's country club / gerlach, nv

The next day we have our breakfast at Bruno’s, where the restaurant opens at 6am. Chicken-friend steak for Melissa and I, and huevos rancheros for Dan. Good food, which we wash down with tolerable coffee and lots of ice water.  We are going out to the playainfoInfoAn area of flat, dried-up land, esp. a desert basin from which water evaporates quickly., and it is already getting warm.

We stop at the Friends of Black Rock headquarters in the old Jalisco Club. There we meet Karen, a rugged desert woman, beautiful and strong and very, very knowledgeable about all-things-Black-Rock.  We ask her advice about measuring air quality, and hot springs, and how to get out to the playa, and she quickly overloads us with information. While we’re talking, Will Roger stops by.  He’s one of the founders of Burning Man, and he’s in Gerlach working on this year’s city build. We talk about our project, and Will wobbles back and forth between being defensive about Burning Man’s eco-friendliness, and saying our project sounds fascinating.

jalisco club / gerlach, nv

We finally head out, driving north of Gerlach to the 8-mile entrance to the playa. This is the same entrance I’ve used 5 times before to visit Black Rock City, a gravel road from the pavement across the sandy sagebrush to the hard playa floor. Once you hit the playa, you can head any way you want. I point the Prius north.

We drive and drive and drive, making our own road in the cracked surface of the playa. We’re heading directly for Black Rock Point, a small black mountain at the north end of the playa. Though it’s clearly visible, Black Rock is 20 miles away. You can drive a long time and that damned rock doesn’t get any closer.

screaming across eternity in a prius / black rock, nevada

Eventually at a point that is not perceptibly different from any other point on the playa, Dr. Lunden says “Stop here”, and I do. Our Prius glides to a halt, and after waiting a moment for the dust cloud we raised to settle, we leave our shuttlecraft and step out onto the alien landscape of the playa.

We haul out the generator and seven different scientific instruments, and Dr. Lunden begins hooking them up to one another with an elaborate spider web of serial cables, power cords, clamps, and a bit of hose we acquired from the Gerlach service station.

our laboratory / black rock, nevada

Note: If you zoom in the photo above by clicking on it, you might be able to see Black Rock on the horizon about halfway between the car and the left side of the photo.

and the science gets done / black rock, nevada

dr. lunden of the desert / black rock, nevada

an elaborate spider web of cables and clamps / black rock, nevada

When everything is connected, we fire up the generator and flip on the power.

…And all of the circuit breakers on the generator blow.

At this point I would have flipped out, cursed a lot, and probably called the whole thing off. Dr. Lunden, however, is a fucking scientist, and considers this just part of the fucking job. She sighs deeply and starts unplugging things and plugging them back in in a different order. This goes on for the next hour, as Dan sits next to the generator with his arm extended, thumb in the air (up to indicate ‘okay so far’, and down to indicate ‘you killed it, again.’)

It turns out that the problem is the largest instrument, a rack-mount aethalometer for measuring black carbon particles in the air.  (In the photo directly above, it’s the large blue box. Not only has it completely died, but it’s also causing the generator’s circuit breakers to fire. When this instrument is removed from the circuit, the remaining instruments continue to work.

For a moment. Then the computer monitor dies. As we don’t have a backup monitor, this means that we can’t use the computer to record the output from the various instruments.

Dr. Lunden sighs again. Then she points out that most of the instruments are still recording to their internal storage. They sigh and chug and click, and we retreat to the shade of the car.

After an hour of leaving the instruments to measure the air quality (which is remarkably clean) Dr. Lunden says it’s time to get a dust reading. During Burning Man dust storms blow through camp on a regular basis, but today there is nothing. The sky is blue and there is not a dust storm in sight. We have to manufacture our own, and that involves driving around the instrument cluster at high speed in tight circles, a job that I do with no small amount of relish.

Afterwards, Dr. Lunden sends Dan and I off to explore on our own for a little while. (I suspect that she’s just tired of my fidgeting.) We leave her with a gallon of water, and decide to check out Black Rock Point.  Pointing the Prius north once more, we speed out across the desert. It’s still a long way, and as we head north the desert floor gets softer, making driving squirrely. The car wobbles northwards at 40mph, and I wonder whether our headlong rush towards Black Rock will end suddenly when the car sinks into a damp spot on the playa to its axles.

But this doesn’t happen, and a twenty minutes later we’re at the edge of the playa, looking at the small mountain known as Black Rock Point.

black rock point / nevada

Somewhere between where I’m standing and Black Rock is a hot springs. It was the first source of water for five hundred miles on this stretch of the Oregon Trail, and it’s why this rather small geological formation gives the desert its name, even though most of the surrounding mountains dwarf this one. The emigrants knew that at the base of Black Rock Point was potable water, allowing them to water their oxen and guaranteeing their survival at least another few days.

Dan and I would love to take a dip in Black Rock hot springs, but we don’t know where it is, or how far, and we’ve been gone from Melissa for a long time. We turn the car around and head south again.

As we drove away from Melissa I was certain that we would be able to find her on the way south.  The desert is flat and featureless, and a scientist should show up for miles. But as we drive back southwards, I realize that the desert is also home to mirages that make anything over a mile away look like a sheet of water reflecting the distant mountains and hiding anything that might actually be on the desert floor. For example, a scientist.

Luckily Dan had noted the distance that we drove north. (That’s why we call him ‘Safety Dan’.) We drive south the same distance and begin looking around. There is not a scientist in sight, just desert and mirage.

We continue driving, and then Dan notices something in the distance directly west of us. It’s a spec, and can be anything, but we decide to investigate. We aim in that direction and as we get closer realize that we have indeed found our misplaced scientist.

our lost scientist / black rock, nevada

Zoom in on the photo above and you might be able to see Dr. Lunden rolling her eyes at us.

We pack the equipment into the car and head back to Gerlach for dinner at Bruno’s Country Club. Our waitress was exactly the sort of person who you would find working as a waitress in a remote restaurant in the Nevada desert. During the course of dinner, we learn the following about her:

cleo (patra) / gerlach, nevada

  • Her name is Cleo(patra) Anne. “Yup, my mom put the ‘Patra’ in parentheses right on my birth certificate.”
  • She was born in July, making her a moon spirit. “I go crazy every time there is a full moon.  I love to run outside and howl at it. My husband used to get so upset with me… he would say ‘Cleo you get in here and put on some clothes!'”
  • She curses by saying “Sugar!!!”.  “Oh, I used to say that other word but one day my grandma said ‘Cleo, can’t you think of anything sweeter to have coming out of your mouth?'”

After a delicious dinner of prime rib and strawberry-rhubarb pie, we are feeling fat and sleepy. But I’m not going to bed, not yet. I want to visit a hot spring on this trip, and I’m going to drag my companions along with me. They’re both worried about navigating the playa after dark, but I have a fool’s confidence that it won’t be a problem, and so we head back out onto the playa with the sun just dipping below the western mountains.

26 miles later we pull off the playa onto a rough dirt road that makes its way through the scrub. The road is fairly solid for several miles, but then goes through a narrow slot where the ruts become too deep to safely navigate with a Prius’ ground clearance. We pull the car off the road and start walking.

off-road prius / black rock, nevada

sunset / black rock, nevada

It’s about a mile to the springs, and by the time we get there it’s getting pretty dark.

Double Hot Springs is very hot… 180°F at the source. The spring has a reputation for boiling alive dogs that playfully leap into the water (and once, the owner who leapt in to save them.) The two large pools are surrounded by a fence and many warning signs. The water is clear enough to be able to see the vent leading down below the water deep into the earth.

dan at double hot springs / black rock, nevada

Just down the hill from these deadly springs someone has set a ten-foot diameter cattle trough with a slow trickle of water leading into it from the spring. It’s just enough to keep the trough at about 100°F, the perfect soaking temperature.

Right next to the tub someone has set up camp. We walk over and announce ourselves, and a scruffy gentleman appears and introduces himself as Clay. He’s pretty surprised to see us, and even more surprised that we walked to the spring. We ask him if he minds if we take a soak.  “No, the tub’s just sitting there, begging to be used.  Go on.” Well, I say sheepishly, we didn’t actually bring bathing suits. “That’s just fine.  Ain’t nobody around but us desert rats.” And with that, Clay graciously retreats to the far side of his camp, where he and his dogs watch what remains of the sunset.

We strip and soak, and Dr. Lunden opens a bottle of ice-cold rosé that we’ve brought with us. We pour it into plastic cups and drink it as we watch the sky change from orange to red to black, and then the bats as they zip overhead. A plank in the tub makes a perfect floating bar, and the stars start to appear.

plank bar at sunset / black rock, nevada

After a while, we decide that it’s time to go. We dress, gather our stuff, and head back towards the road. The night is silent, except for a final call that comes from the shadows of Clay’s camp… “Make a lot of noise going back to your car. You wouldn’t want a cougar to think that you’re an easy dinner.”

clay's camp / black rock, nevada

We make it back to the car without being mauled, and spend the next half hour driving in near sensory-deprivation at 60mph across the playa.  We stop only once, to stare upwards at the stars through the crystal-clear air.

 

9 thoughts on “Black Rock without the City

  1. You guys are having the most fun anytime, anywhere, on this whole planet!! Thanks for bringing us along! 🙂
    xoxo
    Heidi

    • Nice story! Next time calculate the watts required of your instruments before renting/borrowing a generator. It will save on heartache, and should be easy enough for a scientific mind.

  2. No only do you write well, but your pictures are beautiful. I was a little apprehensive about your leaving Dr. Lunden out in the middle of no where….but I absolutely love the picture of you folks in the tub with the little “bar” floating in front.

  3. Oh My God! That is an awesome story. I am a scientist too:) Can I volunteer on your next journey?(I know a bit about air measurements, VOC’s and instruments).I am home all June and August….

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